ANALYSIS: The Broncos learn the level from Cleary and the Panthers - after one of the most bizarre Bunker decisions of all time

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

If the Broncos weren’t aware of the level at the very top end of the NRL, they are now. They went down 15-4 to Penrith to kick off Indigenous Round, their third loss in four, and yet, again, came out of it as a better footy side.

The Panthers have been the benchmark for several years and are properly motoring now, turning in a performance of classic Clearyball dominance both through Ivan’s ideas on control in defence and patience in attack and Nathan’s ability to enact them.

This was a seasons-best from the halfback, and on the eve of Origin. He hit a personal milestone – the youngest to 1300 points in first grade – and showed every facet of his game: creatively with the ball, taking on the line, controlling with the boot and muscling up in defence.

“We dominated field position and possession,” said Ivan. “We didn’t have the polish tonight but in terms of how we like to play the game, I thought we did a decent job. It was a decent win.

“Early (in the year) we lost a couple of close ones but we were playing OK, just not consistently enough to how we like to play – the last three weeks have been more like that.

“After a disappointing loss to the Tigers, I felt we have responded well and been a bit more like how we like to play.”

Brisbane couldn’t go with Penrith in the end, but the manner in which they defended mountains of pressure can only leave Kevin Walters feeling that his team are going to be something special.

“It’s all learning for us,” said the coach. “They’ve been doing it for three or four years now and we’re just coming into all that. It was a good lesson.”

Though they went 7-1 prior to losing to South Sydney at the end of last month, it is the run of poor results since that have been more impressive. The first two months were a rails run, a confidence-building exercise for the attack.

This was the real stuff, the football that wins finals, and though they lost now, it will help them win in the future.

“We’re one from the last four, but it’s not alarming,” said Walters.

“We’d have preferred to win more but I’m OK with where we are. When we get it right, and we will get it right in September, we’re going to be OK.

“If you’d have said at the end of September last year when everyone was throwing bricks at us that, after 12 rounds, we’d have won eight games, I reckon you’d take that from a Broncos position.”

Brisbane did so without Adam Reynolds, too, ruled out with injury. Had he played, they might have been able to turn early pressure into points and forced the scoreboard pressure onto Penrith.

Instead, they succumbed to first Jarome Luai and then Cleary, who both created tries.

It might have been more. Penrith had multiple tries disallowed in the first half as they camped on the Broncos’ line.

But also, it might have been closer. At 14-4, a bizarre bunker call took a try off Brisbane that could have sparked a comeback: Kotoni Staggs thought he had scored and the Bunker agreed, only for referee Adam Gee to query the video call and find an obstruction in the build-up. The right call was found, albeit not through the traditional methods.

The Panthers haven’t gone anywhere

This was a lesson in efficiency from Penrith. The Broncos were clearly bang up for the game and fired into early tackles, at times halting the Panthers within their own 30 and forcing them to kick away. 

The defence provoked attacking opportunities for Brisbane, but their lack of clinicality – no Reynolds, remember – saw last tackle options wasted twice. 

Needless to say, Nathan Cleary didn’t let that happen. On the Panthers’ first serious attack, they scored through Sunia Turuva. 

On their second, they should have, and but for a miracle tackle to dislodge the ball from Moses Leota, they would have. On their third, they came away with two from a penalty goal.

What everyone knows about Penrith is their defence. On the limited occasions in the first half where Brisbane got towards their end, the solidity was on full display to keep them out for five tackles, and then the lack of a top-class halfback was evident on the last.

While Jock Madden had a decent game, he’s not Reynolds. Ezra Mam and Reece Walsh are great talents, but they’re nowhere near the kicking threat of their captain.

The lack of points from the Panthers, for once, wasn’t a result of their attack not quite coming together, rather exceptional work from the Broncos to stop them. 

And as ever, they just kept on at it and eventually got their rewards. The truth, as Ivan Cleary has known all along, is that the attack only really needs to be on in September, especially if the defence is on all the time.

The Broncos aren’t a threat…yet

This is becoming a bit of a theme for the Broncos. For the third time, they’ve faced a Premiership contender, a real big gun, and for the third time, they’ve lost.

But every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way, so let’s pick these apart. 

Against Souths, they struggled to deal with the game’s best attack and were eventually run over the top of – admittedly without Payne Haas and Ezra Mam, who were suspended.

Against the Storm, they lost Reynolds early, then endured three sin bins that hamstrung their ability to compete – but compete they did, with only finishing and discipline the difference.

So what did we learn here? Well, for one, there is improvement. For a long period, this was the best of the three showings, going toe-to-toe and set-for-set with the masters of grinding, defensive footy.

The pressure that the Broncos were under was immense. Penrith played almost perfectly for an hour, with next to no errors and domination of both field position and the ball, but the Brisbane defence largely held firm. 

To concede just two tries in that period in the face of such an onslaught says everything.

It’s worth remembering how far this side has come. When the Panthers began their period of dominance, Brisbane were the worst defensive team in the comp and liable to fold like deckchairs at the slightest push. 

There was a whiff of a comeback in attack, but it was never likely given the energy extended in keeping the score respectable. A count of zero line breaks to five told everything about who was most likely to win.

The last three weeks have shown that, despite the huge improvements, the Broncos remain a rung down from the proper heavyweights. But the trajectory is there. They’re probably still a year off, but it’s coming.

Penrith are at the tail end of, or still in the middle of their Premiership phase. Souths are moving into theirs and the Storm seemingly never leave one. Kevvie will know that his is just opening, and that’s fine.

