ANALYSIS: Bellamy blasts 'complacent' Storm as Knights boilover breaks 11-game losing streak

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

One of the NRL’s great hoodoos has been broken, with Newcastle producing a mammoth performance to upset Melbourne 26-18, breaking an 11-game losing streak in the process.

Craig Bellamy looked on in disbelief as his side’s campaign for the top four took a serious blow. With a tough stretch ahead of them featuring Parramatta, Penrith and Canberra back to back, this would have been a much-needed win.

The coach raged at his players in the post-match, openly questioning their desire.

“Sometimes you wonder how important it is to them?” he said.

“It was disappointing, it was probably as disappointing a 70 minutes that I can remember, especially that first half. We lacked energy, we lacked enthusiasm, we looked like we lacked communication.

“I’m not quite sure where that initial enthusiasm, aggression and intent went. It was like it just got too hard or we thought it was going to be too easy.

“One thing we pride ourselves on is never getting complacent. That’s not what we’re about and we don’t want to be about that, but I’m not quite sure if that was it.”

Instead, it is Adam O’Brien who takes the spoils. His side had the skill with the ball to get a lead, then, roared on by a raucous home crowd, the desperation to see it home. There have been few more impressive wins in his time in charge in the Hunter than this.

“I’ve said a number of times this week in particular that our best footy has held up against Penrith, it’s held up against Brisbane,” said the coach.

“We’ve come a long way in terms of our resilience, definitely. We’re a tougher footy team than what we were last year. We’re maturing as well.

“We’ve got a really important game next week down in Canberra to keep this going.”

Dane Gagai is the only Knight left from that night in 2015, and even he went away and came back again. Another holdover was Tariq Sims, in Knights colours then and playing for the Storm tonight.

He had a huge hand in the Newcastle victory, albeit inadvertently: his high shot on Jackson Hastings resulted in a ten minute sit down, during which the Knights scored three times.

They had already fought back from 12-0 down in a topsy-turvy first half, as Dom Young and Bradman Best cancelled out a runaway from Nick Meaney and a close range Trent Loeiro barge.

With the man advantage, Kalyn Ponga ruthlessly picked Melbourne apart. Greg Marzhew, Lachlan Fitzgibbon and Mat Croker got the tries, but the superstar fullback was at the heart of it all.

Sims will now likely face a charge, while the Storm might have to do without Reimis Smith, who suffered a suspected torn adductor muscle.

Where has this Newcastle been?

On days like this, it’s hard to understand why Newcastle have been so poor for so long. Looking back over the last two seasons, they’ve often threatened to be really good.

This year they’ve made the error of saving their best performances for the best teams, meaning that they often got no reward for decent efforts: in defeat to Penrith in Golden Point and the Broncos on the last play of the game, Newcastle were much the better team, and were also not far off winning in Townsville and Auckland.

It’s not like this performance had been coming, per se, but it’s never been beyond the Knights to play like this. 

Their style is almost perfect for bringing it to big teams and making their lives difficult, even if it is also a little limited against similar-level opposition.

The back five can be exceptional and go in with the very best. Young and Marzhew will match any wing pairing for out of the backfield, while Best and Dane Gagai are both rep level centres.

The fallacy of Ponga the five eighth has given Newcastle back an elite fullback – and removed a defensive liability – while Jackson Hastings is more than good enough an organiser to keep things ticking over.

Today, the 1-7 were perfect and the rest came off that. The wingers weren’t limited by errors, Ponga played up to price tag and the middle defence did their job, which has been far from a given in 2023. 

As a result, Newcastle comfortably won plays 1, 2 and 3, which freed up the attack to play in the latter half of the set and were able to do the bulk of their work in Melbourne’s half. Their attacking efficiency has never been bad, and up against a 12-man Storm, it was ruthless. 

Storm warning

Much as this kind of performance had been coming from Newcastle, it had been slightly foreshadowed by the Storm, too.

They were second best against the Roosters for 50 minutes last week, but were fortunate enough to face a team that had forgotten how to attack. On another day, they might have found themselves behind.

Prior to that, they were blown away by the Panthers and before that, struggled for another 50 minutes against a bang average Manly, who also, came with zero attack.

