Nathan's kicks the difference in Panthers rearguard action as Ivan reveals reason for Turuva absence

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Penrith have won plenty of games under Ivan Cleary, but few can have seen them have to grit it out as much as this one.

On a hot night in Townsville, the Panthers were asked to defend for their lives, enduring pressure upon pressure from a Cowboys side that threw the kitchen sink, but repelled enough to pull off a 26-20 smash and grab win.

The hosts had 44 sets to 37, made the Panthers make 50 more tackles and won the metres comfortably – but, eventually, lost by three Nathan Cleary kicks.

Cleary, on return to the side, was perfect off the tee and pulled off a trysaver in the final minute to preserve a win that was all about guts and scramble.

Ivan Cleary had pulled Sunia Turuva from the line-up ahead of kick off, confirming that the Fijian had been left out due to the strain of his contract discussions in the week passed, but struck gold in his replacement, Paul Alamoti, who scored a vital intercept.

“Sunia didn’t play mainly because he was going through his contract decision and still negotiating,” said the coach.

“So it was something that has been going on for a few weeks. I think people don’t quite understand how much that can take out of someone, especially a young man with such a big decision.

“Not just professionally wise but emotionally. That’s why we gave him the night off.”

“We had a rash of possession against us,” said Cleary senior on the game itself.

“The Cows started throwing caution to the wind a little bit and got repeat possession in a bunch of different ways and we were under pressure for what felt like the whole second half. We’re relieved to get home.

“It’s good to go through it and still be able to get the job done but it’s going to be a long, hard season if we do that to ourselves.”

North Queensland did plenty right before the break, but found themselves 24-4 down thanks to tries gifted to the opposition – the Alamoti intercept, Liam Martin from an error – and poor goalline, which allowed the Panthers to score on their rare visits to Cowboys territory.

From the canvas, however, Todd Payten’s men put on three second half tries to make the game very interesting indeed.

“I was pleased (at the fightback) but really frustrated too,” said the coach.

“From 24-4 down it’s a great effort but it’s still not good enough. We fell short in the win again and two freak tries to the opposition either side of half time is the difference in the end.

“We lost three of the last four and we can’t be happy with being close.”

Kulikefu Finefeuiaki, Jeremiah Nanai and Val Holmes had given the Cowboys hope, but they hadn’t factored on a second wind from Penrith to stop the comeback in its tracks.

They also lost Tom Chester to a hamstring strain, which will give Payten headaches given other losses in the outside backs with Murray Taulagi already sidelined, though the coach was confident he could return next week.

Alamoti makes a point

Cleary opted to replace Turuva with Alamoti. In doing so, he might have gone a long way to finding his replacement for next year, with another strong performance from the former Bulldog.

Anyone who has seen Alamoti play NSW Cup knows that he’s far too good for that level, and most who saw him play NRL for Canterbury last year could guess that, at least to some extent, it was a case of them, rather than him, being the issue.

It looked like a great pickup for the Panthers when they took over his contract and it’s only looking better now.

Alamoti was excellent tonight, actively looking for work as well as taking care of that which came his way anyway, topping 200m in carries by half time – aided by two breaks – but also taking 11 hard carries.

He had a hand in two first half tries. Though Brian To’o scored the first on the left wing, the space was created by Alamoti’s break on the right, and on the stroke of half time, he iced an intercept to move Penrith to a three score lead.

Those two moments were the bookends to a half in which the Panthers had to do a lot of defending.

Dylan Edwards, who scored the try in between, was the best of the lot, though for the first time in a long time, it actually caught up with them.

To’o, in game 100, seemed on a mission to mark his milestone and took almost 200m himself, plenty of it post-contact thanks to a huge 17 tackle breaks.

The nature of the tries scored, not least the intercept and Martin’s, from a spilled kick, told a tale.

North Queensland did all the right things to win but were punished in tiny moments while proving unable to turn their own domination into enough results.

The Cowboys can’t capitalise

There’s a feeling that the Panthers are a machine who can defend and defend ad infinitum, but with a few missing links in the chain and a Cowboys side that really came to play in the second half, things got very tough indeed.

By the hour mark, the Cowboys had accumulated 61% of possession across the game, with ten whole sets more than their opponents and 40 red zone tackles to just eight.

That the game was still in their favour was exceptional in and of itself, a testament to the systems that Cleary has built over time.

The Cowboys have lived on their attack all year, but couldn’t post enough from their huge advantages in field position.

They did find some joy, especially in isolating backrowers over halves: Nanai went straight through Jarome Luai and Cleary missed a quarter of his tackles, but the scramble was generally there.

The Cowboys got 20 points and were forced to work for every single one of them. Penrith put in a shift to stop North Queensland, but got their own points too easily.

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-28T07:06:33+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Or that he doesn’t work that hard in the forwards? Good point there. They could almost reverse that situation of needing another centre, by keeping a back on the bench . Which is often needed. Move Tago to the forwards when required, as he was a forward.

