Bright future for young Bronco Su'A

Super Freak

Super Freak

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Jan 25, 2014
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The Brisbane Broncos may have unearthed something special in 18-year-old Jaydn Su'A, with the second-row forward slotting seamlessly into first grade over the first two matches of his NRL career.

Su'A debuted for the Broncos in Round 12 against the Wests Tigers, replacing the Origin-bound Matt Gillett, and the exciting forward received his second start for Brisbane last weekend in the Broncos' 40-14 loss to the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs.

In the process, Su'A became the youngest forward to start a match in the nearly three-decade history of the Broncos.

At just age 18 and 216 days, Su'A has already made his impact at the club and if it wasn't for a shoulder injury in the Holden Cup in Round 13, he may have already had more than two NRL matches to his name.

Although recent results haven't gone his way, Su'A has been superb – playing for 80 minutes in both matches, as well as averaging 91.5 run metres and 36 tackles a game.

Broncos Holden Cup coach Craig Hodges has seen Su'A develop since 2015, and he says what Su'A is like as a person is what made him first take notice.

"He's a high quality young man and that's what first struck me," Hodges said.

"I've seen him put in at training… He has a really good work ethic and that's the first thing that impressed me when watching him.

"He has a lot of skills when it comes to his footballing ability, such as his great footwork and superb handling.

"He has such a willingness to learn and that will continue to help his development."

Su'A has been a regular for Brisbane's Holden Cup side this year, with his early-season form earning him a call-up to the Junior Kangaroos.

He produced a man-of-the-match performance in the Junior Kangaroos' 34-20 win over the Junior Kiwis, and Hodges was a keen observer throughout this performance.

Hodges said watching Su'A play both representative football and first grade is great for his Holden Cup teammates as it gives them confidence that they may one day make it into the NRL as well.

"We've really noticed not having him in the Holden Cup when he's moved up into the first grade side," he said.

"If you take quality like that out of any under-20s side then it will always leave a big hole.

"The flipside to it is that it adds excitement to the whole group because they can see their mate doing it on the big stage.

"Everyone was very excited for him. He's done a great job so far in his first grade career."

Su'A has been a shining light for the Broncos in this year's State of Origin period, with Brisbane struggling to cover injuries and Origin representatives over the past five weeks.

The Broncos have lost three from four in the process and it is up to their younger generation to stand up.

One of those is Jarrod Wallace, with the 24-year-old newly promoted to a starting role and fellow forward Adam Blair dropped to the bench.

Wallace was full of praise for Su'A, admitting that the young forward's fitness is what has impressed him the most.

"He's been great so far and I'm sure he'll be a big star in the future. He's only 18 and in his first two starts he's been able to play the full 80 minutes," Wallace said.

"It's hard to do that when you've played 100 games, let alone two. Hopefully Jaydn can keep up his current form because he's been so impressive.

"He's only going to learn and be better as his career goes on. I'm glad he's been given an opportunity and taken it with both hands."

Bright future for young Bronco Su'A - NRL.com
 
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Moat impressive thing about him for mine is his defence, he was hitting hard and not missing many. Looking forward to the Gillett & Su'A edge defence over the next 5+ years, having those 2 bodyguarding Hunt & Milford in the defensive line should be a big help.
 
The kid looks a natural born superstar. Just looking at him, you can see he is one of those special ones. His challenge will be staying grounded and respecting what he has
 
He has a young SBW in style written all over him, let's hope the attitude couldn't be further dissimilar though.
 
Actually your right. Also seen his ball playing skills and offloads in 20s and its definietly reminiscent of SBW. Cant wait for him to get up the confidence and take those risks in his NRL time. Seems not to be too shy to take risks in his defence.
 
The kid has certainly shown a lot of ticker already in first grade and Bennett must really rate him as he has had him starting even when the origin players were back. And at only 18 he has a hell of a lot more improvement in him yet
 
Actually your right. Also seen his ball playing skills and offloads in 20s and its definietly reminiscent of SBW. Cant wait for him to get up the confidence and take those risks in his NRL time. Seems not to be too shy to take risks in his defence.

while i enjoy all the talk and the progression of this kid, lets not place a burden on him already and start comparing to sbw and the likes. its unfair on him.
 
while i enjoy all the talk and the progression of this kid, lets not place a burden on him already and start comparing to sbw and the likes. its unfair on him.

But to say a player has similarities to a young version of another player who became a gun is not a bad thing. I don't believe any of us are saying he is even close to finished product SBW but he looks and plays a LOT like the early SBW, that is a VERY good thing. That isn't to say he will end up as good or even the same type of player.
 
Agree.. saying he reminds of a young SBW is different to saying he is the next SBW.
 
If he leaves the Broncos I will flip.
 
I remember his NYC debut.

I had been sick all week with the flu and it just so happened to be the hottest Autumn day I can remember. Still, I was amped for the start of the season and couldn't wait to see what the club would be like under Wayne.

