upthetigers
Well-known member
Let Stef go if that's what he wants I want props who are angry not smiling all the time. He was lucky to play Origin this year he was definitely not one of the elite props in the game.
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Actually this season he's played 80 mins in 9/12 matches and 60+ in another. Nearly all at 5/8 or halfback. And if you remove the 2 tries against the most pitiful team in the comp he has one try and one try assist and only 4 forced drop outs.Well if you dig a little deeper you see about half of his 27 matches were off the bench or starting hooker.
So it's more like 7 tries, 3 try assists, 6 offloads and 6 forced restarts from 15 games starting in the halves, plus bits and pieces. It's a decent strike rate for a 21 year old.
And my observation of him is he is most dangerous close to the try line, which is a distinct deficit of the Tigers.
Our coaches are not adventurous. They're very conservative with team selectionsCould be a reshuffle or we could try stuff with people we want to keep and want to be here.
Our coaches are adventurous.
Just in saying joffa should've been kept.
Wish I had your confidence
Let Stef go if that's what he wants I want props who are angry not smiling all the time.
He was lucky to play Origin this year he was definitely not one of the elite props in the game.
Pre-season will be the best ever this year.
Yes pre season is great!!! It’s the season that sux!Pre-season will be the best ever this year.
An absolute nothing story. Most large organisations have these sessions.
Wests Tigers turn to facilitator in bid to find peace between warring factions
After weeks of uneasiness, the Tigers warring factions finally got in a room together as they plan for a long road back from the bottom of the ladder. That could include a new-look halves pair.
Brent Read and Michael Carayannis
Wests Tigers warring factions were finally together on Thursday as the Tigers conducted a strategic priority session aimed at putting some distance between the club and the bottom of the ladder.
The likes of Benji Marshall, Scott Fulton, Tim Sheens, Brett Kimmorley and Justin Pascoe took part in the meeting which included a range of staff from across the club.
The meeting came 72 hours after a scheduled three-way meeting between Pascoe, Marshall and Fulton failed to eventuate. That meeting, which was scheduled to take place on Monday, was supposed to put out fires between Marshall and Fulton – the coach-in-waiting and the club’s recruitment boss had failed to see eye-to-eye on a range of issues in recent weeks.
Instead they held individual meetings with Pascoe where they told the club’s chief executive that they would act professionally and get along with each other.
That truce faced its first test on Thursday as they finally came together in Wollongong as part of an annual event where an independent facilitator helps bring the club together in a bid to try and have the organisation operate more smoothly.
The event took place just hours before the Tigers lost to St George Illawarra at WIN Stadium which left the Tigers with a tight grip on successive wooden spoons.
The strategy session capped a turbulent week for the Tigers. While they sit four points adrift at the bottom of the premiership ladder they dominated headlines in recent days for a string of off-field matters.
The Marshall-Fulton dynamic will continue to be an ongoing issue despite suggestions the pair have been told – and agreed – to work together.
The Tigers were boosted by the impending arrival of Manly talented duo Latu and Samuela Fainu on rich four year contracts starting from next year. They also locked in representative star Api Koroisau until at least the end of 2026.
The Tigers have also emerged as a likely destination for St George Illawarra half Jayden Sullivan who was formally given permission to negotiate with rival clubs on Wednesday.
Sullivan’s likely arrival, coming on top of the signing of Latu Fainu, will help ease some of the concerns over the club’s playmaking situation. While new faces are on the way, the Tigers suffered another setback on Friday when it was confirmed that Daine Laurie would return to Penrith next season.
Laurie was one of the Tigers best players in their loss to St George Illawarra, playing in the unfamiliar position of five-eighth. His promising performance at pivot came too late for him to win a new deal at the Tigers, the club having made it clear in recent weeks that they were exploring other options.
The Panthers took advantage of the Tigers’ hesitance as they signed Laurie back on a one-year dealThe Marshall-Fulton dynamic will continue to be an ongoing issue despite suggestions the pair have been told – and agreed – to work together..
