ANALYSIS: Brisbane smash Parra, all but ending their Finals hopes - and Moses' season over with fractured eye socket

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

It had all been going so well for Parramatta. For 20 minutes, they were more than the equal of the Broncos and looked like offering a stiff challenge to one of the big Premiership contenders and, perhaps, giving their own Finals hopes a massive boost in the process.

Then, as has happened so frequently this year, it all fell apart. Brisbane blew the game open with four tries – some brilliant, some highly avoidable – and that was that. 24-0 at half time and Brad Arthur’s hopes of another tilt at the Grand Final disappearing into the Queensland night.

It wasn’t just that his side were beaten. He also lost Mitchell Moses, most likely for the season, with a fractured eye socket. He had sustained the injury in the opening stages, but soldiered on until half time and had to be convinced not to come out for the second half.

With the game gone, there was little point risking further injury to the Eels’ most influential player. In the second half, they lost Andrew Davey and Daejarn Asi to head knocks, too.

“We were beaten by a time that was too good for us,” said Arthur. “We had some carnage and they were too good.

“It makes it tough but we’re not giving up. We’re still fighting until it’s over. We’ve got two games and we’re going to fight on. This team has been fighting all year and we’ll continue fighting.”

For Brisbane, this was another underlining of their credentials. Reece Walsh, Ezra Mam, Herbie Farnworth and, somewhat surprisingly, Billy Walters were their stars, far too good for Parra’s defence.

Adam Reynolds, too, became just the second player to 1000 goals in the NRL, following Cameron Smith.

Kevin Walters, of course, will be happier about the points against than the points for. He knows that the defence will terrify the Panthers – and, as is increasingly becoming clear, that is the only contest that matters in 2023.

“For me, this team works best going one week at a time,” he said. “We tried a little block period and it didn’t work so well, so we’ll go one week at a time. 

“I keep telling anyone who wants to listen that we don’t know where our cap is, but we’re going to find it before the year’s out, that’s for sure.”

Where did it all go wrong for Parra?

There’s a temptation to look at this Parramatta team and wonder what might have been. They had a shocker of a draw to start the season – one of the absolute toughest imaginable – that got them off on the wrong foot, which was then backed up by a combination of injuries, suspensions and off-field drama that ensured Arthur never had the best options to choose from.

There are certainly things that have gone very wrong: Dylan Brown’s incident, dual suspensions to Maika Sivo and Reagan Campbell-Gillard and their best players getting called into Origin for their most important game of the year. 

If Parra make the Finals – and it’s not impossible – then they’ll see it as a win for the year given all that has happened. But with 11 wins on the board, two rounds to play and the Roosters and Panthers standing between the Eels and the magic number of 13 wins, it doesn’t seem overly likely.

Beyond the wins and losses, this was an example of why Parra won’t do anything this year.

Their middle remains a weakness defensively, with no ability to stop the roll or halt the offloads of the Broncos. That’s been there since last year.

Moreover, it’s built into the way that Arthur plays footy: so much salary cap is invested in RCG and Junior Paulo as his long-minute options, but it really hasn’t worked.

The pair have only started together eight times this year, and even when they do, they are invariably left on too long. The interchange policy is always suspect.

Today, Brisbane built fatigue on fatigue and exploited it late in the half. Paulo was given his spell seconds after the first try. Walters waltzed past Ryan Matterson, who looked knackered – but had only been on the field for four minutes. 

Late half collapses have been a hallmark of Parra’s worst footy for several years. They were killed by it again tonight. 

Brisbane knew that if they kept their cool, the points would follow. Parra, as has been the case for two years and perhaps longer, need to dominate possession to have the energy to last the full 40 minutes. In the first half tonight, they had just 38%.

Though the points didn’t come until later, the possession split was that all along – and that’s before factoring in the offloads, which were 7-1. 

Arthur talks about ‘physicality’ constantly. You can only be physical for so long when you don’t have the ball. That’s the way to beat Parra, and everyone knows it.

How good can Brisbane be?

When trying to work out the level of a side, it’s worth thinking about the different ways they can get through a game.

Brisbane, clearly, are one of those who have more than one way of winning, and that makes them one of the best. 

Their defence, as pointed out last week by Todd Payten at the Cowboys and evidenced by just two line breaks against tonight, is right up there with the best. They faced two sides that throw plenty and gave them next to nothing.

On other occasions, it’s been the attack that has ended games early, particularly through the exuberance of Walsh and Mam playing in shape and the strike of Farnworth on the edge.

At the start of the year, it was sometimes the kicking of Adam Reynolds that unpicked defences when the best of the attack wasn’t always firing.

Cast your mind back to the opening month or so and there was a feeling that even though the Broncos were winning, they were a little lucky in how they did it, a feeling that was compounded by defeats to contenders just before Origin that positioned Brisbane just below the level of the very best.

Now, in the fullness of time, Walters has been vindicated. Last year’s Brisbane were tasked with improving the defence and becoming a highly transitional, efficient side. Now, they’ve taken that and added real flair with the ball. It’s impressive stuff.

Tonight it was both in the same game. They got into the cycle and kept Parra having to work hard, then outlasted them to get results. 

The first try was excellent heads-up play from Walsh, Kurt Capewell and Reynolds and the third an extravagant scrum play that got Deine Mariner over. The second and fourth, however, were essentially caused by a defence that had strangled the Eels and induced tiredness and mistakes.

