OFFICIAL Jarome Luai - #295

Once again....
The claim was he has done SO MUCH FOR US that he already deserves an extension to the two years he has yet to play.
I would like to see a list of all the stuff he has done for us that requires an extra year.

I agree. It was the same with Robbie Farah from 2012 onwards. Api's a good player and a great captain, but he's not someone who's ever going to ice games for us week in week out. If he was he would have done it by now. I'm not convinced that hookers should ever be given marquee player wages.
 
Was at the NRL fan fest yesterday and I gotta say Jarome Luai blew me away! 🔥 Never met the bloke previously, but the amount of work he does for the community, bringing people together, signing autographs and taking photos non-stop when other people are saying enough! He’s a gem of a bloke and gonna be incredible for WT next year!
 
Its no excuse... It's a fact and a very valid question ... He's been very costly for us at times this year and the coaches SHOULD be looking at why... We don't want the same thing happening to Luiai
It’s something I hadn’t really thought about but it’s true. You could possibly make a case that he tries too hard, and feels he has too much responsibility and gets too carried away at times. However, the binning in the final round was inexcusable. We had just began to claw back momentum and he makes one of the dumbest tackles I think I have ever seen. You’d be hard pressed to find a bigger boneheaded play throughout the entire competition, all season. I’ve been the biggest Api advocate for captain there could be, but maybe it’s just not suited to him for these reasons. Maybe if you take it off him he’ll feel like a weight is lifted and he’ll just play his role and not worry about anything else. It’s not something I would worry about with Luai, because as good as Api has been, Luai is on another level.
 
Its no excuse... It's a fact and a very valid question ... He's been very costly for us at times this year and the coaches SHOULD be looking at why... We don't want the same thing happening to Luiai
I agree Ink but think they have very different characters. Api seems more of a guy who wants to be everyone's friend, albeit very good on his day. Luai will rip his teammates apart of they aren't doing their job. More of a charismatic leader that players want to follow.
The new Luai is much more composed and mature and won't let the team down.
 

NRL 2024: The Penrith Panthers tough love that has Bulldogs junior Paul Alamoti 80 minutes away from a premiership​

Panthers young gun Paul Alamoti has praised Jarome Luai for helping turning his NRL career around, crediting some of the five-eighth’s savage sprays for turning him into a grand final player.

Paul Alamoti didn’t get tough love at Canterbury, at least not the kind that Penrith teammate Jarome Luai has dished out to the 20-year-old all season long at the foot of the mountains.
Alamoti can’t remember one game, from the 15 he has played for Penrith in 2024, where Luai has not lashed him with an on-field spray.
Not that the young centre is complaining.
With every spray, Alamoti takes a step closer to fulfilling the potential that had the best rugby league scouts agree that the Bulldogs junior was a prodigious talent.
Only last weekend, in Penrith’s preliminary win against Cronulla, Luai caught the left centre in a moment of ‘laziness’.
The words are too explicit for the three-time winning five-eighth to share with this masthead.
“I probably can’t tell you exactly what I said, it went like ‘bleep, you bleep, bleeeeep!,” Luai laughed.

“It was just a moment against the Sharks, he stopped moving when the ball was in the air.”
“I don’t really look at it as a spray anymore, I know he does and some of the younger boys do. But I just want to see my brothers at their best.”
Whether it’s a spray, a heated exchange or verbal stoush, the semantics don’t matter.
Not when Alamoti, according to coach Ivan Cleary, produced his best ever performance since joining the club in last Saturday’s grand final qualifier against the Sharks.
“He’s made me the player that I am today,” Alamoti said.
“He’s got a spray in him every single game and I get one every single game. I love it, it keeps me in the game. I don’t see it as a bad thing, he is always holding me accountable.
“To be honest, it’s the best thing that has happened to me.
“He’s pushed me in a big way out on the field and he is getting the best out of me. That’s definitely something I have needed in my career, so I have a lot of respect for him in that regard.
“He’s kind of like our father figure on the left edge.”

