Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

De La Salle Va'a to debut

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #46
    Some years back after a Barcelona FC visit, the club decided going forward to implement and professionalise the Rooster pathways/academy system.
    Last year we entered a Rooster team in the NSW Cup this team contained many young academy players

    Let me speculate
    Robo calls a meeting to discuss the team for 2025 and beyond, with many of our players having left the club .
    Two long term injuries to Sam Walker and Brendon Smith have changed the original plan.
    Robbo said he got Townsend (1 year) for his leadership and experience and as a back up to Walker and Sandon Smith if required
    Robbo bought Nawaqanitawase to replace Sua'ali'i and Manu (after failing to buy Gagai)
    On the whiteboard he has a picture of the R1 team and a picture of say the team 1 month out from the finals which might /or might not include Sam Walker and Brandon Smith
    From the meeting a plan is agreed which includes which players are part of the plan and which are not
    Positions that are vacant will be filled from internally if possible and if not, see if quality is available on the open market

    Imagine Robbo has a wave of young players ready to play at NRL level and behind them are another batch ready for NSW Cup (and so on)

    If we intend to use the academy players now they are ready, we will need to make positions available at the top.and pay them accordingly. Else we will lose them to other clubs.

    The salary cap will mean we have to be ruthless on who we keep and who we let go.
    To win a premiership one likely built around Sam Walker, he will need the creme de la creme of players around him to compete with the likes of Penrith
    A team that can match it man for man if not better it.




    Comment


    • #47
      Originally posted by ChookMaster View Post

      Right and letting Terrell leave was a step in the right direction…..
      If he was that good he wouldn't have been chased by shit teams like the Tigers, Dragons and Bulldogs

      Comment


      • #48
        Originally posted by SamKerrSimp View Post

        If he was that good he wouldn't have been chased by shit teams like the Tigers, Dragons and Bulldogs
        And once again the IQ of this place drops 20 points.

        Comment


        • #49
          Originally posted by SamKerrSimp View Post

          If he was that good he wouldn't have been chased by shit teams like the Tigers, Dragons and Bulldogs
          Last time I checked, Kikau, Burton, Luai and Turuva weren’t too bad.
          FVCK CANCER

          Comment


          • #50
            Originally posted by ChookMaster View Post

            Right and letting Terrell leave was a step in the right direction…..
            I don't know if this is the case as but I have wondered if there was some post season analysis done that identified some issues with Terrell's game that contributed to the decision to let him go.

            I was really excited to see the way he started the season because he was running with power, something I'd called out as an opportunity of his in prior seasons but the longer the season went on the more and more he went away from that power game and the more he seemed to care about staying upright in a tackle rather than making the most amount of yards or getting a quick play the ball.

            For some insight more specifically what I'm talking about, out of all Roosters players to play prop last season he ranked last in average metres per run. This also saw him rank 83rd out of 96 players to play prop in the comp last year for average metres per carry.

            In terms of his carries 45% saw him gain less than 8 metres and 55% more than 8 metres gained. That was equal worst in the squad among props along with Lindsay Collins. This is really surprising given how frequently he came off the bench and how many late set carries he would take. No prop in the competition took more sub 8 metre runs last year than Terrell May.

            Now I know that's not the be all and end all, like most on here you'd have to be blind not to see his potential. I'd argue he's just about the most naturally gifted prop in the game currently, so I'm disappointed it hasn't worked out for him at the Roosters and will watch his development with one eye.

            But I do wonder if this all played some role, because he's certainly not your typical modern day prop. He plays the game a little differently.

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by Rooster_6 View Post

              I don't know if this is the case as but I have wondered if there was some post season analysis done that identified some issues with Terrell's game that contributed to the decision to let him go.

              I was really excited to see the way he started the season because he was running with power, something I'd called out as an opportunity of his in prior seasons but the longer the season went on the more and more he went away from that power game and the more he seemed to care about staying upright in a tackle rather than making the most amount of yards or getting a quick play the ball.

              For some insight more specifically what I'm talking about, out of all Roosters players to play prop last season he ranked last in average metres per run. This also saw him rank 83rd out of 96 players to play prop in the comp last year for average metres per carry.

