Expert
Opinion
With the bottom four now out of the way, The Roar’s NRL preview series moves onto those teams who will be in contention for the top eight, but are forecast to miss out.
One of these sides lacks experience in almost every way, while the other have been a perennial struggler, and still won’t improve enough to play finals footy for the first time in years.
When it comes to playing finals footy, there are few clubs who have been as consistent as Brisbane. They almost always find a way to be there at the business end of the season.
In fact, the only times the Broncos have missed the finals this century were in 2013 and 2010, although the last two campaigns might as well be added to the list after heavy first-week exits against the Dragons in 2018, and Parramatta last year by a stunning 58-0.
But they come into the new season with many of the issues they faced last time around, only potentially greater and tougher to deal with.
Anthony Seibold has still not impressed as a coach outside of the strong side he had at Souths, and even then, it could be argued he misused that side to within an inch of its life, while Brisbane’s lack of experience across the paddock is alarming.
Their recruitment has done nothing to address this, and while the positives of a very strong forward pack are there, that’s offset by the lack of experience in it, as well as a major lack of depth once past the top 17, with only a couple of players in the squad able to be played in those positions should injury or suspension strike.
Alex Glenn (c), Jesse Arthars, Jack Bird, Darius Boyd, Patrick Carrigan, Xavier Coates, Brodie Croft, Tom Dearden, Herbie Farnworth, David Fifita, Thomas Flegler, Payne Haas, Jamil Hopoate, Jamayne Isaako, Jordan Kahu, Richie Kennar, Rhys Kennedy, Matthew Lodge, Andrew McCullough, Anthony Milford, Sean O’Sullivan, Corey Oates, Joe Ofahengaue, Cory Paix, Keenan Palasia, Tevita Pangai Junior, Izaia Perese, Kotoni Staggs, Jake Turpin, Ilikena Vudogo
Development players: Ethan Bullemor, Tyson Gamble, Kobe Hetherington, Jordan Leigh, Fanitesi Niu, Pride Petterson-Robati, Jordan Riki
Coach: Anthony Seibold
Captain: Alex Glenn
Ins: Jesse Arthars (Gold Coast Titans), Brodie Croft (Melbourne Storm), Jordan Kahu (North Queensland Cowboys), Rhys Kennedy (South Sydney Rabbitohs mid-2019), Sean O’Sullivan (Sydney Roosters), Keenan Palasia (development)
Outs: Troy Dargan (South Sydney Rabbitohs), George Fai (rugby union), Shaun Fensom (retired), Matt Gillett (retired), Patrick Mago (South Sydney Rabbitohs), Andre Savelio (Hull FC), James Segeyaro (provisional suspension), Gehamat Shibasaki (Newcastle Knights), Sam Tagataese (retired)
The best 17
1. Jamayne Isaako
2. Corey Oates
3. Kotoni Staggs
4. Jack Bird
5. Darius Boyd
6. Anthony Milford
7. Brodie Croft
8. Payne Haas
9. Andrew McCullough
10. Matt Lodge
11. Alex Glenn
12. David Fifita
13. Tevita Pangai Junior
Interchange
14. Jake Turpin
15. Joe Ofahengaue
16. Patrick Carrigan
17. Thomas Flegler
Team overview
As mentioned, the Broncos side is very skinny on experience. Darius Boyd, Anthony Milford, Corey Oates and Alex Glenn head up the list, but arguably, Glenn and Boyd may not be in the starting 13 if they didn’t hold those positions.
Boyd, potentially shuffled out to the wing as a result of his own form and the need to play Jamayne Isaako and Anthony Milford in key positions, will be intriguing in that he simply must be better than he was last year.
Then there is the issue of Andrew McCullough needing to start, when form of the last 12 months and future aspirations would otherwise have Jake Turpin in the nine jersey.
Speaking of the lack of experience, and the pressure on Brodie Croft is immense in 2020. He is an inexperienced half who is likely down on confidence after being dropped by Melbourne before making his way north.
He will undoubtedly line up though, as will Anthony Milford next to him, while Corey Oates, Jack Bird and Kotoni Staggs pick themselves, but will be under the pump with plenty of depth in the back line.
As mentioned, Brisbane’s forward depth outside the top 17 is woeful. The starting and bench pack pick themselves, virtually because there are no replacements, not helped by the off-season losses of Matt Gillett and Shaun Fensom among others.
Strengths
As much as their forward depth is going to be a thorn in the side, their starting pack – when it fires – is unbelievably strong.
