NEWS Lodge's league exile officially over

You don't really want your edge back rowers to be too heavy. They have to be fairly mobile and be able to change angles andn what not. Oates has a fantastic build for a edge back rower, it's just his injury prone body that might be the problem.
 
Over 100 kg is small to you bloody hell I can’t imagine how big you want our forwards.

you have been one of the ones complaining that our pack is too small because our forwards aren't all well over 110kg ... have you changed your opinion?
 
We are going to be in real trouble if Lodge can't live up to expectations: and that's a possibility. He's only played 12 NRL games and not since 2015.
 
you have been one of the ones complaining that our pack is too small because our forwards aren't all well over 110kg ... have you changed your opinion?

I have stated that this year our forwards are the biggest we have had in a good while and I’m excited. Lodge, Offa, TPJ, Haas all over 115kg and all could be in our side round 1. Even Sims and fai are up at 110 according to our broncos site.
 
We are going to be in real trouble if Lodge can't live up to expectations: and that's a possibility. He's only played 12 NRL games and not since 2015.

He was starting at 20 when he did and his form at Redcliffe was impressive. He’s not the saviour but he will do a good job for us
 
I have stated that this year our forwards are the biggest we have had in a good while and I’m excited. Lodge, Offa, TPJ, Haas all over 115kg and all could be in our side round 1. Even Sims and fai are up at 110 according to our broncos site.

you realise there isn't that much difference in size between last season and the likely line up this season.

Likely starting pack 2018 (no Macca) = 539kg; possible bench 441kg (if we carry 4 forwards, but around 336 if we do the same as last season and carry 3 forwards + a utility)

starting pack 2017 (no macca) = 522kg; bench = 340kg

so working on the formula that we will have a bench make up of 3 forwards and a utility (since that is usually our make up)

the 2018 likely pack + bench is only 13kg heavier than 2017 (possibly less depending on which forward misses out) ... 875kg - 862kg
 
13kg makes a massive difference climbing a hill on a bike though.
 
How Matt Lodge can give Brisbane Broncos extra power
Wed 14 Feb 2018, 05:00 PM
Matt Lodge has done his apprenticeship and has the attributes to make the Brisbane Broncos premiership contenders, insists legendary Redcliffe Dolphins prop Troy Lindsay.

The 22-year-old 118kg front-rower will make his Broncos debut in the trial with the Gold Coast Titans in Toowoomba on Saturday night.

Lodge, who last played in the Telstra Premiership for the Wests Tigers in 2015, was a standout performer for Redcliffe in the Intrust Super Cup.

Lindsay played a competition record 270 games and won five premierships with the Dolphins, and was named in the 20-year anniversary Cup team of all time.

"He is a big man, thick through the chest and just takes handling," said Lindsay, a Redcliffe director these days.

"That is what is going to make him so good for Brisbane. If he plays his best football, I reckon without a doubt he will be their starting front-rower and will help them push for a premiership, if not this year then in a year or two.

"You’d nearly say he is a halfback in a front-rower’s body and offers you something extra with that, whereas your traditional front-rower is bash and barge.

"At times he probably tried to play too much football last year but Wayne Bennett will give him a role to do and that will be to get them forward.

lodge_redcliffe2.jpg

"Guys like Josh McGuire and Sam Thaiday get through a lot of work but they are not big men. You need someone there bending that line and Lodge will do that."

The Broncos starting props were 14th and 16th respectively in metres gained last year. Coach Wayne Bennett told NRL.com the style of play the props play would not change.

"Running hard, passing at the line, offloading, it’s worked well with our front-rowers and offers a point of difference up front," Bennett said.

Lindsay said Lodge could so all those things but added he could learn from a disappointing display in last year’s Intrust Super Cup semi-final against the Sunshine Coast about finding a balance.

"He was wanting to play too much football and not lay a platform,” he said.

"The first couple of runs he busted them wide open and then started to play like a halfback and I thought if he’d gone back to what he was doing early Redcliffe would have been a lot better off, although all of them were woeful that day.

"He is only young but he has got to learn that you’ve got to lay a platform and do the hard work before you play football, and it might take you 60 or 70 minutes to do it too."

Lodge was deregistered by the NRL after an alcohol-fuelled rampage in New York in 2015 but was given the green light by the NRL Integrity Unit to return to the top grade after transforming his life.

Lindsay said his Redcliffe experience was pivotal.

"It has grounded him a little bit more and given him an understanding of the grassroots," Lindsay said.

"He probably thought he wasn’t going to get back to the NRL but the Intrust Super Cup has prepared him for that because you don’t get any easy games in the Cup. He worked for everything he got and no-one laid down and let him run over them.

“He has a real bright future, so long as he stays on track, but he was real good at Redcliffe last year and didn’t give any trouble.”

Sam Thaiday said Lodge would bring “a bit of size, a bit of aggression” to the Broncos.

