Smart Signings: The Bulldogs have signed so many players - so why haven't they solved their biggest problem?

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

With the Finals over and the November 1 contract deadline passed, we can officially declare the NRL’s silly season open.

Into the morass of gossip and conjecture, we will bring sanity, with the relaunch of Smart Signings, our dissection of where clubs are weak, what they need to improve and where they might find it. Expect stats, profiles and insights, with options that are available and realistic. Don’t expect rumours.

There’s a theory in recruitment that the best players that you have are the ones you have got. Coaching, not spending, is often the secret. 

In 2023, Andrew Webster, who transformed the Warriors, did so with a side that wasn’t a million miles away from that which finished down the bottom the year before.

In 2022, Todd Payten did something similar with the Cowboys, using the off-season to improve those that he had a little more than he looked to bring outside faces in. 

The Bulldogs, however, take a more maximalist approach. Phil Gould loves the limelight and nothing says limelight more than a rake of signings, each more fantastic than the last.

There was a fair bit of surgery needed after the Trent Barrett debacle, for sure, but even so, the rosters movements have been quite extreme. 

Of the 17 that played his last game, Magic Round 2022, only Matt Burton, Max King, Chris Patolo and Josh Addo-Carr are still in the Top 30. 

For reference, 15 of the 17 Cronulla Sharks that played that same weekend are still there 18 months on, and the two that aren’t, Aiden Tolman and Wade Graham, have retired. 

One might question the utility – and we’ll get to the utilities – of keeping on a team that was rubbish, but rugby league is fundamentally a systems sport and it’s basically impossible to build a system when you keep changing the parts.

Cameron Ciraldo knows this, because he’s from the ultimate systems background at Penrith, and much as he refuted any attempts to paint it like this, he also knows it because of the hard experience of 2023, where he never got the chance to put a proper team on the field until it was too late.

The line on injuries is that everyone gets them, and that squads exist to cope with them, but the truth is that not everyone gets them at the same time and in the same position.

At the end of April, for example, Canterbury had a ridiculous number of forwards out, with starting front rowers, Max King and Luke Thompson, plus back-ups Franklin Pele and Patolo, as well as both starting wingers, Addo-Carr and Jacob Kiraz. 

The Dogs likely needed a lot to go right to improve in Ciraldo’s first year, and largely, it didn’t – and often for reasons that weren’t really in their control. 

Given that, the signing spree for 2024 does seem a bit strange. Canterbury have added several players who clearly strengthen their first 13, with Stephen Crichton and Josh Curran likely to step right in, but have also signed a huge raft of utility players without any great emphasis on quality or an articulated strategy of where they will play.

Blake Taaffe, for example, is in – but Crichton moved to Belmore to play fullback. Is Taaffe a back-up or does he play as a half? If he does, what about Toby Sexton, who they only signed late last year and looked pretty good in the 7. 

Or Drew Hutchison, who is a half, a centre or a hooker, or Jaeman Salmon, who is a five eighth and a backrower, or Kurt Mann, the combination lock/half/whatever?

Bronson Xerri is also back and might be a starting centre, but he hasn’t played in years. Kiraz finished 2022 as a centre, and they extended Blake Wilson, a winger, and signed Jake Turpin, a back-up hooker to Reed Mahoney, who never goes off the field. Confused? 

Despite adding 25 new players in 18 months, the Dogs are yet to solve the single biggest issue that they have had the entire time, which is a lack of forward power through the middle.

Matt Burton. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Between Luke Thompson’s constant injuries and Tevita Pangai jnr’s raging inconsistency, they’ve never found a solution in the starting pack and, as a result, were stone motherless last for both run metres gained last year.

It’s ironic, because under Barrett, the Dogs were actually great at getting up the park – they just never scored. Now, they can’t get up the park.

Defensively, they were third worst for metres conceded, second worst for line breaks conceded and absolutely the worst, by a margin, for tries conceded. 

As it stands at time of writing, their forward rotation is Max King and Ryan Sutton, with Chris Patolo, Poasa Faamausili and Liam Knight, augmented by Isaac Matalavea-Booth and Kitione Kautoga.

Raymond Faitala-Mariner, who could have filled in at lock, is persona non grata at training and will be gone as soon as they can find someone to take over his contract.

King is a solid first grader, especially defensively. That’s the good part. After that, things go south.

