It was a very underwhelming performance , even allowing for he "outs " Anzac Day at home , full house .I think the honeymoon is over and reality has arrived for Holbrook. He’s got some work to do.
I rated him at the Titans and I think he can do something with us, but **** me, the road will be as bumpy as a QLD highway for a while I feel
Def not the ref, we were physically bashed in every part of the gameI haven't watched the game yet but some stats that stick out to me is 5-2 ruck infringements. Our PTB speed was 3.67 seconds and panthers 2.92 seconds. That alone tells me we are peeling off quicker but getting pinged whilst Penrith can do what they like in the ruck.
One saving grace is our losses have been to the sides coming 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 5th. And of course we play the 4th placed Bunnies next week. But after that there’s plenty of winnable games and we’ll get a bunch of players back.
That’s the NRL this season, if you lose, you lose big. Very few close games … and there’s no way we were ever going to keep it close if Penrith got on a roll, imo.The thing for me is losses were always going to happen especially with so many outs, but it's the way we have lost that hurts the most.
If you lose so be it but we have been absolutely pumped the past few weeks, errors after errors also.....at least show some fight and make the games closer.
That grand final win maybe usurps 2012 (Storm 14 Bulldogs 4) as the best ever example of perfect gameplanning and execution. That was Penrith with all their cheat code/X factor guys finally taken away (and Stephen Crichton in particular was a huge part of why they won 2021 and 2023), and they were just relentless in their combination of physicality in D and relentless working over their middle with the ball. Past a certain point, none of Melbourne's forwards are getting back onside before tackle 4 or 5 in yardage, no one is running decoys, no one is in support... they were dying out there.We played a team yesterday who's basic game plan through winning four grand finals is to make the opposition middles and big men so fatigued they are irrelevant and targets if the game is on the line late. Best example is the 2024 grand final where Tui Kamikamica was so exhausted after 17 minutes that he couldn't come back on the field. Penrith won that game 14-6 on paper but realistically the Storm were never a chance in the second half.
We lost that game before the first try was scored yesterday. About ten minutes in I said to my daughter "I'm not enjoying this, I want to go home"
So reality is Jsaf, Saulo, Mooney have really dropped the ball. The only middle I can give love too is Croker who keeps making PCM and great contact through the middle.
Yep we were on the back foot from the start , seemed like we spent the first 15 minutes on our line You knew it wasn't going to be our day . Credit to Penrith they are very well drilled in all aspects of the game . Hopefully we are at level one day ( soon)We played a team yesterday who's basic game plan through winning four grand finals is to make the opposition middles and big men so fatigued they are irrelevant and targets if the game is on the line late. Best example is the 2024 grand final where Tui Kamikamica was so exhausted after 17 minutes that he couldn't come back on the field. Penrith won that game 14-6 on paper but realistically the Storm were never a chance in the second half.
We lost that game before the first try was scored yesterday. About ten minutes in I said to my daughter "I'm not enjoying this, I want to go home". Error after error after error and just watching Cleary working us over drained any confidence from me. We had periods of the game later where we competed pretty well set for set. But the Panthers were always well in control.
Wow, under current rules you may actually be right. But that is possibly the biggest the biggest indictment on the six again tweeks yet. Stopping the opposition scoring shouldn't be detrimental to any team in any sport.Maybe in the current game it's actually better letting them score to have a chance to reset.
Lol ok sure, aside from a big 10 metres for the Panthers and errors, the Knights were completely physically on top of them.I just watched the game and I didn't think so. I did notice the ref giving a big 10 metres to Penrith. Knight were always 12 metres back which is pretty crazy. First contact was tough I thought, just too many errors in good ball led to where we ended up. It took an effort play from pheens and an individual effort from dylbro to get tries on the board. Penrith are definitely beatable if you can keep the ball in possession and play down their end. None of which we did today.
Yeah I didn't think so when I watched it if I'm honest. Our errors in red zone really cemented penriths first 30 minutes. Even if we did that to say the titans it's probably the same outcome. Maybe just not as many points. I thought they defended quite well until about minute 50 when fatigue really set in.Def not the ref, we were physically bashed in every part of the game
Panthers were definitely not in 2nd gear. They started producing fatigue errors late in the game. Knights just couldn't keep producing effort plays without an error.Lol ok sure, aside from a big 10 metres for the Panthers and errors, the Knights were completely physically on top of them.
I’d argue the Panthers could’ve been held back 15 metres and the result would still be mostly the same. Maybe they would’ve had to get out of 2nd gear
Yeah I didn't think so when I watched it if I'm honest. Our errors in red zone really cemented penriths first 30 minutes. Even if we did that to say the titans it's probably the same outcome. Maybe just not as many points. I thought they defended quite well until about minute 50 when fatigue really set in.
I get what you’re saying, defend 2 sets but not 3 because you’ll too gassed to do anything else.Someone in this thread said it was good we'd held the panthers out for so long, I was thinking the opposite. Maybe in the current game it's actually better letting them score to have a chance to reset.