ANALYSIS: Reynolds hurt, Carrigan in hip-drop strife and Kevvie rages - but did Broncos just enhance premiership case?

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

This was a defeat for Brisbane, but it might not feel like one. Though the Broncos have won eight times, they will learn more from this defeat than from almost any of those victories: they can now call themselves premiership contenders, having given one of the toughest teams in the comp a real shake on their own turf.

Despite going down 24-16, there was no doubt that the Broncos are right up there with the best.

They responded to multiple setbacks, including the loss of captain Adam Reynolds early on, only losing late to a Storm team that eventually came over the top of them following multiple sin bins.

Herbie Farnworth, Tom Flegler and Pat Carrigan all did ten minute stints – the latter for a clear hip-drop that might see him miss time, potentially including Origin, given a similar incident late last year that ended Jackson Hastings’ season. 

The great difference, in the end, was discipline, and according to Broncos coach Kevin Walters, the officiating – not least the call to bin Carrigan.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

“I’m pretty frustrated,” he said. “We came here to play football, that’s what we’ve been doing all year, and I just don’t think that we got a game of football.

“We had three guys sin binned. It’s hard to win when that happens. Were they fair sin binnings? I won’t make any comments because my contract isn’t big enough to pay the fine.”

“He (Carrigan) slid down his legs. You wouldn’t like to see that happen in a Grand Final. For someone to get sin binned for that. What the NRL want you to do now is slide down the legs and Patty did that. 

“Anyway, good luck to the Storm, they deserved to win. The good thing from our point of view is that we’ve come here, tough environment, and last time we came here we got beat by 50, so I reckon we’ve made some improvements.

“There’s been some commentary around our team, that we’re front end bullies. We weren’t that tonight. We were on the back foot all night. When we get it right, we’ve got a hell of a footy team here, so look out.”

Talisman Reynolds was left concussed early after landing on his head while chasing a kick from Farnworth. Nelson Asofa-Solomona also left the game in clear discomfort, holding his ribs.

There were initial fears that it was a much worse injury for the halfback, who reported to medics that he had no feeling in his hands and feet, and is known to have been carrying a neck complaint.

Walters confirmed that he will miss next week, while Storm coach Craig Bellamy couldn’t confirm the extent of the damage to Asofa-Solomona.

Melbourne will be thrilled to record a win, especially after their loss to Souths last week. Though it took them time to find their best, when they did it was classic Storm.

A late try, the second of two for Will Warbrick, was a trademark piece of improvisation from Jahrome Hughes, who ignored a set restart to kick early and find his winger.

“It was a strange game,” said Bellamy. “There was so many 50/50 things that happened and it seemed to go for a hell of a long time too. It was like an AFL game in the time it took. 

“We wanted to do a couple of basic things for us to do well, and we did those reasonably well. We didn’t get off to the greatest start and the Broncos really locked us down in our half, but at the end of the day, we knuckled down and that was the rhythm for our defence for the rest of the game.”

Munster back on song

This match was a story of two Queensland Origin players, one established, one hopeful. Munster was back to his best while Reece Walsh maintained his campaign for a Maroon jumper.

Walsh underlined his case to be Queensland fullback, while Munster rebounded to his best after a difficult evening at Suncorp last week.

Munster doesn’t have many off-nights, so it’s hard to judge how they affect him, but it seemed as if the five eighth was intent on righting the wrongs of Magic Round. 

He was dreadful last week against Souths, having next to no impact on the game. From minute one tonight, he looked far more interested and impactful, challenging the line constantly in his trademark, impish style.

His first try was more of a lack of defensive organisation from the Broncos, but Munster’s desire to hit the ball at pace and get over the stripe was there for all to see.

His second line break, which Justin Olam should have converted into a try, was classic Munster with extravagant dummies and swift hands to free the PNG centre. Unfortunately for the Storm, Walsh pulled off the try-saver.

Walsh has to play Origin

If there had been any lingering doubt about the form candidate for the Queensland fullback role, Reece Walsh removed them.

There was one hairy moment where he was reprieved by a late offside call having dropped a bomb, but outside of that, this was a stellar showing from Walsh.

If there has been a criticism of his play since returning to the Broncos, it would be that he has been something of a flat track bully. Against Souths, he was totally absent.

There’s fewer tougher assignments in the NRL than Melbourne away, and Walsh turned up here. His kicking was a particular high point, taking up the slack after Reynolds departed.

Defence was excellent too, with the bravest of brave shots on Olam to deny a try. There was a whiff of a shoulder charge about it, but the Bunker didn’t intervene. He was less fortunate from a Munster-esque ball steal, which was a second out from being one of the plays of the season, but was wiped off for a second man in.

In attack, Walsh was playing the hits. He put a try on a platter for Jesse Arthars and constantly when the Broncos were able to put on their shape.

The Maroons are famed for their loyalty and usually err on the side of incumbency, but Billy Slater will be the main target if he ignores Walsh in favour of Kalyn Ponga and Queensland lose. 

Ponga is bang out of form, has been injured and playing as a five eighth. Walsh has been excellent, is fit and is playing fullback.

The Crowd Says:

2023-05-12T23:52:56+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


And ditto different rule books on shoulder charges. Refs say Walsh was fine, MRC says no he wasn't $1500 and a brand smudge.

