Smart Signings: The Broncos have a big call coming with Reynolds - but they might already know his replacement

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.

If you come at the king, as the great Omar Little said, you best not miss. 

Brisbane learned that the hard way in 2023, pushing the Panthers to their maximum and getting punished by the brilliance of Nathan Cleary.

For Kevin Walters, the path to going one better in 2024 already has obstacles in it. Herbie Farnworth, arguably the game’s best centre and a fulcrum of the Broncos’ style, has left for the Dolphins, where he will be joined by Thomas Flegler, a crucial cog in their middle rotation.

Keenan Palasia is out too, and while he might not jump off the page to the same extent as the other two, he has played almost every game for two seasons straight and provided vital flexibility to their rotation.

The joy of being the Broncos coach is that you always have a junior nursery pushing the next great player your way, but the flipside to that is that you aren’t judged at the same level as a regular club. 

At this point, it’s Premierships or nothing and the issue for Kevvie and co could be that they’ve just missed their best shot, because there’s a strong argument that they made the Grand Final ahead of schedule.

Reece Walsh, for example, is an outstanding footballer but few would have picked him to explode quite as spectacularly as he did in year one back at the Broncos. Ditto Ezra Mam, who was named Dally M Five Eighth of the Year at the age of just 20.

The question now is whether last year was the sweet spot, with all those blokes on deck, or if the best is yet to come. 

The thing about being elite in rugby league is that the system takes you 95% of the way and the best players do the rest. 

For the Bronx, that should be good news: while Herbie, Flegler and Palasia will be missed, the core of the team is still there, with Walsh, Mam and Adam Reynolds still in the spine and Payne Haas and Patrick Carrigan in the middle.

There’s still questions, too, however. 

Reynolds will turn 34 midway through next year and is, obviously, closer to the end than the start. He’s achieved so much in his time with the club already, but a replacement is needed sooner rather than later.

Billy Walters had a breakout year in the 9 jumper, but there was a reason that expectations were low and he was able to confound them. Is he just good now, or was 2023 the exception?

Looking at some sides – Penrith, Souths and the Roosters would be top of mind – it’s possible to name 75% of the best 17 now, but with Brisbane, that’s a little murkier.

We know that Deine Mariner is Farnworth’s replacement in the centre, but he is just six NRL games into his career. Until proven otherwise, that’s a downgrade.

Patrick Carrigan. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

The likelihood is that Pat Carrigan moves into the front row to replace Flegler, with Kobe Hetherington into the run-on side at lock. Fletcher Baker has arrived from the Roosters, but he’s more of an up and down middle and not currently the same class at Flegler.

Hetherington has had several shots at that role in the NRL over the years without ever making it his own, and last year, Palasia actually started more games in that position. 

On the bench, both Brendan Piakura and Xavier Willison have long threatened to be the next big thing, but neither have completely convinced.

Speaking of next big things, we have heard this about Blake Mozer, the young hooker, for a long time but he only appeared once in 2023. 

Then you get to the November 1 list.

Currently seven of the 17 that played the Grand Final are unsigned beyond this year – Mam, Walters, Reynolds, Piakura, Tyson Smoothy, Kurt Capewell and Jordan Riki – and that doesn’t include the three that have already left or the host of depth options who may depart.

For comparison, the Panthers have six of their 17 either gone or available to leave, and it’s the same for their Prelim opponents, the Warriors.

That’s a fair bit of roster uncertainty right there that Kevvie has to deal with.

The great irony as far as Smart Signings is concerned is that the main question facing the Broncos is the same that delivered them their biggest boost: whither Reynolds?

This column has long held that Souths were right to let him go and that the Broncos were right to sign him. Now, though, Reynolds is three years older and the question is yet more acute.

The problem for Walters is twofold: Reynolds is both an excellent player and the undoubted leader of the group. 

His tangible skills in playmarking, organisation and kicking are semi-replaceable, but his intangible ones aren’t, at least unless another leader like him emerges. They’re thin on the ground in the NRL at the moment.

