'People talk about who’s not there, but we talk about who is there': How Robbo’s reggies battlers are looking to upset the Storm

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

As recently as April, Paul Momirovski was playing on a pitch without proper goalposts. 

In the midst of a wet weekend in April, the NSW Cup game between North Sydney Bears and Sydney Roosters – both feeders to the same NRL team – was moved to Hills Grammar, with a host of professional players forced to turn out on a field usually reserved for teenagers, replete with hybrid soccer/rugby posts.

This weekend, the circumstances could not be more different. Momirovski, plus Sandon Smith, Junior Pauga and Siua Wong, who also played that day, will be the biggest show in Australia as they travel to AAMI Park for the Roosters’ knockout finals showdown with the Melbourne Storm.

Shorn of stars Joey Manu (hamstring), Joseph Suaalii (concussion), Daniel Tupou (knee) and Billy Smith (jaw), the named backline will be James Tedesco plus four, all of whom have spent more time in the second grade than first in 2023.

Trent Robinson might have been forgiven for giving up hope, but instead, sought to put his faith in the reggies battlers that have put in the work all year to get to this moment.

“They’re uncontrollable,” he said of the injuries in last weekend’s win over Cronulla.

“Suaaliii there was no choice, Joey Manu there was no choice and Billy Smith got operated on yesterday so there was no choice, so no wasted energy on those.

“Guys that we believe in and that have played a lot of footy are coming in. You continue the belief in the squad that you’re going to choose and keep going.

“A lot of people have been talking about who’s not there, but we spend all week talking about who is there, their qualities and what they bring.

“Sometimes their strengths are better than the two Joeys. It’s not about what’s not there, it’s about what is, and then slight adaptations to their skillset. We think we’ve done that and now we need to execute it.”

Momirovski is top of the list of battlers. He has been out since Round 9 with a shoulder injury and bounced between firsts and seconds before that, but has proven experience in the finals having played a Prelim for the Roosters in 2019, been in the squad for Melbourne’s Premiership in 2020 and then won a comp with Penrith in 2021. 

“There’s always been confidence in Momma and that’s why he’s back here,” said Robinson. 

“He’s a Grand Final winner, a big game player for us as well. We’d have liked more games with his shoulder injury but we’re always confident in Momma and what he’s capable of.

“With shoulder surgery, he’s done a lot of running and opposition work against us, pushing the strength and all that to the point where he’s able to get selected. This is the first week that he got ticked off.

“Two weeks ago they highlighted this week to get back ready to play again so that was good timing.

“If he wasn’t going to play with us, he might be playing at North Sydney on Saturday. He was slated to play this week. We’re not rushing anyone back, we’re not putting anybody at risk.”

That link with reserve grade is being tested to the max this weekend with so many first string players, especially in the backline, absent. 

Robinson focused on the importance of players keeping high standard and being ready when their moment comes, as it will this weekend.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

“There’s a big difference between playing reserve grade and playing first grade, and so there should be,” he said. “That’s why we watch elite sport. 

“The fall-off is quite sharp, but you’re still the same person and the belief that you hold, no matter where you play and what you’re working on, is what we talk about.

“We talk about working in the shadows. When no-one’s watching, what work are you doing?

“Guys like Corey Allen and Paul Momorovski have been meticulous all year, whether they’ve been in rehab, reserve grade or first grade.

“They work and work and work. That’s where the belief comes from us, because as soon as you go back in, you don’t have to pump them up. I know they’re ready. They’ve been ready, it’s just we haven’t seen it on the big stage. They’ve been preparing for it for a long time.”

One of those who had successfully made the jump has been forward Terrell May. His performances in the last month have caught they eye, especially in the absence of pack leader Jared Waerea-Hargreaves, with the youngster forced to take on extra minutes to cover injuries and suspensions.

May played the whole second half against Cronulla, which Robinson said was all down to his own improvements, with the coach growing in confidence to leave him on.

“He played 40 minutes the second half against Souths as well, and I needed to lean on him in that game, and I needed to lean on him again last week with the changes,” he said.

“You have a plan and then you keep looking at the player and if it needs to be tweaked. Every time I look at him, he has good energy, good movements. 

“Ten minutes in the second half, then 20 minutes, 30 minutes and he keeps moving. It’s a real credit to him for what he’s done and where he’s come from. 

“He’s been unheralded throughout his juniors as well and he had to work really hard to get into the position he’s in. Now, the rewards are coming.

“He’s a real credit to North Sydney. They put forward guys that they want to train and trial and T turned up for five weeks. 

“That was all he was guaranteed. We were like: ’This guy’s pretty good’, so we extended that.

“We got the point where he was dominating, but couldn’t play first grade because he wasn’t in the top 30. You can’t play before Round 11.

“He was dominating reserve grade, all the stats, everything like that. I think we debuted on the 12th round of the season, as soon as we could play him we played him.

“He’s been a real quiet achiever and his game’s developed. The way he goes about playing the game has been great.

“There’s a lot of train and trials where the hunger of only having one or two weeks (to impress). It’s not a lot of money, they’re on a thousand a week and it could drop off in a week. 

“They don’t have a full time job, they don’t have a base salary and they can go back to nothing. They have to find a job next week and play reserve grade.

“But they’re happy to do that and that hunger – guys either fall off, can’t do it and aren’t good enough or guys grab it. That’s what Terrell did.

“He went from 120kgs to 105kgs in the preseason before he got to us and said ‘I’m hungry to do this’.”

(Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Defeating Melbourne in Melbourne with a backline filled with reserve graders is as big an ask as it comes, but the 2023 Roosters are not daunted. They have been playing knockout footy for over a month to make it this far, culminating in the emotionally draining Sharks win.

Robinson admitted that the effort to sneak home in the Shire took it out of his team, but said that they had tailored their week in order to go again in Victoria.

