ANALYSIS: Nelson dances Storm to Manly win - but is a trip to Melbourne the challenge it used to be?

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Melbourne got there in the end, and through the unlikeliest of methods. For an hour, this had been a slog of a game, with the Storm unable to prise open a committed, if understrength Manly.

In their moment of need, it was the twinkle toes of Nelson Asofa-Solomona – all two metres and 115kgs of him – that split the Sea Eagles open.

His try sparked a late flurry to drag the score up to 24-6, though for a long time, it had been 10-6 and the win in doubt. Haumole Olakau’atu had opened the scoring for Manly, who were game but little more.

There might be a feeling that both sides will take the result: Melbourne get the points, Manly didn’t get smashed.

Anthony Seibold would have hoped for a win, but in truth, that was always a long shot given the absentees in his side. Both Trbojevic brothers are now out for the foreseeable, and with them go any hopes of the Sea Eagles doing anything substantial this year.

Craig Bellamy, on the other hand, will look at the poor control in the first half and the lack of incision from his attack. They were missing Cameron Munster, who was rested after playing Origin with an illness, and without him, it was pedestrian for a long time.

“First half we didn’t complete well,” said Bellamy. “We did a good job defensively to stay in it, the only points they scored in the game was off a kick. 

“We had to work a lot harder than what we should have because of the amount of error that we had. We fixed that up in the second half and I was happy with their effort.”

This was the sixth win on the trot at home for Melbourne, but with Penrith heading south next week, the Storm will have to be a lot better to stand a chance against the Premiers.

“I thought we were really good first half,” said Seibold. “Defensively we were strong and turned up for each other. Second half our accuracy and detail in attack put too much pressure on our defence.

“I thought we were brave defensively, but not good enough from an attacking point of view.”

Are Melbourne just another team now?

There was a time when a trip to Melbourne was the toughest assignment in rugby league. Now, it’s still a tough trip, but it doesn’t hold anything like the fear factor it once did.

The Storm were workmanlike tonight, and got there in the end, but they should have torn strips off an overmatched Manly side. Parramatta, Penrith and Brisbane all racked up big scores over the Sea Eagles on home turf.

There’s two ways of looking at this performance, then: either the mark of champions is winning when you don’t play particularly well, and this is perfectly sufficient, or it was an underwhelming showing that will see the Storm found out against better sides.

Bellamy’s reactions in the coaches box suggested that he might favour the latter reading of events.

There were a few notable exceptions. Harry Grant struggled after backing up, but Jahrome Hughes picked up the slack creatively.

Nick Meaney remains one of the most underrated players in the NRL and was excellent again here. Will Warbrick on the wing gets better with every game he plays.

Across the piece, though, it was a slack showing, with lots of unforced errors and an inability to test a Manly side that have shown a very soft underbelly at times in 2023. 

The late slew of points against a gassed Sea Eagles made this look a lot better than it actually was. Next week, at home to Penrith, they will have to be a lot better.

DCE sails the ship alone

Manly have a third of their salary cap invested in just three blokes, and two of them are injured for the foreseeable future. 

It’s lucky, then, that Daly Cherry-Evans is in perhaps the best form of his career. 

Without him, the Sea Eagles would be totally bereft: he was, again, the source of everything good that they did. His kicking was exceptional and regularly made Melbourne have to start sets on their own goalline, with four in the first half alone that dropped within three metres of the line.

It was vital to keeping Manly in the fight. They had far less ball than the Storm but were able to manipulate the field position in their favour, limiting what Melbourne could throw back at them. 

DCE’s connection with Olakau’atu on the right edge was back firing again, with a few near misses as well as a try assist off the boot. 

He just needs more men to go with him, however. Reuben Garrick shifted into Turbo’s role at the back, and while he is exceptional in yardage and in defensive duties, his creativity at times looks like a winger playing fullback.

Josh Schuster, too, often plays with flash rather than effectiveness, and lay dormant for over an hour before sparking into life. 
Manly generally live or die by their star players, and without two of them, they are in dire need of the other standing up.

Next week’s clash with the Roosters is make or break for their season, and Seibold would do well to ask the other 16 blokes to get close to the captain’s level of performance.