2024-04-28T07:04:04+00:00

blacktown leagues

Roar Rookie


Good call LP maybe put him one wider to improve his defensive reads

2024-04-28T06:59:45+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


I think Geyer playing centres in NSW Cup is about improving his versatility and making him more valuable to the FG bench; he can take Garner’s spot on the bench as the forward who can also play in the backs at a pinch.

2024-04-28T05:47:36+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Agree, Storm are the worst in the comp at the hold down. What they do is ignore the Ref . A few 6 against and the Eefs give up. I only thought the Panthers were really bad in that one time period and i did think they deserved at least a warning but you are right Melbourne are the Gold standard.

2024-04-28T05:42:54+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


He was fantastic in the trial game against the Broncs. I thought when Hess went down he was a shoe in but no. I would give him a real go.

2024-04-28T05:23:19+00:00

Dodgy Dragons

Roar Rookie


Very true, but if defensively a team was on the same page and had their defensive line pretty set, hopefully it would reduce the easy metres that their back 3 would get, but those 3 are very good at making inroads either way. Just a thought to slow them down a bit.

2024-04-28T05:16:17+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


They also changed the rule to 20m restart and 7 tackle set to counter the tactic of kicking dead. Again easy to say, but you need a good yardage set, followed by a great kick into the corner (that hits the grass), and then an elite chase line. Dominant first tackle to allow tackles 2 and 3 to have a compressed line. Discipline to slow the play but not concede a penalty or 6-again. Boom! Panthers sorted :laughing:

2024-04-28T04:23:34+00:00

Nathan Absalom

Roar Guru


I used to think that. But when they changed the rule to a play the ball instead of a scrum when the ball was kicked into touch, they also allow the play the ball to be taken before the players get back onside. Why this is the case, I do not know, but it makes kicking the ball out a less effective tactic.

2024-04-28T03:23:02+00:00

Dodgy Dragons

Roar Rookie


Michaele looks like a good one, impressed how he played last night Jimmmy.

2024-04-28T03:20:35+00:00

Dodgy Dragons

Roar Rookie


I’m surprised opposition coaches don’t try targeting finding the sideline on their clearing kicks against the panthers. It would make all the forwards have to get back behind the line, give your team a chance to set up defensively and a bit of a breather and hopefully reduce the momentum of their back 3 carries. Maybe they are, but Penrith’s positional play is too good, I’m not sure ????‍♂️

2024-04-28T03:15:12+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Safe to say some of the tactics the Storm in particular have adopted have proven to be very suss in hindsight but you're right, were considered good coaching at the time. Some time soon, I hope those who think the game is all about playing on quickly realise it's far more than that. They can then instruct the refs to stop the crap that teams are forced to adopt to slow things down

2024-04-28T02:42:13+00:00

Nathan Absalom

Roar Guru


Yeah, the lack of a sin bin when warranted for repeat cynical infringements has been a feature of the last few weeks.

2024-04-28T02:41:04+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


I agree with Luki being a centre option along with Taulagi ( who has very good hands passing and kicking behind the line. Both he and Feldt could play centre also. Valemei has limited ability other than being a powerful runner from what I’ve seen. Centres with limited ball play limit your winger’s ability to score. There are plenty of combinations Todd could come up with. Maybe Drinkwater off the bench and Val at starting fullback. 20min in swap Drinkwater into fullback and Val to centre. A bigger, stronger more defensive team for the opening 20min.

2024-04-28T02:36:47+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Storm are specialists. However, mostly just considered to be good coaching when it’s them. Broncos are much the same. Plus kings of the second man flop on tackle.

2024-04-28T02:29:19+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I'm sure there are more than a few teams who should cop more of these type of penalties against them, Panthers. This rule was meant to both speed up the game and supposedly take this type of cynical play out of it. IMO it's not working so lets go next level and bin a few guys.

2024-04-28T02:21:06+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


Let’s be honest there wouldn’t be a player ( forward, half or back) in the competition that wouldn’t lick their lips seeing Drinkwater in defence. He wants nothing to do with that part of the game.

2024-04-28T02:16:20+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


Edwards is fantastic footballer. I’m total NQ and QLD but I’ve been impressed by this bloke since he started. He’s constantly thinking and 100% committed. He’s more than happy to do the hard stuff and never overplays his hand. That stop on Nanai was massive. He makes plenty of critical plays that don’t get much attention. Drinkwater however makes little effort on defence and also loves the glory play. These interceptions are easily read IMO because Drinkwater is looking to be a hero with the ball? He throws numerous passes that result in errors because they’re dumb pressure balls also. Edwards doesn’t give you any dumb stuff but plenty of quality.

2024-04-28T02:11:55+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


That’s true to a point. Yet they only notice one side offending & the other side is good as gold, no matter what. That all goes with making it really tough for this side, this season. Top of the most penalised teams again with West’s.

2024-04-28T01:42:25+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Once again the Panthers back three set up the win, Edwards 219m To'o 227m Alamoti 247m give them such a leg-up to start their sets. It's easy to say, but almost impossible to do, but if teams can restrict yardage from tackles 1-3, they will go a long, long way to rolling the Panthers.

2024-04-28T01:16:59+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Spot on GB , you can't complain about possession when it's you deliberately giving penalties away.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar