Johns tried to lure boom rookie Luke Brooks to Knights

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innsaneink

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ANDREW Johns was intrigued. He'd just watched a 2012 schoolboys game featuring Holy Cross Ryde and was taken with the performance of their chief playmaker, Luke Brooks.

At full time Johns crossed the sideline at WIN Stadium for a quick word with the 17-year-old. During their brief exchange, the Knights legend joked: "How about coming to play in Newcastle?"

Before the starstruck Brooks could summon a reply, a veteran official from Wests Tigers intervened and set Johns straight: "There's no chance of that happening, mate. He's with us."

If only they knew. If only Johns and countless talent scouts from rival clubs who've dreamed of extracting the prodigious from Tigertown knew.

If only they knew that, even before he owned a football, Brooks was besotted with Tigers.

![](http://resources2.news.com.au/images/2014/02/01/1226815/719018-48e5af0a-8ad5-11e3-92e1-07d47f226b83.jpg)

_Tigers young gun Luke Brooks as a kid._
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There were soft toy tigers, a tiger imprinted doona, even his first beach towel was covered with them. The obsession deepened when Brooks discovered rugby league through his mother, Michele, a lifelong Tigers fan who was raised across the bay from Leichhardt Oval.

Like generations of local kids beforehand, her middle son spent the winter afternoons of his early childhood on the venue's majestic grass hill, using a plastic bottle to emulate his heroes.

![](http://resources0.news.com.au/images/2014/02/01/1226815/718424-485fb10c-8ad5-11e3-92e1-07d47f226b83.jpg)

_Tigers young gun Luke Brooks playing junior rugby league._
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By the age of 10 he was old enough to appreciate their incredible skill, which unfolded before his own eyes at ANZ Stadium in October 2005, when Benji Marshall highlighted Wests Tigers' maiden premiership win with a flick pass for the ages.

Brooks tried to replicate the feat in junior games but could never quite make it work. For a strikingly talented kid, it was an all too rare taste of failure. Brooks also excelled at soccer to the point that opposing teams pleaded for him to be restricted to goalkeeping.

He set junior records in athletics, and made representative sides in cricket too, with his grandfather Clive Johnston a former NSW Sheffield Shield captain This idyll unfolded along the length of Victoria Rd, the main artery of Tigertown. Sporting fields in Gladesville, Ryde, and Leichhardt were his domain. Putney Primary School, where Michele is now assistant principal, was the scene of Brooks' first proper game of rugby league in 2001.

"I was in Year One and my older brother's team was short on numbers for a knockout game," Brooks recalls. "They tossed me on the wing and I remember scoring a try in the corner form a cut-out pass he threw to me."
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![](http://resources0.news.com.au/images/2014/02/01/1226815/719072-4dcb1cc6-8ad5-11e3-92e1-07d47f226b83.jpg)

_Tigers young gun Luke Brooks with Geoff Lawson and Kerry O’Keefe_

According to his father, Jeff, that moment set Brooks on the path to becoming an NRL star. By his thirteenth birthday, all other pursuits had been abandoned in favour of rugby league and just a year later Brooks progressed to Balmain's junior representative system.

![](http://resources3.news.com.au/images/2014/02/01/1226815/718451-4b912806-8ad5-11e3-92e1-07d47f226b83.jpg)

_Tigers young gun Luke Brooks excelled at soccer as a junior._
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But there would be no magic carpet ride to the breathless acclaim of his NRL debut against St George Illawarra late last season. In the years leading up to that sparkling August day at the SCG, Brooks played precious little football as his lifelong passion for the game dimmed.

Between April 2010 and June 2012, Brooks managed just half a dozen matches. Two broken ankles, a golden staph infection and a broken thumb reduced him to a hapless spectator. The first ankle injury required a 15 month recovery, and, in just his second game back for Holy Cross, Brooks snapped the other one.

![](http://resources3.news.com.au/images/2014/02/01/1226815/719507-4a8cdb1c-8ad5-11e3-92e1-07d47f226b83.jpg)

_Tigers young gun Luke Brooks receiving a first place award at junior athletics_
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Jeff was on the sidelines that afternoon, and remembers his boy slamming the turf in disgust. Growing up, Brooks displayed remarkably little emotion or pain when hurt. He relished confrontations with bigger kids and junior coaches inevitably found themselves begging their star playmaker to leave the defensive grunt work to the forwards. Faced with such unusual distress, Jeff knew something was very wrong.

"I walked over to meet him on the sideline and there was a tear in his eye," Jeff said. "It's one of the only times I've seen him cry. He's such a tough, tough kid. He just said, 'Dad, I've broken the other one.'."

Brooks confesses the following nine months were the darkest of his short life thus far.

"When I returned I kept thinking that I would break my leg in every tackle, and I still get that a little bit to this day," he said. "Back then it was really hard and I got a bit over footy, to be honest. I was not really enjoying it, and I didn't think I was playing that well when I came back (in 2012)."

Trick shots and tries don't cut the mustard for Brooks. A sound defensive and kicking game are the keys for him to be personally satisfied after 80 minutes. Fine judges felt he did all that and much, much more prior to making his NRL debut, generating headlines and quotes that dared to compare him to Johns.

![](http://resources0.news.com.au/images/2014/02/01/1226815/719128-49782a24-8ad5-11e3-92e1-07d47f226b83.jpg)

_Tigers young gun Luke Brooks was a passionate Tigers supporter as a Kid._
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Although he handled the hype to slay the Dragons with a first-up display of remarkable quality, Brooks is far from comfortable with the attention as he prepares to the steer the Tigers attack on a permanent basis in 2014.

"I was very uncomfortable because I hadn't even played an NRL game and all these people were talking about me," he says. "After my debut it changed again. You see people look and recognise you and even say hello. I never expected that and I'm still not used to it. To be honest, I think I should still be doing that sort of stuff to the boys of playing with."

Should he perform as predicted, Brooks will have little choice but to adjust. As a level headed and polite teen, there's no reason why he won't. Just as there was no reason for him to even contemplate testing the open market when the Tigers offered a three-year extension midway through last season.

"He was not driven by money, not at all," Jeff reveals. "He said at the time, 'Dad, I don't really care what they offer, I just want to play for the Tigers'. He's always dreamed of playing for them, and there's a bit of destiny about it because he loved Tigers so much as a very young child."

If only they knew.
 
Didn't test the open market?

hmm, ok.

So I suppose 400k per year was just a figure pulled out of someone's ass then.
 
Being a Magpies diehard I would have played for Wests for beer money. Shit that is all I got for playing local A Grade. LOL!

In all seriousness I just hope all the media BS doesn't go to the young bloke's head. He has a good game we have seen that but to replicate and improve on it in a hard comp is going to take more than just talent.
 
He is going to be targeted this year by every club. All this media write up makes me feel sick for the kid. Fancy comparing him to an immortal before he had played first grade….If he makes it with all the pressure he has on him, he is one mentally tough young man.
 
As long as he keeps enjoying his footy he will love up to his own expectations.

The expectations of him being compared to johns are by those people who know as much about him as us mug fans.

Just enjoy, have fun and keep ripping in week in week out.

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@tig_prmz said:
As long as he keeps enjoying his footy he will love up to his own expectations.

The expectations of him being compared to johns are by those people who know as much about him as us mug fans.

Just enjoy, have fun and keep ripping in week in week out.

_Posted using RoarFEED 2013_

thats funny cause joey is the one who made the comparison to joey johns im pretty sure
 
@stryker said:
He is going to be targeted this year by every club. All this media write up makes me feel sick for the kid. Fancy comparing him to an immortal before he had played first grade….If he makes it with all the pressure he has on him, he is one mentally tough young man.

Yep…..its unavoidable...it'll make him or break him, hard enough to deal with giants running at him - he has the media circus to deal with, the club will have to limit his media access to help him remain focussed.

But, its nothing really new for him....he was always news in the local media as a kid, always reading about him in the local rag, the Balmain websites and annual yearbooks....he was hard to miss at games too if our games happened to be at the same ground...this smaller kid carving up onfield with others twice his size left behind.
Most Jnr leagues have players that have reputations far & wide, he was one...Sirro and his bro were another, instantly recognizable - but unless they have the talent they soon fade away, as I saw with Wayne Pearces nephew - he had the genes and name but not the skills
 
**Wests Tigers rookie Luke Brooks has eyes of the Tigers**

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-rookie-luke-brooks-has-eyes-of-the-tigers-20140201-31txk.html#ixzz2s6UOeahR
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<big>After a dazzling NRL debut last year, rookie playmaker Luke Brooks is getting used to the pressure that comes with being one of the Wests Tigers most prized assets, writes Adrian Proszenko.</big>

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-rookie-luke-brooks-has-eyes-of-the-tigers-20140201-31txk.html#ixzz2s6UHvoPi

![](http://images.smh.com.au/2014/02/01/5125001/Luke-20Brooks-20140201215800434422-620x349.jpg)
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There's a lot of talk about passing the baton when it comes to Luke Brooks.

But history shows that it literally hasn't always worked out. Like the time he ran the anchor leg for Holy Cross College's state 4x100 metre relay team in year 10.

''I got disqualified,'' Brooks chuckled.
Luke Brooks

Brooks in action last year. Photo: Getty Images

''I didn't know the rules, you start at one point and are meant to get the baton there and I started before it. We won by a mile. A few of the boys weren't taking it too serious and then we were disqualified.
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''One of the guys who took it serious was blowing up - he threw his spikes right out of the ground. I was just laughing.''

There was almost another false start, albeit on a grander stage. It was the Tuesday before THAT debut. Wests Tigers coach Mick Potter told him he was playing. A lifelong ambition was about to be fulfilled. Or was it? In his previous game in reggies, Brooks was placed on report for a high tackle.

Unable to help himself, Under-20s coach Todd Payten came up to Brooks and said, po-faced: ''You're suspended, you can't play.'' ''I had a feeling he was stitching me up,'' Brooks said. ''So it was pretty funny.'' History will show that Brooks played. And how. His first game was on the hallowed turf of the Sydney Cricket Ground. It was the grand old venue his late grandfather, Clive Johnson, had captained the NSW cricket team alongside the likes of greats Richie Benaud and Bob Simpson.

To say he was nervous was an understatement.

''I was thinking about the game all week,'' he said.

''Going to the ground, about halfway there, I remember really needing to go to the toilet. I had to run to the change rooms. The time I most got nervous was during the anthems, just standing there.'' It didn't show. The teenage halfback scored a try against the Dragons, had a hand or a foot in just about everything and was crowned man of the match. Due to second-tier salary cap restrictions, it remains his only NRL appearance.

''It was a dream come true, I always wanted to play for the Tigers,'' he said.

''I really have to pinch myself because it's weird playing with people you've looked up to. I never thought I'd get a chance to play with Benji [Marshall], it was good.

''It would have been good to play a few more games with him but at least I got one.'' That he is playing at all is reward for perseverance. The former Australian Schoolboy badly broke and dislocated his ankle three years ago.

Complications, including a golden staph infection, meant he was sidelined for 15 months. In the second game of his comeback, he broke the other leg. And a broken thumb prevented him from participating in the SG Ball final series.

''I did [think about quitting] a bit but I always knew I wanted to keep playing,'' he said.

He isn't the only member of his family training on Concord Oval. His older brother Joel plays for the Wests Harbour rugby side which trains at the same field. The 21-year-old is currently trialling for a spot with the Waratahs. Another sibling, 15-year-old Scott, is a fullback in the Tigers feeder system.

Luke and Joel crossed paths when their teams set up a training camp at Kiama during the week.

''My older brother was in the ranks of the Tigers with the 20s and stopped playing footy,'' Brooks said. ''He stopped for two years and got back into union with his mates.''