Payne Haas and David Fifita were revelations last year, while Matt Lodge (once he returns from injury) could push for an Origin gig this year.
Their bench, on paper, could also be one of the stronger ones if it clicks, with Joe Ofahengaue, Thomas Flegler and probably Patrick Carrigan likely to start at a lot of other clubs.
If Croft (and more on this in a moment) can control this team, then Anthony Milford also becomes a strength. At his best, he is absolutely damaging, but we haven’t seen that for some time, because he has been trying to play a role that puts him in charge of the side’s attacking structures.
Weaknesses
Brisbane’s big problem last year was a controller in the halves, allowing Milford to play his own game, but at just 22 and coming out of a system where he was always second fiddle, whether Croft has the tools to guide the forward pack around remains to be seen.
The pressure on him to carry out a role that reverses Brisbane’s attacking fortunes, at a club where fans don’t take lack of success for an answer, will be enormous.
That being said, their defence will also need to up its game. It was strong on occasion last year, but the consistency wasn’t there.
Often, Brisbane’s much talked-about pack would fall asleep and let easy points in. That, or the edges would struggle to contain, and that could be an issue again, with Darius Boyd on one side and Corey Oates – who often struggles under the high ball – on the other.
Defensively, a good controller at the back is pivotal. Most premiership teams have had a fullback who knows how to position his team – think Billy Slater or James Tedesco. Jamayne Isaako, though talented, still has a lot to prove in that area.
Round | Date | Time | Opponent | Venue | TV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Fri Mar 13 | 8:05pm | North Queensland Cowboys | North Queensland Stadium | Nine/Fox |
2 | Fri Mar 20 | 8:05pm | South Sydney Rabbitohs | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
3 | Sun Mar 29 | 6:15pm | Gold Coast Titans | CBus Super Stadium | Fox |
4 | Sat Apr 4 | 7:35pm | Penrith Panthers | Panthers Stadium | Fox |
5 | Fri Apr 10 | 7:55pm | North Queensland Cowboys | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
6 | Fri Apr 17 | 7:55pm | Cronulla Sharks | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
7 | Fri Apr 24 | 7:55pm | Parramatta Eels | TIO Stadium, Darwin | Nine/Fox |
8 | Fri May 1 | 8:05pm | Manly Sea Eagles | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
9 | Thu May 7 | 7:50pm | South Sydney Rabbitohs | ANZ Stadium | Nine/Fox |
10 | Fri May 15 | 7:55pm | St George Illawarra Dragons | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
11 | Thu May 21 | 7:50pm | Canterbury Bulldogs | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
12 | Bye | ||||
13 | Fri Jun 5 | 6pm | New Zealand Warriors | Mt Smart Stadium | Fox |
14 | Thu Jun 11 | 7:50pm | Sydney Roosters | Sydney Cricket Ground | Nine/Fox |
15 | Fri Jun 26 | 7:55pm | Melbourne Storm | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
16 | Thu Jul 2 | 7:50pm | Penrith Panthers | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
17 | Sat Jul 11 | 5:30pm | Canberra Raiders | GIO Stadium | Fox |
18 | Sun Jul 19 | 4:05pm | Newcastle Knights | McDonald Jones Stadium | Nine/Fox |
19 | Sat Jul 25 | 5:30pm | New Zealand Warriors | Suncorp Stadium | Fox |
20 | Fri Jul 31 | 7:55pm | Parramatta Eels | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
21 | Sun Aug 9 | 4:05pm | Wests Tigers | Campbelltown Stadium | Nine/Fox |
22 | Sun Aug 16 | 2:05pm | Gold Coast Titans | Suncorp Stadium | Fox |
23 | Sun Aug 22 | 7:35pm | Newcastle Knights | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
24 | Sat Aug 29 | 7:35pm | Melbourne Storm | AAMI Stadium | Nine/Fox |
25 | Fri Sep 4 | 7:55pm | Sydney Roosters | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
Teams to play twice: North Queensland Cowboys, South Sydney Rabbitohs, Penrith Panthers, New Zealand Warriors, Parramatta Eels, Gold Coast Titans, Newcastle Knights, Melbourne Storm, Sydney Roosters
Five-day turnarounds: 0
Seven-plus-day turnarounds: 13
Best home run: Round 19 to 25 (five of seven)
Worst away run: Round 3 to 9 (five of seven) including Magic Round
Apart from the fact the Broncos play Souths, Parramatta, Melbourne and the Roosters twice, their fixture run is about as good as it gets.