Luai’s emergence as a leader, both at club and Origin level, has earned the 27-year old plenty of praise and plaudits in 2024.
It was only last year, when he and former teammate Jaeman Salmon were caught on camera having a heated exchange after a loss to Brisbane in round one.
While Luai concedes that the field was the ‘wrong place and wrong time’ to have it out with Salmon, the five-eighth is unapologetic about wanting to push his teammates to be their best.
“For Pauly, to say that he sees me as a father figure is humbling,” Luai said.
“I do see it as tough love, there was some footage of me and Jaeman Salmon last … those are those tough conversations that everyday people don’t see.
 

NRL 2024: The Penrith Panthers tough love that has Bulldogs junior Paul Alamoti 80 minutes away from a premiership​

Panthers young gun Paul Alamoti has praised Jarome Luai for helping turning his NRL career around, crediting some of the five-eighth’s savage sprays for turning him into a grand final player.

Paul Alamoti didn’t get tough love at Canterbury, at least not the kind that Penrith teammate Jarome Luai has dished out to the 20-year-old all season long at the foot of the mountains.
Alamoti can’t remember one game, from the 15 he has played for Penrith in 2024, where Luai has not lashed him with an on-field spray.
Not that the young centre is complaining.
With every spray, Alamoti takes a step closer to fulfilling the potential that had the best rugby league scouts agree that the Bulldogs junior was a prodigious talent.
Only last weekend, in Penrith’s preliminary win against Cronulla, Luai caught the left centre in a moment of ‘laziness’.
The words are too explicit for the three-time winning five-eighth to share with this masthead.
“I probably can’t tell you exactly what I said, it went like ‘bleep, you bleep, bleeeeep!,” Luai laughed.

“It was just a moment against the Sharks, he stopped moving when the ball was in the air.”
“I don’t really look at it as a spray anymore, I know he does and some of the younger boys do. But I just want to see my brothers at their best.”
Whether it’s a spray, a heated exchange or verbal stoush, the semantics don’t matter.
Not when Alamoti, according to coach Ivan Cleary, produced his best ever performance since joining the club in last Saturday’s grand final qualifier against the Sharks.
“He’s made me the player that I am today,” Alamoti said.
“He’s got a spray in him every single game and I get one every single game. I love it, it keeps me in the game. I don’t see it as a bad thing, he is always holding me accountable.
“To be honest, it’s the best thing that has happened to me.
“He’s pushed me in a big way out on the field and he is getting the best out of me. That’s definitely something I have needed in my career, so I have a lot of respect for him in that regard.
“He’s kind of like our father figure on the left edge.”

Luai’s emergence as a leader, both at club and Origin level, has earned the 27-year old plenty of praise and plaudits in 2024.
It was only last year, when he and former teammate Jaeman Salmon were caught on camera having a heated exchange after a loss to Brisbane in round one.
While Luai concedes that the field was the ‘wrong place and wrong time’ to have it out with Salmon, the five-eighth is unapologetic about wanting to push his teammates to be their best.
“For Pauly, to say that he sees me as a father figure is humbling,” Luai said.
“I do see it as tough love, there was some footage of me and Jaeman Salmon last … those are those tough conversations that everyday people don’t see.
this is the accountability we've wanted for so long.

he really could be the hard reset we need.
 
this is the accountability we've wanted for so long.

he really could be the hard reset we need.
Gonna need a lot more than him. Competent coaching staff, players used to losing and accepting shit standards, as well as constant misery is going to be too hard to overcome. It will take another decade at least
 
It’s something I hadn’t really thought about but it’s true. You could possibly make a case that he tries too hard, and feels he has too much responsibility and gets too carried away at times. However, the binning in the final round was inexcusable. We had just began to claw back momentum and he makes one of the dumbest tackles I think I have ever seen. You’d be hard pressed to find a bigger boneheaded play throughout the entire competition, all season. I’ve been the biggest Api advocate for captain there could be, but maybe it’s just not suited to him for these reasons. Maybe if you take it off him he’ll feel like a weight is lifted and he’ll just play his role and not worry about anything else. It’s not something I would worry about with Luai, because as good as Api has been, Luai is on another level.
Some players just aren't as good when they're captain. Look at Burton and Mahoney this year? I also think Teddy is a better player when he's not captain of a team
 
Brandon Smith said on Matty Johns show; that he's heard from multiple people that Jarome tries to fight his team-mates at training & he expects high quality of football from them and a high stadnard . Said something along the lines of people don't like it but compared it to Michael Jordan.

Interesting comments.
 
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