Cohesion v competition: Can Webster keep calm if things go wrong now he has Roger, Chanel and a strong squad?

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

The idea that competition for places drives better performance is one of the greatest truisms in professional sport.

At this time of year, it’s a favourite line of NRL coaches who don’t want to say whether they have settled on who they think will take to the field in Round 1, just a month away.

Variants on ‘we’ll see who goes best in the trials’ and ‘the jersey is up for grabs’ are the coaching equivalents of blowing cobwebs off and training the house down, and perhaps we shouldn’t expect more at a time of year when there isn’t that much to talk about and nobody wants to give anything away.

In many cases, of course, the competition part is true.

The Bulldogs, as we detailed extensively, have half a team’s worth of places available for players to compete for, and a coach like Cameron Ciraldo will obviously base his decision on who ultimately gets them based on what he sees on the training paddock and in the Pre-Season Challenge.

However, most commonly accepted truisms have flaws. Another cliché would tell you that form is temporary and class is permanent, which flies in the face of picking based on current performance.

We regularly hear that all a player needs is a run of games or a settled place in the side to build confidence, and the data on this is pretty clear, with results increasing in correlation with how much a side plays together – even if they are losing in the here and now.

(Photo by Fiona Goodall/Getty Images)

A year ago, former Wallabies prop turned cohesion expert Ben Darwin told The Roar as much last year while previewing the Dolphins.

“Some teams last year finished the year with poor cohesion numbers, because they lose and make changes,” he said. “If teams don’t change they can improve cohesion and if they change too much they can actually go backwards.”

That might be something of note to Ciraldo’s former Panthers colleague Andrew Webster.

His Warriors side are nowhere near as unsettled as the Dogs and, indeed, one could name almost their whole Round 1 team now.

Last year, they and Cronulla were probably the most settled sides, with little deliberate chopping and changing at all.

Of the 30 players who featured for them last year, 15 did so in 75% of all games, meaning that, in general, only two spots were different week to week.

Aside from five eighth, where Te Maire Martin, Luke Metcalf and Dylan Walker all got runs because of injury, he knew exactly who was best in each position. Competition for places didn’t come into it.

Once Dallin Watene-Zelezniak and Rocco Berry returned from pre-season injuries, the 1-5 basically never changed.

Between Round 11, when Berry came in, and the Preliminary Final loss to the Broncos, there were 85 backline jumpers to be filled and the same five blokes filled them 95% of the time – and that includes Round 27, when Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad and Watene-Zelezniak were rested.

For the six starting pack roles, that’s 102 jumpers. They were filled by the same six blokes 90% of the time, which would have been yet higher but for a Marata Niukore suspension.

(Photo by Dave Rowland/Getty Images)

The Wahs almost always picked the same team across the whole year, which speaks to both the luck they had with injury and the confidence that Webster had to let his team lose together.

Remember, much as we think of them of having had a good year, it was very back-ended: they were 6-5 prior to their first bye, and were in eighth as late as Round 18.

The whole ‘Up the Wahs’ vibes train was more a reaction to their success in relation to expectations, which were on the floor before the season, and then a late surge.

As Darwin pointed out: would that surge have come if they had panicked midyear? They lost three straight between Anzac Day and Magic Round, but never blinked.

Plenty of that was because Webster didn’t have a choice. Now, going into 2024, that won’t be an issue.

The Warriors have Roger Tuivasa-Sheck coming in, a blue chip player who has won a Dally M player of the year in two positions – winger and fullback – as well as Chanel Harris-Tavita, who has shown he can play in either halves role, dummy half and as a bench utility.

Imagine a world where Nicoll-Klokstad doesn’t start the season well – how long will it take for a campaign to start to shift Roger to the back?

Coaches have to balance getting good depth options with keeping everyone happy, even those who are not playing.

The obvious answer is to respond to poor form by chopping and changing, but the evidence suggests that tinkering with the personnel is often not the best option.

What Webster will need to decide is whether he trusts his players based on where they are now or on what their ceiling is.

Tuivasa-Sheck, for example, has shown the world how good he can be time and again.

Webster will be looking to return him to those heights again, much like he did with Shaun Johnson last year.

Harris-Tavita, too, has hit the heights before when given time. When he left the NRL for a sabbatical, he had been a starting half for the Warriors for the best part of two years, which doesn’t happen if you can’t play.

Last year, the Warriors were able to play the way they did at the end of the year because of the hard work that Webster did in building a collaborative culture and then sticking to his guns when things didn’t always go his side’s way.