“It definitely does (take it out of you) so the recovery is very important,” said the coach. 

“You’ve got to make sure you get the energy back that you expended. When someone goes off the field, someone has to take their place so recovering from that. 

“Then also you get energy from it as a team and a club. Your faith in the guys around you starts to rise even more than what it was.

“You get the energy back that you need to go again and also the faith and trust in the guys around you to go again and attack the game.

“We’ve played a lot of semi-final games (with Melbourne) and been toe-to-toe a lot of times, so there’s respect there, but also a hunger to attack each other.

“That’s why they’re memorable games, and that’s no different for this game. If we’re cycling at the top enough we’ll run into each other.

“We really want to go after this game. There is no tomorrow, and that’s been our mantra for a while now. It’s no different. We haven’t looked past this week, we know who we’re playing and we know what we’ve got to do. 

“We emptied the tank last week and we’ll empty it again on Friday.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-20T06:33:30+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Nice try criag. Kensington is south of Redfern which is already defined as South Sydney. For that matter, latitudally speaking, Bondi Junction is as far south of the Sydney CBD as Redfern. We're taking the lot! I'll call Rusty and suggest he uses his considerable influence to get the boundaries corrected again. Thanks for helping to correct this oversight, criag. :silly:

2023-09-20T03:23:46+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


No, “I’ll take your word for it” was a genuine statement and just stating what I was able to find. I was open to be given more accurate info – a concept I know many here are not familiar with.

2023-09-20T03:21:39+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


I looked on the website and the was a dash next to his junior club, but yes, thanks. Kensington United, a club stolen by the Evil Empire of Myths and Lies years ago, before Ron Coote could make his debut at his father’s club, the mighty Tricolours! And of course, it doesn’t change the fact that Smith was developed into a first grade player coming through the Roosters system.

2023-09-15T09:52:28+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


I heard reports that an Armaguard truck was filmed going from Eastern Suburbs Leagues Club to NRL HQ. Could that have anything to do with it do you think? :silly:

2023-09-15T09:34:13+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


I haven’t been able to find anything about any lease amount that the Roosters are paying to use that stadium? Do they actually pay anything at all?

2023-09-15T09:31:21+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Thanks for drawing a 'literal' line through my punchline, BL. I don't have an axe to grind against the Tigers and it was inefficient to my purpose to include the Storm. I had two targets in my sights and hit them both. Catching two kitty cats with one hook is an added bonus. :laughing:

2023-09-15T09:14:19+00:00

blacktown leagues

Roar Rookie


Momorovski was actually at the tigers for a year then done a season in Melbourne in the Harry grant swap, that’s where the panthers signed him from, while contracted to the Tigers in a swap for Dane Laurie and he won a premiership so good move for him.They didn’t steal him off anyone.

2023-09-15T09:10:11+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Redfern oval is closer than Bondi Junction to that stadium. It is built on South Sydney juniors turf. I trained for Chelsea United Eagles across the road. That stadium belongs to the Bunnies. The chooks should be paying us rent.

2023-09-15T09:01:00+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


You were saying about all the times Penrith never made the finals. I remember a lot of those years. I know how you feel with how the Dragons have gone in recent times & then some.

2023-09-15T08:55:13+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


Chooks at $4 the win now

2023-09-15T08:54:23+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


Aahhhh fair enough i didn't realise you were joking - i didnt say much but you kept me going hee hee ..... I'm not very social media savvy and yes the Dragons have made me laugh many times these days but more of a pained version......

2023-09-15T08:43:33+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


How do all the welfare recipients around the South’s main supporter base area afford to go to Sydney Olympic Park so often? They must feel really frustrated at having to go there. Never mind. If South’s ask the Roosters very nicely, the Roosters may let South’s share their shiny new stadium? See , a problem resolved! :laughing:

2023-09-15T08:36:59+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


It was just banter with GB. Which was simply in reply to a comment about Momirovski, being a South’s player. Maybe actually read any comments I’m replying to , before getting too wound up about the other clubs taking Penrith juniors comments. However, I’m sure to place some more comments about other clubs poaching Penrith players now. Especially for you. I was so hoping that you were a Roosters supporter! :laughing: :thumbup:

2023-09-15T04:50:00+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


From 5 yrs old until when, Pickett? Primary school age may teach the basics but the real skills are picked up from high school age. Suualii played for the Coogee Wombats from 12 yrs old. That makes him a South Sydney junior in my book. And we all know my book is the only one I go by. :silly:

2023-09-15T04:41:18+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


It's all just banter Robbo. As a Dragons supporter I would have thought that having a healthy sense of humour and a well stocked liquor cabinet were prerequisites for staying sane. :silly: :thumbup:

2023-09-15T04:36:04+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Yes. Another South Sydney junior lured to Bondi Junction. And you're welcome. :silly:

2023-09-15T03:49:48+00:00

Pickett

Roar Rookie


Joseph Suaallii is prime example. Before Souths and Rugby fans claim him as their junior, he played for the Glenmore Park JRLFC from age 5. He is a Penrith junior.

2023-09-15T03:47:42+00:00

Pickett

Roar Rookie


Kensington United! The junior club of future Immortal, RON COOTE!

2023-09-15T00:14:27+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


No issue with you being a proud supporter - the carry on about everyone taking Penrith's talent is a bit tiresome that's all so I like to bring it back to reality. I'm a St George supporter.

2023-09-15T00:06:44+00:00

Poss

Roar Rookie


I’m so hoping your correct Robbo…But “the Cheese” stirred them up last week by calling them “putrid” after their loss last week so they will be on their best tonight to prove him wrong… And we’ve got so many out..But the Chooks have done it before so here’s hoping…Go the Chookies!!!!! :thumbup:

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