One of his own good mates is fellow playmaker Mitchell Moses. The pair were the gun athletes at Holy Cross, often sharing the school's player of the year awards. Injuries have prevented them from combining often - Moses broke his leg and has been hampered by hamstring and calf problems - but the pair are earmarked as the long-term Wests Tigers halves.

They have come through the grades together, although they have also played against each other. Moses spent part of his junior career at Parramatta and Brooks recalls a particular time they clashed.

''He actually threw me an intercept,'' Brooks recalled.

''It actually looked like he threw it straight to me. He was pretty filthy.'' Moses has been named for the Tigers' first trial, while Brooks will be missing from the Nines tournament. The latter suffered stress fractures last year and the club are mindful of protecting him. His debut appearance was headline news and already there have been comparisons to Andrew Johns.

For a teen who has played just one game, they are unhelpful. It is not yet time for Benji to pass the baton.

''Sometimes you get noticed,'' Brooks said of the newfound attention he has received.

''It feels a bit weird.''

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-rookie-luke-brooks-has-eyes-of-the-tigers-20140201-31txk.html#ixzz2s6UBzoh3
 
The only person who will be putting pressure on Luke Brooks is Luke Brooks

The key for him for probably his first 2 seasons will be to keep looking forward and not worry about what might of happened last play ,last game

He will have some great days and some not so great games and we are going to have to accept that

If he ignores all the news stories and can relax away from the game he will be fine

Hopefully he has someone close to him that can keep it real
 
He has a pretty wise young head in Sirro who was in his shoes not too long ago…theyve been around each other for yonks...he'll be fine
 
I'm surprised the club allowed him to be interviewed like that. Sheens certainly wouldn't have allowed it.
 
@stryker said:
He is going to be targeted this year by every club. All this media write up makes me feel sick for the kid. Fancy comparing him to an immortal before he had played first grade….If he makes it with all the pressure he has on him, he is one mentally tough young man.

I agree there is plenty of pressure but it seems to me that it doesn't bother the kid. One other thing it is doing, is letting Moses sneak under the radar. He is in the main team for the trial and Potter has mentioned that he has impressed.

If the injury gods are kind we could see these two together in firsts before we know it!
 
@pHyR3 said:
@GNR4LIFE said:
I'm surprised the club allowed him to be interviewed like that. Sheens certainly wouldn't have allowed it.

yea i thought there was a media ban?

Get it out in the open now, less to talk about later. That's one way to look at it anyway.
 
@innsaneink said:
Trick shots and tries don't cut the mustard for Brooks. A sound defensive and kicking game are the keys for him to be personally satisfied after 80 minutes.

I like the sounds of this.

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@GNR4LIFE said:
I'm surprised the club allowed him to be interviewed like that. Sheens certainly wouldn't have allowed it.

I dont think that's right; I remember Benji in the media from very early in the piece. Maybe the first games the media was kept away but with Benji it was inevitable after that that the press would be all over him.

I have no doubt that Brooks will be fine with it all as Ink has suggested.
 
@GNR4LIFE said:
I'm surprised the club allowed him to be interviewed like that. Sheens certainly wouldn't have allowed it.

Sheens also played halves in the forwards, had a back on the bench who didn't play any minutes in numerous instances, second rowers at props, etc.

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recently i have noticed so many articles on him that i have to say i dont remember any young player receiving this much exposure, especially having played just the one game.
he seems very level headed, so im not too worried anything will go to his head, and as said before, it is best to get all the attention out of the way before the season.

to be honest, it has made me start to think that he is just going to be a very special player. i mean, its not just tigers people who are talking him up. maybe his debut was just the usual for him?!!
 
@Peaches said:
@GNR4LIFE said:
I'm surprised the club allowed him to be interviewed like that. Sheens certainly wouldn't have allowed it.

Sheens also played halves in the forwards, had a back on the bench who didn't play any minutes in numerous instances, second rowers at props, etc.

_Posted using RoarFEED 2013_

Pplll

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