Storm warning for competition as Bellamy's streak continues, Panthers question Bunker

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

It was the unstoppable force against the immoveable object. The threepeat Panthers, who had won five of their last six against the Storm, facing a Melbourne side who have never lost in Round 1 in Craig Bellamy’s two decades as head coach.

In the end, it was tradition that won out: Melbourne took it 8-0, securing a famous victory on the back of exceptional defence and bucketloads of heart.

For 40 minutes, it was close but far from a classic as both sides struggled to put anything together at all, but in the second, the match became a slugfest between the relentless pressure of the Panthers and the endless resilience of the Storm.

Penrith did break through in the second half with a Soni Luke try, only for the Bunker to find an obstruction in the build up that, in the eyes of Ivan Cleary, seemed soft.

“I’ll be careful about it, but if there’s an obstruction rule then someone has to be obstructed,” he said, cautious not to invite censure.

“They (the Bunker) said that Jahrome Hughes made a defensive decision and once that happens, you know (the rest).

“I guess it’s just one of those things, probably summed up the night really.”

Missing talismanic figures Cameron Munster and Nelson Asofa-Solomona through injury, Melbourne pulled out a classic Bellamy performance, all about collective commitment and maximising opportunity.

Their replacements, Jonah Pezet and Joe Chan, were emblematic of what Bellamy has built.

Pezet provided the kick from which Reimis Smith scored the only try while Chan, in just his second NRL game, did all the clean-up work and effort plays that have defined the coach’s tenure.

Penrith were poor in the first half, but applied the full strangle in the second, throwing everything they had at the line from a basecamp in the Storm half. Melbourne never tapped.

“I don’t do it,” joked Bellamy of the record.

“I’m sitting up in the box. It’s a nice record to have, I suppose. We pride ourselves on what we do in the preseason so we can have a good start.

“I don’t think we even played that well to be honest, but we were really gutsy. There were a lot of tackles to be made in the 20m area and we were out on our feet a few times, but we kept finding a way to keeping turning up.”

One for the purists

They will tell you that this is what the fans want to see, but sometimes when the score is low, it’s because both teams can’t attack very well rather than the sort of exceptional defensive footy that gets the purists going.

Before half time, that was certainly the case. It was real slog: close, sure, but also quite poor.

When Nathan Cleary, Isaah Yeo and Moses Leota are making errors, you know that the Panthers are really, really off their game, and the Storm were just as guilty.

The defences, much as they were tested, were there and thus, the game was played almost exclusively between the red zones. There were 154 play-the-balls in the first half and only 14% of them were inside the 20m at either end.

The Panthers’ game is built on patience and the unshakable confidence that, over a long enough time, they’ll be in the opposing end enough to make things happen, but Melbourne did enough to keep the scoreboard going to add a sliver of doubt into the well-oiled machine.

Bellamy knew this all along. He was adamant that his support staff overrule an on-field decision to play on when presented with two easy points in the first half, ensuring that the Storm got their noses in front.

While Melbourne weren’t great shakes themselves, only scoring with a kick, the conversation was always about whether the Panthers could breach them.

Too often, the attack was chaotic and lacking the usual direction given by Cleary and Yeo: they took inside lines that weren’t on, going where they had already been, forced passes that weren’t there and lost their way on last tackles.

The pattern last year early on was the same.

Penrith took a decent amount of time to get going in attack, even though their defence never really went anywhere, and that saw them lose to St Helens, Brisbane and Parramatta in their first three games.

Wigan, too, shut the door on the Panthers and got the win, just like the Storm did here.

Ivan Cleary would rightly point to how well they were going at the end of the year, but the point remains: two points now are worth the same as in August.

The Panthers won’t worry for a second, and Melbourne won’t read anything into it. But as a self-contained match, it’s a win for the Storm and two on the board.

Taylan May steps up

The brightest spot for the Panthers, without a doubt, was the returning centre Taylan May.

Having missed all of last year with an ACL injury, the Samoan international was something of a forgotten man, toiling away in rehab while Sunia Turuva replaced him and won Rookie of the Year at the Dally M Awards.

It was an award that May himself went close to the year before, proving the talent that he has, but still, many wondered if he would even begin this year given how well Turuva went in his stead and the arrival of Bulldogs centre Paul Alamoti as a like-for-like replacement for Stephen Crichton, who has gone the other way.

This was the first time that May has been named in the centres in the NRL, but it looked like he’d been there his whole life.

In this fixture last year, down the road at Marvel Stadium, Izack Tago was the star for the Panthers as they turned around a deficit to record a statement win.

It was that same edge – Tago took Crichton’s spot on the other side – that offered the most for Penrith, and it was as if May was doing his best impression of the man he replaced.

He had Tago’s low centre of gravity, rotational strength and standing-start speed, offering constant threat all night. The closest Penrith came with a disallowed try that was all about May’s pace and evasion, as well as composure to ice the moment.

It didn’t stand, and after that, the Storm were too good.