2023-05-12T21:45:29+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


'There’s a definite problem if you and I (and others) as lifelong league fans can’t reasonably define and agree what a hipdrop tackle even is' And even sadder neither can those who police the game.. bunker / referees and MRC.

2023-05-12T21:01:56+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Its become an absolute mess 3-4 weeks ago I thought the NRL had come up with a pretty tight definition pf a hip drop tackle… but they sold themselves out There’s a definite problem if you and I (and others) as lifelong league fans can’t reasonably define and agree what a hipdrop tackle even is

2023-05-12T12:30:34+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


'It's not a (bunker) mistake. It is two different interpretations between bunker and MRC. That's embarrassing' From Voss's Twitter and I totally agree.

2023-05-12T12:23:47+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


When he delivered his 3 indicators it was 'They then drop their body weight onto the legs of the opposition player with force in a manner which could be determined as either careless or reckless. ' From the monitor available to the public Carrigan was stomach up on NAS's legs. Today it's reworded as FULL body weight. This was the total reason he gave for no charge. No relevance to slipping or sliding. All other indicators were covered. He needed to have 100% on the legs. He moved the goal posts.

2023-05-12T04:21:43+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


And Carrigan has already been given no case to answer. Just another poor call from the officials last night

2023-05-12T04:18:38+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Nope, Carrigan completely cleared. That sin bin likely cost Brisbane the game

2023-05-12T01:30:16+00:00

3 R M

Roar Rookie


Unsurprisingly for me the real culprit in these bunker blunders is one G. Sutton who is the worst reff with the highest profile who always seems to escape any criticism for his continued incompetence.

2023-05-12T01:20:27+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


It’s borderline insulting…

2023-05-12T00:53:18+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


You may be right on whether or not it would have been a Mam knock on, but the rationale was ludicrous.

2023-05-12T00:51:51+00:00

Pyromaniac

Roar Rookie


he jarred his neck and lost feeling in his hands

2023-05-12T00:43:48+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


Outside of that i am trying to get my head around Adam Reynolds, not being concussed and feeling a twinge - maybe getting a burner, and needing a medicab and a neck brace to leave the field? All NRL players are tough but that man can find an "injury"

2023-05-12T00:23:30+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Carrigan cleared…

2023-05-12T00:16:21+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Agree with most of those With the Mam strip he clearly played at the ball, but it has to be a Broncos knock back and then Katoa knocked on as he tried to ground the ball So that’s one I think they got the right decision just the wrong way While the decision was correct (for mine) it’s alarming that a senior ref in the bunker had to go through a BS process to get there To suggest that Mam was just making a tackle and not playing the ball us treating us all as fools…

2023-05-12T00:15:11+00:00

Gray-Hand

Roar Rookie


…and the match review committee have already cleared him before 10:00am on the following day.

2023-05-12T00:10:04+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


The snap shot of dodgy calls (in my opinion) * Walsh shoulder charge on Olam to stop a try. nothing * Hughes is third man in to a push and shove which escalates it. nothing * Felgler clearly grabs a marker resulting in a try * The Katoa drop over the line which bunker says "Mam is attempting to make a tackle. No he isn't, if he tried to make a tackle from behind in the ingoal it would be a try, he is trying to strip the ball - its a Broncos knock on. * Wasn't a fan of the penalty try (i am not convinced Herbie would make it) * Wasn't a fan of the Herbie sin bin * Wasn't a fan of the call that Coates was infront of the kicker for the disaalowed try (if you can tell he had a foot infront, you can rule on forward passes - and you can't) It was all a shame, because the contest was quite good.

2023-05-11T23:53:00+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


I might amend my second par to say I think he started well, but as the game went on, he lost a bit of control. But when you consider that he would have been watching replays on the big screen like us, with one of the most senior officials in the game in charge of the bunker, and wondering how they were coming up with the decisions they were, i can imagine his own stress levels would have been going up. It was probably the biggest game of his 30 game career, a chance to showcase his ability, and the NRL scrwed him with no support, putting him in a position that was near impossible to succeed in.

2023-05-11T23:46:52+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


The only thing made abundantly clear tonight is how little you know about rugby league. 1, There was no shoulder charge from Walsh. His arms were wide spread until Olam steps into him. Olam, on the other hand, where it comes off his head A, that was a shoulder charge. B the whistle had been blown. Right call or wrong, that’s the rule. You should probably learn a few. 2, Mam on Katoa, even if he attacked the ball it’s a knock back and last touched by Katoa constituting a knock on. Again, another rule you should brush up on. 3, Your Walsh strip example v Burgess? You mean where the ref let the video make the adjudication after the play had complete? He had to make a call to send it up. That’s what the bunker is for. 4, You pretend to watch that game and your takeaway is that Brisbane were favoured? For your sake I hope you are a drinker.

2023-05-11T23:28:44+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


This is the 4th time Kevvie's lost a player mid game for hip dropping. So far all guilty. Needs to do more than #refs mistake it.

2023-05-11T23:21:54+00:00

Col in Paradise

Roar Rookie


Good points agree - seems like the whole game was in a alternative vortex - on field and off field decisions weird....X Files type game..confusing and rubbish...the Ref was from another planet..

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