ANALYSIS: Ciraldo needs to have a long, hard look at his attack as Warriors blunt Bulldogs in impressive win

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

The Andrew Webster revolution continues apace at the Warriors, with another impressive victory for the reborn Kiwi club.

This one finished 24-12 over the Bulldogs, who were blown away early on and struggled to make a meaningful dent in the Warriors’ line despite sustained second half pressure.

Addin Fonua-Blake was a titan in the middle, with Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad also showing his best form from the back, both in sweeping up Dogs’ kicks and returning the ball with gusto.

Shaun Johnson was again at the heart of the best things the visitors did, creating two tries off his boot, but this was a collective effort built on effort and determination. His future is still on decided for 2024.

“He should be proud if there are people this side of the ditch that want him,” said Webster.

“People want him to come back because they’re seeing how well he’s playing and they think he can contribute and impact for his team. He should be proud of that. We’re proud of that.

“He’s certainly happy at home in New Zealand, which is a different Shaun. We love him. Shaun and I have a good relationship, we know where that is at, and how that looks.”

In winning this, Webster completed a sweep of his former colleague Cameron Ciraldo, having previously won their encounter in Auckland in Round 4.

It could end up as a pivotal moment in both sides’ seasons. 

The Warriors, by virtue of their win, now have a 6-5 record and will pick up two more points next week with the bye, before an Origin period that will see them lose nobody. Winning tonight caps a superb start to the year for the Kiwis.

For the Bulldogs, however, this was exactly the sort of game that they needed to win to stand a chance. Had they won, they would have moved to five wins, with a home game against the Titans next week before their own bye kicks in. Now, things look far less rosy.

“The three tries we gave up in the first half are just not what we want to be about but it is what we are at the moment,” said Ciraldo.

“I thought we responded in the second half, we played better in the second half but it was way too late. We can’t come in and play like that in the first half and then wait for a spray at half-time and respond in the second half.”

Canterbury need to sort out their spine

The Warriors excel at manipulating field position, with a fairly simplistic, yet effective style designed to move the bulk of the footy away from their goalline. It’s rarely scintillating stuff, but it can be very effective. 

The Dogs are a lot more adventurous, and with good reason: when they get within striking distance, they look terrible at the moment.

In the era of the short dropout, being able to accumulate pressure over time is fast going out of fashion. The Dogs were able to camp in Warriors territory at times, especially in the second half, and rarely threatened, then lost the ball after forcing the repeat.

Occam’s Razor in these circumstances would be to look at the spine, and with the Bulldogs, that passes the sniff test. 

Matt Burton is a run-first five eighth being asked to play halfback. Hayze Perham, as displayed twice in the opening stages, can’t pass. Josh Reynolds is a guy who wasn’t good enough for a team that finished fourth bottom of the Super League last year. 

The Dogs have been battered with injuries this year, but the four men running out now are their first choice. They are choosing to leave Kyle Flanagan out and choosing to limit Karl Oloapu’s minutes and give some of them to Reynolds. It’s not working, clearly.

They could make changes. Jake Averillo, currently at centre, showed far more creativity from fullback in his time there last year than Perham has. 

It’s not that Perham isn’t good enough for this level, but in a side that lacks any guile, he is the most guileless. Straight swapping the pair and letting Perham play as a centre would be a start.

His best moments come with running the footy, and Averillo offers that plus ball-playing. It’s a straight fix that Ciraldo could bring in tomorrow.

Beyond that, he really has to decide what the halves are going to be for this year and, indeed, into the future. If that is Karl Oloapu as a halfback, then play him as a halfback. 

There’s plenty of teams in the NRL who effectively balance their halves in terms of possessions. Melbourne do it, with a halfback who loves to run and a five eighth who is partial to a kick.

Souths did it for most of last year too, before handing the keys to Lachlan Ilias full time. It’s more than doable, if there’s the will.

At the moment, it’s half-pregnant. Reynolds is nobodies’ long-term solution and, at best, is a bench spark plug. The time has come to make the hard calls. The status quo is not working.

Addin Fonua-Blake is in career best form

The Warriors are pretty much everyone’s second favourite team these days, and it’s because of performances like this. It’s the honest toil, the spirit, the camaraderie that is there for everyone to see.

In terms of personnel, it’s not that much different to a team that looked like it had never met under Nathan Brown, and that looked like it would rather be anywhere else at times during the long Covid exile.

Webster has imparted an identity on this team in a very short amount of time. In many ways, his task is not a million miles away from that of Wayne Bennett at the Dolphins: come into the gaff with a blank slate and make a footy team exist. 

Tactically, the pair have done it in similar ways. Simple, conservative stuff that makes you hard to beat, allied to a defensive strategy that prioritises effort areas.

It’s all the free stuff, and while there’ll be no championships won in this manner, it is plenty good enough to beat bad teams. That’s enough for now.

The best exemplar of this Addin Fonua-Blake. The man who gets the plaudits is Shaun Johnson, who is the creator-in-chief of almost everything the Warriors do, but it comes on the back of the dominance of AFB.

This is career best stuff from Fonua-Blake, who is finally becoming the player that many at Manly thought he might be. He’s a microcosm of what Webster has done, a guy who has benefitted massively from a simplified, conservative role.