Then you get the salary cap issue. Given the November 1 list, the smart thing to do would be immediately to extend Mam, Riki and Piakura as the cornerstones of a young side, with Walters extended as either the long term hooker or a bridge until Mozer is ready for week-to-week NRL.

They could squeeze out Capewell – well below his best in 2023 – and Reynolds as well as older bodies like Martin Taupau to free up some cash, and then look around for a 2024 halfback.

One option screams out. Wigan halfback Harry Smith is an interesting cognate for Reynolds for a number of reasons.

Firstly, the Broncos scored a disproportionately high number of tries from kicks, a category in which Smith lead the Super League in 2023 with 11. He was also top, by a country miles, for finding the floor from his long-kicking, a category in which Reynolds topped the NRL.

On a system level, Smith is the ideal man because he already knows how to play with the Broncos. 

Their attack is designed by Lee Briers, who was previously attack coach at Wigan, and Smith has made an art form of working with Jai Field and Bevan French, who play the roles that Mam and Walsh occupy at the Broncos.

Where Smith cannot compete at all is on experience, though it’s hard to think of many who can where Reynolds is involved. 

The Broncos might want to fill the leadership vacuum somewhere else – Carrigan surely will be the new captain – and instead opt for a guy who, for his age at least, has achieved plenty.

Smith is 23 and has already made his Test debut for England, won a Grand Final and produced the game-winning play in the Challenge Cup Final. He’s up to 102 games of first grade already and more than ready for the switch to Australia.

Brisbane might baulk at signing a guy straight from Super League to win them a comp, however – but if they want another year of Reynolds instead, then their options really open up. 

There’s a huge power play they could run to bring Sam Walker – on next year’s November 1 list – back to Queensland, especially as that might come with a Maroons jersey given Daly Cherry-Evans and Ben Hunt cannot continue forever.

Jamal Fogarty, perhaps the most Reynolds-like kicker in the NRL at the moment, is also an option with a club option in his contract for 2026, though it might be that the Beaudesert-born star fancies returning north. He’d be 32 by then, and in prime position to take over a serious leadership role. 

In the more pressing future, any decision on Capewell would open the door for movement in the backrow. That could be Piakura to a starting role, but a serious signing would be Jaydn Su’A, one of their own juniors, who left in 2019.

He’s just turned 26 and would be coming into his prime, and with a serious point to prove. In many ways, he’s Capewell 2.0. With Riki on one edge and Su’A on the other, plus Carrigan and Haas in the middle, it’s a serious proposition in the pack.

The Crowd Says:

2023-11-16T22:12:44+00:00

langparker

Roar Rookie


Think you’re a bit harsh on Willison & Piakura MMW (long threatened?). Xavier came into the nrl as a 19 year old rookie prop from late 2021 & Brendan has been slowly brought through in the back row playing from the bench. I believe Willison, injured just prior to the finals, has the size, skills& pace to replace Flegler and may cement that third prop spot for years. A Qld origin rep through the U16/18/20’s, he’s impressive. Piakura is clearly being groomed for Capewell’s spot. Baker held his own in a surging rooster pack at the back end of 2023, so he’ll be an asset. Farnworth is harder to replace but Marriner is certainly promising enough that the Dolphins got sanctioned for trying to get him while contracted. Their biggest concern is backing up after a stellar season.

2023-11-16T21:08:57+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


I might just make it up there for that game Andrew. My son lives nearby.

2023-11-16T20:51:16+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


I think the Dolphins will be a really strong side if they can keep all their top liners on the field Tony and with the addition of Herbie and Flegler they'll be a force. I see the Dragons play them in round 2 in Redcliffe.

2023-11-16T20:21:22+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


If Herbie was an Aussie, he'd be in the Australian side for sure

2023-11-16T13:47:27+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Would Reynolds have been a better halfback for South’s last season than Ilias? Would he have given them an even better shot at another GF? You’d have to say 100% , Yes! Yet, I don’t mind South’s decision to look to the future & keep a halfback that they see as the future. Save money & keep your younger players. The next question is then , what about Walker? He’s no spring chicken either now. Are they going to replace him very soon, with an up & coming player?

