NewsBite

Immortals: Mal Meninga thanks Wayne Bennett for inspiring him to rugby league greatness

WAYNE Bennett and Mal Meninga have had their differences in recent history including a famous stoush two years ago — but all that was put aside for one special moment.

Mal Meninga poses for photographs after he was named as the 13th Immortal at the 2018 NRL Hall of Fame at Sydney Cricket Ground. Picture: Mark Evans
Mal Meninga poses for photographs after he was named as the 13th Immortal at the 2018 NRL Hall of Fame at Sydney Cricket Ground. Picture: Mark Evans

IT was the sight that made the night but only a few years ago it was one that rugby league feared could be lost from its landscape.

Mal Meninga and Wayne Bennett standing away from the maelstrom in the shadows behind a billboard at the Hall of Fame function in Sydney, smiling as they swapped 40-year-old stories about their long gone but cherished days at the Queensland Police Academy.

They were the years when Bennett was a young instructor who had more confidence in Meninga than Meninga had in himself.

Bennett and Meninga have had their differences in recent years including a famous stoush two years ago when Meninga penned a column for The Courier-Mail claiming Bennett had been undermining him after missing out on the Kangaroos coach job which Meninga landed.

Meninga wrote that he and Bennett were “not enemies, but we’re not friends either.”

RECOGNITION: Finally, Mal Meninga earns Immortal status

MORE: The greatest games NRL’s newest Immortals played

HISTORY: Discover the three pre-war Immortals

DAVID RICCIO: Champions no longer lost in time

Mal Meninga and Wayne Bennett catch up at the NRL Hall of Fame function.
Mal Meninga and Wayne Bennett catch up at the NRL Hall of Fame function.

That column was not a one-off spray. Meninga had been mulling it over for months. Later they settled their difference — sort of — but there was always a feeling they would never be as close as they were.

Over the past few years there’s been times when there’s been too much tense recent history for them to be close but on Wednesday there was too much pleasant ancient history for them to be anything but.

Only the two men involved would know the current state of their relationship but the joy of the Hall of Fame function was the way Meninga put all that in the past and gave Bennett sincere thanks for inspiring him when it mattered.

In his acceptance speech as the game’s latest Immortal Meninga told the crowd how taken aback and inspired he was, as a teenage cadet, when Bennett told him in front of a group that “he could be anything he wanted to be.’’

Mal Meninga poses for photographs after he was named as the 13th Immortal at the 2018 NRL Hall of Fame function. Picture: Getty Images
Mal Meninga poses for photographs after he was named as the 13th Immortal at the 2018 NRL Hall of Fame function. Picture: Getty Images

He went back to his room and wrote down a goal to play for Queensland and so started one of the most distinguished rugby league careers of all time.

Bennett smiled warmly and soon after the formalities ended Bennett approached Meninga and the years fell away.

“We talked about his parents, his brothers and the relationship he has always had with them and we talked about the police cadets he played football with and how he is still best mates with those guys,’’ Bennett said.

“It was a great night for him.’’

Wayne Bennett and Mal Meninga have a long history.
Wayne Bennett and Mal Meninga have a long history.

Bennett said he appreciated Meninga’s kind words.

“When you coach you don’t know what influence you have on people,” he said.

“Sometimes you are long gone or in another place in the world before you realise what you have done.

“Coaching is like teaching. Teachers have the same problem. The students don’t realise until they leave what the teacher did for them.’’

Rugby league has had a rugged year but the Hall of Fame night was a gold stud which sparkled through the grey mist which hovered after non-stop refereeing dramas.

Gorden Tallis speaks to the media as he arrives at the 2018 NRL Hall of Fame function. Picture: Getty Images
Gorden Tallis speaks to the media as he arrives at the 2018 NRL Hall of Fame function. Picture: Getty Images

Hard men like Meninga, Gorden Tallis and Petero Civoniceva choked up with pride as they received their inductions into the Immortals (Meninga) or Hall of Fame (Tallis and Civoniceva), telling stories about their young years with Tallis recalling how he treasured his signed Wally Lewis football.

It sure beating hearing about the latest bunker scandal.

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/sport/nrl/immortals-mal-meninga-thanks-wayne-bennett-for-inspiring-him-to-rugby-league-greatness/news-story/57ecb66b5c93882d17cacd3d67b4d94e