He’s put the offload away – the Warriors had the fewest in the NRL through ten rounds – but is free to concentrate on running hard, tackling and scaring the life out of opponents. 

It’s working, too: five tries in 11 games – the same as Alex Johnston, Sione Katoa and Tom Trbojevic. Some company. They didn’t get theirs under the posts, either.

The Crowd Says:

2023-05-13T02:27:35+00:00

RLFan

Roar Rookie


I agree to a certain extent, I always felt they should have kept Paul Vaughn, who was their best forward last season. They went into this year fairly thin on forward stocks, and Thompson being out for half the year, Kikau injured for most of the year has highlighted that. As for Oloapu, whatever position he ends up playing in, I feel he may not quite ready yet. It's hard for young halves to shine, when their forwards are being outmuscled. I think they tried to sign an experienced half-back, but missed out. The proof of the pudding will be when they get a full and fit team on the park.

2023-05-13T01:27:39+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Gould and Ciraldo running the show, "Canterbury is still struggling to find somebody to fill the halfback position, they are short of a big forward " and the buck stops with Gould who has been there since 2021. Signed Karl Oloapu as a half back but he captained the 2022 Aust Schoolboys from lock forward with Keano Kini from the Titans academy playing half back ? Bulldogs digging a hole full of salary cap issues & poor signings. can only blame themselves

2023-05-13T00:59:08+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Where do you guys play RTS when he comes back. I reckon CNK has been sensational. Personally I couldn't move him.

2023-05-12T23:33:37+00:00

RLFan

Roar Rookie


To be fair, you are comparing apples with oranges. As Cooper Cronk said last night Webster has a lot more to work with than Ciraldo, a top halfback, a good fullback and a big, strong and skilful forward pack, a recipe for success in Rugby League. Whereas Canterbury is still struggling to find somebody to fill the halfback position, they are short of a big forward and their fullback has been very ordinary. Due to long term and a spate of short term injuries, we seldom field the same team each week.

2023-05-12T21:42:12+00:00

Uncle Buck

Roar Rookie


Perham is a total dud. The Warriors first try should have been covered by Perham, but he was defending under the posts. The bloke has no idea on positional play for a fullback. Suspect these traits would make him a useless winger. The dogs forwards need to start tackelling the big boppers around the legs and get them to the ground. The sight of a determined Warriors forward charging downfield with 3 or 4 dogs players dancing around them like school girls is an embarrassment. I suspect real school girls would have done a better job. At this stage I think I may be eating my breakfast with a wooden spoon on grand final day.

2023-05-12T12:50:09+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


The sky has always been the limit for AFB. He's a natural footballer who looks fitter than he's ever been. The Warriors and the Phins looked like been a bit average this season but it's great to see them playing decent footy. From the highlights it looks like Dylan Walker has matured as a ball player by being more subtle with his play.

2023-05-12T11:57:56+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


For all the talk about Cameron Ciraldo as the promising coach, it is his former colleague at Penrith the quiet achiever.

2023-05-12T11:47:06+00:00

WithTheDawn

Roar Rookie


That was a satisfying win for the Warriors. I was hoping they would play as well as the last few weeks when they lost against top opposition. Glad to see that was mostly true, and they secured a good win. They have had some great defence this season, plenty of games conceding no more than 2 tries. The attack still needs some work, but they had more than enough in them tonight after a strong first half.

2023-05-12T11:24:10+00:00

RLFan

Roar Rookie


Johnson is on top of his game and creating attacking opportunities all around the park, and our forwards were outmuscled by a strong Warrior's pack. Burton is playing in the wrong position, simply because we do not have an alternative. Wilson the young winger played well and would have been a better choice last week than Casey, who let is a number of tries. Okunbar despite all the criticism he gets, is going well in the forwards, but overall we are weak in key positions, halfback and fullback. There does not seem to be a solution to halfback, but I agree it would be worth trying Averillo at fullback.

2023-05-12T10:45:47+00:00

Bloke7

Roar Rookie


The biggest problem with the Bulldogs isn't their spine, it's a forward pack that's tiny compared to most teams. Warriors make so many post contact metres and most of our yards come from our backs. Our forwards get driven back and struggled to contain the warriors pack. Then our backs are too tired to do what they need to do. I agree Burton is not a halfback and Reynolds certainly isn't(but he's a lot more creative than Flanagan) so we should give Oluapu a chance. Hayze perham has a running game but nothing else so I definitely agree averillo was better at fullback last year. Hopefully Crichton can take that role next year for the money we're going to pay him. But again, all our outside backs look a lot more dangerous when we have forwards making yards.

2023-05-12T10:38:15+00:00

JimCam73

Roar Rookie


The Warriors really look good. Johnson has matured - great vision and organisational skills to complement his instinctive ability. Even fairly average performers like Berry have improved.

2023-05-12T10:24:09+00:00

Pilferer

Roar Rookie


Huge effort from the boys after a gruelling 18 odd days! Back 3 outstanding with big meters off the line and defused Burton bombs expertly by going past the ball and turning back into it , smart as if you drop it then it likely goes backwards. Great coaching

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