Halatau comes full circle for milestone

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Halatau comes full circle for milestone

Tue 14 Jul, 2015, 7:00pm
By Jack Brady, National Correspondent, NRL.com

When it comes to the Wests Tigers veteran utility Dene Halatau has become a part of the furniture.

Ahead of his 150th game for the club up against the Broncos at Suncorp Stadium, on a weekend where the NRL celebrates Men of League Heritage Round, Halatau's career has certainly come full circle.

Debuting against the Sea Eagles back in 2003 as a fresh-faced 20-year-old, Halatau will join the club's top 10 most capped players alongside eight of his teammates from the Tigers' 2005 Premiership-winning team – a team where only he, Robbie Farah and Pat Richards remain at the club.

One of the mainstays in the club's history, and after captaining the Tigers for the first time this season, there's no better weekend than Heritage Round to showcase the now 32-year-old's value.

Admitting that while being a leader has "crept up" on him in recent seasons, Halatau isn't surprised by how much the Tigers have changed since his debut, considering the Mitchell Moses's, Luke Brooks's and James Tedesco's of the world aren't unlike he and many of his teammates back when they won the club's one and only premiership.

"The club has changed but I guess that's the nature of football. Squads turnover pretty regularly and change their personnel. All these guys coming through are no different to when I was coming through with Liam [Fulton], Bryce [Gibbs], Robbie [Farah] and Bronson Harrison. It's much the same in that regard but with different faces," Halatau said.

"Things evolve for you though when you're older and been around for a while and you're ticking off milestones, which is when you become one of those experienced guys. I'm enjoying it though, the young boys give me heaps of stick but it is good.

"I think I've had to learn [to become a leader] too, I looked up to guys like Ben Galea and Mark O'Neill when I first came into first grade – Mark is a guy I took a lot of football lessons and life lessons from – and I guess they were teaching me back then what I'm using now I suppose."

Keen to extend his playing days beyond this season, the off-contract Halatau said that while casual conversations haven't "materialised" to anything substantial he would love to remain at the club.

However if it weren't to happen, Halatau said many of his younger teammates have already crossed leadership barriers he wouldn't have dreamed of at their age, as he referred back to the first several years of his career where he never spoke up at team meetings.

"Aaron Woods is only 24 and he's become a regular fixture in the Origin team and he's played over 100 games for the Tigers now so Woodsy has become a senior player at a very young age," Halatau said.

"Chrissy Lawrence, who is still relatively young, has been a senior player for a long time and then there's Marty Taupau – who came over with myself from the Bulldogs – who has really established himself the past 18 months and a guy who many of the young guys feel they can go to and ask for advice or follow his lead."
 
Good on you Dene on reaching that milestone, as for next year, well we will need someone to play as we have lost plenty and bought no one.
 
I think he deserves a new one year deal. Like you said there is no one coming in so we need some blokes to keep the morale up and some leaders around the club.

He is a good example of how of you use your tradesman. Short contracts on average money and you get good value out of them . Dene is a good club man and plays hard.

He is never going to win you a game, but i think everyone respects him and our kids need players to look up to in terms of professionalism.

The problem is we have other tradesman of average talent on long term contracts that are playing well below that. Guys like Galloway, Moltzen, Richards, Lawrence, have not been anything close to value for money.

I have no problem with Halatau as he is not in the big bucks, and he plays probably above his wage most time he plays. Most successful clubs have plenty of players like this , we just have the mix th wrong way around.
 
I am such a fan of Dene,

I had the pleasure of spending almost an entire evening in his company whilst he was a bulldog.

We were hosted by the Bulldogs with a close family friend of ours who since then have lost there little boy to childhood cancer (Dogs Supporter). Dene was humble, Respectful engaging and funny at times.

I hope you dont mind me sharing something that for some reason I don't like remembering that much.

That night stands out for me and and my family, Whilst all kitted out in Tigers gear (inflatable hand and all), for our little 7 year old friend who was going through hard times, we all hoped for a Tigers loss.

The Tigers lost that night and I didnt care for once in my life since I was five.

He Smiled the whole night.
 

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