He's scored 7 times in his career, I think it's disingenuous to only count the 3 tries of 2023 and dismiss those scored against Tigers.Actually this season he's played 80 mins in 9/12 matches and 60+ in another. Nearly all at 5/8 or halfback. And if you remove the 2 tries against the most pitiful team in the comp he has one try and one try assist and only 4 forced drop outs.
He's had a very poor season.
If we can get him for 2 years on 200k a year that night be ok.as a gamble, but we'd need them to chip in 300k a session for that to happen
I might be in the minority in thinking this, but who has that put into their contract?Apparently According to SEN if we don't make finals next year Steph becomes a free agent
I wonder if ‘strategy’ is the new word for ‘therapy’?Wests Tigers turn to facilitator in bid to find peace between warring factions
After weeks of uneasiness, the Tigers warring factions finally got in a room together as they plan for a long road back from the bottom of the ladder. That could include a new-look halves pair.
Brent Read and Michael Carayannis
Wests Tigers warring factions were finally together on Thursday as the Tigers conducted a strategic priority session aimed at putting some distance between the club and the bottom of the ladder.
The likes of Benji Marshall, Scott Fulton, Tim Sheens, Brett Kimmorley and Justin Pascoe took part in the meeting which included a range of staff from across the club.
The meeting came 72 hours after a scheduled three-way meeting between Pascoe, Marshall and Fulton failed to eventuate. That meeting, which was scheduled to take place on Monday, was supposed to put out fires between Marshall and Fulton – the coach-in-waiting and the club’s recruitment boss had failed to see eye-to-eye on a range of issues in recent weeks.
Instead they held individual meetings with Pascoe where they told the club’s chief executive that they would act professionally and get along with each other.
That truce faced its first test on Thursday as they finally came together in Wollongong as part of an annual event where an independent facilitator helps bring the club together in a bid to try and have the organisation operate more smoothly.
The event took place just hours before the Tigers lost to St George Illawarra at WIN Stadium which left the Tigers with a tight grip on successive wooden spoons.
The strategy session capped a turbulent week for the Tigers. While they sit four points adrift at the bottom of the premiership ladder they dominated headlines in recent days for a string of off-field matters.
The Marshall-Fulton dynamic will continue to be an ongoing issue despite suggestions the pair have been told – and agreed – to work together.
The Tigers were boosted by the impending arrival of Manly talented duo Latu and Samuela Fainu on rich four year contracts starting from next year. They also locked in representative star Api Koroisau until at least the end of 2026.
The Tigers have also emerged as a likely destination for St George Illawarra half Jayden Sullivan who was formally given permission to negotiate with rival clubs on Wednesday.
Sullivan’s likely arrival, coming on top of the signing of Latu Fainu, will help ease some of the concerns over the club’s playmaking situation. While new faces are on the way, the Tigers suffered another setback on Friday when it was confirmed that Daine Laurie would return to Penrith next season.
Laurie was one of the Tigers best players in their loss to St George Illawarra, playing in the unfamiliar position of five-eighth. His promising performance at pivot came too late for him to win a new deal at the Tigers, the club having made it clear in recent weeks that they were exploring other options.
The Panthers took advantage of the Tigers’ hesitance as they signed Laurie back on a one-year deal.
That's because good sides have backs that demand attention from the defence, therefore the defence cannot be condensed to concentrate strictly on the middle. Watch a WT game and see how condensed the defence is against us because there is zero threat out wide. On the odd occasion we do go wide, watch how much yardage we gain, simply because the defence has to adjust and spread.Ok for a low table club but all the top teams have forwards that aren’t just meter eaters. They have skills and variety and they are very much a factor of their sides ability to attack.
That's an opinion.Confusing article
This part is concerning
The Marshall-Fulton dynamic will continue to be an ongoing issue despite suggestions the pair have been told – and agreed – to work together.
Fair point.That's because good sides have backs that demand attention from the defence, therefore the defence cannot be condensed to concentrate strictly on the middle. Watch a WT game and see how condensed the defence is against us because there is zero threat out wide. On the odd occasion we do go wide, watch how much yardage we gain, simply because the defence has to adjust and spread.