Signings, Suggestions & Rumours Discussion

I wouldn't like to make the call. Benji and his team are in a tough position.

This to me says Sheens stuffed up our recruitment. The squad is unbalanced. We bought Klemmer for big dollars and we have Stef on big dollars and we probably only need one of them. They are big and slow but with the potential to take tough hit-ups. Then we have a bunch of juniors in the squad who don't look like making it as NRL players.

He hasn't stuffed us as badly as Clearly did and next year we lose a bunch of players so it's not terrible but it's not good for next season.
 
He played well in a strong Cronulla team with Fitzgibbon as his coach. The move to a weaker Knights' team where he struggled at the back hasn't paid off. It highlights how well Bula has played at WTs and why he is held in such high regard.

It's also luck. The team revolves around Ponga and he is elite and he seems to be playing best at fullback. If he was playing great as a 6 then maybe Miller stays in the NRL.
 
This to me says Sheens stuffed up our recruitment. The squad is unbalanced. We bought Klemmer for big dollars and we have Stef on big dollars and we probably only need one of them. They are big and slow but with the potential to take tough hit-ups. Then we have a bunch of juniors in the squad who don't look like making it as NRL players.

He hasn't stuffed us as badly as Clearly did and next year we lose a bunch of players so it's not terrible but it's not good for next season.
Klemmer is the tough forward leader we required. Utoikamanu is going to be a fine forward for WTs. We are in the happy position of having a number of good young forwards who have some NRL experience who are attracting interest. As for the younger players, we don't offer them a top 30 position. we will lose them to predatory clubs. It is not easy winning the spoon.
 
It's also luck. The team revolves around Ponga and he is elite and he seems to be playing best at fullback. If he was playing great as a 6 then maybe Miller stays in the NRL.
Fitzgibbon is a very good coach and player manager. He runs a tight organisation at the Sharks. He doesn't like to let players go.
 

Why South Sydney have gone from title pretenders to a dumpster fire​

Andrew Webster

Andrew Webster

Chief Sports Writer
August 23, 2023 — 5.45am
Save

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/live-scores?match=534846787
There are so many fires burning at South Sydney right now, it’s difficult to know which one needs the garden hose first, but you can trace some of the fractures in the club back to August last year.
As a player, Sam Burgess was a force of nature who expected everyone to care and hurt and play through as much pain as he did. He was never about personal glory, just the glory-glory of South Sydney.

The Rabbitohs are reportedly dealing with internal issues as their season begins to unravel.
As an assistant coach with designs of one day holding the main job, he sets the same standards for the current squad even where they may not have the same approach as he did.
In summary, a difference in coaching styles is at the heart of the infighting and feuds troubling South Sydney.

Those fault lines are hard to track but the best I can ascertain, having spoken to a variety of sources, is Burgess and fellow assistant John Morris are on the outer with coach Jason Demetriou, who Burgess thinks gives preferential treatment to Latrell Mitchell and Cody Walker, neither of whom get on particularly well right now with Burgess, who is also close to captain Cameron Murray and Damien Cook.
Then there are all the whispers and leaked stories; the back-biting and undermining. Just the general sort of stuff that happens in rugby league each day.
South Sydney assistant coach Sam Burgess.

South Sydney assistant coach Sam Burgess.CREDIT:GETTY
This schoolyard imbroglio would be acceptable if it was a pub team or the Wests Tigers, but it’s South Sydney, one of the favourites at the start of the year to win the premiership.
Burgess was added to Demetriou’s staff last August at the urging of co-owner Russell Crowe after he spent the year coaching the Orara Valley Axemen in Group 2.

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When it was announced that Burgess was returning to Redfern, several people at Souths wondered if it was the right move. Not because Burgess is divisive or a bad influence. Mostly, because he was a big guy with a big personality coming into a team with a vastly different dynamic to what he’d been involved with as a player.
Demetriou was also relatively new to the role, having replaced Wayne Bennett at the end of 2021, so how was it going to work with a club legend like Burgess sitting in the wings?
Cody Walker and Latrell Mitchell.

