The Watchback: How the Storm gave the Panthers a massive fright - and how they can do it again

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

There’s a thing about the Penrith Panthers. They win so much that that, most of the time when you try to isolate flaws in their game plan, what you actually find is examples of how they overcome adversity..

Melbourne learned this the hard way in Round 18. For 25 minutes, they dominated the Panthers and led 14-0, really picking holes in how they operated. It might have been brief, but they worked out the system. 

Trouble is that the Panthers are incredible problem solvers: their confidence in their system is such that they will back it to win out over 80 minutes, and will lean on their leaders to work out the path to victory.

They also have strike everywhere, which is what happened here. Penrith stuck at Plan A for long enough that they built pressure, before Izack Tago produced several moments that squared the ledger. In the second half, they ran over the top of the Storm.

With the pair set to meet in Friday night’s Preliminary Final, it’s highly likely that Craig Bellamy will have his analysts cutting tape of that opening period, ready to show the Storm boys how they, for a short time at least, rattled the unrattleable.

As a tactical guide to how the Prelim might unfold, it’s worth another look.

But first, the caveats: this was a Panthers without Nathan Cleary, who was injured. It was between Origins 2 and 3, so though nobody was backing up or missing out, there were five tired bodies in Panthers pink and three who had played for the Storm. 

It was also under the roof at Marvel Stadium, with the commentators regularly mentioning the dew on the ball, which affected both sides but the Panthers particularly badly. 

Still, Melbourne were perfect in the opening stages and, really should have gone on. How?

Bellamy clearly wanted the team to begin with exceptional line speed, usually the Panthers’ best weapon, and to attack at an above-average pace too. 

The intensity from Melbourne was relentless and forced four errors in 20 minutes out of Penrith – and this is a team that average eight in a whole game. They only make three more in the hour that follows.

Indeed, the desire to play fast limits Melbourne, too. Nelson Asofa-Solomona makes a play the ball error at one point, planting the ball to get through more quickly, and Harry Grant throws a borderline forward pass under no pressure in an effort to hurry along his work. It’s nominally bad things, but speaks to the mentality that the Storm brought.

There’s endeavour, too. They force four offloads to Penrith’s one, in a team that usually doesn’t excel in that discipline. The Panthers, as Parramatta have repeatedly shown, suffer in second phase and it’s something that the Storm have thought about. 

They’re also running a lot of traffic, decoys and supports, with Nick Meaney in particular noticeable around the ruck. It’s all the things that you have to do to beat the Panthers.

Grant was the standout in terms of leading the intensity. Within 90 seconds, he’s in a push-and-shove with Jarome Luai following a late tackle on Jahrome Hughes as he kicked the ball.

It’s a pretty harsh penalty call on the Panthers, and certainly not worth Grant failing to chase a kick to get in a scrap with an opponent, but he does it anyway. 

Having seen him do the same in the opening set of the Storm’s finals loss to the Broncos, tussling with Pat Carrigan, it’s hard not to think of Grant as having premeditated the incident, or at least lowered his threshold in an attempt to generate an early excuse to ratchet up the intensity.

The hooker is the one leading the line speed too. After Melbourne take an early penalty goal following the Hughes incident, Penrith get a penalty and do a two-man shift off the tap. 

Grant’s there, right in Isaah Yeo’s face, forcing the pass to go behind, where Moses Leota drops the ball. 

Credit: NRL/Nine

The desire from Bellamy to up the tempo and throw the Panthers off their game was everywhere to be seen. 

To that end, he swapped Tui Kamikamica to the bench and started with Tariq Sims in the middle.

Sims only began tour games all year – including the last round, when almost everyone was rested – but he was crucial to getting the Storm off on the front foot. 

He had four carries for 32m – nothing to write home about – but half of those metres were post-contact. 

Watching the tape, he’d clearly been told to engage high on the bodies of the tacklers, then get the legs pumping to win the ruck.

In defence, Sims was at the forefront of the line and forced errors through his work getting out around the ruck, with Moses Leota the recipient of his treatment.

Bellamy also started Nelson Asofa-Solomona as an edge for just the second time all year and, like Sims, one of only four times in 2023 where he was given that role.

This was right up there with his best showings of the season, with huge impacts both in attack and defence. He topped both the runs and the metres through half an hour – remember, while theoretically being a backrower – and scored a try of his.

Off the ball, there was a clear remit to intimidate Isaah Yeo and remove his ball-playing to the left. 

This came to the fore in the Panthers’ first good ball set. On play two, Nelson crunches the lock and, two plays later, when the ball threatens to come his way again, Yeo plays inside to a forward, without engaging the line on fourth tackle, with shape set up outside. 

This very, very rarely happens, and you’d have to deduce that it’s a result of being leathered the last time he touched the footy.

On the fifth, there’s Nelson again, kick pressuring Luai into a poor effort that goes well dead.

“It’s not the worst set of six I’ve ever seen,” said Phil Gould on the commentary. “But it’s in the finals.”

If that was terrible, the next set from Melbourne might well have been perfect. From the 20m tap, they play entirely on the right hand side of the field, repeatedly hitting the same defenders, before Tom Eisenhuth – fresh on for Sims – breaks the line.

