Luai can lift Tigers out of doldrums but mega offer continues vicious cycle of overpaying for recruits

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Wests Tigers fans are a hardy bunch. They’ve put up with a lot over the years. 

Coming off two wooden spoons they are desperate for the team’s fortunes to turn around.

So is new coach Benji Marshall and the various factions of the management who occasionally stop making threats at each other to make decisions to try to get the club up the ladder. 

Making a mammoth offer for Panthers five-eighth Jarome Luai is the latest high-risk play from the perennial NRL strugglers with a rookie coach, fractured boardroom, interim head of football and longest finals drought in the competition. 

Luai is a very good player, a three-time premiership-winner, a State of Origin representative and a key member of Samoa’s rise to prominence in the international arena. 

Benji Marshall. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

But he is not in the same stratosphere as the elite playmakers.

He gets unfairly treated by some critics who say he is little more than the Robin to Nathan Cleary’s Batman. 

Luai is a fine running five-eighth. A secondary playmaker whose main value is a combination of ad-lib “eyes-up” footy with a dash of running set plays. 

Many of the tries he’s scored or conjured up down the left edge for Penrith over the years have not just simply been instinct – he runs the shapes well and fed the likes of Viliame Kikau, Matt Burton and Stephen Crichton a significant portion of quality attacking ball.

But he has some deficiencies with his kicking game and on-field organising ability which prevent him from being included alongside Cleary, Mitchell Moses, Adam Reynolds, Daly Cherry-Evans, Jahrome Hughes and Nicho Hynes as among the very best of the NRL’s on-field generals.

Which is why Penrith have deemed him worth a deal around $850,000 judging by the current player market.

As always, it only takes one higher offer to inflate a player’s value and, as they’ve done several times in recent seasons, the Wests Tigers (aka the free agent’s wet dream) are bumping up Luai’s value with an offer reportedly worth as much as $4.5 million over four seasons from 2025 onwards.

You’d want to get a lot of bang if you are dishing out that kind of buck.

Luai will undoubtedly be a major plus for the Tigers if he opts for Concord ahead of Penrith or other suitors such as Canterbury or the Dragons but will he give them full value for marquee money?

All evidence from his career thus far is to the contrary.

It’s a familiar tale for the Tigers who have outlaid massive sums on their spine in recent times for new recruits like Josh Reynolds, Moses Mbye and to re-sign Luke Brooks. 

None of them went even close to fulfilling their value. 

Marshall is a legend of the club and could indeed make it as a coach but by offering Luai a huge contract and the possibility of taking over as chief playmaker, he’s making a rookie error.

It’s another quick fix for the Tigers, an endless cycle they’ve been mired in for more than a decade since their last playoff run in 2011. 

There appears little long-term investment in the vast junior base the club enjoys in Sydney’s south-west which takes a back seat to the endless parade of high-profile recruits who are past their prime – James Roberts, Tyrone Peachey, Russell Packer, Ben Matulino, Chris McQueen and James Tamou are among a long list of veterans who played like they joined the Tigers because they had no other option.

Promising Luai the No.7 jersey after a season of Aidan Sezer providing stopgap reliability alongside young prospects Jayden Sullivan and Latu Fainu is what desperate clubs do.

Jarome Luai looks to pass. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Down the road at Belmore, the Bulldogs have made all sorts of promises in recent years to get players in the door – at various times Will Hopoate, Nick Meaney, Dallin Watene-Zelezniak and Nick Cotric were lured in for the promise of playing in their preferred position of fullback or centre before being shunted back to the wing.

The Panthers have already indicated they won’t get into an auction for Luai’s services, which is a wise move.

A team like the Roosters is often lampooned for supposedly rorting the salary cap but the secret to their success is not overpaying for stars, even ones they have on the books.

They didn’t think Latrell Mitchell was worth top dollar when they only needed him to be a centre so that was one of the main reasons why he ended up at Souths a few years back.

The Joey Manu situation for them could play out the same way – unless they can offer James Tedesco’s No.1 jersey as an incentive down the line, it will be hard to convince the Kiwi star to stick around for less than he could command on the open market.

(Photo by Graham Denholm/Getty Images)

St George Illawarra coach Shane Flanagan will likely dangle the keys to WIN Stadium and Kogarah Oval to Manu if a seven-figure salary and the fullback’s role is not enough to convince him to switch. 

For the Panthers, they already have the nucleus of their premiership squad re-signed long term in Cleary, Isaiah Yeo, Brian To’o, James Fisher-Harris, Dylan Edwards, Moses Leota and Liam Martin.

It would be nice for them to keep Luai around as they try to convert their three titles into a true dynasty for the rest of this decade.

But as has been shown at various stages when the likes of Sean O’Sullivan and Jack Cogger have stepped into the halves to partner Cleary, they need a complementary player in that role, not a dominant one. 