The Crowd Says:

2023-05-19T07:53:23+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


If I could do 1 thing to improve the bunker, I would ban it from being able to look at incidents in slow motion. All decisions would give the benefit of the doubt to the attacking team, with the exception of head contact/tackles where the benefit of the doubt would be against the tackler (ie it would need to be clear in normal speed that the head was not hit).

2023-05-19T06:43:42+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Yep, I don’t doubt his spatial awareness are next level. You can see Walsh tracks the ball in the air right up to his collision with Sorensen and then he seems to pick a point in time and space, so has no need to have eyes up. After getting over the top of Peachy, Walsh spins in mid air and is almost perfectly placed to catch the ball. I’m neither a Broncos or even a Walsh fan, but thought it was great skill that was undermined by an on-field ref. Even after the Bunker, who we are told have dozens of camera angles not available to us or the ref, cleared the contact.

2023-05-19T06:43:27+00:00

Pop

Roar Rookie


Farnworth could be a replacement for Gagai, when he retires from Origin. He was solid in the the loss by the Broncos. He is showing good development.

2023-05-19T06:40:55+00:00

Pop

Roar Rookie


Yes how many origin series does DCE have left in him?

2023-05-19T06:25:17+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


I believe Hammer would be Queenslands best option at fullback because he’s very safe with solid defence and excellent in the air. Hammer puts pressure on middle and edge defenders just with his support presence. JMK and Isaako are benefiting greatly by Hammer pressure? I’d personally look at Walsh off the bench. He would be a game breaker coming on fresh against a tiring defence. Time for Hunt to play 7 and DCE to concentrate on retirement.

2023-05-19T06:12:14+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Sorry matty… Imma bit hot under the collar after last night…

2023-05-19T05:59:55+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


Yes there is a lot of skullduggery in these kick contests. I’ve been saying for about 3 years and particularly the Panthers rarely genuinely contest a bomb they’re more about pressuring the catcher looking for an error. Walsh is a brilliant footballer and smarter than smart. LOL you can almost say he has powers of perception that mere mortals don’t. I actually think he’s watching the ball and players around him. He’s not focused on the ball as much as he also being aware of where Luai, Peachy and his teammates were around him whilst getting into a position to jump into a contest. Like a 6th sense he knows pretty much where and when the ball is going to be. His initial focus is getting past Luai and getting above Peachy then he’s happy to look for the ball. It’s like algebraic football in his smart football brain. He’s working out things he doesn’t know ( like what Luai is going to do, what Peachy’s intentions and whether his teammate is going for it). He was in a position and looking at the football whilst also in the air when it was there to be caught? That not really illegal until he misses catching it I guess. Peachy also missed it and he was in the air jumping into Walsh also. The smart call was Luai interfering with no interest in competing for the ball IMO.

2023-05-19T05:19:25+00:00

zonecadet

Roar Rookie


I agree otherwise they are just flag carriers

2023-05-19T05:07:13+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Barry I agree with you, I’m just making fun of a recent game where the attacking player blatantly pushed the defender in the back when chasing a ball, and the bunker said it was fine because he was looking at the ball. I think it was Canberra v Dolphins but could be wrong.

2023-05-19T05:02:29+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


He actually didn’t look for the ball at all until after he’d taken the Penrith player out, by which time he’d already jumped past where the ball eventually landed, it was out of his reach and he tried to catch it one handed because he was so far out of position It was the most blatant example of taking out the catcher I’ve seen for a while. If there’s an example of one worse being allowed I’m happy to revise my position but all this vague “it should be allowed because I’ve seen worse” doesn’t mean too much…

2023-05-19T04:49:27+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


He glanced in the general direction of the ball. According previous interpretations he can do whatever he likes as long as he glances at the ball.

2023-05-19T04:38:53+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I thought after the last time we had “interference “ that the agreement was you could do everything short of kneecapping an opposition player with a machete as long as you mad some effort to look at the ball.

2023-05-19T04:32:57+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


So the bunker had a Barry Crocker.

2023-05-19T04:29:59+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Regarding Cleary, he has the maturity now of lots of games and big games under his belt. He continues to improve. You can see the difference a few years makes when you look at the brilliant Walsh, who due to experience is still prone to the odd error or bad decision to go with the excitement (how good was that grubber!

2023-05-19T04:24:30+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


The kicking game was definitely the difference. Come September Brisbane need everyone fit and to play their best game and have likes of the Panthers and Rabbitohs slightly off and they could spring an upset. Hard to see them doing it 2-3 times in the finals to go all the way. Penrith’s defense is as good as I’ve seen since the Dogs of War in the 1980’s

2023-05-19T03:36:17+00:00

Fraser

Roar Rookie


Just watched all 3 incidents again and happy to clear the offside for all of them. - Peachey definitely behind Cleary for the Sorensen no try - Crichton just barely behind the kicker for his no try - Haas had his foot in the air in front of the kicker for the Staggs no try, but hadn't landed it yet so all good.

2023-05-19T02:54:54+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


He’s a better footballer, more multi skilled 13 than Yeo.

2023-05-19T02:44:55+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


They got 4 points off a kick. 67 tackles by their most dangerous offloader will do that to them.

2023-05-19T02:39:33+00:00

Dunning Kruger

Roar Rookie


Looking forward to see who Annersley sacks this week. Got to be the Video Ref for the second week in a row. The head butt knock on that cost the Walsh try was the worst of the night. Just amazing that he could view that and say the Bronco lost the ball forward. We need a bunker to review the bunker "howlers"....Well we do, but it comes on Monday after the game has been ruined.

2023-05-19T02:34:26+00:00

Dunning Kruger

Roar Rookie


Agreed, Luai contributed nothing except missed tackles. Zero threat all night.

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