The Crowd Says:

2023-06-26T01:34:51+00:00

Easy target

Roar Rookie


Fair point. My remark had to do with the reduction of storms depth in the team, which is relevant when referring to a team being understrength. But you're right in that you can only play with the team you have

2023-06-26T01:17:36+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


Schuster isn’t the problem.. the guy pretending to coach them is. Barrett 2.0

2023-06-26T01:16:21+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


Understrength means without player currently on the roster not those who they lost.. your point on the Bromwich boys, Kafusi and Smith is about as valid as me suggesting Manly missing Jamie Lyon, Matai and the Stewarts!!

2023-06-25T13:25:55+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


You're a hard marker Mike. No Munster (and still no Paps) and they handled Manly with ease after the first 20 minutes, but you reckon they are no longer a danger team at home? They seem to do alright down there and they are firmly in the top 4 in a very even year when any team seems capable of getting an upset.

2023-06-25T04:13:20+00:00

Hard Yards

Roar Rookie


Penn is jealous that Des is a local hero, while nobody had heard of Penn. Penn is a bum.

2023-06-25T04:11:44+00:00

Hard Yards

Roar Rookie


Des has historically had extensive Northern Beaches schools appearances over the years, and is a hero on the Beaches.

2023-06-25T04:10:25+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


The Penn boy seems to dislike club legends… he speared Tooves and replaced him with a hapless clown too.

2023-06-25T01:40:58+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


Maybe we should rename the last place on the ladder from being the "wooden spoon" position to being the "Seibold Place" ...... or is that just being too mean ?

2023-06-25T01:36:20+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


Seibold may or may not have learned from his time at the Broncos. The Jury is definitely still out on that one but this season is certainly not making a good case for him. Dessie had his problems but he was as much Manly as Manly themselves. He had far more Manly blood in his veins, commitment, experience and buy in from the players than his replacement will ever have. It would appear that someone in the Manly hierarchy (Penn ?) seriously does not like Des. They are willing to put their club at an apparent disadvantage than work with him. It seems that the Titans, despite making unsavoury decisions of their own, see far more worth in the former Manly mentor. I don't think that Holbrook deserved what happened to him but from a purely selfish Titans viewpoint, I think they have made the best decision.

2023-06-25T00:42:29+00:00

Muzz Manyana

Roar Rookie


Garrick has improved more than any other NRL player since making his debut.

2023-06-24T22:59:28+00:00

Fraser

Roar Rookie


This article sounds like wishful thinking Mike. Storm weren't at their best and still only allowed Manly a single try. Melbourne are sitting pretty in equal first. Manly are sliding down the table towards Seibold's favoured position. I don't see how they win another game this season, although the draw is in their favour with Dragons, Tigers, Dogs to play.

2023-06-24T21:23:33+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


To paraphrase you, Mike, 'Storm not as scary at home since Big Three era' is not an idea many would dispute. But they can still give the odd fright from time to time, as Cronulla found out a couple of weeks ago.

2023-06-24T20:52:40+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


I really rate Garrick and reckon he is the style of player that helps change the culture in the Blues. I'd have him on the wing instead of Addo-Carr.

2023-06-24T14:22:20+00:00

Easy target

Roar Rookie


I'm not trying to be a d**k, but were manly the under strength team tonight? I know manly didn't have jake and tom and I'll add saab as well, but Melbourne were playing without tui, katoa, Munster, and papenhyuzen and that's after losing Bromwich brothers, kaufusi and cheese in the off season.

2023-06-24T13:29:27+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


I think the term is de-evolution

2023-06-24T13:27:44+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


Apparently Penn was sick of a coach with extensive finals experience and two premierships and was keen to get someone with a wooden spoon in their short resume

2023-06-24T12:16:10+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Manly fans must be so disappointed in the evolution of Schuster. Siebold just can't unlock the bloke, maybe he should speak to Des at the Titans.

2023-06-24T12:05:53+00:00

Hard Yards

Roar Rookie


Yeah why was Des taken out into the back room and shot again?

2023-06-24T11:46:58+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


For Manly, Garrick was superb. a natural fullback, DCE tried his hardest, Harper has learnt how to tackle, Schuster needs a stint in reserves to learn some basic skills, old Woodsy earnt his money for a change, Croker is a very important cog in their works and the rest did their best but it wasn't enough. Manly were down two of their top stock as were Melbourne so they evened themselves out with the better side winning. A good game to watch.

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