Roger Tuivasa-Sheck (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

As a coach, he has shown exceptional abilities in man management to turn around a playing group that seemed to be fraying at the edges the year before.

Much as we like to think of rugby league players as big hard blokes who respond to survival of the fittest, there are reams of evidence to suggest that they are anything but and that a significant portion of them respond to being given confidence that their mistakes will not be terminal.

Guys like CNK, who was punted to reserve grade at Canberra, and Johnson, who was seen as washed up when he left Cronulla, clearly responded to being told that the jersey was theirs.

Perhaps the most interesting part of the Warriors’ second season under Webster will be if he can maintain that atmosphere and culture when he has options to pick from.

The groundswell of public support last year, first through the Wahs and then topped off by the Kiwis’ victory in the Pacific Championship, will see unprecedented levels of patience from fans.

Expectation, yes, but also trust that Webby knows what he is doing. Fans will forgive, especially for guys like RTS and CHT, who are well-known and well-loved figures, or for any of the heroes of 2023.

If the Warriors have a 50% record again halfway through the year, the temptation might be there to roll the dice with the squad. Webster would do well to resist it.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-03T22:47:49+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I gather Johnson's out of the moon boot and expected to right to play in the Warriors 2nd trial match. I wonder if they'll risk him? I wouldn't.

2024-02-03T22:38:52+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Volkman would have been an obvious next up halfback at the Warriors. They punted him, as he has serious injury issues. They have gone on a halves buying spree over the last couple of years , in different age groups. We will see who steps up from these options, if required? Johnson was walking around in a moon boot a couple of weeks ago. How’s the serious ankle injury going now?

2024-02-02T02:14:29+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Top ten tips for success. No. 7 will shock you :shocked:

2024-02-02T02:08:42+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


With gems like 'a team that doesn't change too much has better cohesion' i am assured he is not related to Charles.

2024-02-02T02:04:19+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


It is straight from the business mentors cliche handbook. I bet he has an animated power point to suit.

2024-02-02T01:56:35+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


He was flogging this snake oil years ago. Must be the new and improved version ...

2024-02-02T01:53:32+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


:laughing: :thumbup:

2024-02-02T01:16:26+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Don’t make unnecessary changes to a team: I hope no-one is paying Darwin for that advice.

2024-02-02T00:28:06+00:00

RLFan

Roar Rookie


I agree with Nat's summary - Johnson was in top form last year, so it is vital for the Warriors that he stays on the park and keeps up his good form. It is easy to stick to the same side, when your team is relatively injury free, but when injuries hit key players, a team can fall in a heap.

2024-02-01T23:40:44+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I'd have thought Websters biggest responsibility to is find an option to challenge Johnson. As Mike said, the best way to keep guys on their toes is competition and if Shaun does fade as you described, the Warriors have someone who can replace him.

2024-02-01T23:32:30+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


More than anything I think the Warriors fortunes rest on the shoulders of Johnson. When he is on he has the ability to drag a team with him as exampled by the main interruptions to their 2023 season was his halves partner. However, ask any Sharks fan or Kiwi with a half decent memory what happens when he tapers off? The Warriors don’t have an option B at all so it is coaches biggest responsibility to keep him on the park and head in the game.

2024-02-01T22:54:12+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


The key to any team's success is buy-in to what the coach is trying to do from the players and last year, the entire Warriors squad were more than happy to do what the coach wanted. With that season under their collective belts, I don't see any reason why they should not come out of the blocks playing winning footy from round 1. They have 4 home games in their first 6 rounds and 5 in their first 8, with away games to the Storm & Rabbitohs & Dragons. I'm guessing they'd want to be no less than 6 out of 8 by the end of April. If they are and don't get cruelled by injuries, they'll have to a top 4 contender again.

2024-02-01T21:49:26+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Not sure whether there should be too many queries about the Warriors second year under Webster ? He has proven his ability to get the best out of his squad, and they look to have only been strengthened in 2024 with the addition of RTS, CHT and Capewell . I think after the Panthers & Broncos , they have the next best best middle third in the NRL with Blake , Egan, Barnett & Harris. Their edge forwards in Niukore , Ford & now Capewell , had big years in 2023. Throw in bench variations in Walker & Tevaga and you have pretty good and experienced pack. The real key however will be the ability for Johnson to repeat his 2023 season from halfback. He will be ably supported by Martin, Metcalf & Harris Tevita. Their back three ( DWZ , CNK & Montoya)are solid metre eaters out of defence, giving them good starts to their sets, and their centres of Pompey & Rocco improved greatly last season. They look to be top 8 material again, assuming a reasonable run with injuries.

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