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-11T08:06:19+00:00

wilbas

Roar Rookie


well they didn't have it...they had Creighton securing one side and giving it impetus...i said based on what we saw they are impotent attack wise....Louai is still under a cloud...

2024-03-11T03:18:59+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


You wonder how they could have won 3 premierships in a row with all that liability on each side of the park ?

2024-03-10T10:25:25+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


You could see Melbourne deliberately trying to expose them in that area every time they went forward, Panthers did well to keep most of them out but agree that it doesn't look sustainable against teams with tall wingers

2024-03-10T10:19:50+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Come to the Dark Side! Honestly though, it's great supporting a club that in general has players, coaches and a culture you can respect. Always room for one more in the purple family :laughing: Good luck (except against us) for your Sea Eagles this year matey :thumbup:

2024-03-09T16:24:16+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


Could be that 40-0 GF win that softened my attitude. Toss pots indeed

2024-03-09T13:19:37+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


It must be tough to piece together a premiership winning team when your club [Ivan Cleary's not yours] has the only junior nursery that is the size of Switzerland. No wonder, they can afford to part ways with half a premiership winning side and still come up with junior talent to replace them and still win premierships. Especially when Cleary doesn't have to worry about 50/50 calls that the referee and bunker convert to 90/10 calls in his favour, that must relieve some of the anxiety and psychological stress from Cleary's shoulders as well. Still, Ivan Cleary's recent success with a team that for any other club would have been at least $2 mill over the salary cap notwithstanding, Cleary is still a LONG, LONG way from emulating the coaching success of both Wayne Bennett and Craig Bellamy. Not to mention the 5 straight premierships of the Rabbitohs and the 11 consecutive premiership wins by the Dragons.

2024-03-09T11:39:28+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


Not too late to change teams mate - get away from the Manly toss pots as it were.....

2024-03-09T10:06:57+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


I truly wonder the coach from the reigning premiers for the last 3 years copes with such a psychological masterclass.

2024-03-09T10:05:48+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Jimmy, that saddens me. I thought my first two tips were winners coz I gave some left field thought to the games, not because they were ordained.. :silly:

2024-03-09T09:45:06+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


It's a good quote and is still true. Bennett had Cleary squirming and regretting taking the old fox on in the media. It never gets old. :laughing:

2024-03-09T09:38:40+00:00

Long280

Roar Rookie


You still haven't got over it yet,have you? The Panthers have been living rent free inside your head ever since Critta took the intercept off Walker and ran away to score in the 2021 Grand Final. We get it,you hate the Panthers. Try to cope.

2024-03-09T08:33:14+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


I agree about the Dogs. See my comments on the Eels vs Dogs post-game wrap up.

2024-03-09T08:25:11+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Hey GB, Atkins is in good form in 2024, bet you that he is getting warmed up for the Panthers games :laughing: and did his usual job with the Parra v Dogs game with heaps of controversial calls that were head scratchers and virtually killed the Dogs in the 1st half and gave the game to Parra. But the Dogs are a rabble they didn't deserve even 8 points as it was one of the worst performances I've seen in a long time from an NRL side.

2024-03-09T07:18:26+00:00

Ben Lewis

Roar Pro


Penrith whinging about the Bunker, surely not!

2024-03-09T07:13:45+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


I would expect depth like that for a club whose junior nursery is larger than Switzerland! :laughing:

2024-03-09T06:34:35+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Don’t worry too much GB. I know you always have concerns about the Panthers players. Jaxson Edgar is a brilliant young fullback. On his way up & signed again as a Panthers supporter, to play for them. Billy Scott is an excellent young player at dummy half . NSW under 19’s rep player from last season. Already very close to a first grade position. Iongi had a great start as fullback in NSW Cup this week. Despite the loss Turuva had a very good start this season & is a fullback. Turuva , May & Kenny are all set to sign new contracts. Casey McLean had an excellent start to the season in Jersey Flegg , wing/ centre. Already trained during summer with first grade. He & brother Jesse , both very promising. Things don’t look bad for the future. Knew you’d like to know about them.

2024-03-09T02:33:50+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Yeah, for sure When refs used discretion we all wanted a black and white rule. Now it’s black and white we’re howling for them to use discretion and have a feel for the game :laughing: :laughing:

2024-03-09T02:19:35+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


I’m happy to see those given as a try. But the officials are damned if they do and dammed if they don’t.

2024-03-09T01:26:54+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Yes I feel silly commenting a couple of week back that Storm weren’t even certainties to make the top 4. They look solid for it.

2024-03-09T01:02:34+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


Obviously they are trying to even up the comp - Penrith didnt get any calls trying to come back and of course the travelling World Club finalists (Sutton telling them not to challenge??) have to play away instead of at home in first round - how unjust is that (reminds me of the Danish womens soccer team who were always destined to face Matildas in second round but had to travel from east coast to Perth 3 times in 10 days - no-one else did this). The Cronulla game seemed to be ÿou are in front so I'll give a decision to the trailing team.

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