2023-11-16T01:37:18+00:00

Greg

Roar Pro


Doesn't fill the leadership/experience void but I'd be chasing Tom Weaver to be Reynolds successor.

2023-11-16T01:34:04+00:00

Greg

Roar Pro


Yep, and also that they would not have lost any of their other stars if they didn't have the cash from the Reynolds-Ilias downgrade to spend elsewhere. Reynolds to Broncos was the right call for Broncos. That doesn't make it the wrong call for Souths.

2023-11-15T22:33:35+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


quality spine players are at a premium, aren't they? At present, the sport seems to be able to churn out top notch forwards & wingers (even centres), but seems to struggle with the halves and fullback spots

2023-11-15T11:08:20+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


You were the first one I thought of when I seen their new jumpers. Obviously the focus groups were positive on the offset chevrons.

2023-11-15T10:50:19+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


All well and good. However, their most important signing will be a jersey designer/maker who can come up with something that doesn't make the rugbah league world want to claw its eyes out. :happy:

2023-11-15T09:47:54+00:00

the outsider

Roar Rookie


Tom Deardon maybe

2023-11-15T09:35:36+00:00

Muzz Manyana

Roar Rookie


I was surprised that Reynolds couldn't steer the Broncos to victory with such a big lead in the grand final.

2023-11-15T08:13:59+00:00

Ferret

Roar Rookie


A good coach adapts the style of play to accommodate for waxing and waning abilities in the squad. Shaun Johnson is no longer the mercurial player he once was, but has developed (under Webster's tutelage) as a brilliant organising half. These sorts of analyses seem to assume players, coaches, teams are locked into a style and cannot evolve. So, yes, Reynolds is getting older and slower, I don't think that will be a revelation to his coach. Jock Madden may step up to organise and give more responsibility to Mam. The Broncs forward pack will certainly get them down field, and Kevvie was pretty good at converting position into points in his playing days.

2023-11-15T08:07:30+00:00

Ferret

Roar Rookie


"On the bench, both Brendan Piakura and Xavier Willison have long threatened to be the next big thing, but neither have completely convinced." They're both 21 years old. Not too many middle forwards are established as the "next big thing" by 21 (Payne Haas excepted).

2023-11-15T07:34:45+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


Losing Flegler and Farnworth will weaken the Broncos in my book. I'd prefer Farnworth over Staggs every day of the week and Flegler's game will improve immensely under Bennett.

2023-11-15T06:23:24+00:00

SSTID

Roar Rookie


I for one didn't see anything significantly wrong with Ilias this year. He certainty didn't take on the defence as much as he did in the first half of the season, but from what I heard in commentary (and I try to avoid Ch 9 commentary as much as possible) was Johns criticising his long kicking game. If that is the best they can come up with in an era of limited "good" half backs, then I will take that. He is still a solid defender who rarely misses a tackle (more than I can say for some other "star" halfs and 5/8). I think he just needs to get back into the groove off going up and into the line more often. I thought both him and Koloamatangi were off in their combination in the second half of this year and if they clicked, then we might have won a few more games that we shouldn't have lost. Other than that, in 2022 we were one win away from getting into the GF with Ilias as half-back in his first year in top grade. So your reasoning doesn't hold true to me. If Ilias was still so green, why did we do so well in 2022.

2023-11-15T06:12:20+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Yep he is a footy player. Reckon we’ll see a bit more of him this year.

2023-11-15T06:05:26+00:00

Nico

Roar Rookie


Been a bit surprised at the lack of attention given to Tristan Sailor in the media, in the opportunities he got in first grade during ’23 he had some very big moments. Will be interesting to see how he’s used in ’24 but could see him coming on as a 14 against tiring defenders at the end of each half and wreaking havoc

2023-11-15T05:36:14+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Def struggle to make the 4. I’d like to think we’d have made the 8. Also hard to say who would have played HB otherwise and therefore how worse was the alternative scenario.

2023-11-15T05:25:14+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Sure. Certainly you can’t be complacent in the modern game.

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