The Tackle: Gus forced to eat words on Broncos take-down
Phil Gould will have to rethink his assertion that the Broncos don’t have the defensive mettle to win the premiership, writes PAUL CRAWLEY.
Phil Gould will have to rethink his assertion that the Broncos don’t have the defensive mettle to win the premiership, writes PAUL CRAWLEY.
When you win a Dally M Medal by a record margin and then sign a $1 million-a-year contract you’re expected to play like a superstar, writes PHIL ROTHFIELD.
The Melbourne Storm were good, the early Broncos even better – but no team of the modern rugby league era can hold a candle to the Panthers, writes BRENT READ.
Wests Tigers have called an emergency meeting between warring recruitment manager Scott Fulton and Benji Marshall – and there will be one noticeable absentee.
From Jarryd Hayne, to Ash Taylor and David Fifita, the Titans just keep getting their recruitment wrong and now another coach is about to be chewed up and spat out.
Since joining the competition, all Titans’ coaches have had one undesired feature in common. Whoever they chose next must bring some success, writes Michael Carayannis.
After missing out on Cameron Ciraldo, the Tigers will change their approach for hiring a new coach, with some more names added to the shortlist.
In a warning for rivals, Penrith should win four or five premierships in the next decade, but there’s one thing they need to solve first, MATTY JOHNS writes.
The Wests Tigers continue to mess with their best player, proof Nathan Cleary is a protected species and more in the Crawley Files.
QRL boss Bruce Hatcher says the Maroons won’t stoop to NSW’s level before the series decider, despite being on the end of some contentious calls in Origin II.
Rather than pursuing ersatz versions of successful coaches, struggling clubs could do worse than reach out to those that have proved they can do it their own way, writes Paul Kent.
Unfairly dropped for Game I, Jake Trbojevic was the best forward on the park for NSW in Game II and Brad Fittler owes him an apology, writes PAUL CRAWLEY.
Selling State of Origin to the non-diehard rugby league audience used to be easy, writes Paul Kent, then the game lost its white-hot anger.
Those arguing for the inclusion of transgender women on the basis of equality are either deliberately distorting the argument or lost in a hopeless state of denial, PAUL KENT writes.
Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/sport/nrl/opinion/page/29