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NRL’s top 50 under-23 players position-by-position breakdown: NRL’s hooker drought exposed

Elite young playmakers are a scarce commodity but our NRL Top-50 players 23 and under list has exposed another key spine position in short supply.

Some of the NRL’s brightest young talents.
Some of the NRL’s brightest young talents.

Elite young playmakers are a scarce commodity but this masthead’s NRL’s Top-50 players 23 and under list has exposed another key spine position in short supply – hooker.

Just seven dummy halves were eligible for the list, and only one in rising Wests Tigers rake Tallyn Da Silva made it into the top-50.

Da Silva is the brightest out of the club’s Western Suburbs Magpies nursery, where he helped the Harold Matthews Cup side to grand final victory last season.

The 18-year old’s tenacity, speed and running game has elevated him above Jake Simpkin, 21, as the long term replacement to Api Koroisau, who has just re-signed until the end of 2026.

Simpkin, who did not make the list, was lured to Concord from the Broncos with a reputation as Queensland’s best young hooker back in 2019.

He is now one of a number of players, including Shawn Blore, that the Tigers are looking to offload before the end of their contracts in 2024.

Wests Tigers’ hooker Tallyn Da Silva is a serious talent. Picture: Getty
Wests Tigers’ hooker Tallyn Da Silva is a serious talent. Picture: Getty

Brisbane’s Corey Paix, 23, has been kept out of the No.9 jumper by Billy Walters, and now Tyson Smoothy is favoured on the bench. Neither has had enough impact in Brisbane’s surge to the top of the ladder to warrant a spot in the top-50.

Parramatta’s Brendan Hands, 23, has had a solid start to his NRL career from the bench before stepping into the starting hooker role for veteran Josh Hodgson, who is facing a medical retirement due to a neck injury.

Despite showing promise, coach Brad Arthur still preferred experience in the role and Joey Lussick was a mid-season signing from St Helens.

While young hooking talent might be light on in the NRL, one rising rake has the potential to shake-up the dummy half stocks, and the top 50 list.

Brisbane’s Blake Mozer is on the cusp of an NRL debut and some pundits have even dared to compare the 19-year-old to legendary Melbourne hooker Cameron Smith.

Mozer’s craftiness from the ruck and ability to control the attack through the middle has the teen sensation at a class above his dummy half peers.

Blake Mozer is a star talent at the Broncos. Picture: NRL Photos
Blake Mozer is a star talent at the Broncos. Picture: NRL Photos

OUTSIDE BACKS

The NRL is oozing with young tackle breaking centres and speedster wingers. So unsurprisingly, the Top 50 is dominated by outside backs with a total of 21 wingers and centres on the list.

Queensland flyers Selwyn Cobbo and Xavier Coates headline the 10 wingers to earn a spot on the list. Cobbo is all x-factor but missed out on the top 10 for his tendency to go missing in games.

More consistency from Cobbo would see him leapfrog our No.10 pick centre Izack Tago.

The winger’s field also features rookie of the year contenders in try scoring machine Alofiana Khan-Pereira and Penrith’s hard running Sunia Turuva.

The 11 centres who made the cut are a mix of pure athleticism, power and skill.

Two-time premiership winner Stephen Crichton leads the pack and the Penrith centre’s game has gone to another level since a stand out Origin series for the Blues.

It’s a similar story for Bradman Best, who’s full potential and power was on display in his Blues debut and helped earn him a spot in the Top 50.

Unlike the other centres on the list, Matt Timoko has only just arrived as a household name with a breakout season for the Raiders.

Newcastle’s Dominic Young has defied a history of English backs to flame out in the NRL to rise to the top of the try scorers list, and No.23 on the list.

SIXES AND SEVENS

There are three five-eighths in the top 10 but only two halfbacks, Lachlan Ilias and Isaiya Katoa, in the top 30.

The NRL’s young halfbacks have arguably had a challenging season but all four on the list – Sam Walker, Jayden Sullivan, Katoa and Ilias – have enormous upside and time on their side.

