OFFICIAL Jarome Luai - #295

Dylan brown is waving at you, "wait till you see me next year"
Everyone is predicting brown to a massive failure. This time last year everyone said luai would be the saviour. Brown doesn't have the same pressure as no one expects him to be great. Luai was overhyped and believed the hype, but never backed up his word play
 
The following recruits played a significant amount for us this year:

Luai
Terrell May
Turuva
Skelton

These guys also played a fair amount:

Taylan May
Bird
Hunt

We also had Doueihi return and stay healthy for most of the year, while the only losses of note from last year's team are Utoikamanu, Galvin and Sezer.

I feel like we had a reasonably good run with injury this year too. Not too many players missing extended periods.

All in all, we improved but not a great deal. A few extra wins and a few less blowouts. I'd give Luai a little credit for that, but not anything more than the other guys who also played the bulk of the year.

We haven't really signed anyone for next year apart from KPP so we're going to need to see a lot of internal growth if we're gonna make the 8.

I'd give the Luai signing a C at this point. If we're speaking strictly as a player, it's probably a D given he's about league average at his position but paid as a superstar. But since he's supposedly been involved in recruiting others and reports suggest our culture is better now, it gets a little bump up.
 
Everyone is predicting brown to a massive failure. This time last year everyone said luai would be the saviour. Brown doesn't have the same pressure as no one expects him to be great. Luai was overhyped and believed the hype, but never backed up his word play
There are 💯 expectations of brown as a $13 million dollar player.. watch the media jump on him if the knights lose their first few games... Look at the pressure on Galvin and he's on a fraction of the money brown is...

The tigers finished 4 places, 6 points and +165 differential above the spoon... So I think it's debateable whether Luais had had an influence on the outcome this year ... we all know he wasn't his best on the field this year - but alot of that has to do with the calibre of players around him... Its all good and well to shift into the 7 role at the Panthers and make it work - but it's different at the tigers.. we could have brought across Nathan Cleary and he probably wouldn't have been a success for us stating out either.. our systems were sh1t, still are to a degree.. it's going to take some time..

When we finally had cohesion (after Galvin gate) and our spine had a few games together - Luai bought the best out of Samuela and Taylan on that left edge... We had a glimpse into how dangerous that left hand side attack could be with a full pre-season..

I'm happy to fall on my sword with Luai if nothing improves next year... But there's only one bloke that could have come in and had the impact everyone wanted - and that would be Andrew Johns in his prime..

Anyway I guess we will see next year. Everyone's going to be watching Luai closely!
 
He is considered a very good organizer, particularly in attack. A creative playmaker, with vision and ability to steer his team to success. Or at least this is the type of leadership seen when he played for Penrith's and Samoa's. Some describe JL as confident, vocal, and energetic, qualities that inspire teammates and help to bring out their best performance.
This said, and given he is a marquee player for us, do you think he has played according to his capabilities and manifested all the qualities mentioned above? Where have we improved as a result of his addition to the team? Has he suffered as a result of playing alongside lesser skilled players?
4.5M over 4 years is a lot of money - have we been getting our worth?

I am kind of on the fence on this one, a result perhaps of my own expectations (or ongoing frustrations that inevitably go with following the WT)..
 
He is considered a very good organizer, particularly in attack. A creative playmaker, with vision and ability to steer his team to success. Or at least this is the type of leadership seen when he played for Penrith's and Samoa's. Some describe JL as confident, vocal, and energetic, qualities that inspire teammates and help to bring out their best performance.
This said, and given he is a marquee player for us, do you think he has played according to his capabilities and manifested all the qualities mentioned above? Where have we improved as a result of his addition to the team? Has he suffered as a result of playing alongside lesser skilled players?
4.5M over 4 years is a lot of money - have we been getting our worth?

I am kind of on the fence on this one, a result perhaps of my own expectations (or ongoing frustrations that inevitably go with following the WT)..
He went from the 4 time premiership winning team to the 3 time wooden spooners always gonna take some time to adjust to a completely different system.

