ANALYSIS: Storm overshadow AFL as Warbrick speccy downs brave Roosters - who nearly repeat the fairytale

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

They thought they’d done it again. Sam Walker thought he’d done it again. But this time, the fairytale didn’t have a happy ending for the Roosters.

With 90 seconds to play, Will Warbrick rose highest to clinch a late win for the Storm, grabbing an 18-13 win with a high catch that they would have been proud of over the road at the MCG.

It was crueller than cruel on the Roosters, who had fought so hard to turn a 10-0 to the Storm into 13-12 in their favour, but bow out in dramatic fashion.

Having played knockout footy for two months, Trent Robinson can be incredibly proud to depart now and in this fashion.

Melbourne now travel to Sydney to face the Panthers next week at Accor Stadium, and while they will be huge underdogs, they have proven tonight that the famous fight is still there.

“Heartbroken,” was how Robinson described his emotions. “I feel like we fought really hard to continue on. You believe that you’re going to keep going until right at the end.

“It’s a devastating way to finish, because we felt like we found our team the longer this season went.

“There’s belief in the way that we can defend for the most part and then find our tries. Those guys that have debuted this year and come through in the last year or two have given us energy.

“They’ve really stood up in critical times and that bodes well for the future, but the present ain’t pretty for us as the moment.”

Both sides were ravaged by injury: Jahrome Hughes and Xavier Coates were the headline outs for Melbourne, but they paled in comparison to a Roosters list that included four of their best back five, with Joey Manu, Joseph Suaaliii, Billy Smith and Daniel Tupou all gone.

The Storm then rejigged further, starting Harry Grant and Christian Welch from the bench and elevating Tyran Wishart to Hughes’ role at halfback and Bronson Garlick to the starting XIII.

For the opening quarter, it seemed to have worked a treat: Wishart opened the scoring and played a crucial role in the second try, though not as crucial as referee Ashley Klein, who missed a clear knock on from Grant moments before.

It was looking ominous, but this Roosters team have no quit. They edged forward, then found attacking confidence, then got their points. Brandon Smith, on return to AAMI Park, nicked one, and after the break, Lindsay Collins snuck through.

Walker then repeated his trick from last week in Cronulla, but this time, there was a coda from the Storm.

“I think we made real hard work of it,” said Craig Bellamy.

“It felt like the first 20-30 minutes we were on top, but after that we we’re chasing our tails for a fair bit of it.

“Some of our options were poor and their kicking game was much superior to ours, so that’s something we’ll have to look at for next week.

“I’m really proud of how we stuck in there. It wasn’t pretty, without a doubt, but we needed to come back with a display like that after last week (when the Storm were thrashed by Brisbane). We live to fight another day.”

Melbourne’s Grant play comes off 

Grant was the best on ground, and from the moment he came on, the Storm looked a better side.

Melbourne began with their star hooker on the bench and immediately looked a lot more impactful in attack when he came on – not least his multiple touches in the set that saw Marion Seve score, or, if we’re being fair, the knock on that Klein flat out missed in the build up.

His work out of dummy half was electric, and the Roosters never really got to grips with him. Grant did plenty stood in the line, too, assisting Wishart as an extra half.

The replacement halfback stole the show early on with a smart try and a series of good touches, but was Grant took over, was happy to take more of a backseat.

At the back, Nick Meaney was huge, coming down with dangerous kicks time and again. Walker and Luke Keary gave him a workout, but the fullback was well up to it.

In a game as tight as this one, having a key position player who makes next to no mistakes is a huge win, especially in terms of starting sets and keeping the ball in play. 

When the Storm were on top, it was usually because the game didn’t stop and they won the grind. Meaney continually catching kicks, returning with interest and keeping that flow going was crucial. 

On the last play of the game, as the Roosters tried the short kick off, there was only one man to come down with the ball.

Munster, normally the headline act, was fourth place again. His defence was excellent at times, notably a bell-ringer on Walker and a try saver on Radley, but in attack he underwhelmed again. 

Perhaps the star five eighth focused on playing more like a halfback to accommodate Wishart’s lack of experience – certainly he did the bulk of the kicking, and largely, did it very well. His kick for Warbrick at the end showed just how good Munster can be.

