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Third versus last on the ladder. TAB odds of $1.08 against $8.00. On paper, this Saturday night’s battle of the big cats should be one-way traffic with the Panthers running riot over the Tigers.
But this is rugby league, and especially in 2023, anything can happen.
Indeed the Tigers last Sunday proved they’re anything but easybeats, very nearly upsetting Manly in wet conditions at Campbelltown Stadium. Had the last pass stuck on a couple more occasions, they may have just recorded their first win of the year.
And the Panthers are still missing a host of key players, including James Fisher-Harris and Liam Martin, with centre Izack Tago added to that list this week. Tyrone Peachey starts for the first time this year in his place.
I’m not reading too much into Penrith’s capitulation at the hands of Souths last Thursday night. The Panthers were well in control until Sunia Turuva got injured, forcing a backline
re-shuffle that Souths took total advantage of in the final five minutes. You can’t help such circumstances but if Turuva doesn’t go off, Penrith probably hang on.
The fact that Penrith’s losses this year have been by one point (twice) and two points says a lot about the team. Yes, they’ve come back to the pack a little but the main mission this year is simply staying in top four contention and being in the mix when the whips are cracking at the business end of the season.
The Panthers can’t afford to take the Tigers lightly this Saturday in Bathurst but perhaps the best thing for Ivan Cleary’s side is how results went last weekend. They won’t want to lose back-to-back games, while the Tigers’ effort showed they won’t be easybeats. The two results will ensure Penrith are very focused heading into this one.
In the end the Panthers would be disappointed by their kicking game last weekend
– the Rabbitohs dominated in this facet of
the game, while they also doubled Penrith’s offloads, keeping the ball alive and forcing Penrith to scramble more than they’re used to.
You would think Penrith should be too clever and too strong for the Tigers. It’s hard to imagine Tim Sheens’ side containing Penrith’s strong starts to sets, which will give Nathan Cleary plenty of time to plot attacking raids.
As much as the Tigers may try hard, they rarely take the right option – perhaps that’s more of a confidence thing than anything else, but it doesn’t do them any favours when it comes to taking advantage of situations presented to them.
Also working in Penrith’s favour is the lead-up time to this game. They played last Thursday, providing a nine-day turnaround after what was a quality game of football. And while the Tigers aren’t necessarily on a short turnaround, they did play on Sunday in wet and sluggish conditions – so there’s no doubt the legs would have been heavy early in the week.
The Panthers simply need to go about their game plan here. There’s no need to reinvent the wheel. They’re stronger in almost every position, have a much clearer mind in attack and a better defensive resolve.
The one x-factor for the Tigers could be Api Koroisau. Not only would he be keen to get one over his former team mates, but there’s no question Penrith are struggling to adequately replace him at dummy half.
I’m also a little concerned that there could be further surprise changes to the line-up. Call it a gut feel, or examining the extended bench too much, but it just feels like a late shake-up could be on the cards.
An intriguing game of footy this one – and Penrith’s performance against Newcastle a fortnight ago does have me a little worried about which Panthers team will turn up. But I’m confident enough Ivan Cleary’s team will get the job done at their home away from home.
Tip: Panthers by 18.
Seasons
If you were stranded on a desert island, who are you bringing with you and why? My Dad because he’ll help me survive on the island.
! Rugby’s “raid”: It’s true that Rugby Australia has Panthers co-captain Nathan Cleary on a hit list of potential targets, but the chances of the dual Premiership winner switching codes are thin. Not that it’s unprecedented at Penrith – after all, 2003 Premiership winning halfback Craig Gower made a controversial switch to rugby during his Panthers career. But Cleary is pretty set in Penrith and rugby league – his previous comments about being open to rugby were flippant and off the cuff during an early morning TV interview. A lot of water, and seasons in the NRL, will flow under the bridge before this becomes a legitimate issue. “Nathan’s a competitor, so of course you can’t rule it out, but it’s not anywhere in his real headspace at the moment,” a Panthers source told me this week.
! Late night road trip: While the Panthers headed to Bathurst on Thursday for a range of commitments ahead of Saturday’s game against the Wests Tigers, they won’t be hanging around too long post-match. The team has opted to head home on a bus after the game, instead of staying for the night in Bathurst and returning on Sunday.
! Mixing with fans: The Panthers backed up from last Thursday’s loss to South Sydney to attend a signing session at Westfield Penrith last Friday. There was a huge turnout with supporters taking advantage of the school holidays to meet their heroes.
ment, and the previous countless stories about the NRL hitting the United States market have fallen flat.
! Panthers still favourites: Penrith remain competition favourites with the TAB at $4.00 despite Brisbane’s stunning start to the season. In fact, the Broncos are fourth favourites at $7.00, with the Rabbitohs and Roosters sitting behind the Panthers at $6.00.
