BREAKING: Scans confirm disaster for Tino, Titans as knee injury further sours Belmore horror show

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Tino Fa’asuamaleaui was carried off on a horror afternoon for the Gold Coast Titans, who went down 32-0 to a resurgent Canterbury Bulldogs at Belmore Sports Ground.

The talismanic Titans captain stayed down underneath a tackle in obvious discomfort midway through the second half and played no further part in the game, turning what was already a chastening experience into an outright disaster.

Scans have since confirmed a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), ruling him out for the season – a bitter blow to compound a horror start to the season for the Titans.

The injury is also a massive blow for the Maroons for this year’s State of Origin series – the Titans skipper has played 12 consecutive Origins and Queensland are already without Dolphins lock Tom Gilbert, whose season is also over due to a torn ACL.

Gold Coast have already had to play their first two matches with fullback Jayden Campbell (patella) and second-rower David Fifita (torn pectoral) on the sidelines.

Campbell made a comeback in the Queensland Cup on the weekend but Titans coach Des Hasler has many more problems after his team’s second consecutive heavey loss.

“The first half I thought it was admirable what we did from a defensive point of view,” Hasler said after the match. “We held them to 12-0 with one off a charge down, so we went into half-time with a bit of confidence.

(Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

“Our attack and end of set in particular put so much pressure on our defence. We came out of the corners the whole day.”

The score was 32-0 at that point after an early second half blitz had seen the Bulldogs surge into a commanding lead. They didn’t add to it, but didn’t need to. Belmore was already rocking and, when Hasler appeared on the big screen, he was booed triumphantly.

Viliame Kikau had been the star, scoring one and setting up another while proving a constant menace in defence. When Tanah Boyd goes to sleep tonight, he will see Kikau looming in his dreams, so terrorised was he in kick pressure.

Cameron Ciraldo’s men clearly came to play, dominating early on through field position and possession before cashing in late in points.

After a wobble early on – Kieran Foran and AJ Brimson conspired to bomb the easiest try of the year – Canterbury took over, with Reed Mahoney and Matt Burton doing a kick and control job that allowed the forwards to take over.

It was textbook stuff, and far too good for the Titans.

“We keep believing what we’re doing and trusting our process,” said the coach.

“It’s easy after a couple of losses to change things around and stop believing, but I feel like everyone in the building stuck to it.

“Today we got the result but I’ve been feeling that at training that we’ve had a lot of winning behaviours, so it was just a matter of time until it came out.”

Kikau fires the Dogs forward

With away trips to Parramatta and Cronulla first up, it perhaps isn’t surprising that the Dogs began with two losses, but there had been signs of defensive improvement that augured well for Ciraldo, especially as that was their worst area in 2023.

The Dogs might be a little bit off a completed team still, but the signs of improvement that were there to see in their first two defeats were again evident, and with weaker opposition, Canterbury were able to play to some of their strengths as well.

One might think of it as raising the floor on this team. Rugby league is a weak link sport, and in previous Dogs sides, it wasn’t that hard to find those pain points and attack them.

This year, they’re still looking for cohesion with plenty of new players, but when you don’t leak tries, you bring in the opportunity to jag ones of your own and pick up wins, especially against other cellar dwellers.

The tries for Canterbury weren’t majestic, with a charge down and a dummy half pushover high on the list, but the effort areas that created them will be of great encouragement to Ciraldo.

Nobody exemplified it better than Kikau. He stripped his game back to hard running and effort areas, largely leaving the flashier stuff until the game was won, and was heavily rewarded.

His chargedown try was a perfect example, but Reed Mahoney’s close range effort came from a Tanah Boyd mistake, which was in turn caused by inside pressure from the Fijian backrower. It wasn’t even the first time he’d done it to Boyd, either.

With guys like Kikau, Stephen Crichton and Matt Burton, you’ll get points from magic moments, so it’s a case of keeping the score tight enough for that to win you a game. Today, that worked a treat.

Des has a huge job on his hands

The Titans have been defensively suspect for years, and changing that is top of Hasler’s priorities.

Brian Kelly has been consistently at the bottom of the NRL for defensive metrics among centres: he didn’t make the top 40 for tackle efficiency and averaged a try cause per game in 2023.

Today, he added another two to that list. The first was a class bad read, watching Kieran Foran go up on his inside but failing to follow him, the second a straight up one-on-one miss that allowed Jacob Kiraz to go right past him. At this level, it’s not good enough.

He wasn’t the only one to struggle.

Keano Kini, the fullback, is exciting in possession but was a liability underneath the high ball and continually out of position for long kicks, with Mahoney able to find the floor from dummy half on several occasions.

Jayden Campbell is back in Q Cup this weekend and you’d have to expect will be rushed back into the first grade squad as soon as possible.

Boyd, as mentioned, was terrorised in his defensive kicking, allowing the Dogs to start almost every set on the front foot.

One could make the argument that the best Titans halves option of recent years was on show at Belmore today – because Toby Sexton played reserve grade for the Dogs before the NRL.

The Titans have struggled to score points this year, with just four so far, but that remains the secondary concern, because first the Dragons and now the Bulldogs have made them look very ordinary indeed in defence.

If that’s what happens with sides who most think will finish towards the bottom, what happens when they face the big boys?

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-25T10:49:15+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


I would love to see Blake Taaffe do well. He is good kid and always gave his best for Souths. He did a great job covering for Latrell coming in during the finals for the 2021 season. However, he struggles to break the line, and I can't remember him ever making a clean line break that he created. Looking at his stats from last weekend, he didn't have one line break or line break assist. I don't think centre is his position, and I think he might do much better if he was shifted to the halves.