But the feeling that the best weapon Melbourne have remains misfiring remains. Still, a misfiring Munster is a lot better than most people’s five eighth. Every other team left in this series would take him.

The Roosters can be very proud

The general flow of the first half mimicked that of last week’s for the Roosters, especially with the ball. They were pretty clean in possession but utterly unthreatening, with the net results of gradually playing the game in their own half as Melbourne won the grind.

Yet when the Chooks decided to put on some attack, they did look a lot more capable of challenging. 

There were a lot of moving parts that might explain this. For one, both sides are weaker out wide than they are in the middle, so playing more expansively saw the Roosters move the ball into the areas in which the Storm’s defence is weaker. 

For two, the interchanges had a massive impact. When the Storm changed their middles and the Roosters brought on Terrell May, things swapped around entirely. 

May was excellent, as he has been in recent weeks, and began producing second phase that enabled a more threatening Roosters attack. He won rucks, too, which encouraged the Chooks to play wider and get the footy to Corey Allen and Paul Momirovski in the centres.

In the second half, we saw the same pattern. For ten minutes, the Roosters played within themselves, then – off another May offload – kicked into gear again.

Victor Radley was close behind him, not just for his now restrained defence, but also his ball-playing. When the Roosters were best, it was when the offloads were flowing and Radley was passing close to the line.

Ultimately, however, they didn’t have the attack to get it over the line, which might have been expected in light of the backline injuries.

Their goal would have been to keep Melbourne to as low a score as possible, and did a pretty good job of it – not to mention that one of the tries, Seve’s, should never have happened.

Though they depart the finals, the Roosters end on a high note. Nobody outside their four walls expected them to be here and, in the process, they have uncovered a few traits to take forward into 2024.

May is a huge development and Radley is in career best form. Sandon Smith, who never would have got a game had Walker not been dropped, impressed again as a back-up hooker and half. Siua Wong is a superstar in waiting.

Coming into next year, with their stars back, they’ll start as one of the favourites again. Nobody would have said that on the Sunday afternoon at the start of July when they lost to Manly.

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-18T03:25:24+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Yep ! The Panthers targeted him in the 2021 GF when he was on the Souths wing. Munster did the same on Friday night, two years later, with the same success.

2023-09-18T03:18:02+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


You’d think after a few years in the top grade that Paulo's decision making would have improved but no

2023-09-18T02:05:35+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


A bit harsh on Loeiro, Joe. After all, he is easily the best in the NRL at walking forward off the mark in the play the ball ! :silly:

2023-09-18T01:59:24+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Paulo is a proven dud. How he is ever selected in an NRL team is beyond me. He is a mistake-a-thon. He proved it at Souths , and now at the Chooks. I thought the Chooks were the better side and deserved to hang on, but another error from Paulo gave the Storm a chance for a "hail mary" bomb to snatch the win. I thought Collins , Radley & May were exceptional for the Chooks . For the Storm I thought Meaney and Josh King were their best. Harry was dangerous at times and Munster who was ordinary throughout, but as usual grabbed the glory late.

2023-09-17T23:24:56+00:00

Tony Dargon

Roar Guru


Both were poor mistakes, to be sure.

2023-09-17T23:18:11+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


To be fair was Klein's gaffe any worse than Radley's stone cold dropsie to go from defensive pressure earning a 7 tackle set to gifting a 10m attacking scrum? The storm still had to go the length of the field and we conceded a penalty I think on the trip down to compound it.

2023-09-17T21:58:45+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


I think so Tony. He’s on loose change and nobody is trying to poach him. Good depth option.

2023-09-17T21:48:27+00:00

Poss

Roar Rookie


He's fine where he is thankyou Panthers! He is doing such a good job at the chooks..You've got enough good players in your team.. :thumbup:

2023-09-17T21:43:38+00:00

Poss

Roar Rookie


Robbo is all class Cam..He owns the losses & takes it on the chin...I can't say that I'd be that tolerant..Hope we have him for many,many more years.. :thumbup:

2023-09-17T09:53:59+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


And Iremaea.