Crucially, Grant is behind every play the ball and directs all of the first three tackles at Luai, before taking him on himself, creating the space that Hughes uses to put Eisenhuth through.

Dylan Edwards makes the tackle, but Grant takes the attack back right again, shifting against an unset line. Reimis Smith pokes through and offloads to Asofa-Solomona, with Luai again the man unable to make the tackle. Who could blame him? He was spotted up constantly.

It was a theme throughout. The five eighth averages 15 per game but was already halfway there by the time the try was scored, in the 24th minute, and had missed five, twice his usual tally.

The set after points is actually very good, with four forward hit-ups, a 50m gain and a Cameron Munster that cages Edwards, who can only catch and be tackled.

On the next possession, Will Warbrock makes a yardage error and all their momentum goes up in smoke – and never comes back. The door opens a crack.

The next set, Cameron Munster kicks early to try and reassert the field position, but two set restarts follow and Stephen Crichton is pushed off the ball in an attempt to score for a penalty try. Off the next set, Tago scores with another restart in the middle of the set.

Melbourne crucify themselves. A yardage error, ruck penalties and foul play, all largely under little pressure, kick the door wide open.

From the 25th minute to the break, Melbourne then make four errors, starving themselves of possession. They get five sets – and only complete three – while the Panthers go 11/11 and score three times.

For the first period, when the Storm were on top, they had 55% of the territory and 57% of the ball. They’re great value for a 14-0 lead.

In the second half the first half, it’s 66% position, 62% possession the other way. The Panthers system kicks in and the strange begins, forcing defensive errors and you know the rest.

The point to follow is why this happened, and if it can be replicated for longer than 25 minutes.

Obviously, making errors in yardage then giving away a rake of six agains doesn’t help. This is not a team against which there is much room for mistakes. 

The less obvious parts might surround fitness and mentality. 

Firstly, the Panthers know exactly what they’re going to do, and challenge other slides to go with them. Melbourne don’t play at that pace every week and couldn’t keep it up.

Credit: NRL/Nine

By the time the Panthers score with 30 seconds of the half to go, Asofa-Solomona is walking, visibly gassed, in no man’s land. He’s there in the yellow boots.

There’s still a few bits to go wrong yet, but the kick falls to Smith, who flicks to Martin for the try.

It was a huge psychological blow. Had Melbourne made it to the break, all bets would have been off. 

The Storm could have got their breath back and regrouped, while Ivan Cleary would have been in a rare situation, where he would either have to deviate from Plan A or double down on it. 

When they’re sat doing video this week, Bellamy will be battering this 25 minute passage into the brains of his troops, to counteract those physical and mental deficiencies.

He can prove that this kind of strategy can work and that they have the skill and physicality to really disrupt Penrith. He can show them all the good stuff.

Then, he can ram home how close they came. Ten minutes of clean footy was all they needed. It’s been done. It can be done again.

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-20T12:37:49+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


I watched the Irish Rugby union team the other day. They remind me of the Panthers in that they are working to a plan, are relentless, are intelligent in their decision making and have a brilliant spine. They also have extremely busy hardworking wingers.

2023-09-20T11:47:23+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I struggle to ever write off the Storm. Even though this year is a supposed ‘down’ year they still made the top four and at worst the final four But geez this would have to be a massive turnaround The Storm have Munster out of sorts - and possibly injured and Hughes playing on one leg. Their three quarter line has been shuffled and re-shuffled. They were bashed against the Broncos and then had a tough 80 minuter against the Roosters The Panthers are settled and coming off a week’s rest and a comprehensive dismantling of the Warriors who went on to flog the Knights Maybe this is setting up for the ambush of the century? I don’t think the Storm forwards can go toe to toe with the Panthers for 80 minutes. They’re very good players and honest but NAS is the only one who’ll match the Panthers aggression, but he only plays for 45-50 minutes. There a sameness to Welch, King, Kamikamica, Eisenhuth I think this will be a replay of the last couple of tabes between these two. Melbourne matching them early, maybe even leading, but the Panthers going away down the straight, hands and heels

2023-09-20T11:35:00+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Yeah, outside the first 20 minutes I remember that game as a demolition. Ditto their next clash a few weeks later

2023-09-20T09:24:03+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


An upset could be on the cards.. the Storm have been playing way under their capabilities.

2023-09-20T06:47:41+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


The bench forwards of Smith and Leniu are a huge advantage also; they maintain the intensity.

2023-09-20T06:45:02+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


And Penrith coming off a week off..

2023-09-20T06:42:48+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


They are also more aggressive. Not in a ‘cheap shot’ way, but using the defensive sets to bash their opponents legally, hitting them hard in defence. Can only occur because of the outside backs making the yards and the kickers boxing them in. It’s a perfect symbiotic game plan..

2023-09-20T03:56:59+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Great writing Pomoz, you had me galloping thru the points. And you are right, Penrith are extremely tough, but also smaller compared to most packs. They can outlast the opposition fitness wise and are faster. Added to that the carry back by the outside backs gives those forwards a breather.