Katoa, the highest ranking halfback at No.26, has handled his rookie season with composure and control, and has the skill to reign above his No. 7 cohort for years to come.

Parramatta five-eighth Dylan Brown hasn’t played a game since round 13 but was in fine form before his suspension – and took his game to another level in the Eels’ charge to the grand final in 2022. All which helped him to the No.3 spot ahead of the likes of North Queensland’s Tom Dearden and Canterbury’s Matt Burton.

Dearden has stepped out of halfback Chad Townsend’s shadow this year to emerge as not only the most underrated five-eighth aged 23 and younger, but in the NRL.

FULLBACK

Only experience separated Reece Walsh from Brisbane teammate Payne Haas and the No.1 spot on the list.

Walsh has been a revelation for the Broncos, where he has taken the side’s attack to another level helping to turn the side in a title favourite. He’s also the buy of the year.

The next best fullback is Dolphin Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, while Tyrell Sloan and Jahream Bula have the raw talent to shoot further up the list. Sloan is a work in progress defensively.

FORWARDS

Considering props take time to peak, the fact five of the six players on the list are Origin representatives is an impressive feat.

Only Penrith’s Spencer Leniu is yet to represent his state but only narrowly missed out on NSW selection this year and is a Blue-in-waiting.

Payne Haas’ massive motor and consistency for a prop so young helped earn him the crown as the best player 23 and under in the NRL. Critics of Haas claim the forward needs to add variety to his game but the lack of an offload, does not diminish the huge role he has played in Brisbane’s resurgence to the top of the ladder.

In the second row, North Queensland’s Jeremiah Nanai narrowly surpassed Titans powerhouse David Fifita in the top 10 on the back of his tenacity and willingness to go after a game.


HOOKERS 23 AND UNDER

Tyson Smoothy

Brendan Hands

Cory Paix

Freddy Lussick

Adrian Trevilyan

Jake Simpkin

Tallyn Da Silva

Gordon Chan Kum Tong

YET TO DEBUT

Blake Mozer

TOP 50 – POSITION BREAKDOWN

CENTRE - TOTAL 11

Stephen Crichton

Izack Tago

Herbie Farnworth

Bradman Best

Matt Timoko

Will Penisini

Isaiah Tass

Zac Lomax

Jake Averillo

Tolutau Koula

Paul Alamoti

Stephen Crichton headlines some serious backline talent under 23. Picture: Getty
Stephen Crichton headlines some serious backline talent under 23. Picture: Getty

WING - TOTAL 10

Selwyn Cobbo

Xavier Coates

Dominic Young

Ronaldo Mulitalo

Alofiana Khan-Pereira

Sunia Turuva

Junior Tupou

Jacob Kiraz

Jason Saab

Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii

FIVE-EIGHTH - TOTAL 7

Dylan Brown

Tom Dearden

Matt Burton

Ezra Mam

Isaiya Katoa

Josh Schuster

Karl Oloapu

PROP - TOTAL 6

Payne Haas

Tino Fa'asuamaleaui

Spencer Leniu

Thomas Flegler

Moeaki Fotuaika

Stefano Utoikamanu

SECOND ROW - TOTAL 5

Jeremiah Nanai

David Fifita

Jordan Riki

Eliesa Katoa

Jacob Preston

Jacob Preston has been a revelation for the Bulldogs. Picture: Getty
Jacob Preston has been a revelation for the Bulldogs. Picture: Getty

FULLBACK - TOTAL 4

Reece Walsh

Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow

Jahream Bula

Tyrell Sloan

HALFBACK - TOTAL 4

Lachlan Ilias

Sam Walker

Tanah Boyd

Jayden Sullivan

LOCK - TOTAL 1

Thomas Gilbert

UTILITY - TOTAL 1

Jayden Campbell

HOOKER - TOTAL 1

Tallyn Da Silva

Green shoots of Bulldogs’ forced young policy

Canterbury has used more under-23 players than any other side in the NRL so far this season – 18.

