Despite all that promise, Benji Marshall's lost his way

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

Guest
Despite all that promise, Benji Marshall's lost his way

Phil Rothfield
The Daily Telegraph
October 15, 2012 12:00AM

A COUPLE of years ago Benji Marshall was rated by some as the No.1 player in rugby league.

A more brilliant footballer than even Cameron Smith, Billy Slater, Johnathan Thurston and Greg Inglis.

The Kiwis had just won the 2010 Four Nations final after Marshall grabbed the match-winning try in the 79th minute.

He'd achieved everything - a premiership with the Tigers in 2005, a World Cup victory in 2008 and now the Four Nations with the Kiwis.

He was the face of the game. The player every youngster aspired to be.

Today, if you were compiling a list of the top 20 players in the game, Benji wouldn't make it.

Saturday night's Test match against Australia in Townsville on the back of a poor season with the Wests Tigers proved that.

I'm not blaming him for the Kiwis' defeat. Australia were always going to win and should have done so far more convincingly.

The Kangaroos have four future immortals in Smith, Inglis, Slater and Thurston. On paper they are a 20-point better side than the Kiwis.

But back to Benji. He had just four runs for 26m and missed five tackles.

He kicked well and put up the bomb that was miraculously taken by Sam Perrett for Gerard Beale's try on half-time.

But when the score was locked at 10-all for 20 minutes of the second half, the Kiwis were desperately looking for some of his old magic. A big sidestep, a broken-play surge or even the old flick pass.

It just wasn't there.

Whoever coaches the Wests Tigers next year faces an enormous task to get his career back on track.

It will be a massive challenge for a rookie coach like Matt Parish or Kevin Walters because Benji carries so much influence at the club.

He is the chief executive, chairman of selectors, recruitment boss and just about everything else at the Wests Tigers.

He reports to no one.

And that's the major reason why his game has gone backwards. He gets sidetracked by other issues.

For three or four games a year he plays like a superstar and can still tear an opposition to shreds.

But there is no consistency in his game.

At 27, after more than 200 appearances, he should be at the peak of his career.

It's an age when good players become greats and champions become legends.

He should be a better player than two years ago because of the extra experience.

He should be like Smith, Slater and Cronk by producing week in, week out.

Benji is desperately in need of a strong mentor. Someone like a Craig Bellamy, a Des Hasler or a Wayne Bennett who can control his ego.

He still has the class and the ability.

There is absolutely no doubt about that.

Time is on his side and he could still finish his career over the next three or four years as an all-time great.

But it will require a huge turnaround.
\
\
\
**Pack change shows Sheens is tactically Myles away**

TIM Sheens made a major tactical error by changing the side the selectors had given him for Saturday night's Test match.

Starting Tony Williams ahead of Nate Myles was an impossible-to-justify decision.

Myles was the State of Origin player of the year while T-Rex struggled in Manly's pack for much of the season.

Nathan Hindmarsh summed it up well on Twitter during the game.

"If you started with Nate Myles the job would have been done earlier," he said.

Williams should not have been in the squad, let alone the starting 13.

He lost the football in the second minute of the game, gave away a penalty in the first minute of the second-half and knocked on in the 48th minute. Myles eventually got onto the park midway through the second half.

Earlier this year, Sheens controversially left Daly Cherry-Evans on the bench the entire match, on Saturday night it took him 57 minutes to send in Myles, the Dally M representative player of the year.

Myles passed brilliantly from off the ground to play a role in Darius Boyd's match-winning try, showing little evidence of the sternum injury behind his demotion. Again Williams didn't stand deep enough to hit the line with pace or power.

There were other back-rowers more deserving of the green and gold jersey. Out of 10, the Australian performance on Saturday night was probably a seven. They fielded a superior side to New Zealand but took 70 minutes to put the Kiwis away.
 
Typical scumbag, lack of research article, benji didn't s ore the match winner for nz in 2010 final…
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_
 
As much as I dislike rothfield and disagree with majority of his suggestions, he's on the money with this one. Benji isnt top 20 on recent form at all.
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_
 
whatever Phil, nothing else to write about, the Tigers are having some off-field drama's, so it's time to lay the boot in a bit more eh?
 
As much as Rothfield is an @ss… He makes some valid points, Benji is a shadow of his former self... Very sad to see a player with Benji's potential declining way before his time.

He is the captain of his country and in Saturday nights test showed no qualities required from a captain.

It breaks my heart to see him at the level he is at now. What happened to him?
\
\
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_
 
R u guys delirious? How many more wayward passes, crap kicks and nothing plays does he have to do for u to consider him in bad form? jt cronk smith slater inglis Reynolds Farah Morris Johnson tamaou woods thaiday are a few guys off the top of my head who were playing much better than him, sure I'm missing a heap too.

Take ur anti rothfield hats off for a sec and realize he's actually right (there is a first for everything)
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_
 
@mtd said:
R u guys delirious? How many more wayward passes, crap kicks and nothing plays does he have to do for u to consider him in bad form? jt cronk smith slater inglis Reynolds Farah Morris Johnson tamaou woods thaiday are a few guys off the top of my head who were playing much better than him, sure I'm missing a heap too.

Take ur anti rothfield hats off for a sec and realize he's actually right (there is a first for everything)
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_

This…
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_
 
@mtd said:
R u guys delirious? How many more wayward passes, crap kicks and nothing plays does he have to do for u to consider him in bad form? jt cronk smith slater inglis Reynolds Farah Morris Johnson tamaou woods thaiday are a few guys off the top of my head who were playing much better than him, sure I'm missing a heap too.

Take ur anti rothfield hats off for a sec and realize he's actually right (there is a first for everything)
\
\
_Posted using RoarFEED 2012_

Have to agree the good thing is though with a new coach and direction Benji could turn it around and be the player he should be
 
Telegraph basically uses forum discussions and innuendo for articles now right?
 
He is correct on 2012 form
I know someone will bring up his 30 try assists but if you were to compare that to how many touches he had the figures would look pretty bad compared to the other superstars of the game

Add that to his mistake rate and missed tackles (his defence at times wasn't as bad as it has been ) when he comes up with fresh air in defence and he is barely a top 50 player
 
give a buffoon a typewriter and by the law of averages he will occassionally get something right.
This is rothfields once in a career moment.
 
Benji's ego has been stroked by so many people it is now huge….with the new coach wanting to deflate it there is more trouble ahead for the Wests Tigers..
 

Members online

Back
Top