Playing 13 games at home thanks to Magic Round helps, but they only have two substantial blocks of the season where they spend lots of time away (Rounds 3 to 9, and 13 to 18), before playing five of their last seven at home.
If the Broncos are going to finish down the bottom, the fixtures won’t be an excuse, although finishing the season on a double-header of the Storm (away) and Roosters (home) could be both a blessing and a curse – a blessing if they are already in the finals and need some tough games, and a curse if they need two from two to make the eight.
For so long, the Knights have struggled at the wrong end of the table, and while last year was supposed to bring an enormous change in fortunes, it did anything but.
Instead of bringing finals footy to the Hunter, Nathan Brown found himself out of a job, the Knights found themselves falling flat on their face with no motivation, and back to the drawing board ahead of 2020.
Now, Adam O’Brien comes in to manage the side – a side with a lot of youth and potential – but a side who aren’t expected to do amazing things.
They have one of the most talented players in the game on their books, but he put in a poor 2019, they have talented forwards, but they clicked in and out of games, and a back line that leaves plenty to be desired.
The Knights will need a mighty effort to turn things around, and whether they can looks unlikely in the short term, with a similar finish to last year – where they lost all momentum and were blown out 54-10 on the final day of the season by Penrith – in the pipeline again.
Mitchell Pearce (c), Mitch Barnett, Bradman Best, Jayden Brailey, Phoenix Crossland, Herman Ese’ese, Lachlan Fitzgibbon, Tim Glasby, Aidan Guerra, Hymel Hunt, Brodie Jones, Josh King, David Klemmer, Edrick Lee, Mason Lino, Kurt Mann, Sione Mata’utia, Tautau Moga, Jirah Momoisea, Kalyn Ponga, Daniel Saifiti, Jacob Saifiti, Pasami Saulo, Gehamat Shibasaki, Starford To’a, Enari Tuala, Connor Watson
Development players: Matt Croker, Tex Hoy, Luke Huth, Nathanael Sasagi
Coach: Adam O’Brien
Captain: Mitchell Pearce
Ins: Bradman Best (promoted from development mid-2019), Jayden Brailey (Cronulla Sharks), Phoenix Crossland (development), Starford To’a (development), Enari Tuala (North Queensland Cowboys)
Outs: Jamie Buhrer (retired), James Gavet (Huddersfield Giants), Slade Griffin (retired), Shaun Kenny-Dowall (Hull KR), Danny Levi (Manly Sea Eagles), Jesse Ramien (Cronulla Sharks), Nathan Ross (retired), Sam Stone (Gold Coast Titans mid 2019), Zac Woolford (released)
The best 17
1. Kalyn Ponga
2. Edrick Lee
3. Bradman Best
4. Tautau Moga
5. Hymel Hunt
6. Mason Lino
7. Mitchell Pearce
8. Daniel Saifiti
9. Jayden Brailey
10. David Klemmer
11. Lachlan Fitzgibbon
12. Mitch Barnett
13. Tim Glasby
Interchange
14. Aidan Guerra
15. Connor Watson
16. Herman Ese’ese
17. Josh King
Team overview
The Newcastle side is very much up in the air across a number of positions. While Kalyn Ponga, Mitchell Pearce and the recruited Jayden Brailey are locked into the spine, Mason Lino could be under the pump from Kurt Mann, Connor Watson or outrageous talent Phoenix Crossland.
Edrick Lee and Hymel Hunt are similarly likely certain starters in the back five thanks to their 2019 seasons, while Tautau Moga and Bradman Best will have to fend off competition for the centre spots from Enari Tuala and the arriving Gehamat Shibasaki – Best is injured at the current time.
When it comes to the forwards, David Klemmer and Tim Glasby will lead the way with Lachlan Fitzgibbon, Daniel Saifiti and Mitch Barnett all set to start. It means Herman Ese’ese, Josh King, Aidan Guerra, Sione Mata’utia, Jacob Saifiti and Pasami Saulo will battle for the remaining bench spots.
Should Watson land a starting role, it’s likely the utility spot would fall to Kurt Mann.
Strengths
The immediate strength that comes to mind for Newcastle is their kicking game. Pearce is one of the most consistent in the competition, while Lino will add plenty.
Where they pick up is the ability of Brailey to kick the ball out of dummy half, something they lacked last time around.
Brailey is a great signing for the club, with the young hooker capable of playing big minutes. Not only will he add to their kicking game, but he should be able to work in with a good forward pack, providing consistent service of the ball in the right spots.
