Do you think a Luai and Fainu halves combination will work and be a success long term ?Now that the dust has settled on what was a poor game from both sides I have taken a look at the replay and tried to identify what we can take away and build on.
Compressed defence. I raised this in relation to our loss v Warriors and NSW’s loss in game three of SOO. Unfortunately, we were on the receiving end of the lesson. We played a compressed defence early in the game as we were concerned that the Titans were going to send a lot of traffic down the middle.
If we are going to play that style we need to have better line speed to cut down time for the halves. Jayden Campbell had way too much time to execute. Had we had a compressed defence, with line speed, we may have been able to prevent a couple of tries due to pressure.
Campbell is not in the same conversation as the Cleary when it comes to “talent”; however, he was able to sum up the defensive situation and pull it apart. One harbour bridge cutout pass and one kick in behind was all it took to make us change our defensive pattern. On the plus side for the Titans both also led to tries.
This was the perfect demonstration of how to deal with that type of defensive pressure. Clearly someone in the Titans outfit has a footy brain. On the positive side for us we adapted our defensive strategy on the run and were able to stay in the game. Our defence overall needs work and will no doubt be the subject of numerous reps this week.
Fight: Despite playing poorly we fought to stay in the game. This happened throughout the game but to fight back from 16–20 down with five minutes remaining showed composure. Skelton’s long-range try and AD’s field goal on full‑time demonstrated that we no longer throw in the towel and have practiced clutch scenarios. I was definitely concerned that we had blown the FG opportunity, but, it was executed with minimal fuss and was well disguised. Much better teams than us are so structured in their setup that the opposition counters it.
Sharper attacking shape: There too isn’t much to write home about here; however, you could see development. We executed a few blocks and double blocks, Latu was sweeping and Tiny demonstrated what difference a strike centre makes to the side. Given the new halves’ combination, AD playing 13 for the first time and players playing out of position it wasn’t too bad. Charlie had a shocker, his hands are usually pretty good. There were a few poor passes in traffic that probably would either stick or not be thrown with a settled backline – so positive signs. A more cohesive second half had us building field position and sustaining sets. The ability to build the pressure got us home in the end.
Resilience. With minutes slipping away we maintained discipline and delivered when it counted.
Adam Doueihi at 13. I have copped some flack on here in relation to my takes on AD. Given this was game 1 for AD at 13 it is something worth exploring further. Just shy of 60mins on the park, 12 runs for 76m, 21 PCM. 1 line break assist, 1 line break and 7 hitups. His PTB speed was on average with the rest of the pack, demonstrating how lenient the officiating was in this area. On the other side if the pill 32 tackles, 3 missed, 1 ineffective (89%) so not bad for the first time in the middle. His general play kicks were average – but being in the middle he provides options. Kicking in general play remains something he needs to work hard on.
I was concerned that he would not take the dirty hit-ups, and for the most part he didn’t but that was not his role either. I think he needs to be a little more involved in this area, but he was clearly gassed with the extra workload. Not having to make the hard defensive decisions and having a big body make him a useful addition to the pack and he could develop over time. As a half, he is a backup, as a centre he is OK but too slow, as a lock – he may just get there.
Coaching. Benji’s move of AD to the middle demonstrates that AD was only holding his centre spot until we could find someone that could shift the needle. Tiny at centre highlighted how deficient we were in that area. While he has made plenty of mistakes Benji has demonstrated resolve and a clear commitment to sustained development rather than short-term appeasement. Despite the results he has continued to reinforce unity in the paying group.
The result yesterday, while not pretty or convincing, demonstrated that the team is developing a culture that is resilient. They are definitely playing for each other and him as a coach, even though execution is below par. His public defence of his methods and gradual assertiveness mean the onus has to switch from just falling short, or just getting over the line, to delivering consistent results. For now, he appears to be safe in his role and the run home may validate his approach. Time will tell, but I doubt that he will be given much leniency in 2026.
Summary
We were able to dig a win out of a poor performance – that shows that the team is resolute and composed even when faced with adversity. There is a lot of work to do on execution, kicking and early aggression, but the move to bring AD into the middle could yield dividends and with the return of Bula and settling halves combination. Benji has the support of the playing group and has not waivered from his development approach. I trust that it starts to pay dividends at this end of the season and we finish on an upward trend.
I’ve got concerns, both very good players individually, but it just doesn’t seem to be a fluent combination although still early days.