Poor discipline on and off the field costly for Brisbane

Gaz

Gaz

NRL Captain
Contributor
Oct 7, 2017
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Poor discipline on and off the field costly for Brisbane

Author
Joel GouldNRL.com Reporter
Timestamp
Sun 7 Apr 2019, 05:21 PM
via Email
Brisbane's season is already teetering precariously on the edge of the abyss and poor discipline on and off the field is costing them dearly.
Centre James Roberts's admission to coach Anthony Seibold that he lost control and drank to excess at a private party last Friday night after the loss to the Dragons is minor on the scale of off-field incidents that can beset the game, but has come in the wake of the costly suspensions of Payne Haas, Matt Lodge and Tevita Pangai jnr.
The photo that appeared of an allegedly inebriated Roberts, which was published by NewsCorp media outlets, may prove to be a godsend if it can be the catalyst for self-reflection and change.
The fact is Roberts has an ongoing Achilles injury that will require constant rehab on his behalf if he is to return to his best. Last year Broncos performance staff, while admiring Roberts’s toughness for playing through the injury, were frustrated he was not more diligent in doing the required exercises.
When Darius Boyd last week urged Roberts to get his body right and do all the calf drills that such an Achilles injury requires, it was a subtle shot across the bow to the NSW centre to get his act together.
Seibold has made it clear what the rules are about players in rehab and drinking.
lodgem-180708700.jpg

Brisbane prop Matt Lodge.©NRL Photos
"The playing group is very clear on that. As a collective group we know where Anthony stands and the standards he sets," hooker Andrew McCullough said on Sunday.
For Roberts's sake, and that of his team, he needs to embrace those standards.
Before a ball was kicked this season, Haas was suspended by the Broncos for four weeks for failing to satisfactorily co-operate with the NRL Integrity Unit, who were investigating an incident involving the young prop's family.
Lodge was then suspended for two games for a dangerous tackle on Cameron Munster against the Storm. Then Pangai copped another two weeks for a late shot on Roosters half Cooper Cronk.
The upshot of those three suspensions is Haas, Pangai and Lodge – three of the their most damaging middle forwards – will not play together until the round-seven clash with Cronulla.
In the cases of Lodge and Pangai it would be easy to say occasional suspensions for aggressive, intimidating forwards are part and parcel of rugby league.
However, their lack of control has cost their team when it could least afford it.
The Broncos missed 54 tackles against the Roosters last Thursday, one of their most ill-disciplined defensive efforts in recent times.
Lodge and Pangai, who missed 11 tackles between them, would do well to take a close look at Roosters counterpart Sioisiua Taukeiaho. He ran for 209 metres, including 72m post-contact, and made 22 tackles with one missed.
He simply ran hard, tackled hard and did his job. That is all Seibold wants from his forwards – not big statements that lead to penalties and suspensions.
In the case of Haas, his suspension was a lesson that a professional footballer cannot serve two masters. He was asked to be forthcoming with the Integrity Unit by his club, the one that signed him last year to a lucrative six-year deal, and chose not to do so.
Granted, he was in a difficult decision and put his family first but the old saying that "he who pays the piper calls the tune" applied to Haas. He is not a law unto himself. He is an integral member of a club and team.
The Broncos have worked their backsides off under Seibold over the past four months but they need to be careful the privileged environment they work in does not lead to complacency.
pangait-180816700-sd.jpg

Brisbane forward Tevita Pangai jnr.©Scott Davis/NRL Photos
When you approach Brisbane’s Red Hill base it appears as a shimmering citadel on the horizon, but when it comes to delivering premierships such an edifice is nothing more than a mirage. Up close it is a multimillion-dollar facility that has everything a professional footballer could want, including a sleeping room.
Premierships are won in October after building the foundations for success through 24 rounds, not won by the team with the most impressive training base. Melbourne do not revel in the building they are housed in.
They wax lyrical about a pre-season manual work program for new recruits where they dig holes, build fences and toil in the hot sun.
The Broncos are fortunate to have Boyd, McCullough, Matt Gillett and Alex Glenn in their leadership group. That quartet will no doubt be reinforcing this week what it means to be a Bronco and how what they dished up as a collective against the Roosters was unacceptable.
It is vital the Broncos, with just one win from four games, ensure discipline on and off the field is at the highest level in the next month because the Wests Tigers, Raiders, Sharks and Rabbitohs will be applying the blowtorch.