And those players can be found for a lot less than a million-plus per year.

The Crowd Says:

2023-12-01T22:49:47+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I would say that Cleary is now a great player, while I see Munster as a player of great games

2023-12-01T22:37:35+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Great but to do that the whole market has to agree

2023-11-28T04:59:37+00:00

blacktown leagues

Roar Rookie


Have to disagree on two counts .It’s debatable about who has the better pack and Cleary dominated DCE in the 21 series when all three games were played in QLD.Cleary only played in the first two and NSW won both easy ,a combined score of 76-6.And at international level DCE has played at 7 in Australia’s two most embarrassing losses ,against Tonga in 2019 and a couple of weeks back against NZ.Cleary has to be the 7

2023-11-27T05:32:21+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


I was more meaning studying whatever it was that the Panthers are doing rather than just taking their administrators. Being blessed with large numbers of juniors is one thing, developing them (and the right ones) into NRL players is another. Something certainly kicked into gear finally at Penrith.

2023-11-27T02:01:19+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


I do believe the criticism he gets is un warranted I'd say yes and no. He's 26. When you look back at the all time greats, I don't think any peaked at 26. They did so more around 30. Andrew Johns peaked at Origin around 26-31. But at the same time, he's been anointed the best 7 for the Kangaroos, when at Origin level with arguably a better team (and more effective forward pack) he hasn't outplayed DCE across a series.

2023-11-27T01:54:58+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


From the Broncos. No from the Broncos catchment which they basically get for free via natural monopoly. You’re like a nepo baby who thinks he earned the seat in granddaddies company

2023-11-27T01:53:07+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Well given most of the money spent comes from government then it should be tax contribution anyway.

2023-11-27T01:51:18+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Think their management is going to come down to focusing on the right players to keep. Feels more like it has more parralells with letting Mitchell go than keeping Manu on less. Either way I'm sure the grand final helped frame their valuation.

2023-11-26T06:42:27+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


They already bought management from Penrith before? I don’t think they are currently that popular at the Tigers. Given that the clubs who develop their own players, would no doubt do better if allowed a cap concession to allow them to retain more of ‘their best’ local juniors. As better players, bring better performances, then that goes with more club members & possibly better club sponsors. ( Not even talking about pathways players! ) I don’t see how it’s not a good idea? As opposed to other clubs buying the best of them & then saying how well they do developing them. ‘ See the last comment I posted, about the Roosters latest development players . All from the Broncos ‘ . Down below! :thumbup:

2023-11-26T04:57:19+00:00

blacktown leagues

Roar Rookie


Im referring to Cleary here Maxtruck but have to agree on Mam comment

2023-11-26T04:28:52+00:00

Peta Smith

Roar Rookie


Is he proven though? And what has he proven? That he’s a very good Robin?! There’s still a huge question as to wether he’s capable of becoming Batman in his own right…

2023-11-26T02:36:01+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Ezra Mam is only a kid but he has Luai covered

2023-11-26T02:23:04+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


The salary cap is meant to prevent clubs with 'weaker' management over-spending and getting into financial trouble, so giving them the ability to spend more might not necessarily be a great thing. I have the feeling if the mob that run the the Tigers did have concessions, they'd still manage to mis-manage. The Tigers do have a surprisingly large number of juniors. Maybe it's a situation that they need less in the way of Panthers' players and more in the way of Panthers' management.

2023-11-26T01:34:27+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Maybe? Yet Wighton isn’t as good a 5/8. As he’s just not a natural 5/8. Even if they bought him to play centre. If Luai was there right now, he could well be the halfback.

2023-11-25T23:36:14+00:00

Tez

Roar Rookie


Yeah I agree 100% with this post. Luai is not a star playmaker but he is a good running 5/8. He is also a bit of a loose cannon. My suggestion to the Tigers is to walk away and not sign him .... and Dragons stay well away.

2023-11-25T22:34:24+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


Luai is a fine player… in a champion team a great player.. in a wooden spoon outfit he’s going to be a struggling good player. A bit like Api he’s going to need to put in a monster shift week after week

2023-11-25T21:43:11+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


And if anyone was getting married he could MC the event !

2023-11-25T05:04:33+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


It's a lot of brass to fork out but what else can the tigers do. They're locked in to paying overs for good players. I actually like the idea of Luai and Api joining forces. If Sezer works as a link between them then the tigers might have some game.

2023-11-25T04:51:36+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


I would rather Cody Walker any day of the week over Luai. Souths dodged a bullet IMO.

2023-11-25T04:04:40+00:00

blacktown leagues

Roar Rookie


I'm not claiming he's the gun at origin but I do believe the criticism he gets is un warranted. The bloke is an exceptional footballer who has had his moments in origin. Not many truly dominate origin on a regular basis.

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