It was near-perfect stuff from the Broncos. They’re Penrith’s biggest threat this year.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-13T03:20:50+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I've no issue with coaches getting pushed but I tried to put myself in Arthur's shoes when I made my comment. I'd be seriously annoyed if the Parra CEO or whoever sacked me, given all the issues (and more) that have happened to the Eels this year. If those were the reasons given, I'm guessing Arthur would probably be hiring a lawyer who specializes in unfair dismissals - assuming that bit of Law applies to the NRL.

2023-08-12T11:27:45+00:00

Kurt S

Roar Pro


Fluked a grand final, eh? Care to explain that a little more? Anyone who makes it to a GF deserves to be there. Suggesting otherwise discredits the whole of the league.

2023-08-12T10:59:23+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Who were they? Tell me!! :stoked:

2023-08-12T10:37:19+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


They’ve been doing that for a decade

2023-08-12T10:20:21+00:00

E-Meter

Roar Rookie


We fluked the grand final and got roundly smashed. It could be anyone for all I care. He has got nothing left. Did you hear his press conference? Embarrassing. Our attitude was ON. Thanks BA you’ve done all you can.

2023-08-12T09:33:28+00:00

Ghosthound

Roar Rookie


So you want to sack the coach that took your team to the grand final year because…? And, who replaces him?

2023-08-12T03:02:04+00:00

E-Meter

Roar Rookie


Nup. He has had a fair go at it. Time to move on.

2023-08-12T01:46:37+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Those couple of passes to space that Mariner ran onto was brilliant footy. Just so good to watch and undefendable. Where are the Kevvie can't coach brigade now ? Yeah , you know who you are.

2023-08-12T00:19:09+00:00

dogs

Roar Rookie


Think it's also been Simonson's best season to date.

2023-08-12T00:16:09+00:00

dogs

Roar Rookie


Walters was playing his best game of the season, and was so given heaps more minutes than usual (good coaching). Also been impressed with Smoothy's last month or so, think they're one of the best dummy half pairings in the comp.

2023-08-11T23:53:54+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


Parramatta are currently at the same level, at best as St George who they beat last week on the back of a refereeing error and were flogged the week before by Melbourne. Wouldn’t be going off yet.

2023-08-11T23:19:54+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


Broncs have the forwards to match it with Penrith. If they can do that, and their attack clicks, then they might just be able to break down the Panthers brick wall defence.

2023-08-11T23:18:39+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Looking great Brisbane! If Melbourne can't go all the way I'll be cheering the Broncs in the GF and they really do seem to have the cattle and the game plan to do it. Credit to K Walters though - remember what they were like when he took the job on? It felt like it was going to take a decade to make them competitive. He's done a lot with this team in a very short amount of time.

2023-08-11T23:15:01+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Mariner can run on water.

2023-08-11T22:20:34+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


"Cast your mind back to the opening month or so and there was a feeling that even though the Broncos were winning, they were a little lucky in how they did it," Well I don't think that is true. WE were playing just as well, you just didn't rate the team. I am kind of disappointed with that in the end, which is not fair on the players really given the score, but it could have been a much bigger flogging. That ruthless streak isn't there yet, to just keep playing and scoring. That is the sort of game Bennett would be tearing shreds off the players afterwards. But our attack is looking great, and more importantly, looking like a Broncs team of old. That is down to Kevie I think. The defence is good as well. Bring on the Storm then September

2023-08-11T22:14:49+00:00

Lance Boil

Roar Rookie


I thought the first twenty minutes was most enjoyable . All that territory and Nicks, Nada , Bugger All. No Panic, No break down of defensive set up just a willingness to weather the storm. They knew they were going to be alright and it looked obvious to me at least. Their attacking chops are the best in the competition right now make the Panthers look predictable.

2023-08-11T22:02:12+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Yes, Penrith seem to break oppositions systems down with the speed of their play. It's a blitzkrieg. In Brisbane's case, they are extremely fast as well and Reece Walsh in particular last night seems to find some great angles either with the inside runner or the cut out pass to a winger. It might come down to the famous quote from Tyson - 'everyones got a plan until they are punched in the mouth'.

2023-08-11T21:56:01+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I don’t know I think with guys like Moses, Gutho, Brown, RCG, Paulo, Hopgood, Pen.isini, Sivo, Russell, Lane, Matterson there’s the core of a good side there. They do fall off a cliff pretty quickly from there. There’s heaps of players who look like journeyman first graders rather than elite squad players. The big question is how much of their cap do they have to sign a centre, hooker, prop… or do they have young blokes coming through It’s also a weird balanced squad. They’ve got so many edge forwards. Cartwright, Lane, Davey, Matterson, Doorey and barely depth in the middle. They’d slotted Matterson into the mobile 13 role, but then signed Hopgood I rate Matterson but he’s moving between roles and not looking like he fits in anywhere As someone said above they’ve had a pretty tough draw and a lot of injuries. The first third of the season they kept having narrow losses to good teams. Unfortunately when the draw softened for them a little, the narrow losses continued

2023-08-11T21:54:40+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Full credit to Moses for sticking it out till half time with a broken bone in his face. I didn't think he was that tough but clearly, he is. The question posed "how good can Brisbane be" should be focused on defence, not attack. Mike made the comment "the defence will terrify the Panthers – and, as is increasingly becoming clear, that is the only contest that matters in 2023." That is exactly right because the Panthers game is based on stifling defence and the ability to take their opportunities in grinding games of football. This was a great exhibition of attacking footy by the Broncos last night but anyone who thinks a repeat is on the cards if/when they play the Panthers is likely to be very disappointed. The peak the Broncos need to find is in defence, not attack - not if they want to win the premiership this year, that is.

2023-08-11T21:45:57+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


So, it's the coaches' fault the team had a terrible draw, lots of injuries to key players, suspensions, the Dylan Brown incident, etc, etc?

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