Cody Walker and Latrell Mitchell.CREDIT:GETTY
In the last six or seven weeks, those concerns have escalated as Souths’ season spirals out of control, culminating in Sunday’s dreadful 29-10 loss to Newcastle.
Burgess issued a firm “no mate” via text when contacted on Tuesday, but you can only imagine he’d have no truck with the sense of indifference with which Mitchell appears to be approaching matches.

Last Wednesday night, Mitchell attended the concert of US country music star Luke Combs and was videoed shotgunning a can of beer on stage before throwing it into the crowd.
No big deal, of course, but it wasn’t the greatest look from a player who has missed 10 weeks because of injury, in a side spluttering to the finish line, just days out before a must-win match against the Knights in Newcastle.
Burgess would be the last person to criticise a player for having a beer, regardless of whether it’s a sneaky schooner at the Coogee Pavilion or a shotgunned can in front of a sold-out stadium.
The difference, though, is someone at Souths would’ve taken Burgess to task about it the next day, or at least had a quiet word.
Tellingly, nobody in power at Souths has mentioned the Combs incident to Mitchell.

In other words, they didn’t want to upset him before such an important match. A reminder: this is Latrell Mitchell, not Beyonce nor Luke Combs. The other key difference is Burgess would have torn into the Knights’ pack like it was personal, running himself into the ground. If Souths didn’t win the game, at least Newcastle would know they’d been in a fight.
Mitchell did the opposite, looking barely interested at times before digging an elbow into the back of NSW teammate Tyson Frizell, for which he’s been suspended for one match.

Latrell Mitchell has spoken of his disappointment in himself after he was suspended for an elbow on Tyson Frizell.
It’s a silly play that will rub him out of a critical game late in the season. Just as his errant shot on Roosters centre Joseph Manu cost Mitchell a 2021 grand final appearance, another will similarly sideline him from the final-round match against the Roosters.
After the game, Demetriou was critical of Mitchell’s indiscretion, stunning all concerned because there has been no greater supporter of the fullback in the past year than the coach.

Does Mitchell receive preferential treatment? Is there one set of rules for him and another for the rest of the playing group?
Maybe – but so what?
There hasn’t been a team in history that hasn’t stroked the egos of its superstar players. Bennett understood better than anyone that you can’t win premierships without superstar players, whether it was Allan Langer and Kevin Walters at the Broncos, or Mitchell and Walker when he coached Souths.
Yet Bennett had the rare ability of making sure the rest of the group never felt like they were coming second and he often did this by playing “good cop, bad cop” with his assistant coaches so that the head coach could be the good guy.
Demetriou, an assistant to Bennett for five years, is still a relatively young coach and Burgess is even greener.

RELATED ARTICLE​

Sam Burgess and Jason Demetriou.

Updated​

NRL 2023

Rabbitohs waiting on Crowe decision as Burgess and Morris exit looms

But both would understand that Bennett treated superstars differently because they played like superstars. Surely, they could agree that Mitchell’s recent actions and his long spells out with injuries mean he is currently far removed from that constellation.
His teammates seem to think this. In a recent video session, Mitchell snapped at Murray for not passing him the ball when he wanted it.
“When I call for it, give it to me,” Mitchell said, according to those in the room.
To which Murray replied: “Most of the time, you’re not there.”

This schoolyard imbroglio would be acceptable if it was a pub team or the Wests Tigers, but it’s South Sydney, one of the favourites at the start of the year to win the premiership.

Why involve Wests Tigers ?? This is pure gutter trash journalism
Yes we have concerns but deadset it's like they get paid bonuses for every article with our click bait name in it.
 
This schoolyard imbroglio would be acceptable if it was a pub team or the Wests Tigers, but it’s South Sydney, one of the favourites at the start of the year to win the premiership.