There’s always an element of outcome bias that remembers wins better than losses, of course, but those who watch closely might have noticed a side below its best.

Today, the run of play went against the Storm and they were forced to chase. The Knights took their chances and Melbourne gave them plenty, notably when Sims was in the bin.

Game state is a powerful thing in rugby league, not least when you’re an underdog and the home crowd are behind you. The Knights had something to defend and found reserves of energy to make sure that they did.

Bellamy will know that his side have not been at their best. They have time to right that record before it’s too late, but that needs to start now.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-23T03:08:47+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


The difference was it was Newcastle's grand final - lose and their season was over. Storm were just playing to hold onto 4th spot. Newcastle were a desperate team.

2023-07-23T00:12:16+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


You lost Cam Smith. The Storm are in the slow decline as Smith's influence wears off. Storm have a lot of good players and a great coach but Smith was the guy that lead that team and the one who made the premiership treats every year.

2023-07-23T00:08:38+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


New castle have come good since Gamble was permanently at 6 and Ponga back to fullback. Gamble is just what they needed and Ponga was never a 6

2023-07-22T23:06:17+00:00

Abbot

Roar Rookie


It wouldn’t happen, but imagine Munster at 14 bringing 25-30 minute bursts of high energy ad-lib play each half as a roving free licence player. Scary to think the impact that could have!

2023-07-22T22:36:56+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


Coaches with dynamic, attacking , healthy fullbacks are smiling a fair bit at the moment. The attacking moves are ending with a nonevent at the Bunnies and Eagles just like they were at the Chooks . Meanwhile Walsh and Drinkwater are having field days. Ponga as well now it seems. The game is in healthy shape when the most gifted attacking players can show their wares on a regular basis and things are looking pretty handy at the moment.

2023-07-22T20:46:57+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Choppy , I couldn't be happier for Knights fans . Those guys ( and gals) who go to all the Knights home games and stick with them through thick and thin deserve results like this . And because it was the Storm , it was even better. Watching them lose is just so funny. The team get ' dazed and confused ' and Bellemey does his spoilt child. You've made my weekend . ( well that plus us getting over Parra).

2023-07-22T14:46:20+00:00

Luke S

Roar Rookie


Knights played really well and deserved their win. I'm not sure that the Storm were off tonight - I just think the Knights just played well. As a Broncos supporter, thanks to the Knights for keeping your team in with a chance to make the 8 and for keeping the Storm another win away from us! Probably a bit too much to ask the same from the Bulldogs against the Panthers tomorrow....

2023-07-22T14:23:32+00:00

Get_real

Roar Rookie


The first two tries would be worrying for AOB though, looking forward further improvement against the Raiders. The Sims sin bin was too much for the Storm to handle.

2023-07-22T13:17:30+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Good to see from Knights, this how good they can be. They just need to learn, as Melbourne have, how to raise their effort and consistency when needed and often. Next week in desperation round their match with Raiders will be interesting. Storm a little off pace.

2023-07-22T11:15:58+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


There is a distinct lack of a standout team so far this year, and while the Storm are alive they are dangerous. No team would wanna play the Storm in the semis. I'm stoked for the Knights. Seeing the elation of Best, Gamble, Fitz, Jake Siafiti and Adam Elliott was, strangely probably the highlight. Well after Lachlan Fitz's try which was a cracker.

2023-07-22T09:52:31+00:00

Arama

Roar Rookie


Hmmm?! Interesting times as a Storm member, original fan. I believe Bellyache or whoever chose Munster over Nico Hynes made a mistake. For all Munsters other-worldly talent, I believe his ego is hampering the Storm's cohesion. I just don't see the "mental-steel" in this team. Specially when compared to Storm teams of old. Or the Panthers... Interesting reading a while ago, Storm's win percentage is higher with just Huges as opposed to both Huges and Munster. Nothing I've seen this year has proven otherwise. Could still be wrong of course, just my "gut-instinct" or a fact-learned bias...

2023-07-22T09:52:08+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Storm line-speed was poor and plenty of arm-grabbing going on at contact (16 more missed tackles than the Knights). Unless Papenhuyzen returns soon to spark their attack, Storm will be bounced early in the final series.

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