Rabbitohs players had headed to the dressing room. They do it every week – and deserve to be applauded for it.
! Spotted: Injured Panthers second-rower Liam Martin soaking up the pre-match atmosphere at Accor Stadium before the Souths game last Thursday night.
! NRL gambles on Vegas: The annual story about the NRL launching the next season in America is back again. This time, we’re told the league is investigating the possibility of opening the 2024 season with a double header in Las Vegas. It would reportedly involve four Sydney clubs – and you can almost guarantee that will include glamour sides like Souths and the Roosters. We’re a long-way off this being confirmed and any potential Penrith involve-
! Hall of Fame falls silent: Will we ever see any additional players added to Penrith’s Hall of Fame? It’s been eight years since Grahame Moran, Royce Simmons, Greg Alexander and Craig Gower became the inaugural Hall of Fame members. Their names adorn the eastern grandstand at BlueBet Stadium. But there’s been very little said about it since – and no sign of any additional players being added.
! Credit where it’s due: Despite a narrow loss at the hands of Souths last Thursday, Penrith players quickly headed over to mix with fans in the stands at Accor Stadium. Penrith players were still on the field long after
! Hip drop confusion: NRL Head of Football Graham Annesley’s weekly press conference dragged on for almost an hour on Monday as tried to explain the NRL’s current policies around the hip drop tackle. The NRL is at pains to say it’s not a crackdown, but that it needs to get the tackle out of the game. All of this just a week out from Magic Round – where the infamous high tackle crackdown took place a few seasons ago.
! Tune in: Panthers co-captain Nathan Cleary offers tremendous insight into his career in the latest episode of Hayden Knowles’ podcast, ‘Get The Edge’. Cleary talks about preparation, recent highs and lows and recaps the 2021 and 2022 Premiership successes.
! Tago’s tough luck: Boom centre Izack Tago will be out for around a month with a pectoral injury.
Nathan Cleary. Photo: NRL Images.and think about where you could’ve been or what you could’ve done better.”
sucks, but we’re expecting every team to come out and put on their best performance against us,” he said.
Have you ever exercised at night and struggled to get to sleep? Post-exercise insomnia is a common occurrence for people who like to work out in the later hours and is caused by a number of factors, like often too much adrenaline running through the body.
After getting home from a game and with his young family tucked away in bed, Sorensen takes his “digesting” to another level and sometimes watches full match replays of the intense battle he just played out.
“I won’t watch match highlights, instead I’ll sometimes
“We hold a standard here and we know we are better than that and we need to be better than that.
“Hopefully we can turn that around and put in a good performance this week.”
For the fourth time this season, the 30-year-old will line up in the back row for this Saturday night’s clash against the Wests Tigers in Bathurst, replacing the injured Liam Martin.
The Kiwi international said he can’t wait to mingle with the Bathurst community in the lead up to their clash with last year’s wooden spoon ers at Carrington Park.
“I love going out there, it’s like our second home out there in Bathurst,” Sorensen said.
“It’s an awesome little community and I enjoy getting out and doing footy clinics and getting amongst it.
“We love playing out there, we get such good support, and everyone turns up. It’s a cool atmosphere, a cool ground, and a really nice town as well.”
It probably comes as no surprise that our favourite Panthers stars also go through the same thing, especially following prime-time games.
With matches often finishing around 10pm, players aren’t usually back home or in their hotel beds until midnight or even later.
From there, anything can happen.
Some players fall asleep quite quickly, while others are up tossing and turning, unable to switch off, until the sun rises the next day.
Panthers forward Scott Sorensen is one player who often finds himself awake until the wee hours, dissecting the NRL game he just played in his head.
“Especially after a loss,” Sorensen admitted to Extra Time
“It’s a little bit tricky to go to bed because you’re digesting the game and processing it all – I wish I could’ve done this, I wish I could’ve done that.
“It’s a funny one because even with wins you sit up and digest the game
rewatch the whole game at home,” he revealed.
“I like to sit down and watch it from start to finish and watch the process of the game – how we start and that sort of stuff.
“It’s kind of interesting to sit and watch the game back, but I suppose it’s also good to switch off a little bit when you get home and have some family time before going back to work and going through it all again with the coaches and team.”
One game that was hard to shake for both Panthers fans and players was Thursday night’s last minute capitulation to the South Sydney Rabbitohs at Accor Stadium.
Penrith were up by eight points in the dying stages of the match and were looking set for their fifth victory of the season, before South Sydney pulled a rabbit out of their hat.
Sorensen said the Rabbitohs were “too good” in the end.
“You never like to lose, it always
Deep down Sorensen will be hoping there will be plenty more trips out to Bathurst in his future. Off-contract at the end of the season, the Cronulla-Caringbah Sharks junior would love nothing more than to remain at the foot of the Mountains longterm.