"He's a fantastic ball player as well. He's going to give us a bit more creativity in the forward pack,” Thaiday said.

"He has been in the system last year and for a few reasons didn't get a chance to run around.

"I am sure he is going to be itching to get out there and play and really prove a few people wrong."
 
How Matt Lodge can give Brisbane Broncos extra power
Wed 14 Feb 2018, 05:00 PM
Matt Lodge has done his apprenticeship and has the attributes to make the Brisbane Broncos premiership contenders, insists legendary Redcliffe Dolphins prop Troy Lindsay.

The 22-year-old 118kg front-rower will make his Broncos debut in the trial with the Gold Coast Titans in Toowoomba on Saturday night.

Lodge, who last played in the Telstra Premiership for the Wests Tigers in 2015, was a standout performer for Redcliffe in the Intrust Super Cup.

Lindsay played a competition record 270 games and won five premierships with the Dolphins, and was named in the 20-year anniversary Cup team of all time.

"He is a big man, thick through the chest and just takes handling," said Lindsay, a Redcliffe director these days.

"That is what is going to make him so good for Brisbane. If he plays his best football, I reckon without a doubt he will be their starting front-rower and will help them push for a premiership, if not this year then in a year or two.

"You’d nearly say he is a halfback in a front-rower’s body and offers you something extra with that, whereas your traditional front-rower is bash and barge.

"At times he probably tried to play too much football last year but Wayne Bennett will give him a role to do and that will be to get them forward.

lodge_redcliffe2.jpg

"Guys like Josh McGuire and Sam Thaiday get through a lot of work but they are not big men. You need someone there bending that line and Lodge will do that."

The Broncos starting props were 14th and 16th respectively in metres gained last year. Coach Wayne Bennett told NRL.com the style of play the props play would not change.

"Running hard, passing at the line, offloading, it’s worked well with our front-rowers and offers a point of difference up front," Bennett said.

Lindsay said Lodge could so all those things but added he could learn from a disappointing display in last year’s Intrust Super Cup semi-final against the Sunshine Coast about finding a balance.

"He was wanting to play too much football and not lay a platform,” he said.

"The first couple of runs he busted them wide open and then started to play like a halfback and I thought if he’d gone back to what he was doing early Redcliffe would have been a lot better off, although all of them were woeful that day.

"He is only young but he has got to learn that you’ve got to lay a platform and do the hard work before you play football, and it might take you 60 or 70 minutes to do it too."

Lodge was deregistered by the NRL after an alcohol-fuelled rampage in New York in 2015 but was given the green light by the NRL Integrity Unit to return to the top grade after transforming his life.

Lindsay said his Redcliffe experience was pivotal.

"It has grounded him a little bit more and given him an understanding of the grassroots," Lindsay said.

"He probably thought he wasn’t going to get back to the NRL but the Intrust Super Cup has prepared him for that because you don’t get any easy games in the Cup. He worked for everything he got and no-one laid down and let him run over them.

“He has a real bright future, so long as he stays on track, but he was real good at Redcliffe last year and didn’t give any trouble.”

Sam Thaiday said Lodge would bring “a bit of size, a bit of aggression” to the Broncos.

"He's a fantastic ball player as well. He's going to give us a bit more creativity in the forward pack,” Thaiday said.

"He has been in the system last year and for a few reasons didn't get a chance to run around.

"I am sure he is going to be itching to get out there and play and really prove a few people wrong."
C18DFFA7 7E3C 47EE 8A7A 13B643977A99
 
"Guys like Josh McGuire and Sam Thaiday get through a lot of work but they are not big men. You need someone there bending that line and Lodge will do that."

Thanks Cowboy!!!

Dead right!
 
NRL 2018: Matt Lodge to resume career but victims still unpaid, says lawyer
Chris Barrett15 February 2018 — 8:00pm
The lawyer representing the victims of Matt Lodge's New York rampage in 2015 have expressed outrage that the Brisbane Broncos forward is set to resume his NRL career without having handed over a cent of the $US1.234 million ($1.6 million) damages bill he was ordered to pay them by an American judge.

Lodge, 22, is listed to make his first appearance for the Broncos in their trial match against Gold Coast Titans at Toowoomba on Saturday night in what will be his first top-grade outing in nearly three years.

Controversy: Matt Lodge is set to resume his NRL career this season.

The front-rower's impending return comes, however, with the four victims of his night of rage in the US yet to receive compensation.

"Our clients haven't been paid," said Renan Varghese, a senior associate at law firm Wigdor LLP. "We are in the process of looking into avenues to collect against him for his conduct.

"The fact of the matter is he has not taken responsibility for those actions. We believe that he should be required to take such responsibility and a court has already found he should have to take responsibility."

Lodge escaped a prison sentence in December 2016 when a New York judge granted him a conditional discharge after he performed community service and had treatment for anger and alcohol abuse.