Sutton is a decent bench option but was dropped last year and has done all his best work as a lock, not a prop. 

Faamausili is onto his fifth NRL club in as many seasons and has never locked down an NRL jumper, while Knight hasn’t been a regular presence since 2020 at Souths.

Patolo is proven not to be good enough at this level as anything more than a backup and Matalavea-Booth nor Kautoga have one first grade game between them.

Smart Signings has never been easier. They need experienced middle, and fast.

The good news is that this is an area with options. The Dogs might well chance their arm in the Addin Fonua-Blake sweepstakes for 2025, but failing that, they can pick up real middle talent right now.

Jacob Saifiti isn’t quite at AFB’s level, but he’s far better than what the Bulldogs have and, if they could convince him to part with his brother at Newcastle, he’d be a superb fit for a team absolutely crying out for a leader.

The November 1 list also includes Tom Burgess and Braden Hamlin-Uele, both of whom would pretty much instantly become the best prop at the club overnight.

Hamlin-Uele is the best statistical pick: he’s fifth in the NRL for metres per run and provides a nice attacking-focussed counterpoint to King’s defensive solidity. It’s a pairing that could certainly work.

He’s also 28, 99 appearances into his career and entering his prime as a prop. The Dogs would offer him far more financially than the Sharks and should be busting their backsides to do so.

Burgess will likely have his eyes on a return to England come the end of the year, but Gould could certainly make him an offer to change his mind. Lord knows, his type is what they need.

Braden Hamlin-Uele is rounded up by Marata Niukore. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Smart Signings favourite Martin Taupau is also more than available and – for what it’s worth – actually lives pretty close to Belmore when he’s in Sydney. That’s not data, but it does go a long way when you need a culture leader, an old head and someone who add grunt to a weak middle.

If it’s not experience the Dogs are after, they’d do well to look at Parramatta, who can only offer bench and depth minutes to Jirah Momoisea and Ofahiki Ogden, both of whom would be upgrades on what they currently have.

The Eels want Addo-Carr, too, and getting him off their salary cap would allow for a better crack at AFB, without shedding too much given how many backs the Dogs have on the books.

They actually chatted about a deal for Ryan Matterson, though if the plan was to really aim at the stars then Reagan Campbell-Gillard, off in 2025, would be the better option.

The Dragons are rebuilding, too, and both Molo brothers would currently walk into the Bulldogs’ side. New coach Shane Flanagan has made it known that deals are there to be done, and he and Gould know each other well.

Amazingly, the Dogs still have Top 30 spots if they want to use them despite signing so many players, and it’s quite astounding that they have managed to add so many without really bolstering their weakest area at all.

There’s still time for that to change – and Gus loves a deal. Make it happen, Bulldogs.

The Crowd Says:

2023-11-26T00:01:27+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


Kikau didn't seem too interested after coming back in late 2023. Pele has to get in this team in 2024 to give them some go forward.

2023-11-14T00:24:00+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Well it seems they must have a pretty long NRL gestation period ? :silly:

2023-11-13T17:14:03+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Not so sure about that? Look at their results in junior & lower grades last season. They did pretty well. Those are the places you build the club from ground up.

2023-11-13T00:28:53+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Well it sounds like the wrong people are running these junior programmes, as they are finding and developing very little it seems ?

2023-11-11T11:21:47+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Rorting by some of their best players leaving each year? Or by not trying to buy competitions? Anything they’ve achieved for a few years only , they’ve earned. Who’s South’s going to take over next ? All the rest of the best junior league playing high schools in Queensland, or the clubs in North Queensland? :thumbup:

2023-11-11T05:34:36+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


I might be wrong but I believe clubs could pay a coach as much as they want? If this is the case and Ivan The Wonderful is considered the main reason why the Panthers have been so good then surely he is priceless and should command ridiculous money? Trouble is the clubs must be aware by now that recruiting these Super Coaches typically doesn't achieve the results they expect. I'm glad Cleary is sticking it to his critics but they now run the risk of going too far the other way.

2023-11-11T04:23:04+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


As Penrith lost a very good prop. Then they still have 2 roster positions available . Mariner , an experienced former club captain from another club may fit right in? He’d have 3 Kiwi mates there in the forwards altogether.