Sorensen said while the ideal outcome would be to re-sign with the defending Premiers next year, he has to keep his options open for his young family.
“Staying here would be ideal but all options are open – including the Super League – I need to be in a posi tion to be open to that,” he said.
“I have a young family that, in all honesty, I need to support and look after. Ideally, it would be staying here at Penrith for sure, if we can
room together or, if they’re lucky, get their own pad.
Road trips – some players love them, some not so much. For popular Panthers prop Spencer Leniu, he can see the good and bad side to away games.
While the 22-year-old enforcer couldn’t wait to head out to Bathurst this week to engage with the local community, he was a bit anxious about spending three days away with some of his teammates.
Speaking with Extra Time on Monday afternoon, the Roosters-bound forward said team road trips certainly have their pros and cons.
“I don’t know… sometimes you can enjoy it but sometimes it can get a bit annoying,” Leniu admitted.
“We’ve got a lot of characters in our team and sometimes they can press buttons that you don’t want pressed, but it’s always good fun.
“I’ve grown up with a lot of these boys and it’s always a vibe going out with them.”
The Panthers have already spent nights away on two occasions this season – back in late March down in Canberra and in Newcastle before their Round 7 thriller against the Knights.
Leniu said the players sometimes share a
“In Newcastle we had our own room but when we were in Canberra, we roomed together,” he said.
“Most of the time I get to room with Critta (Stephen Crichton). We try and get put with players who we are closest to, sort of thing.”
The Panthers will be spending a lot of time away from home over the next fortnight or so. This weekend they’ll play their annual fixture in Bathurst, while next week they’ll be up in Brisbane for the NRL’s Magic Round.
The Minchinbury Jets junior said he loves playing out in Bathurst and can’t wait to put on a show for the footy mad fans in the central west.
“They are part of our community and they only get one game a year there, so every time we go out there and play we try and put in a good performance,” Leniu said.
“I love the country crowd… they are full of joy all the time and I can’t wait to play there this weekend.”
Leniu said the Panthers always go out to give it their best every single week, but there’s something about playing in Bathurst.
“They only get one game a year, so it would be pretty poor for us if we go out there and play badly,” he said.
“A lot of emphasis goes into having a good performance, especially when we go to Bathurst, and they deserve it.
“They are hard workers and there’s nothing better we can do than to repay them by playing good footy.”
With the Panthers down on troops for Saturday’s clash against the winless Wests Tigers, all eyes will be on the defending Premiers to see how they bounce back from their last minute loss to South Sydney.
Leniu said he feels sympathy for the strug-
gling Tigers, but he certainly won’t be feeling sorry for them come 7.30pm on Saturday.
“Obviously I feel a lot of sympathy for them, they’ve been going through tough times. It’s not easy losing just one game let alone consecutive games. I’m wishing them all the best but just not this week,” he said.
“It’s going to be weird playing against Api [Koroisau] too… he was big for me when he was here, but I’m going to have to put those friendships aside and try my best to keep it aside. It’s going to be difficult.”
POSITION: SECOND ROW | NRL DEBUT: JULY 2018 ( for Wests Tigers )
WEIGHT: 94KG |
HEIGHT: 190CM |
DOB: 06/09/95 |
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It was inevitable that this day would come. After three golden years, which has seen the Panthers make three consecutive Grand Finals and win the last two to be crowned back-to-back NRL Premiers, league supporters and commentators have started asking, ‘Have the Panthers lost their mojo?’.
The slang meaning of the word ‘mojo’ means ‘magic’ or even more simply, ‘control’ or ‘power’. It may seem like a strange question to ask considering the team has only lost three competition games by the tiniest of margins, two by one point and one by two points. That’s not the issue, the issue is that they have lost three games out of seven (not counting the bye).
The Panthers only lost four games in total last season, three in 2021 and one game in a shortened 2020 season.
So to lose three already in 2023, well it’s no wonder that people have started asking the question.
Statistically, it also doesn’t look good.
Truth be told, if Penrith would have made that last tackle with 90 seconds to go against the Bunnies, they probably would have gone on to win the game and I wouldn’t be writing this column, questioning a side which only two weeks ago I gave a B+ to. I wouldn’t be questioning a side which still sits third on the NRL Premiership ladder.
I suppose that’s the curse of being so dominant and so damn good for so long. Even the smallest hiccup and questions will be asked. Look, I’ve danced around the question long enough and while it pains me to say it, I think that, for now, Penrith have lost the mojo they had over the last three seasons.
I don’t think they would’ve lost those three
games last year. Whether it’s player drain, injuries to key players, working out new combinations, loss of a bit of hunger, late start to the pre-season. Something is not quite right with this wonderful team, at the moment.
