The amazing numbers that make Jahrome Hughes the Dally M favourite
Jahrome Hughes is a raging hot Dally M Medal favourite thanks to one of the most statistically well-rounded playmaking seasons of the past 15 years.
All from a player who Melbourne’s talent scouts doubted would ever be an NRL halfback.
Hughes is considered a strong front-runner for rugby league’s highest individual honour on Wednesday night ahead of Roosters captain James Tedesco and Manly’s Daly Cherry-Evans.
He will then take on Penrith and their No.7 maestro Nathan Cleary in the NRL decider boasting a 2024 stats line that compares favourably to some of the best individual seasons on record.
Typically, a player dominates either try assists or line breaks – one or the other, rarely both – because rugby league tends to have ballplayers setting up a side’s plays and runners then breaking the defensive line.
Hughes’ background as a fullback has made him one of the most dangerous running halves in recent memory, with his ball-playing improving year-on-year.
Cameron Munster’s absence due to injury for parts of the season has also contributed to the Kiwi No.7 averaging an extra 80 kicking metres each game and leading the NRL for attacking kicks.
Hughes’s dominant campaign compares to the stellar seasons of Ben Barba (2012), Reece Walsh (2023), Benji Marshall (2011) and Todd Carney (2010).
The traditional playmaker’s strengths of game management and control – where Cleary remains king – are difficult to quantify, though Hughes has improved significantly in that facet of his game as well.
The introduction of the six-again rule in 2020 undoubtedly favours running playmakers, with the combined statistics also outlining just how dominant Manly star Tom Trbojevic was the following season.
But Hughes has also emerged as one of the game’s truly elite halfbacks, having originally been signed by Melbourne on a $140,000 deal in mid-2016, with the Tigers and Dragons declining the then-No.1 when he was offered to them.
“Not as a halfback,” is how Storm football manager Frank Ponissi recalled Hughes’ signing eight years ago.
“When we recruited him, we weren’t sure if Munster was going to be a No.1 [fullback] to replace Billy Slater. So Jahrome was looked at as being similar to Munster as either a fullback or a six. We thought one would be the fullback and one would be the six, we just didn’t know who would do what.
“So I don’t know where the seven [halfback] came from.”
Neither does Hughes, who told this masthead recently that “a couple of my [junior] coaches wanted me to play in the halves and I was like ‘Nah, this is not for me’.”
Hughes and Melbourne’s last grand final appearance in 2020 came at the end of his first full season as an NRL half in a spine that featured Munster, Ryan Papenhuyzen and Cameron Smith.
“I had ‘Smithy’ there then so I didn’t have to do too much,” Hughes says. “I’ve grown to be more of a leader as we had some pretty good leaders back then, so I just had to jump on the back.
“Not much has changed. I just have a bit more experience and my body is a bit older and bit stronger.”
Hughes has been reluctant to talk up his form all season and still defers to Cleary as “the best player in the game”.
Munster and captain Harry Grant, though, are more than happy to heap praise on their No.7, who also leads every notable attacking statistic for the minor premiers this season.
“He’s just taking the team to another level, and he’s showing 10-fold how good he is,” Munster says.
“He’s a differently developed half. He’s got a good kicking game and not many other halves, Nathan Cleary is probably the other one, who runs the ball as well as Hughesy.”
“He is such a great runner of the ball,” Grant adds. “Then he’s built his game on his kicking, his direction, his control and his leadership.
“As much as he’s a natural footy player, he’s worked extremely hard over the years to build his game. He’s probably just been overshadowed or unnoticed down here in Melbourne. It’s good to see he is getting some recognition.”
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