              In terms of his carries 45% saw him gain less than 8 metres and 55% more than 8 metres gained. That was equal worst in the squad among props along with Lindsay Collins. This is really surprising given how frequently he came off the bench and how many late set carries he would take. No prop in the competition took more sub 8 metre runs last year than Terrell May.

              Now I know that's not the be all and end all, like most on here you'd have to be blind not to see his potential. I'd argue he's just about the most naturally gifted prop in the game currently, so I'm disappointed it hasn't worked out for him at the Roosters and will watch his development with one eye.

              But I do wonder if this all played some role, because he's certainly not your typical modern day prop. He plays the game a little differently.
              Going by what fletch said, it’s probably got more to do with his lack of commitment to the team.(mentioned he didn’t want to turn up to a team function)

              Comment


              • #52
                Originally posted by Rooster_6 View Post

                I don't know if this is the case as but I have wondered if there was some post season analysis done that identified some issues with Terrell's game that contributed to the decision to let him go.

                I was really excited to see the way he started the season because he was running with power, something I'd called out as an opportunity of his in prior seasons but the longer the season went on the more and more he went away from that power game and the more he seemed to care about staying upright in a tackle rather than making the most amount of yards or getting a quick play the ball.

                For some insight more specifically what I'm talking about, out of all Roosters players to play prop last season he ranked last in average metres per run. This also saw him rank 83rd out of 96 players to play prop in the comp last year for average metres per carry.

                In terms of his carries 45% saw him gain less than 8 metres and 55% more than 8 metres gained. That was equal worst in the squad among props along with Lindsay Collins. This is really surprising given how frequently he came off the bench and how many late set carries he would take. No prop in the competition took more sub 8 metre runs last year than Terrell May.

                Now I know that's not the be all and end all, like most on here you'd have to be blind not to see his potential. I'd argue he's just about the most naturally gifted prop in the game currently, so I'm disappointed it hasn't worked out for him at the Roosters and will watch his development with one eye.

                But I do wonder if this all played some role, because he's certainly not your typical modern day prop. He plays the game a little differently.
                I liked this as he compensated with Leniu well coming off the bench
                Leniu was the back fence king while May provided footwork into contact, offloads and ball playing capability - more a smarter frontrower then just bash and crash

                Comment


                • #53
                  Originally posted by Rooster_6 View Post

                  I don't know if this is the case as but I have wondered if there was some post season analysis done that identified some issues with Terrell's game that contributed to the decision to let him go.

                  I was really excited to see the way he started the season because he was running with power, something I'd called out as an opportunity of his in prior seasons but the longer the season went on the more and more he went away from that power game and the more he seemed to care about staying upright in a tackle rather than making the most amount of yards or getting a quick play the ball.

                  For some insight more specifically what I'm talking about, out of all Roosters players to play prop last season he ranked last in average metres per run. This also saw him rank 83rd out of 96 players to play prop in the comp last year for average metres per carry.

                  In terms of his carries 45% saw him gain less than 8 metres and 55% more than 8 metres gained. That was equal worst in the squad among props along with Lindsay Collins. This is really surprising given how frequently he came off the bench and how many late set carries he would take. No prop in the competition took more sub 8 metre runs last year than Terrell May.

                  Now I know that's not the be all and end all, like most on here you'd have to be blind not to see his potential. I'd argue he's just about the most naturally gifted prop in the game currently, so I'm disappointed it hasn't worked out for him at the Roosters and will watch his development with one eye.

                  But I do wonder if this all played some role, because he's certainly not your typical modern day prop. He plays the game a little differently.
                  Good points.

                  I’ve noticed similar from Terrell heck he was named at lock one week wasn’t he? I feel like he’s definitely added more ball playing to his game rather than just hitting it up and he doesn’t have a lot of acceleration into the line either but I still reckon he was pretty good at giving us a quick play the ball.

                  It will be interesting to see how Benj uses him.

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Originally posted by SamKerrSimp View Post

                    If he was that good he wouldn't have been chased by shit teams like the Tigers, Dragons and Bulldogs
                    Another impressive contribution from you. Keep them coming.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X