The good news is, it doesn’t need a radical fix. Just a bit of tinkering. Ivan and the players will work it out.
American Football coach Nick Saban once
wrote: “One thing about championship teams is that they’re resilient. No matter what is thrown at them, no matter how deep the hole, they find a way to bounce back and overcome adversity.” Also, the good thing about losing your mojo is, you can always get it back.
I have no doubt in the world, this champion Panthers team will get it back, and it will be sooner rather than later.
The demoralised Panthers after last week’s loss to Souths. Photo: NRL Images.Not many sports can mix spellbinding success and chaotic controversy like the NRL.
ANZAC Round was the perfect example. Big crowds paid touching respect to the significance of these games, while the athletes excited us with gripping theatre, all watched by big television ratings. In between, the NRL Head of Football Graham Annesley fired up like he rarely does, fending off the outrage generated by two little words – hip drop.
“I can’t understand people saying hip drops are confusing. They’re not confusing. It’s bodyweight onto unprotected legs instead of landing some other way,” Annesley said.
Shortly after with his hands waving in exasperation; “There’s a difference between frustration and confusion. And people keep saying they’re confused. It’s NOT confusing! Just take the time to understand it.”
So we will.
The NRL first sent a memo to club CEOs, head coaches and football managers in July 2020, identifying hip drops as a scourge on the game.
The NRL says there have been more matches missed through injuries resulting from hip drops than any other act of foul play in the game – and often extended periods, sometimes seasons.
It has also provided this definition: “The defender will generally have a hold of the ball carrier with one or both hands. The defender will twist their body to a position behind the ball carrier. The defender will then drop their body weight onto the leg/s of the ball carrier with force in
a careless or reckless manner.”
This is where the ‘noise’ gets louder with voices in the game shouting; “What is he meant to do”, “He was on his own goal line”, “You see 20 of them in every game”, “There was no intent to injure”, etc etc.
Annesley responds: “We can’t just hurl up the white flag and say we’re not going to be able to get this out of the game, so we’re just going to have to let it go.”
That begs the question, how do we get it out of the game?
“The coaches prepare players every week for all sorts of things that can happen in a game,” said Annesley.
“In fact the whole gamut. When you’re defending, attacking, when you’re in a certain situation, certain field position, how you avoid high tackles… and how you avoid these sorts of tackles. We have to coach the players out of this.”
That could take some time. So expect the muscle memory to spark a few more of these tackles, and expect more calls for consistency regarding the punishments of these tackles. Penalty? Sin Bin? Suspension?
With a question mark over the sin binning of two players in Darwin and not a third, Annesley bristled: “The referees would not be making their decision according to how many players they have already put in the bin. Go back to last year with, how many, five players in one game that went to the bin.”
Let’s hope we don’t go back there, but if we do, rest assured, controversy will rage but the game will thrive. Enjoy Round 9.
Alast-second try has cost the Penrith Panthers victory against the South Sydney Rabbitohs in the Knock-On Effect NSW Cup, falling 18-16 at Accor Stadium.
Souths had plenty of early chances, capitalising in the 8th minute through Tom Carr. Blake Taafe converted from touch for a 6-0 lead.
A penalty goal shortly after made it 8-0.
The Panthers struck back in the 16th minute when Jack Cole broke through and set Matt Stimson up out wide.
Ill-discipline put the Panthers under more pressure, eventually leading to a try to Brock Gray near the posts, giving Souths a 14-4 halftime lead.
The Panthers got the second half off to a perfect start, scoring back-to-back tries on either wing through Thomas Jenkins and Daeon Amituanai.
They took the lead on the hour when Kurt Falls set up Jesse McLean with a grubber.
Clinging to a 16-14 lead, the Panthers were reduced to 12 for the final minute when Eddie Blacker was sin-binned for a professional foul. They were made to pay as Cody Hodge scored in the corner to steal the win for Souths.
In Jersey Flegg at Redfern Oval,
three tries in the final 10 minutes allowed the Panthers to snatch a draw against the Rabbitohs.
Riley Wake opened the scoring for the Panthers, but three quick tries to the Rabbitohs saw the hosts lead 18-6 at half-time.
The Panthers hit back early in the second half through Luke Philp,
but a try to Keahlan Bray in the 49th minute opened a 24-10 lead for Souths.
Wake’s second try with 10 to go gave the Panthers a sniff of a comeback and they reduced the deficit to four when Fletcher Haycock scored with five minutes remaining. A penalty allowed them to go on
the attack again and they drew level when Addison Williams scored out wide. He was unable to convert his try and they were forced to settle with the draw.
In Round 9, NSW Cup plays a curtain-raiser in Bathurst against Wests on Saturday, and Jersey Flegg plays the Tigers at 3pm on Sunday.
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