Melbourne and Penrith: Who is the greatest?

In the absorbing Stan documentary “Revealed – Craig Bellamy: Inside the Storm” we see the legendary coach seated delivering his final speech before last year’s grand final: “It’s just another wave in the ocean. But this is our wave. We ain’t gonna let them drop in on us. Go and get it. Let’s f#cking go and get it!”.

Compelling words and metaphor, perfect for a team that’s about to claim the premiership.

Except, it didn’t.

Instead, Ivan Cleary and his Panthers would claim an astonishing fourth consecutive title.

I can’t help thinking Bellamy watched that game in awe of Penrith. They are the modern incarnation of his perfect team. Dominance of territory through a dead straight defensive line, perfect contact in tackles, and powerful hitups; inevitably producing errors by tired opposition defenders and exasperated playmakers.

Bellamy had inherited the exhilarating running spine of Ryan Papenhuyzen, Harry Grant, Cameron Munster and Jahrome Hughes but deep down I think he knew he couldn’t beat this ruthless defensive monolith.

As is obvious from previous articles, I am a huge fan of the Melbourne Storm.

My pieces have reiterated the trans-formative effect on an ex Australian Rules player and fan when he wandered over one night in 1998 to the concrete and crumbling Olympic Park to observe, for the first time live, what I had previously dismissed as an unimpressively sluggish and ground based game from New South Wales.

https://www.theroar.com.au/2011/07/24/taking-the-hits-in-rugby-league/

I and many other Melburnians kept returning to the venue and the freezing elements, fog and lack of clear vision. A bond was forged with the game during those nights when we drank with players post match across the road among fans of all demographics and persuasions. I would stand there feeling a little embarrassed by my fandom. But it was special.

The following year we won the grand final.

The story of the Melbourne Storm, unquestionably one of the great ones of Australian sport, had begun.

The story has included all the elements of a compelling sports narrative: salary cap cheating, tales of opposition fear, hatred and jealousy, grudging respect, and unabashed mimicry.

More significant however is the undisputed establishment of the club as the benchmark. Despite the salary cap and wrestling controversies, other clubs have achieved success using the Storm as a blueprint; because, as unpopular a sentiment as this may be, ultimately it wasn’t salary cap cheating that made them successful.

They have been in a 117 year old elite competition for just 28 seasons and played in 11 grand finals. Since the salary cap punishments were handed down in 2010 they have made the preliminary final on eleven occasions. As Ivan Cleary mentioned in his auto biography: “That’s just ridiculous”.

And all but one of these achievements has been under the watch of a single coach.

However, there is a phenomenon – a grain of sand in the eye, a sliver of a kidney stone – ruining this seemingly perfect healthy profile of greatness:

NO consecutive titles.

History shows it’s an extremely difficult thing to achieve but why has a club with such a remarkable record of sustained success been unable to achieve it?

Even during their salary cap affected era when they made 4 consecutive grand finals and were well on their way to a fifth before the sanctions hit during the 2010 season.

The time they appeared closest to achieving back to back titles was when a brilliant team on paper won the 2020 premiership and in 2021 it was one of the great attacking and beautiful looking sides of all time who put the opposition to the sword on a record equaling 19 successive occasions only to taper off with sheer weariness and injury at the back-end, losing eventually in one of the great preliminary finals.

Potential rivals for greatness appeared but soon fell away. I didn’t have cause to feel worried that Storm’s historical significance would be overcome by another club.

But suddenly there came a serious threat: a horde of precociously talented and organised kids appearing out of the blue of the Blue Mountains to claim in four years the same number of premierships it had taken the Storm juggernaut 28 years to achieve.

It is difficult to believe now that on the eve of the 2021 grand final Ivan Cleary had coached the second most games without winning a premiership.

And yet, just four years later, have Cleary’s Panthers surpassed Bellamy’s Storm as the greater outfit?

Cleary’s autobiography published just 10 days after last year’s premiership triumph expresses his admiration for the Storm, describing the lessons he learned watching them suffering defeat against them and more importantly how he based and molded his dominant team on their style and culture. References to the Melbourne Storm are prominent throughout the book.