So I get there before the gates are opened and I'm expecting to see the likes of Taylor, Nikorima, Ofahengaue, Arrow etc. to tear up. I was excited to see Su'A since I had read so much about him, but I wasn't expecting big things.

I thought he was one of the best players on the park.

His foot-work, acceleration, ability to offload and the odd big-hit made me an instant fan. I don't like to jump on new faces too early since it can just bite you in the arse (thanks a lot Roberts) but even then I thought Su'A was a can't miss.

Stuff happens, Su'A ends up missing half the season due to some arrangement with Churchie and GPS Rugby so the hype sort of died down. By the time he came back, all of the good Broncos players were injured and Brisbane were getting blown off the park every week. I was at the Melbourne Storm game where Nicholl-Klokstead absolutely slayed us. Jaydn was playing centre that game and just wasn't the same player he had been earlier in the season. Obviously the break had hurt him, and he just didn't have the players around him to ease him into it. I thought maybe we wouldn't see him until 2017.

Then I saw the Bundaberg Trial and the guy just looked like a first grader. I thought the pre-season had a few bolters for Brisbane - Arrow, Timu, Eden, Opacic but Su'A was the big surprise of the lot for me. He went from somebody who may get a look in pending on Origin to a guy that should be starting.

Wayne thought the same way as well, but he took it a step further. I didn't expect Su'A to play 80 minutes, but he did so, twice and seemingly got better as each game wore on. It's still clear that at times he's only 18 and he's making poor decisions with his defence (eg. shoulder charging Reynolds a few minutes in, instead of wrapping him up) but he's shown plenty of heart as well.

It used to bug me when people would ask if some NYC flavour of the month could play Origin. How would I know? But when it comes to Su'A, he'll play for Queensland for sure. It's like Jack Bird, there's just some players you know will be stars at that level.

Fortunately Brisbane are lucky to have one.

Unfortunately for the NYC side, he's so good he's playing NRL at the moment. The NYC side is built around his work on the left-edge, without him, they often look rudderless.
 
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Great read BP. I heard he was pretty good at the 15 man game too.
 
I remember his NYC debut.

I had been sick all week with the flu and it just so happened to be the hottest Autumn day I can remember. Still, I was amped for the start of the season and couldn't wait to see what the club would be like under Wayne.

So I get there before the gates are opened and I'm expecting to see the likes of Taylor, Nikorima, Ofahengaue, Arrow etc. to tear up. I was excited to see Su'A since I had read so much about him, but I wasn't expecting big things.

I thought he was one of the best players on the park.

His foot-work, acceleration, ability to offload and the odd big-hit made me an instant fan. I don't like to jump on new faces too early since it can just bite you in the arse (thanks a lot Roberts) but even then I thought Su'A was a can't miss.

Stuff happens, Su'A ends up missing half the season due to some arrangement with Churchie and GPS Rugby so the hype sort of died down. By the time he came back, all of the good Broncos players were injured and Brisbane were getting blown off the park every week. I was at the Melbourne Storm game where Nicholl-Klokstead absolutely slayed us. Jaydn was playing centre that game and just wasn't the same player he had been earlier in the season. Obviously the break had hurt him, and he just didn't have the players around him to ease him into it. I thought maybe we wouldn't see him until 2017.

Then I saw the Bundaberg Trial and the guy just looked like a first grader. I thought the pre-season had a few bolters for Brisbane - Arrow, Timu, Eden, Opacic but Su'A was the big surprise of the lot for me. He went from somebody who may get a look in pending on Origin to a guy that should be starting.

Wayne thought the same way as well, but he took it a step further. I didn't expect Su'A to play 80 minutes, but he did so, twice and seemingly got better as each game wore on. It's still clear that at times he's only 18 and he's making poor decisions with his defence (eg. shoulder charging Reynolds a few minutes in, instead of wrapping him up) but he's shown plenty of heart as well.

It used to bug me when people would ask if some NYC flavour of the month could play Origin. How would I know? But when it comes to Su'A, he'll play for Queensland for sure. It's like Jack Bird, there's just some players you know will be stars at that level.

Fortunately Brisbane are lucky to have one.

Unfortunately for the NYC side, he's so good he's playing NRL at the moment. The NYC side is built around his work on the left-edge, without him, they often look rudderless.
He definitely seems to have something special about him. He reminded me of Oates in that he seemed to always be mentioned somewhere on the scoreboards or match summary wrote ups of the Junior matches.

The fact that not only has he handled two 80 minute stints (unreal really when you consider his age and how many senior forwards can even handle such) but that Bennett has allowed him to. He always drip feeds forwards into first grade, so he must have a huge opinion of Jaydn.

Didn't know til recently he went to my old school, and ripped up in the firsts with last week's storm debutant brodie croft and the much hyped kalyn ponga. Maybe it'll fuel the fire we're going to lure kalyn. Their parents are obviously family friends that devised matching left wing variations of mainstream names.
 
Sure i read on here last year or something that they were best mates, so could be something in that.
 

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