The Bulldogs are also the third-youngest side in the NRL with an average age of 24.9.

For development clubs like Brisbane and Penrith, that youth has underpinned their push to the top.

At Belmore, it has highlighted the size of the rebuild under football boss Phil Gould and first-year head coach Cameron Ciraldo.

But while the Bulldogs are anchored near the bottom of the ladder, there are green shoots.

At 23, Matt Burton is already a premiership winner and NSW and Australian representative. The right foil in the halves will be the key to unlocking Burton’s game as an elite five-eighth.

Burton’s current halves partner and new Bulldogs signing Toby Sexton didn’t make the top 50, along with 11 other eligible players including Jackson Topine and Kurtis Morrin.

If the top 50 was ranked on impact alone, then Jacob Preston would creep up higher than his current spot at 40. Preston, in his rookie season, has been a real find and is already earmarked as a future captain after re-signing until the end of 2027.

The club is invested in teenage playmaker Karl Oloapu, while rising centre Paul Alamoti is off-contract and fellow local junior Jake Averillo, who has been one of their best this season, is Dolphins-bound in 2024.

Matt Burton is crucial to the Bulldogs’ future. Picture: Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images
Matt Burton is crucial to the Bulldogs’ future. Picture: Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images

And there lies one of Canterbury’s biggest challenge in this current roster overhaul – which youngsters to keep or who to cut.

The other is the club’s production line of talent and the time it will take to develop local juniors into NRL-calibre players.

Youth is only a competitive advantage if the club’s youngsters are elite.

The Bulldogs tapped into Brisbane’s pipeline to snatch Oloapu and could be about to do the same with our No.1 under-23 player, Payne Haas.

The highest-ranked Panthers star on the list, No.4 Stephen Crichton, is Belmore bound in 2024, where he will reunite with Burton and Viliame Kikau.

BRONCOS YOUTH MOVEMENT

Any NRL coach will tell you defence wins premierships, but in the modern game so does youth.

Take the Brisbane Broncos in 2023.

The Red Hill club have dominated the top 50 under-23 players for 2023 with seven homegrown stars on the list, led by powerhouse prop Payne Haas and livewire fullback Reece Walsh.

Their premiership revival from wooden spooners just three years ago to second favourites for the 2023 title is being built upon the club’s elite pathways system.

In an even bigger endorsement of Brisbane’s resurgence, Jock Madden is the only under-23 player on coach Kevin Walters’ roster that is not a product of the Broncos development program.

Reece Walsh is driving the youth movement at Brisbane. Picture: NRL Photos
Reece Walsh is driving the youth movement at Brisbane. Picture: NRL Photos

Hooker Corey Paix, boom back-rower Brendan Piakura, rising prop Xavier Willison and outside back Deine Mariner are all graduates from the club’s academy that sit just outside the top 50.

Rising rake Blake Mozer, rated the best young dummy-half in the game and earmarked as Brisbane’s long-term hooker, is yet to make his NRL debut and doesn’t qualify for the list.

It has shades of Penrith Panthers about it. A campaign built on fearlessness, energy and confidence underpinned by the riches of their pathways.

The Broncos have that same boldness about them this season and that has propelled the club into a premiership window.

The average age of Penrith’s back-to-back premiership teams was just 24.

The Broncos are the fourth-youngest NRL side, with an average age of 25, even younger than Penrith (25.9) in 2023.

TITANIC YOUTH

Incoming coach Des Hasler is confident he can take Gold Coast to its first premiership within the next three years.

While it might seem far-fetched, Hasler is walking into a booming Titans roster.

Six players, including Queensland Origin forwards Tino Fa‘asuamaleaui, David Fifita and Moeaki Fotuaika, feature among the top 50 under-23s.

Barnstorming prop Moeaki Fotuaika. Picture: Getty Images/Getty Images
Barnstorming prop Moeaki Fotuaika. Picture: Getty Images/Getty Images

But for all the representative talent at Hasler’s disposal, the engine room is brimming with up-and-coming players like Iszac Fa‘asuamaleaui, Josiah Pahulu and Kleese Haas – not experienced enough to make the list but talented enough to make a real mark in the coming years.