Even if the Panthers lose out this year – after five consecutive grand finals and four consecutive premierships – they have undoubtedly established themselves as one of the greatest outfits in history but will they accept perishing on the 2025 premiership slope and withering away? I don’t think so. They found a little nook to protect themselves from the elements for Round 26 knowing it would mean a longer route to the top but also that it would make them stronger.

This team is barely human, it’s a block of black granite that doesn’t care for your feelings. There are no linchpins to disable because mechanics don’t apply to it.

They find a reason to win, and will their way there.

Before they had even won their first title in 2021, they appeared cooked in the finals with chronic injuries to key players Nathan Cleary, James Fisher-Harris, Moses Leota, Brian To’o and Dylan Edwards, losing the first final, before scraping past the Eels and then Melbourne, clearly the best team in the competition, before winning the grand final through an intercept try.

In 2023 when Reece Walsh and Ezra Mam found their way through its black wall, they responded with the greatest grand final comeback. Last year’s grand final was all about revenge for 2020.

I want to loath them but I can’t help watching this extraordinary enterprise. Ivan Cleary took an eternity to win a premiership which is why he hasn’t yet been placed in the company of Bellamy and Bennett.

He borrowed from Bellamy but he has taken the austerity and singular focus of the Storm maestro to another level. Intensified and refined it. Yes, a gravy train of youthful talent and a relatively young group but gee what an achievement.

When Will Warbrick pulled off the match winning intercept on Friday night to put the Storm into their 16th preliminary final the glorious memories of Olympic Park were re-woken. The deafening noise generated inside AAMI Park at that moment is testament to one of the brilliant moves in Australian sport to introduce rugby league into AFL territory.

Melbourne’s reign has been a generational one while Penrith’s has been recent and brutal.

If they were both to fall away as powerhouses right now whose record would stand out most in the history books. Melbourne’s asterisked titles, multiple preliminary and grand finals, and on-off premierships, or Penrith’s big meaty block of titles staring you in the face.

Even for a Melbourne Storm fan, the latter is overwhelming.

If they continue to win this year these two dominant clubs will meet in yet another grand final.

Motivation for the Storm will be revenge from last year and to extend further its unbelievable run of success.

Unfortunately, for Craig Bellamy, Ivan Cleary has a greater goal.

Published in The Roar https://www.theroar.com.au/2025/09/17/melbourne-or-panthers-whos-the-greatest-in-nrls-modern-rivalry-between-ruthless-juggernauts/

The 1999 NRL Grand Final. Mundine Blows It. Storm Begin Their Dynasty.

The great grand finals are those that cause the greatest joy and therefore the greatest pain.

The 1999 grand final, the second of the NRL era, between the newly formed joint venture St George Illawarra and the foreign interloper Melbourne Storm in only its second season, is certainly one of those.

Melbourne returned from the dead to record the biggest grand final comeback, a record that was eventually usurped by Penrith under similar circumstances in 2023, the subject of my previous article.

Interestingly, despite its status and the fact it was performed in front of a deafening world record crowd in a stadium preparing itself for the upcoming Olympics, it was at times a rather poor game, riddled with errors on the slippery long grassed surface.

Also, watching it now in the modern era of highly structured defences and unprecedented power and athleticism brought to the game by Maori and Pacific Islander players, it’s a little underwhelming.

Not to mention the over-sized wide shouldered jerseys of the time, and those horrifically transparent white nylon shorts (the wash instruction labels clearly visible) worn by the Dragons players.

But let’s begin with the pain.

The player who will always be remembered in this match is the divisive and compelling figure of Anthony Mundine, the Dragons five-eighth who has, rightly or wrongly, shouldered the pain for his team’s loss.

Michael Ennis explained that a grand final loss ‘seeps into the soul” so you can imagine the impact on a player who is seen to have blown his and his teammates’ chance for glory.

Even while well established in a successful boxing career, Mundine was still searching for redemption almost as if his bouts were only ever about rectifying THAT blunder in the 51st minute.

Contemplating a return to the game he remarked: “It still haunts me … I want to win a premiership to help erase those memories”.

After his error, things began to falter for the red and white with Storm scoring immediately after. Melbourne would then snatch the premiership in the dying minutes with a penalty try..

Despite the unparalleled success in its formative years St George hadn’t won a title for 20 years, and had lost its past 4 grand finals. Illawarra had never experienced a premiership.