Source: NRL.com
 
Still have faith but it’s wearing thin.
 
Don't despair, they'll come good.
 
Don't despair, they'll come good.

Yep it’s an opportune time for one of the media’s favourite sports - a good old bit of Bronco bashing.

We come out and flog the Tigers and it will all shut up.
 
Stat Attack: Big guns fall furthest in Broncos' 2019 slide

Author
Dan WalshNRL.com Reporter
Timestamp
Mon 8 Apr 2019, 10:12 AMEmail
After Brisbane's 36-4 capitulation to the Roosters, Anthony Seibold was asked his thoughts on his talent-laden young pack being bludgeoned up and down the SCG by the premiers.
"If you get picked in the NRL you have got to do your job," Seibold said.
"The guys tried hard but trying hard in the NRL is not good enough."
His young forwards may have been outmuscled by Taukeiaho, Cordner and co but unfortunately for Seibold it's his senior men who have been found wanting in an unflattering 1-3 start to his Red Hill rein.
The Broncos have fallen away badly in the basics and their biggest names have fallen the furthest.
Whereas Brisbane's completion rates and average errors ranked as the best in the competition in 2018, this year they sit below par – representative wingers Corey Oates (12 mistakes) and Jamayne Isaako (seven) among the game's worst offenders.
Likewise their efforts without the ball – 39 missed tackles a game and another 23 ineffective efforts – are the worst in the NRL.
stat-attack---broncos_20190408.jpg

Halves Kodi Nikorima (21 missed tackles, second most in the NRL) and Anthony Milford (14) are being successfully targeted in defence, while Matt Gillett (17 ineffective tackles) has struggled in an early shift from the edge to the middle.
Gillett has returned from a serious neck injury out of position until the Roosters thumping, shoring up a Brisbane middle rotation at times lacking Matt Lodge and Payne Haas.
Likewise, the missed tackle counts of internationals Tevita Pangai (17), Alex Glenn 15 misses and another nine ineffective) and Jack Bird (11 ineffective tackles) all rank in an unwanted top 20 across the first four rounds.
But where Brisbane's strengths from 2018 have turned a weakness in their first four games this year, areas they've already struggled in are magnified.
nikorimak-190404_gt_99.jpg

Broncos halfback Kodi Nikorima.©Grant Trouville/NRL Photos
Their average of 384 post-contact metres a game is well down on last year's 471 – still less than middle of the road by NRL standards.
Likewise their minimal support plays still rank them 16th in the competition, and have dropped from 120 a game last year to 98 so far in 2019.
Of course it's early days for Seibold, but all of the above amounts to last year's third best attack (22.1 points per game) sinking to 10th (17.3 points) after the opening month.
The 20.8 points conceded per game in 2018 has ballooned to 23.25.
And just two competition points seems a fair return for what the Broncos have produced to date.

Source: NRL.com

How did we win the one we did - oh that’s right it was the Cows. ****
 
Melbourne do not revel in the building they are housed in. They wax lyrical about a pre-season manual work program for new recruits where they dig holes, build fences and toil in the hot sun.

Great article, @Gaz thanks heaps for posting.

There was so much of value there but I wanted to focus on this point in particular.

The Melbourne Storm always send new recruits to construction sites and other things like that.

Didn't the Broncos do something similar? In one of Bennett's books he talks about a "no work, no play" policy.

They had to do a few hours a week, even if it was just a shift at the Leagues Club or some yard work around Red Hill.

The Gold Coast Titans do something similar to Melbourne. It's not translating into results on the field at the moment but they should persevere with it.

Steve Ricketts, great Rugby League writer, now in retirement has a blog. I found this gem:

The Gold Coast Titans are to be applauded for sending their players to work, to get a taste of the real world.

I remember at training in the bush seeing blokes turn up, blackened from cutting burnt sugar cane; covered in grease from mechanical repair work or covered in stains associated with working in banana plantations.

In Brisbane, State forward, Des Morris (a product of Ipswich Rugby League), would work all day delivering beer kegs, before reporting for training at Easts. And Ipswich prop, Dud Beattie famously worked a morning shift down a coal mine, and then played a Test for Australia in the afternoon.

Titans’ chairman, Dennis Watt has praised the Titans ‘community work’ (not to be confused with work experience) as the best in the NRL. That claim has been supported by several school principals, who have had dealings with the Titans and Broncos.


Check it out here: https://stevericketts.com.au/2018/11/29/comment-give-ipswich-a-go/
 

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