2024-03-25T10:37:09+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


You think you have problems, Tony. I have grade 4 arthritis in both knees and chronic ligament damage in both ankles. I literally don't have a leg to stand on. :silly:

2024-03-25T10:32:59+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Historical research has proven you correct! :silly: What a humbling week it has been. Souths have lost their first 3 games of the season, have conceded an average of 37 points per game, their season is on life support and I have been proven wrong all in the same week! Les Johns was in the frame. The pass cut him out, and he was one of the first to turn and give chase, which is probably why I remember him and assumed he had thrown the pass. Although I was almost 2-years-old at the time, it is still an inexcusable lapse of memory. I stand corrected. :silly:

2024-03-25T09:01:36+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Both :happy:

2024-03-25T08:51:45+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


Lifting weights or the remote control?

2024-03-25T08:17:01+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


Yes, the Doggies have to lift themselves immensely to rise to the lofty heights of the 2024 bunnies.

2024-03-25T08:13:24+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Haha....still fighting fit mate, although some of the joints are beginning to ache thanks to too much sport. :laughing:

2024-03-25T08:13:00+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


We need a good halfback RLF. I don't think Hutchison ticks enough boxes. I would not be adverse to the Fox playing fullback upon his return. He would be very elusive running the ball back on kick returns & he reads opposition kicks very well. Taffe is not the answer at fullback. Jake Averillo would have been a better option. Kikau had his best game since his arrival at Belmore.

2024-03-25T08:12:05+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


If you're talking about the intercept pass that McCarthy snaffled, that was thrown by Canterbury hooker Col Brown. :happy:

2024-03-25T07:59:15+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


That is back a heck of a long way Tony. What brand of walking frame are you pushing. My father raved about his brilliance.

2024-03-25T07:54:08+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


The same thing that has happened to every other team he has coached in the last 10 years. Going backwards.

2024-03-24T10:50:26+00:00

PJ

Roar Rookie


Speaking of weak as, the Bunnies 48-6 capitulation to the Chooks tells me the Dogs are likely to have a very Good Friday.

2024-03-24T05:16:15+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


Very sorry for Tino. No-one wants to see that.

2024-03-24T04:35:23+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Bob McCarthy still has fond memories of a Les Johns pass in the 1967 GF. Fast forward to 2021 and Cody Walker... :shocked:

2024-03-24T04:32:29+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Tragic new for Big Tino and the Titans. To have an entire season written off after just 2 games is heartbreaking.

2024-03-24T03:29:19+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


:laughing:

2024-03-24T03:26:13+00:00

Short Memory

Roar Rookie


Bless you and your starry-eyed optimism.

2024-03-24T03:23:33+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Hang on to your bones and kennels all you Dog fans, all this dream comeback 2 points and 32-0 scoreline will come to an abrupt end Good Friday 29th March at 4:05 pm when the :angry: ANGRY ANGRY BUNNIES get to the Dogs :laughing: that was a pretty soft win against a p-weak Titans side, you have Taaffe who is pretty venerable with the bombs and will be bombed all game, then Kikau is weak as and goes down for anything and was allowed way too much space, as the Dogs were given that game as the Titanms just didn't have a go and were weak as :laughing:

2024-03-24T02:50:02+00:00

RLFan

Roar Rookie


Was very impressed with the "Special K's", Kikau and Kiraz, but it was a big improvement all round. I knew from watching the two previous games that their defence had improved a great deal, and they held their own in the first half of both games. Lack of possession against Parramatta, and some terrible decisions going against them at Cronulla, but the signs were there. Yesterday I saw signs of an improved attack, but a way to get yet. Some of the utilities that everyone bagged are coming up trumps, particularly Kurt Mann, and Connor Tracy. I tend to agree about Taffe at fullback, as my heart is in my mouth when he is under the high ball. Other facets of his game, though are good, he has speed and backs up well. Would he make a good halfback?

2024-03-24T02:16:30+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


The big plus for me was the Dogs winning the middle against a Titans pack including Tino, Moe, Jolliffee, Palasia. That gave such a strong platform for to attack from instead of playing from inside our 40 The Dogs still have mostly plain shape in attack. Lots of ball movement this week and last but too often it’s really obvious who is the target to get the ball and the defence can easily read the tells and re-align. The contrast was Preston’s try. On that play Salmon and Knight ran decoy lines and both were positioned to be legitimate targets, not just decoys. They held the defence up and Preston ran a great line at a hole on the defence, instead of a wall. So it’s there, it’s just getting it going more consistently I’m conscious that the Dragons also flogged the Titans. That form has hardly been franked so not worth getting too excited Tracey was super impressive under the high ball and on kick returns. Does Fox have to earn his spot back…? Still concerns from me about Taaffe. He was much more involved with more attacking ball, but he’s so vulnerable under the high ball and gets pummelled on kick returns The enforcement of the no blocker rule has been a great move. Kickers have never been more protected, so from a physical safety point of view they don’t need blockers. As a result we’re now seeing either kickers demonstrate their skills under immense pressure or what we saw yesterday, a committed defence breaking a kicker with that pressure. I almost felt sorry for Boyd by the end of it. Either way it’s far more entertaining than watching markers run into a brick wall I’d never cheer for an injury to a player but I couldn’t help notice the irony of Tino going down injured in a tackle he’d come into by raising his bumpers into the head of a defender… again

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