However, at the conclusion of a subsequent civil case last year brought against him by the victims - German tourist Carolin Dekeyser, New York couple Joseph Cartright and Ruth Fowler and their then nine-year-old son - he was ordered to pay them a total of $1.6 million.

The Broncos, who signed him to a one-year deal last November, have previously defended their acquisition of the prop, with coach Wayne Bennett speaking about how Lodge had served his time out of the game and turned his life around, quitting alcohol and enrolling in university. Lodge spent last season in the Broncos feeder system with Intrust Super Cup side Redcliffe before winning a place in Brisbane's top-30 squad and having his contract registered by the NRL.

Lodge told News Corp last November the US incident was "a wake-up call in my life". "Everyone has a past and I can only apologise for what I did," he said.

Broncos chief executive Paul White said on Thursday that "Matt has done a mountain of work to get to a place where he now deserves a second chance".

Varghese said the victims did not want Lodge to be unable to play again but were unhappy there had been no commitment to pay damages set by a US District Court judge. Lodge in 2016 had offered to settle for a "small amount" of the claim, Varghese said during the civil proceedings.

"Our clients aren't vindictive people," Varghese said on Thursday. "They're not looking to leave Mr Lodge unable to work. But it's been clear by his actions in this case that he thinks he's above the law and above taking any responsibility for his actions and we can't abide by that.

"They're not happy about the fact that someone could behave the way that he did and treat innocent individuals in the way that he did and can essentially resume his life as if nothing had happened. They don't think it's appropriate and they're disappointed in his behaviour even since the incident.

"He never appeared in the civil case. We had contact with a lawyer purporting to represent him and ... our discussions were unsatisfactory.

"We would hope that Mr Lodge can't escape his judgment just by fleeing back to Australia."

Lodge was signed by Brisbane to a minimum-wage contract of $100,000 but his earning capacity has the potential to balloon well beyond that in coming years, if he delivers on the talent that the Broncos believe he has. Bennett and Brisbane officials have been very impressed by him.

"He has satisfied the fit-and-proper person test as set down by the NRL, who have ratified his return to the top level of the game," White said.

"He has been alcohol-free for more than two years, he is completing university study, and he is doing regular work with young men on the dangers of alcohol and taking personal responsibility for their actions. Matt has also recently become a father, and is a far more mature and responsible person who has learnt from his mistakes, and is sorry for what he did.

"The Broncos believe he is now on the right path and will continue to support him in every way going forward."

Lodge's manager, Isaac Moses, declined to comment when contacted on Thursday.

Varghese declined to detail how he planned to recoup the damages if they remained unpaid but Chris Kintis, a partner in commercial dispute resolution at ClarkeKann Lawyers, said there were options available.

"US civil judgments can be enforced in Australia. However, there is a process," Kintis said. "Fresh proceedings would have to be first commenced in Australia to recognise the US judgment. It would then likely become enforceable just as any Australian judgment would."

The incident in New York occurred from about 4am on October 16, 2015 when Lodge, then at Wests Tigers, followed Ms Dekeyser to an apartment building, grabbing her and saying: "Do you think you're going to die? This is the night you're going to die."

The court was told he then forced his way into an apartment resided in by Mr Cartright, Ms Fowler and their son, grabbing Cartright and making death threats. The terrified family ended up moving as a result and took the young boy to a child therapist after he suffered night terrors.

"It's the kind of situation that a normal person can't really imagine being put into," Varghese said.

"The effects of it are probably going to stay with them for a long time, if not the rest of their lives. Especially when you're dealing with a young child and his parents. It's not something you can wave away."

Chris Barrett is a Sports Writer with The Sydney Morning Herald.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sp...still-unpaid-says-lawyer-20180215-h0w5p9.html
 
Of course the victims haven't been paid yet ... a bit hard to to pay $2 million when your only earning a pie and coke playing ISC
 
Of course the victims haven't been paid yet ... a bit hard to to pay $2 million when your only earning a pie and coke playing ISC

He would have started being paid his new wage once his contract was Lodged (hehe) or October 1 wouldn’t he? Obviously his wage isn’t huge but that’s about 5(?) months of a pretty good (compared to your average 22/23 year old in a regular job) wage isn’t it?
 
"My client is pissed off that something bad happened to them and they don't get to treat it like they won the lottery like everyone else in 'Merica does".

Pretty much sums it up. I wish them the best of luck getting a judge in Australia to enforce that stupid ruling. Hell, Lodge didnt even bother defending it knowing that he wouldnt be held to it anyways.
 
The original thread about Lodge's New York incident got bumped on LU. Right on schedule with the season not far away lol The Broncos have size and aggression up front now, time to throw the shit
 
I find it hard to believe they are going to try and enforce this civil judgement. Surely it's going to be too expensive for them and they'll stop trying.
 

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