Despite finishing 6th,the Dragons cruised through the finals thumping the Storm in the qualifying final and the minor premiers Cronulla in the preliminary final to enter the grand final as raging favourites. The Storm recovered and showed immense character to take both the semi and preliminary finals by a mere two points.

Up to halftime things are going as expected. The Dragons, using their running game and ball movement, have scored two converted tries and a penalty goal to lead 14-0.

As the players walk off, caller Ray Warren confidently trumpets: “St George as a single entity have won 15 premierships. They are 40 minutes away from premiership 16.”

In the race, Storm lock Tawera Nikau grabs his teammate Stephen Kearney by the collar and says: “We’ve just got to rip in and knock their heads off in the second half”.

From the first set of the second half, Nikau backs up his words with actions; his aggressive defence and hit-ups making him and eventual Clive Churchill winner Brett Kimmorley, the players most responsible for the game turning.

The commentators are giving accounts of the coaches’ half time addresses. David  Waite’s obvious and justified contentment with his team’s first half game is suddenly at odds with what is now happening on the screen, only a couple of minutes into the second. Also significant, considering the play that will ultimately decide the premiership, is Waite warning his team about the kicking threat of Kimmorley.

Kimmorley then wears a high shot by prop Craig Smith 20 metres from the Dragons’ line.

Immediately, there is a change in the tone. Smith and his teammates look genuinely unsettled at the opposition’s response and the penalty. Booing fills the stadium when Smith is placed on report.  

Then comes the 51st minute. On the fifth tackle Mundine, who has been lively and threatening throughout the match, chases his own kick ten metres from the try line. The ball ricochets of a sliding Kimmorley and falling Shaun Timmins into his path and he scoops it up. There is a sizeable gap between the grounded Kimmorley on the right and Storm winger Craig Smith on the left, who has had to leave his man Jamie Ainscough and shift across to defend the line.

Mundine moves to the left with the unmarked Darren Treacy and Ainscough on his outside but, imbued with the need for glory, The Man straightens off his left foot and dips for the line. Smith has retained his position and braces for the tackle. Mundine has both hands on the ball and his head passes under Smith’s arm, brushing it slightly, but his left shoulder then impacts Smith’s hip and thigh wrenching his left hand off the ball. The right hand is unable to remain attached for the put-down and he loses the ball over the tryline.

Mundine knows he hasn’t scored. He lies there blinking as if waking from a light filled heroic dream to find himself in a black mould windowless bedsit.

As he walks back in disbelief, Timmins can be seen behind mouthing an obscenity and he has a scowling Ainscough remonstrating with him.

It’s not a good look. They are still up by 12 points but appear to be unraveling, fearful of Melbourne’s ability to finish games.

It is unfair to lay the blame for the loss solely on Mundine. In the kickoff after Martin’s try Storm captain Glenn Lazarus, who was having an awful final game of his distinguished career, knocked on leading immediately to a try by Dragons centre Paul McGregor. If kicker Wayne Bartrim had converted the Dragons would have leading 20-6 with a little over 20 minutes remaining

Like Lazarus, Dragons winger Rod Wishart had  committed a number of errors throughout.

With his team up 18-6, he coughs the ball up early in the ensuring set, leading to an immediate try by Storm forward Ben Roarty.

The penalty try in the 75th minute is probably the most watched moment in the history of the game and has been immortalised by the words of Ray Warren: “I think you’ll find that (referee) Bill Harrigan is about to make one of the biggest calls in 100 years of rugby league”.

There is an interesting end-note that illustrates the profound impact a grand final result can have on the life of players. In a strange quirk of fate the two Storm wingers from the game, Marcus Bai and the man knocked out scoring the penalty try, Craig Smith, both had their premiership rings stolen in different incidents.

On getting his ring remade and engraved by a thoughtful jeweler, Smith had this to say: ” It’s everything. It’s a big piece of me that has been missing for a long time. I think over time since playing this great sport if I was at a low point I’d slip it on. It’s part of what I did…It’s something only footballers understand”.

For the Sydney clubs, I think there was the expectation that this premiership by a Melbourne ring-in was going to be a one-off in their game’s history. It was Lazarus’s final game and quite a few players would shortly leave, as would coach Chris Anderson.