Their other big area of strength should be that of fullback. Kalyn Ponga hasn’t hit his potential yet, but when he does, it’ll be a sight for sore eyes in Newcastle as he plays around second-phase play from the likes of Klemmer, Glasby and Fitzgibbon, creating time and space for the youngster to use his acceleration, speed and footwork.
Weaknesses
Defence has been an area of weakness for the Knights for some years, and could continue to be so as we head into the new season.
The forwards all have the technical capabilities to be very strong at that end of the park, but so often, defensive structures depend on good coaching and a good fullback. Neither O’Brien or Ponga have proven themselves yet in that area, and so it’s tough to identify why the Knights will improve on their record of being fourth-worst last season.
Their is also a weakness in the outside backs, which, of course, directly impacts the defensive ranking of a side. Newcastle don’t have a settled line or great defenders out wide, with Edrick Lee susceptible, and their centres all jostling for position.
On top of that, while all thee players named in those outside positions are serviceable, none of them will set the world on fire in attack, so the likes of Pearce and Ponga will need to be creating some incredibly good opportunities for Newcastle to keep the points ticking.
Round | Date | Time | Opponent | Venue | TV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sat Mar 14 | 3pm | New Zealand Warriors | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
2 | Sun Mar 22 | 4:05pm | Wests Tigers | Leichhardt Oval | Nine/Fox |
3 | Sat Mar 28 | 3pm | Cronulla Sharks | Jubilee Oval | Fox |
4 | Fri Apr 3 | 6pm | North Queensland Cowboys | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
5 | Thu Apr 9 | 7:50pm | Manly Sea Eagles | Lottoland | Nine/Fox |
6 | Sat Apr 18 | 3pm | Canberra Raiders | Wagga Wagga | Fox |
7 | Sun Apr 26 | 4:05pm | Penrith Panthers | McDonald Jones Stadium | Nine/Fox |
8 | Sat May 2 | 3pm | South Sydney Rabbitohs | Suncorp Stadium | Fox |
9 | Sat May 9 | 3pm | St George Illawarra Dragons | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
10 | Thu May 14 | 7:50pm | Sydney Roosters | Sydney Cricket Ground | Nine/Fox |
11 | Sun May 24 | 2:05pm | Cronulla Sharks | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
12 | Sat May 30 | 7:35pm | South Sydney Rabbitohs | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
13 | Sun Jun 7 | 2:05pm | Penrith Panthers | Panthers Stadium | Fox |
14 | Sat Jun 13 | 5:30pm | Melbourne Storm | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
15 | Sun Jun 28 | 2:05pm | Gold Coast Titans | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
16 | Bye | ||||
17 | Sun Jul 12 | 6:15pm | North Queensland Cowboys | North Queensland Stadium | Fox |
18 | Sun Jul 19 | 4:05pm | Brisbane Broncos | McDonald Jones Stadium | Nine/Fox |
19 | Sun Jul 26 | 4:05pm | Wests Tigers | McDonald Jones Stadium | Nine/Fox |
20 | Sat Aug 1 | 5:30pm | Canterbury Bulldogs | Bankwest Stadium | Fox |
21 | Sun Aug 9 | 2:05pm | New Zealand Warriors | Mt Smart Stadium | Fox |
22 | Sat Aug 15 | 5:30pm | Manly Sea Eagles | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
23 | Sat Aug 22 | 7:35pm | Brisbane Broncos | Suncorp Stadium | Nine/Fox |
24 | Fri Aug 28 | 6pm | Parramatta Eels | Bankwest Stadium | Fox |
25 | Sun Sep 6 | 2:05pm | Canterbury Bulldogs | McDonald Jones Stadium | Fox |
Teams to play twice: Cronulla Sharks, South Sydney Rabbitohs, Penrith Panthers, North Queensland Cowboys, Wests Tigers, New Zealand Warriors, Manly Sea Eagles, Brisbane Broncos, Canterbury Bulldogs
Five-day turnarounds: one
Seven-plus-day turnarounds: 13
Best home run: Round 11 to 19 (six out of eight)
Worst away run: Round 2 to 10 (six out of nine)
If the Knights can make their home in the Hunter a fortress, then Novocastrians are going to have a lot of fun through the middle third of the season, when the side play six out of eight at home.
Difficult away runs on either side make their season a little more complicated, and momentum could be lacking.
What they don’t have, though, is a difficult list of teams to play twice, with only Conulla, South Sydney, Manly and Brisbane included from last year’s top eight.
11. Newcastle Knights
12. Brisbane Broncos
13. Canterbury Bulldogs
14. Gold Coast Titans
15. New Zealand Warriors
16. Wests Tigers