2023-09-20T03:39:27+00:00

Artesia

Roar Rookie


I felt the same. I had not seriously entertained the idea of the threepeat until that night. If we could come back and win that game, then anything would be possible. My attitude is to respect all, fear none. I do not doubt that Melbourne can win Noone is unbeatable. I want Penrith to win. Guess we will know on Friday night.

2023-09-20T03:18:00+00:00

Pomoz

Roar Rookie


Foreman vs Ali. The rumble in the jungle. Fast forward to the mangling in Melbourne. The Storm threw everything they had, the Panthers were pinned to the ropes getting battered. They smashed the Panthers to pulp for 30 minutes, throwing haymakers like the legendary Foreman. That tackle on Yeo cut him in half. It must have hurt. All they needed to do was maintain that for 80 minutes, 15 rounds. With Ali they used to only talk about his skill, not his toughness and fitness. As he proved repeatedly, the man was nails hard and a superb athlete in his prime. The Panthers? Nobody talks much about the Panther's fitness and toughness. Its all about their defence, their kicking and the star halfback. They were getting smashed, pinned to the ropes taking massive body shots. Then as the Storm tired, they raised their intensity to "eleven" and the Storm had nothing left in the tank. They had punched themselves out. A half time rest wasn't enough to recharge. Their cornerman did everything thing they could. The Panthers were too tough, too fit and just too ornery to let up and finished them off in the second half. Mike has focused on a blueprint to beat the Panthers. I saw it differently. The Storm were at their home ground, Cleary was missing, they had the perfect start. That night was the first time I though a threepeat could be possible. The toughness under duress during that 30 minutes of intense football by the Storm, highlighted the qualities of the team more than any 40 point flogging.

2023-09-20T03:16:31+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


Have you thought about becoming a coach, Mike? You seem to understand the game better than most.

2023-09-20T02:35:17+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Brilliant Gordon. That would have been wonderful. In Jaisalmer there is a family of Bhopal Gypsies who I know. In their small house they have 11 boys, all of whom are named after Australian cricketers. There’s Warnie, Gillie, Ponting etc. Hilarious. I’m fairly certain there will be no Cleary or To’o’s here and I’ll be the only Panthers fan amongst 1.6 billion people.

2023-09-20T01:47:27+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Your comment about where you're going to watching the football took me back to 1999, when Australia played Pakistan in the cricket World Cup final. I was in Turkey in a town called Izmir and managed to track down the only bar that had the match on TV. I was the only Aussie amongst a lot of Pakistani expats and we had a terrific day, but the locals had no idea about cricket.

2023-09-20T01:24:46+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


That’s a fair analysis I reckon. A refreshed Kenny is also a huge plus for the defence. He is an awesome defender.

2023-09-20T00:15:19+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


This is a great piece of analysis and one which most NRL coaches would be proud of, assuming they were this articulate. That said, I'm trying to work out how a team with a defensive record 150 worse, can win this game? I think both attacks can match each other if both play to the very best of their abilities, so it comes down to how well each defence plays and that's the huge edge the Panthers have. If both attacks are going at it hard, the Storm defence is simply not as good as the Panthers. Melbourne can still win by making sure Penrith has an off day, but if they do, I reckon they'd have played their grand final a week early.

2023-09-19T23:24:32+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Rugby League is a problem solving industry. Very few participants gain an honours degree. Panthers and Premierships renew their vows every year.

2023-09-19T22:28:20+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Just a few aspects of that match to be remembered , the match was played in Melbourne, the Panthers were missing halfback Cleary , the Panthers still scored 6 tries to 2, the Panthers were in front by halftime, and Melbourne were held scoreless for the last 60 minutes . On Friday the match will be in Sydney, Cleary will be playing and Panthers likely to be at full strength or near so ( query on Luai or Cogger ?).

2023-09-19T21:54:12+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Very interesting analysis. Whenever Michael Ennis is commentating a Panthers game I watch with the sound down. Life’s too short. Anyway, it shows a very different game in silence. I often see the looks of shock on the oppositions faces. The Penrith speed is a kind of blitzkrieg that overwhelms teams. I’m sure the strategy you have outlined will be tried again but I’m also sure Penrith will be primed for it. I do worry that your analysis shows how Luai’s shoulder could be a liability. Anyway I travel to Jaisalmer in Rajasthan today safe in the knowledge I’ll be the only Penrith supporter ever watching an NRL game in the 700 year old history of Jaisalmer Fort.

2023-09-19T21:00:20+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Nice analysis; I am backing Melbourne for the upset if Hughes is in the team. Barring injuries, the Storm have had some nice preparation - most of them rested in the last week of the regular season, then a torrid game against Brisbane to wake them up a bit, and some great tough and skillful footy to get over the Roosters, who played perhaps their best footy of the year in that loss. It feels like they are building to something.

2023-09-19T19:48:55+00:00

The Sporacle

Roar Rookie


That's the difference Mike, as you pointed out. The Panthers have a system they can implement and sustain for 80 minutes. The Storm have a way to create a crack and then exploit it, can't sustain that intensity though. It should be a great game and I'm sure Bellamy will have them primed. Panthers by 12 :thumbup:

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar