Signings, Suggestions & Rumours Discussion

The teenage son of Parramatta legend Nathan Hindmarsh has been snapped up by arch rivals the Penrith Panthers, beating the Eels to the punch.

Buster Hindmarsh, 17, is a rangy second-rower — much leaner than his dad — who has signed for two years with the Panthers.

“Penrith gave us an invitation to go and check out their facilities and they were really impressive,” Nathan said.

“The Bulldogs did the same thing. The Dogs were very close, too. They’ve got a great set up.

“All Parramatta did was send us an offer in an email and didn’t show the same interest.

“He was keen on the Bears too, where he played SG Ball this year, but we decided the Panthers were the best option at this stage of his career.

“They’ve got such a great record bringing kids through and looking after them so professionally.”

It will be upsetting for Eels fans in that Nathan Hindmarsh is such a club legend.

The family has a rich history at Parramatta where Nathan played 330 NRL games for the club and his brother Ian played 164 matches.

“It was a bit weird when he came home the other day in the full Penrith kit,” Hindmarsh said.

“But we’ll get used to it.

“He loves the game and he’s very happy to get the opportunity with the Panthers.

“This is just the start. He knows he’s still got a lot of hard work ahead if he’s to play NRL.”

Penrith CEO Matt Cameron has high hopes for the youngster.

“He’s a beautiful young kid,” Cameron said.

“Our pathways manager Lee Hopkins has been tracking him for a little while.

“We’re really pleased he’s chosen to come here.

“We’ll get him into the building and get him started and see how he goes.”

Another Eels legend, former skipper Nathan Cayless, has a son also playing at a rival club.

Eddie Cayless played in the Roosters’ grand final winning SG Ball team this year.

Both Cayless’ and Hindmarsh’s sons started in Parramatta juniors but left for rival clubs to get better opportunities.

Eels CEO Jim Sarantinos has defended the club’s junior league position.

“The success of our pathways was evident by three of our four teams making grand finals this year,” Sarantinos said.

“The SG Ball team was undefeated until losing the grand final.

“It’s an area we’ve put a lot of work into and we’re proud of it. Buster Hindmarsh was in our juniors but moved to Norths. We wish him well.”
 
The teenage son of Parramatta legend Nathan Hindmarsh has been snapped up by arch rivals the Penrith Panthers, beating the Eels to the punch.

Buster Hindmarsh, 17, is a rangy second-rower — much leaner than his dad — who has signed for two years with the Panthers.

“Penrith gave us an invitation to go and check out their facilities and they were really impressive,” Nathan said.

“The Bulldogs did the same thing. The Dogs were very close, too. They’ve got a great set up.

“All Parramatta did was send us an offer in an email and didn’t show the same interest.

“He was keen on the Bears too, where he played SG Ball this year, but we decided the Panthers were the best option at this stage of his career.

“They’ve got such a great record bringing kids through and looking after them so professionally.”

It will be upsetting for Eels fans in that Nathan Hindmarsh is such a club legend.

The family has a rich history at Parramatta where Nathan played 330 NRL games for the club and his brother Ian played 164 matches.

“It was a bit weird when he came home the other day in the full Penrith kit,” Hindmarsh said.

“But we’ll get used to it.

“He loves the game and he’s very happy to get the opportunity with the Panthers.

“This is just the start. He knows he’s still got a lot of hard work ahead if he’s to play NRL.”

Penrith CEO Matt Cameron has high hopes for the youngster.

“He’s a beautiful young kid,” Cameron said.

“Our pathways manager Lee Hopkins has been tracking him for a little while.

“We’re really pleased he’s chosen to come here.

“We’ll get him into the building and get him started and see how he goes.”

Another Eels legend, former skipper Nathan Cayless, has a son also playing at a rival club.

Eddie Cayless played in the Roosters’ grand final winning SG Ball team this year.

Both Cayless’ and Hindmarsh’s sons started in Parramatta juniors but left for rival clubs to get better opportunities.

Eels CEO Jim Sarantinos has defended the club’s junior league position.

“The success of our pathways was evident by three of our four teams making grand finals this year,” Sarantinos said.

“The SG Ball team was undefeated until losing the grand final.

“It’s an area we’ve put a lot of work into and we’re proud of it. Buster Hindmarsh was in our juniors but moved to Norths. We wish him well.”
Smart from Buster. Might win a comp.
 
The teenage son of Parramatta legend Nathan Hindmarsh has been snapped up by arch rivals the Penrith Panthers, beating the Eels to the punch.