But soon there will be the arrival of an untested senior coach by the name of Craig Bellamy who will continue the legacy of the Melbourne Storm experiment, spawning one of the great chapters – 23 years long and still being written – in the story of Australian sport.

Published on The Roar

https://www.theroar.com.au/2025/06/15/rewinding-the-1999-nrl-grand-final-mundine-blows-it-as-storms-dynasty-kicks-off-with-unbelievable-boilover/

The 2023 NRL Grand Final. The Iceman vs The Dancer.

On his Bye Round podcast former St Helen’s and Canterbury prop Englishman James Graham asked Kevvie Walters about his thoughts on the 2023 grand final loss to Penrith. The Broncos coach replied: “Immediately I walked onto the ground after the game and Ivan came over and I just shook my head: ‘Mate you’ve got to be joking. How did you do that. How did you guys do that?!’ That’s what I said to him. He said: ‘Oh, I don’t know Kev’. And he just smiled…”.

The public comments attached to the interview gave varying answers from Reece Walsh can’t tackle, Adam Reynolds went missing, the Broncos went into their shell, to Nathan Cleary performing a solo master class.

Penrith’s victory was the greatest ever grand final comeback, surpassing Melbourne Storm’s magnificent second-half hunting down of St George Illawarra in 1999 (the subject of my next grand final summary).

For me, there are two defining images from the game.

The first is of Isaah Yeo – Penrith’s spiritual leader  – on his haunches, concussed. Dazed, he’s looking at the video screen and about to be removed from the field for a HIA.

Jarome Luai has succumbed to his injured shoulder, and Brisbane is ahead 24-8 after a ten minute blitzkrieg of Penrith’s feared defensive line.

The game is nearly three quarters done and as good as over.

The break in play allows Penrith fans to appreciate why a three-peat is rare, and to honour their team for making four consecutive grand finals.

For Brisbane supporters it provides an opportunity to take in what has just happened; the realisation that the premiership has been secured and the sorrow of 2015 has been expunged.

For the aesthetes of attacking football it’s validation of their tastes; the ruthless defensive game of Penrith (inspired by and modeled on Craig Bellamy’s austere early teams) being finally dismantled by the free spirited party boys Ezra Mam and Reece Walsh.

Instead, the break proves Brisbane’s undoing.

It allows Penrith time to recover and reassess. Luai’s replacement Jack Cogger becomes first receiver to allow Nathan Cleary to perform his methodical magic.

Brisbane repeat the mistake of its 2015 forebear by attempting to protect the lead instead of continuing to attack a vulnerable opponent.

Immediately after the Yeo incident they receive a penalty and execute an attacking raid involving offloads by Walsh and Payne Haas. With three tackles up their sleeve Brisbane cross the 10 metre line through Herbie Farnworth who, with Penrith’s defensive line bunched, passes to forward Keenan Palasia who has space to the try line. The pass is too forceful and a little behind Palasia but the forward shows no real intent as he clearly thinks his is a dummy run. There are no support players as Adam Reynolds and Walsh have set themselves back for the next play. Farnworth’s pass hits open ground to be pounced on by Crichton and Penrith almost reach the half way mark on the 2nd tackle.

It proves to be the last orchestrated attacking run by Brisbane. Penrith will go on to score three tries. Brisbane won’t score again.

The second defining image of the match is that of Nathan Cleary about to plant the ball in what will prove to be the premiership winning try. In the background – on his knees and looking down – is Reece Walsh.

There are other significant figures in the contest: Broncos five-eighth Ezra Mam immediately after halftime and Panthers centre Stephen Crichton in the final 20 minutes.

But it was always going to come down to the actions of the two superstars, Nathan Cleary and Reece Walsh.

Completely different, equally mesmerising, Walsh and Cleary embody the nature of their respective teams.

Cleary has the calmness of a man who knows God is looking down, guiding him. He resembles a bird of prey searching for an ill timed movement. The jutting brow like the top of a bunker hiding the dark scheming eyes.

Referred to as ‘The Iceman’ in the match commentary, he shares the mindset – cerebral and almost emotionless – of Michael Fassbender’s clinical assassin in David Fincher’s brilliant film, The Killer: “It all comes down to preparation, attention to detail… keep calm, keep moving”.