2023-11-11T03:54:57+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


A change of rules may have assisted, with 6 agains coming in in 2020. It definitely assisted squads that had smaller forwards. A change of mindset is a definite. Wanting to work harder in defence & for the players around you , as well as a pick up in fitness levels . All assisted in a better level of play . Of course there are some talented players there , just as there are in most clubs. Having a good halfback is a must, as is the rest of the spine . ( Many still had doubts about Nathan Cleary , until the last GF ). You can’t teach the will to win , it comes from getting some success & then knowing what it takes to win. Plus then being determined to win more. Yet I show you players not thought of as worth keeping at previous clubs as well. Capewell, Sorenson, Salmon, Peachey, Momirovski, , O’Sullivan, Cogger, Garner, Luke , Sommerton ,Eisenhuth etc… All played their parts over a few years. Then the not worth much players such as Kenny . (Not until last season). Good coaching in a good set up. ( The Storm have been doing it forever. ) Add a few good players & fill in around them. It’s not all about the best squad by a long shot. My comment above wasn’t meant as a criticism of your comment. Just asking a question really. :thumbup:

2023-11-11T03:29:00+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


So which club has finished on top of all the others for the last 3 years? One of the 'wealthiest clubs' or the club that has a disproportionate junior nursery the size of Switzerland and is continually favoured by the NRL and referees? If anyone is rorting the system these days it's the Panthers.

2023-11-11T01:16:14+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


Just been reading up on RFM. Can’t think of a club captain that’s been treated worse.

2023-11-10T22:21:17+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


The Dogs run junior clubs in the Newcastle area , in the local competitions . Have greater Newcastle area high schools as their feeder clubs at a junior level. Have other clubs as feeder clubs at a senior level such as the Western Clydesdales, from Queensland.

2023-11-10T22:10:22+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Sounds like yet another method for the richest clubs to skirt around the cap. They already allow players from outside of the top 30 squad to be used as replacements, given permission to do so. Then it was reported that clubs will may no longer be required to seek permission to do that. Now you’re suggesting that clubs should be able to buy in more players, to replace the injured players. Just sounds like a suggestion to allow for even further stockpiling of better players , by the wealthiest clubs to me .

2023-11-10T21:13:29+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


All the talk about Bulldogs needing props yet Max King unsigned ? Heading back to Melbourne ?

2023-11-10T20:37:49+00:00

Noel

Roar Rookie


There was at least one off field issue with Curran... I've always liked the way he played. High tempo, high impact in attack.

2023-11-10T20:10:18+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


I'm not sure where the Dogs will end up but they have made some quality purchases of pretty young players in recent years and while it hasn't reflected on the results I can't argue with having players like Burton , Kikau and Chrighton at the club in wait for better days. A couple of bits of the puzzle could well emerge in key positions from within or like the Broncos with Reynolds , from elsewhere. I'd much rather be right down the bottom of the ladder but gathering players who could challenge for a title in a few years than be up in the eight without a real show at it.

2023-11-10T19:59:12+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


I've seen some substandard replies but this one is one of the best in that department. In 2019 I said this about Cleary and the Panthers in an article. '' He has the roster and is a good chance of proving his critics wrong in the next few years. The Panthers seem injury prone and a healthy year could end up with them holding up the trophy.'' So before you put words in my mouth again , consider that I do consider things before commenting. Maybe you should give it a try. The Broncos won the spoon a while but if you think that means the squad reflected that position and was therefore without value then good luck. If you think it was all about great coaching then tell me where you said the Broncos were on track when they kept Walters a while back without hindsight. So tell me what happens if they swap the squad with another club? They win the title at the other club , that's what happens. The Pennies have a great squad but they also have the best mindset.

2023-11-10T17:57:14+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


At the end of 2019, you wouldn’t have given much money at all for most of the Panthers squad. Since then they’ve arguably had a worse top 30 squad every year. As they’ve lost a few of their best players each season. Also not actually imported any top names since 2019 , or before then for that matter. So you’re judging their squad right now , simply based on their own efforts over the last 4 years . Efforts from the players & coaches that have been at the club. Did you consider that before commenting , what happens if you swap their squad with another clubs squad?

2023-11-10T11:54:56+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


In this case, 'tis a compliment, Rob. Big(ish) body, ball-playing skills, good defender, probably best used where speed isn't essential (okay, now I'm veering away from being complimentary, but still).

2023-11-10T11:49:22+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


No lock shaming, please David. This is a safe space.

2023-11-10T09:24:45+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


He's a lock in a lock's body, IMO.

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