I think what he has brought to us you cannot put a price on he has brought excitement and energy winning experience to the entire team.

I cannot wait to see him next year after a full year in tigers colours
 
He went from the 4 time premiership winning team to the 3 time wooden spooners always gonna take some time to adjust to a completely different system.

I think what he has brought to us you cannot put a price on he has brought excitement and energy winning experience to the entire team.

I cannot wait to see him next year after a full year in tigers colours
He better be playing in the preseason trials. That was clearly a mistake this season.
 

From the SMH​

Jarome Luai says Wests Tigers have nothing to worry about … if they do one thing.​

Jarome Luai says he will pledge his long-term future to Wests Tigers – on one condition.

“As long as they do right by me and my family, they’ll have nothing to worry about,” Luai said
Jarome has until April 30 to trigger a clause to activate a further three seasons at the Tigers, adding about $3.5 million to his deal.

The playmaker was regularly praised by coach Benji Marshall for lifting standards on and off the field during his first year at Concord after leaving Penrith with four premiership rings.

Whether Luai has seen enough potential in the Tigers playing group to want to recommit – and whether his get-out clause is removed altogether – will be hot topics this summer.
“That’s why I’m still here. That’s why I’m looking forward to staying here as well.

“If they want to talk, then we’ll talk, but like I said, if they treat me and my family right, they’ve got nothing to worry about.”

Luai flew out for New Zealand with the Samoa team early Monday for the start of the Pacific Championships.
Having had time to reflect on the Tigers’ campaign, he said 2025 could not be described as a success because “we didn’t play in the finals”.

“That’s me as a competitor, and the years I’ve been through [at Penrith],” he said. “We can be a lot better, and it starts in pre-season.”

Luai, fellow Tigers Taylan and Terrell May, Canberra’s Josh Papalii, Parramatta’s Junior Paulo, Penrith’s Blaize Talagi and Brian To’o, and premiership-winning prop Payne Haas – who Luai refers to as “Samoa’s marquee signing” – are just some of the big names in action on Sunday against the Kiwis in Auckland.

Haas has been heavily linked to breakaway rugby union competition R360, with his management reportedly telling organisers last week the prop was only interested in entering negotiations if they were prepared to pay a minimum of $3 million a season.

Luai said there had been plenty of “banter” with the players about R360 and the wild money being discussed.
“The figures getting thrown around, as a player, it will always be eye-catching, but until it actually happens, I don’t think we’ll have serious conversations about it,” he said.

Taylan May’s late-season cameo was another promising sign for the Tigers, especially the quality of football he delivered without a pre-season, and Luai said he would be one of Samoa’s danger men out wide.

“He’s a freak, bro ... and if his mind is right, and he’s motivated, and he’s got a goal to work towards, then he’s a threat to a lot of others,” Luai said.

Now 28, Luai captained Samoa in a series in England last year, and will share the responsibility with Paulo this year.

The tiny Pacific nation made it to the World Cup final in 2022, and is still awaiting the returns of Stephen Crichton and Spencer Leniu, two players who will miss this series due to injury and fatherhood respectively, ahead of next year’s World Cup.
 
This bloke s a wanker.
You are still here because we signed you to an extremely generous and lengthy contract.
Play like you did this year again in 26 and you can Fark Off.
 
Full quotes from the DT just for context

“My future is sealed already. I look forward to honouring that,” Luai said.

“Maybe every year you’ll be asking me the same thing,” Luai said, referencing the player options in his deal.

“But as long as they do right by me and my family, they will have nothing to worry about.”

Asked whether he felt the Tigers had been doing the right thing by him, Luai replied: “That’s why I’m still here. That’s why I’m looking forward to staying here as well.”

SMH trying to make it look a lot worse than what it is.
 
Pretty simple solution if you want to show you’re committed - take out the future clauses. All good & well to talk but actions speak louder.

I remember Stefano saying he wanted to be a future captain blah blah blah - a couple months later he was signed for Melbourne. I will say Luai won’t get the same $$$ from any other club so he prob stays
 

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