In the afterword to his father Ivan’s recent autobiography Not Everything Counts But Everything Matters, he writes: “When we were down 24-8 against the Broncos in the 2023 grand final we still had the belief that – somehow – we could win. The work we had done on the mental side of our game meant we were always in the moment”.

One aspect of the mental game is learning the art of maintaining composure while suffering from fatigue. It hides the reality of your pain and vulnerability from opponents, and perhaps even from yourself.

In the same book, Ivan Cleary explains: “At Penrith, strong body language is something we pride ourselves on. Hands on hips are fine. Hands on your knees or head show your opponent you’re tired”.

At the 14th minute, Fox Sports’ Michael Ennis notes: “They’re out on their feet here, Brisbane. So much emotional build up… Billy Walters gasping for air.”

Walters, Kotoni Staggs and Jordan Riki have their hands on their knees. Thomas Flegler, unable to get back into the line, has his behind his head.

No doubt the Penrith players have noticed too and been encouraged by the sight

Despite being made a fool by a line breaking Mam and then Walsh, both of which result in tries, and again when Walsh threatens to score the match winner inside the final ten minutes, Cleary keeps his composure.

With the Panthers 8-24 you can imagine him thinking: “Two tries five minutes apart, and me scoring to win with a couple of minutes to go. Plenty of time”.

Reece Walsh is the Vaslav Nijinsky of the NRL (“I’m not an ordinary man. I’m a dancer. You will understand me when you see me dance.”).

He’s a creature at the whim of the spirits.

At definitive moments a light force within suddenly sets those luminous eyes ablaze. Made more mesmerising and nerve wracking for defenders by the long dark lashes, they glow with exhilaration as he leaps, fends, prances and pirouettes – effortlessly and magnificently – through the defensive line.

However, these scintillating runs come at a price. A sensitive soul in a body not entirely suited to the brutal business of rugby league, Walsh is prone to fatigue, mental lapses, niggling injuries and anxiety which he struggles to disguise.

Just three minutes into the contest Fox Sports’ Warren Smith notes: “Reece Walsh, nervous at the back of the scrum” following a crunching hip tackle by Liam Martin on Herbie Farnsworth which causes a knock-on and melee.

Walsh looks distracted and disorganised.

Commentator Billy Slater, the master of the full back defensive role, has his eye on Walsh throughout the game as he defends his line.

Shortly afterwards, as Brisbane repel Penrith, he cops a stray boot and is seen with the trainer grimacing and limping. Would Penrith fullback Dylan Edwards have shown he was was hurt?

In the 19th minute Penrith score the first try when Herbie Farnsworth taps the ball from Adam Reynold’s short line drop-out into open space only to be pounced on by Mitch Kenny who scores unopposed.

He is unopposed because Walsh, instead of standing on the line in front of the play as a fullback should, is wandering aimlessly, hands on hips, around the in-goal area. As the try is scored Broncos lock Patrick Carrigan casts a glance at Walsh but doesn’t say anything.

For most of the entertaining first half of the 2023 Grand Final it appeared all Penrith had to do for a third consecutive title was feed efficiently off Brisbane errors. Thomas Flegler’s 40th minute try changes things.

And then comes the exhilarating period immediately after halftime when Mam scores a hat-trick of tries in ten minutes.

These three occasions provide a rare sight: Penrith looking vulnerable.

Mam’s first line-break has him dissecting big man Lindsay Smith and Izack Tago and sprinting to the corner with Dylan Edwards closing rapidly. Unable to get hold of Mam as he plants the ball, the momentum sends the gallant Edwards slicing awkwardly through the sideline on his left arm until he becomes stationary and rights himself. Kneeling and out of breath he looks despondently across at the celebrating Broncos.

The replay of the third try – spawned by Walsh and therefore the most spectacular of the trio – is caught superbly by the front-on camera.  Walsh performs a majestic vertical leap and on landing plants an explosive left foot on the advancing Cleary. For once, the Penrith halfback appears mesmerised by Walsh (those eyes, those thighs) and left humiliated on the turf.

The Broncos fullback has advanced fifteen metres before Cleary summons the will to turn and watch the try unfold. Walsh then puts a step on Liam Martin, who also hits the ground, and immediately fends off Tago. The Penrith centre, recovering from the shove, goes through the motions of a chase. When Walsh offloads to Mam, Sunia Turuva, arriving from the opposite wing, takes over the doomed pursuit.