Buster Hindmarsh, 17, is a rangy second-rower — much leaner than his dad — who has signed for two years with the Panthers.

“Penrith gave us an invitation to go and check out their facilities and they were really impressive,” Nathan said.

“The Bulldogs did the same thing. The Dogs were very close, too. They’ve got a great set up.

“All Parramatta did was send us an offer in an email and didn’t show the same interest.

“He was keen on the Bears too, where he played SG Ball this year, but we decided the Panthers were the best option at this stage of his career.

“They’ve got such a great record bringing kids through and looking after them so professionally.”

It will be upsetting for Eels fans in that Nathan Hindmarsh is such a club legend.

The family has a rich history at Parramatta where Nathan played 330 NRL games for the club and his brother Ian played 164 matches.

“It was a bit weird when he came home the other day in the full Penrith kit,” Hindmarsh said.

“But we’ll get used to it.

“He loves the game and he’s very happy to get the opportunity with the Panthers.

“This is just the start. He knows he’s still got a lot of hard work ahead if he’s to play NRL.”

Penrith CEO Matt Cameron has high hopes for the youngster.

“He’s a beautiful young kid,” Cameron said.

“Our pathways manager Lee Hopkins has been tracking him for a little while.

“We’re really pleased he’s chosen to come here.

“We’ll get him into the building and get him started and see how he goes.”

Another Eels legend, former skipper Nathan Cayless, has a son also playing at a rival club.

Eddie Cayless played in the Roosters’ grand final winning SG Ball team this year.

Both Cayless’ and Hindmarsh’s sons started in Parramatta juniors but left for rival clubs to get better opportunities.

Eels CEO Jim Sarantinos has defended the club’s junior league position.

“The success of our pathways was evident by three of our four teams making grand finals this year,” Sarantinos said.

“The SG Ball team was undefeated until losing the grand final.

“It’s an area we’ve put a lot of work into and we’re proud of it. Buster Hindmarsh was in our juniors but moved to Norths. We wish him well.”

Buster Bluth. Solid name.
 
Jury's out on whether KPP will be a great player, but he'd be a marked upgrade on Seyfarth that's for sure.
His stats are not bad but I never really notice him.
Hes a toiler...theres nothing explosive or damaging about him ive seen yet.
People saying Knights are using him wrong and they reckon we would use him correctly?
Big call...like we use Seyfarth.
He doubled his season line breaks tonite
Surely theres better somewhere....Id love to see Seyfarth as depth only when required...he gives me weekly migraines
 
His stats are not bad but I never really notice him.
Hes a toiler...theres nothing explosive or damaging about him ive seen yet.
People saying Knights are using him wrong and they reckon we would use him correctly?
Big call...like we use Seyfarth.
He doubled his season line breaks tonite
Surely theres better somewhere....Id love to see Seyfarth as depth only when required...he gives me weekly migraines
Yeah, he’s not the dominant edge player the top sides are all fielding these days. He’s an upgrade though.
 
Sandon Smith would be one I could handle getting in, goal kicker who plays pretty tough.
I think [hope] Latu is our guy and can get healthy and become consistent.

Sandon deserves a starting gig somewhere and will likely command good dollars.

If Latu gets it together, we still need a back up.
Sandon too expensive.
 
Yeah, he’s not the dominant edge player the top sides are all fielding these days. He’s an upgrade though.
hard to get a read on KPP , rarely watch anymore footy , he seems to have something in him , is the coach using him wrong ?.If he just straightened his back n stuck his chest out he might just realize what he could do
 
I think [hope] Latu is our guy and can get healthy and become consistent.

Sandon deserves a starting gig somewhere and will likely command good dollars.

If Latu gets it together, we still need a back up.
Sandon too expensive.
Yeah, ideally Latu steps into LG’s role and proves he’s up to it. I think it’s important to have a contingency plan in motion in case he’s not the guy.
 
Yeah, ideally Latu steps into LG’s role and proves he’s up to it. I think it’s important to have a contingency plan in motion in case he’s not the guy.

Hard thing is players like Sandon won't come if they are not going to know they are starting. If we give him green light he is the 7 we want, then Latu will leave. I think we might need to look at a 'capable' reserve grade option (or just get Jayden Sullivan back)...
 
Hard thing is players like Sandon won't come if they are not going to know they are starting. If we give him green light he is the 7 we want, then Latu will leave. I think we might need to look at a 'capable' reserve grade option (or just get Jayden Sullivan back)...
lets fix Latu 1st,can he stay busted for ever?
 
Back
Top