Why involve Wests Tigers ?? This is pure gutter trash journalism
Yes we have concerns but deadset it's like they get paid bonuses for every article with our click bait name in it.
Yep I stopped reading when he hacked on the Tigers for no good reason.
Meh, Webster is a knob and souffs suck. May the football gods rain down pain and bad luck on them both for the rest of their days.
 

Why South Sydney have gone from title pretenders to a dumpster fire​

Andrew Webster

Andrew Webster

Chief Sports Writer
August 23, 2023 — 5.45am
Save

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/live-scores?match=534846787
There are so many fires burning at South Sydney right now, it’s difficult to know which one needs the garden hose first, but you can trace some of the fractures in the club back to August last year.
As a player, Sam Burgess was a force of nature who expected everyone to care and hurt and play through as much pain as he did. He was never about personal glory, just the glory-glory of South Sydney.

The Rabbitohs are reportedly dealing with internal issues as their season begins to unravel.
As an assistant coach with designs of one day holding the main job, he sets the same standards for the current squad even where they may not have the same approach as he did.
In summary, a difference in coaching styles is at the heart of the infighting and feuds troubling South Sydney.

Those fault lines are hard to track but the best I can ascertain, having spoken to a variety of sources, is Burgess and fellow assistant John Morris are on the outer with coach Jason Demetriou, who Burgess thinks gives preferential treatment to Latrell Mitchell and Cody Walker, neither of whom get on particularly well right now with Burgess, who is also close to captain Cameron Murray and Damien Cook.
Then there are all the whispers and leaked stories; the back-biting and undermining. Just the general sort of stuff that happens in rugby league each day.
South Sydney assistant coach Sam Burgess.

South Sydney assistant coach Sam Burgess.CREDIT:GETTY
This schoolyard imbroglio would be acceptable if it was a pub team or the Wests Tigers, but it’s South Sydney, one of the favourites at the start of the year to win the premiership.
Burgess was added to Demetriou’s staff last August at the urging of co-owner Russell Crowe after he spent the year coaching the Orara Valley Axemen in Group 2.

Advertisement

When it was announced that Burgess was returning to Redfern, several people at Souths wondered if it was the right move. Not because Burgess is divisive or a bad influence. Mostly, because he was a big guy with a big personality coming into a team with a vastly different dynamic to what he’d been involved with as a player.
Demetriou was also relatively new to the role, having replaced Wayne Bennett at the end of 2021, so how was it going to work with a club legend like Burgess sitting in the wings?
Cody Walker and Latrell Mitchell.

Cody Walker and Latrell Mitchell.CREDIT:GETTY
In the last six or seven weeks, those concerns have escalated as Souths’ season spirals out of control, culminating in Sunday’s dreadful 29-10 loss to Newcastle.
Burgess issued a firm “no mate” via text when contacted on Tuesday, but you can only imagine he’d have no truck with the sense of indifference with which Mitchell appears to be approaching matches.

Last Wednesday night, Mitchell attended the concert of US country music star Luke Combs and was videoed shotgunning a can of beer on stage before throwing it into the crowd.
No big deal, of course, but it wasn’t the greatest look from a player who has missed 10 weeks because of injury, in a side spluttering to the finish line, just days out before a must-win match against the Knights in Newcastle.
Burgess would be the last person to criticise a player for having a beer, regardless of whether it’s a sneaky schooner at the Coogee Pavilion or a shotgunned can in front of a sold-out stadium.
The difference, though, is someone at Souths would’ve taken Burgess to task about it the next day, or at least had a quiet word.
Tellingly, nobody in power at Souths has mentioned the Combs incident to Mitchell.

In other words, they didn’t want to upset him before such an important match. A reminder: this is Latrell Mitchell, not Beyonce nor Luke Combs. The other key difference is Burgess would have torn into the Knights’ pack like it was personal, running himself into the ground. If Souths didn’t win the game, at least Newcastle would know they’d been in a fight.
Mitchell did the opposite, looking barely interested at times before digging an elbow into the back of NSW teammate Tyson Frizell, for which he’s been suspended for one match.