In the slow motion replay of Mam’s run, the despondent faces of Yeo, Cleary, Martin and Edwards are clearly seen in the background before slowly moving out of focus as the Bronco five-eighth extends the distance.

The hat-trick is a result of line breaks, two from their own half, down their left side.

Inexplicably, they don’t attack that edge again. On the few occasions they do threaten in the final 20 minutes they come down their right side towards one of Penrith’s most lethal defenders, Stephen Crichton.

Up to the Moses Leota try in the 65th minute, Brisbane has committed nine errors to Penrith’s one and yet has six line breaks to none and scored four tries to one. They have discovered and exploited their strength and Penrith’s weakness.

This was the time to seal the match but at no point do they attempt to pressure the Panthers last line of defence, to force an error or line drop-out; unlike Crichton who executes three kicks close to the Broncos line, two of which prove decisive in the final match winning breach.

James Graham recently said that if you make an error against Penrith, it takes – given the game has not been taken out of your reach by then – ten sets to regain your equilibrium.

Penrith rarely make mistakes and misjudgments and usually punish other teams for theirs. As the second half progresses you sense that Brisbane are going to pay for their timidity in attack.

The first worrying sign for the Broncos comes at the 63rd minute when Brendan Piakura, freshly on the field, engages a slipping Luke Garner. Piakura fails to fully commit to the tackle and assuming, incorrectly, that it’s completed releases Garner who returns to his feet and continues his run with a disturbing lack of urgency both from Piakura and the other defenders.

In the next play Cleary dissects Kurt Capewell and Mam – replicating what the Broncos five-eighth did to he and Yeo – and offloads to Moses Leota for a free run to the try line.

On the third tackle of the next set Cleary kicks a 40-20 across to Selwyn Cobbo’s wing. The commentators suggest Cobbo is too slow to respond. Cooper Cronk on Fox Sports also mentions Walsh is not in the centre of the ground.

No try ensures for the Panthers but during the following promising set from the Broncos, lock Patrick Carrigan knocks on at the half way line after receiving an accidental head knock from James Fisher-Harris.

Almost immediately Penrith make Brisbane pay when Cleary sets up Crichton for a try.

It is, of course, significant. The game is about to enter the final ten minutes and Penrith have reduced the deficit to a mere unconverted try.

Michael Ennis trumpets: “If you thought this championship side was going to just roll over and let the Broncos take the premiership trophy across the border. No chance!”.

The try unfolds in a blink of an eye but there is a lot going on. The most obvious is the strength, technique, self belief, and sheer arrogance of the champion Penrith centre. But he is also the beneficiary of some good fortune and lapses from the Brisbane defenders.

When Kotoni Staggs engages, Crichton is already beside and outside him. Staggs, the shorter man has the ball carrier’s outstretched right arm holding him off, and is forced to reach up to strip the ball. Crichton easily wrenches the ball from his counterpart’s feeble grasp. Cobbo, who had been correctly marking Sunia Turuva on the outside, is forced to take over.

With Staggs dangling like a corpse at the end of his right arm Crichton’s presents the ball on a left hand platter for Cobbo who grabs it with both hands. At that moment Crichton’s right foot lands on Cobbo’s left and the body of Staggs slides underneath causing him to fall backwards taking the ball out of Cobbo’s reach. Walsh has arrived, too late and too fast to make substantial contact with the slipping figure and is propelled over the sideline.

Walsh’s reliance on his speed and propensity for leaping and overreaction can be liabilities for last line defence which requires a solid base and intense focus on the ball player.

As Crichton lands fully on the unfortunate Staggs, he rolls over and slams the ball down. Cobbo watches the grounding and mouths an obscenity.

The try brings a sense of the inevitable. Ten minutes left for the relentless Panthers to suffocate the life out of the gallant but fading Broncos.

Still, they defend their line desperately. Courageously and miraculously, Kobe Hetherington presents himself as a barricade to a Leota power drive for the try line, damaging himself in the process.

Staggs charges dramatically from his line to shut down Cleary. The usual result of such an action is a side step and line break, or an offload to a teammate into a yawning gap to the try line. Instead, the Bronco centre connects with perfect timing, positioning and power; the ball slamming into Cleary’s chest sending it hurtling 20 metres backwards.