2023-09-16T20:50:07+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Absolutely too many teams in Sydney. Perhaps in Melbourne as well.

2023-09-16T15:46:18+00:00

zonecadet

Roar Rookie


The New York of Australia can't get 96,000 in total to several NRL games any given weekend. Maybe Sydney doesn't deserve the Tigers, or Sharks or Saints or, or ...

2023-09-16T15:44:29+00:00

zonecadet

Roar Rookie


Would love to see any Sydney NRL side go head-to-head with a 96,000 strong attendance at whatever sport you care to name, just across the road. That's tough competition on public transport, on parking, on just getting there on a Friday night. No, wait, there is no sporting code of any sort that draws 96,000 to a game in Sydney.

2023-09-16T08:03:32+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


Great game Roosters and unlucky to bow out. I thought Trent Robinsons tactics especially bringing in the speedy dummy half against tiring forwards almost won them that game. Whoever won today was going to be facing a flogging next week. Still...glad the Storm made another Prelim. Munster's so called 'big game player' status surely is a myth. Big game last week didn't turn up....lets turn it up a notch this week adding in elimination for the loser...didn't turn up again. and somehow gets the wraps for a brilliant take by Warbrick. Meaney was by far the best Storm player...Grant and Munster were hit and miss. NAS makes a difference in the forwards...the rest are plodders. Loeiro shoudln't be in the team...offers nothing but cart the ball up and tackles. Has to be the least creative 2nd rower in the finals series. Still considering the number of experienced players lost this year and newbies coming on it has to be counted as a successful season for Bellamy and his boys.

2023-09-16T04:03:01+00:00

Tony Dargon

Roar Guru


Yep, they really missed Jennings :laughing:

2023-09-16T02:16:15+00:00

scrum

Roar Rookie


So mrl, big AFL crowds in Adelaide and Perth. A full house at the Gabba for the Lions semi final. Average crowds for the finals to date. NRL 27,000 . For AFL 77,000.

2023-09-16T01:09:47+00:00

Bernie

Roar Rookie


that blind side play was in the end crucial, talk about what if. you can blame refs calls and bad luck, they're out of your hands, but that ball sticks and he carts it well down field, quite likely well away from roosters try line. you can only blame yourself for what really was a simple error. gotta hand it to Robbo really, couple of months ago they looked like feather dusters, but in the end probably a reasonable season.

2023-09-16T00:20:21+00:00

NSWelshman

Roar Rookie


Poor Rorters had players missing boo hoo…..so did the Storm!!! Paps, Hughes, Coates, Tonumaipea, Jennings, Iremaia.

2023-09-16T00:19:30+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Roosters were valiant and Robbo had a game plan designed around the team he had that nearly cam off. That said, I think Melbourne were the better team but for a few handling errors and Klein's whistle. Can't agree that Munster was no good. Grant was certainly good but it was Munster generally scheming, working and selectively kicking them out of trouble. I was enjoying the battle between him and Walker as well. One player making a huge difference is NAS. Pretty much as soon as he went off did the Easts pack start to roll. To that same end, Collins has announced himself in 2023. IMO he would be in the top echelon (5 or 6)of props these days. As a whole though, I don't think either team will make a dint on Penrith by the way they are playing. Hopefully Hughes comes back but they need to lift another level, which they are capable of but unlikely to change form so quickly. Maybe just beat them Panthers up a bit. :silly:

2023-09-16T00:17:07+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


I looked at that final Try several times, and there is something that is being overlooked in Warbrick's effort. Yes the kick was pinpoint with its accuracy and Munster was under enormous pressure, and yes it was a great leap, catch and put down by Warbrick, but I think people overlook the patience and self-control that Warbrick showed to wait for Pauga to fall off the tackle and contest for the ball. If Warbrick had rushed to wrestle control away from Pauga and rip the ball away from his tentative hold of it the ball could have easily come loose in the contest leading to it being ruled a knock on into the defender. To me, it seemed that this was a purposeful decision by Warbrick under immense pressure and with only a split second to react. It showed a maturity and level of experience well beyond a rookie playing in his first season and who is new to the game.

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