Latrell Mitchell has spoken of his disappointment in himself after he was suspended for an elbow on Tyson Frizell.
It’s a silly play that will rub him out of a critical game late in the season. Just as his errant shot on Roosters centre Joseph Manu cost Mitchell a 2021 grand final appearance, another will similarly sideline him from the final-round match against the Roosters.
After the game, Demetriou was critical of Mitchell’s indiscretion, stunning all concerned because there has been no greater supporter of the fullback in the past year than the coach.

Does Mitchell receive preferential treatment? Is there one set of rules for him and another for the rest of the playing group?
Maybe – but so what?
There hasn’t been a team in history that hasn’t stroked the egos of its superstar players. Bennett understood better than anyone that you can’t win premierships without superstar players, whether it was Allan Langer and Kevin Walters at the Broncos, or Mitchell and Walker when he coached Souths.
Yet Bennett had the rare ability of making sure the rest of the group never felt like they were coming second and he often did this by playing “good cop, bad cop” with his assistant coaches so that the head coach could be the good guy.
Demetriou, an assistant to Bennett for five years, is still a relatively young coach and Burgess is even greener.

RELATED ARTICLE​

Sam Burgess and Jason Demetriou.

Updated​

NRL 2023

Rabbitohs waiting on Crowe decision as Burgess and Morris exit looms

But both would understand that Bennett treated superstars differently because they played like superstars. Surely, they could agree that Mitchell’s recent actions and his long spells out with injuries mean he is currently far removed from that constellation.
His teammates seem to think this. In a recent video session, Mitchell snapped at Murray for not passing him the ball when he wanted it.
“When I call for it, give it to me,” Mitchell said, according to those in the room.
To which Murray replied: “Most of the time, you’re not there.”
“So what?” Is this guy for real? It’s professional sport.

Stroking egos is different to allowing a top line player having low standards, fitness , discipline on and off the field.

Im glad we missed out on him. Roosters were right to move him on. Mitchell could have been a legend.
 
This to me says Sheens stuffed up our recruitment. The squad is unbalanced. We bought Klemmer for big dollars and we have Stef on big dollars and we probably only need one of them. They are big and slow but with the potential to take tough hit-ups. Then we have a bunch of juniors in the squad who don't look like making it as NRL players.

He hasn't stuffed us as badly as Clearly did and next year we lose a bunch of players so it's not terrible but it's not good for next season.
We have heaps of cap, but 2024 nearly being full with top 30players is an issue. 2025 is very clear
 
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This schoolyard imbroglio would be acceptable if it was a pub team or the Wests Tigers, but it’s South Sydney, one of the favourites at the start of the year to win the premiership.

Why involve Wests Tigers ?? This is pure gutter trash journalism
Yes we have concerns but deadset it's like they get paid bonuses for every article with our click bait name in it.
Humour is a good way to start a column. I laughed.
 
Humour is a good way to start a column. I laughed.
I think the club is an absolute train wreck. That said, I do have an element of that kind of sibling bond where I can say and do whatever I want to my brother, that’s my right, but you better watch your back if you think you can. Same goes for the club I support. If you want to put down an individual, that’s fine. But the moment you start putting down the club as a whole, you’re treading into the sibling rule territory
 
I don't disagree with a lot of what you have said here but the statement that any player should be leading their team to finals to me is just wrong. I believe it is an unrealistic expectation for such a team sport to expect one player to influence the final standings of a team to such a degree.
TT + Manly anyone?
 
The Chad is correct in that we will have to move on a couple of players who are in demand by other clubs in order to improve. In Seyfarth's favour is he has good ball skills as well as a high work rate. Twal is a keeper.

I assume you are implying Blore here … I would rather retain him than those two… nothing personal to them but we can’t retain every one…..

Hopefully they can cut a few people that won’t be wanted by anyone… but are on cheap deals …
 

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