In the 71st minute and on the second tackle Walsh produces another scintillating run from the back half sliding from the left to the right side beating a never ending line of defenders, and is tackled thirty five metres from Penrith’s line. Rather than exploiting the speed of play and the ruffled defence, Mam then simply lobs the ball to a stationary Capewell.

Since his line-breaking heroics and performances for the camera twenty minutes earlier, Mam – unlike Cogger – has shown little urgency or creativity.

Then, on the last tackle twenty metres out, Reynolds hands the ball to Piakura whose is immediately brought down.

With seventy two minutes gone, Crichton executes a grubbing kick intended for the in-goal area. Walsh is out of position and a little slow to react but retrieves it. He slides onto his back stopping just inches outside the try-line when he is struck in the back of the head by Turuva’s stray knee. He reacts in pain, likely expecting a penalty to ensure. Remember, there have been several accidental head knocks throughout the match that have not resulted in penalties. “The bunker OK with that?”, asks a doubtful Michael Ennis.

Walsh is grimacing, ball in one hand, his head in the other. I’m thinking: “Twist, turn over, scramble back, hold your ground. Do something … anything to avoid a line drop-out!”. Instead, he remains a passive target for a Crichton flop tackle whose impact propels him over the line.

At the 75th minute Reynolds kicks on the 4th despite there being plenty of time and space. Walsh is behind him and Piakura, Staggs and Cobbo are on his outside with a paddock in front and a staggered defensive edge in the distance.

Surely an attacking raid, or simply gaining further metres is preferable to presenting an easy ball to a rampaging Brian To’o on his thirty metre line.

There is just five minutes left and they are an unconverted try in front. The game should have been over long ago but they make errors of judgement and produce timid handovers.

Then in the 78th minute, the two superstars come together for the match defining play.

Walsh is at marker on Penrith’s tryline with tackler Jordan Riki. Scott Sorensen plays the ball to hooker Mitch Kenny who sends it to Cleary about six metres out. As the half back receives the ball Walsh has advanced five metres into play with Kenny and Sorensen between him and Cleary.

He has no reason to be there. The two Penrith forwards are marked by Carrigan and Payne Haas, and are obscuring his view of the play.

Again, he should be back near the tryline marking the ball player.

Rather than passing to Crichton which he has been doing throughout the last 20 minutes, the Penrith half back puts a left foot on the leaden-footed and fatigued Reynolds and accelerates past Walters. Riki, who is rushing across from marker, is unable to stop his sideways momentum and prevent Cleary sliding past him also.

It is only at this moment that Walsh responds, having to sprint back and across from behind Kenny and Sorensen to plant an ineffective arm on Cleary’s shoulder who shrugs it off and continues his run to ground the ball in front of the goal posts, ensuring a premiership winning conversion.

Even up to the final thirty seconds, Walsh is still the only man capable of snatching the premiership back as he accelerates through Cogger and Crichton. With the former around his feet and the latter on his back the maestro looks for support. As has been the story for the last twenty minutes for Brisbane none is forthcoming and he turns it over, sealing the fate of his team.

Crichton reacts by clenching his fists and screaming at the back of Walsh’s head; an illustration of the threat this exhilarating and flawed genius poses even for a side as good as Penrith.

Cleary rarely elicits such fiery responses from the opposition. And yet he proves the greater threat. Perhaps it comes down to what Andy Murray said when he was trying to explain what made him special: “My brain works differently to most people. Most people that get to the very, very top of anything are wired slightly differently”.

The basis of Penrith’s rise to greatness was the development of their vast number of juniors under Phil Gould’s watch.

But it took the trauma of the 2020 grand final loss to Melbourne to complete the foundation.

“Plenty of teams say they never watch a grand final. But in 2020 we wanted to learn from our defeat – and we did.”, states Ivan Cleary in his book. They go on to win four consecutive titles.

Kevvie Walters made his reluctant players watch their defeat for the same reason. They fail to make the finals in 2024 and Walters is sacked at the end of the season.

Published on The Roar

https://www.theroar.com.au/2025/06/07/when-it-really-matters-how-the-iceman-went-toe-to-toe-blow-for-blow-with-the-dancer-in-2023-nrl-decider/