In the backline, winger Alofiana Khan-Pereira, at No.27, has 18 tries in 18 NRL appearances to emerge as a genuine rookie of the year contender.

Other youngsters like Aaron Schoupp and Jojo Fifita, not on the list, are astute outside backs.

Whiz kid Keano Kini, 19, is the best youngster at the club and it’s only a matter of time before the metre-eating fullback is a fixture in Hasler’s side.

TOP 50 NRL STARS UNDER 23: VOTE IN OUR RANKING INTERACTIVE

The biggest question mark for Hasler, and the club’s premiership ambitions, is what the coach does in the halves.

Five-eighth Kieran Foran is 33 and contracted until the end of next season. Despite his age, he is a favourite of Hasler’s.

At 23, Tanah Boyd’s toughness and willingness to take on the line earned him the Titans’ No.7 jersey and a spot on the top 50 list, but it will be intriguing to see whether Hasler can develop him into a premiership-calibre halfback.

Hasler has reached five grand finals and has more tools than critics may realise to make it six appearances … and maybe even three grand final wins.

TOP 50 – CLUB BREAKDOWN

BRISBANE BRONCOS – 7

1. Payne Haas

2. Reece Walsh

11. Selwyn Cobbo

15. Ezra Mam

17. Herbie Farnworth

18. Thomas Flegler

23. Jordan Riki

CANTERBURY BULLDOGS – 6

9. Matt Burton

34. Jake Averillo

38. Jacob Kiraz

40. Jacob Preston

46. Paul Alamoti

49. Karl Oloapu

Gold Coast try scoring machine Alofiana Khan-Pereira. Picture: Brendon Thorne/Getty Images
Gold Coast try scoring machine Alofiana Khan-Pereira. Picture: Brendon Thorne/Getty Images

GOLD COAST TITANS – 6

5. Tino Fa‘asuamaleaui

7. David Fifita

19. Moeaki Fotuaika

27. Alofiana Khan-Pereira

41. Jayden Campbell

48. Tanah Boyd

PENRITH PANTHERS – 4

4. Stephen Crichton

10. Izack Tago

12. Spencer Leniu

29. Sunia Turuva

WESTS TIGERS – 4

33. Stefano Utoikamanu

35. Jahream Bula

37. Junior Tupou

50. Tally Da Silva

DOLPHINS – 3

14. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow

16. Thomas Gilbert

26. Isaiya Katoa

Bulldogs-bound Panther Stephen Crichton. Picture: Izhar Khan/Getty Images
Bulldogs-bound Panther Stephen Crichton. Picture: Izhar Khan/Getty Images

ST GEORGE ILLAWARRA DRAGONS – 3

32. Zac Lomax

45. Tyrell Sloan

47. Jayden Sullivan

MANLY SEA EAGLES – 3

39. Josh Schuster

43. Jason Saab

44. Tolutau Koula

NORTH QUEENSLAND COWBOYS – 2

6. Jeremiah Nanai

8. Tom Dearden

PARRAMATTA EELS – 2

3. Dylan Brown

28. Will Penisini

NEWCASTLE KNIGHTS – 2

20. Bradman Best

21. Dominic Young

SOUTH SYDNEY RABBITOHS – 2

30. Lachlan Ilias

31. Isaiah Tass

SYDNEY ROOSTERS – 2

36. Sam Walker

42. Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii

MELBOURNE STORM – 2

13. Xavier Coates

24. Eliesa Katoa

CANBERRA RAIDERS – 1

25. Matthew Timoko

CRONULLA SHARKS – 1

22. Ronaldo Mulitalo

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Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/nrls-top-50-under23-players-clubbyclub-breakdown-panthers-broncos-success-built-by-youth/news-story/07823f6ca8c0a651e2eb6532d67778a8