Signings, Suggestions & Rumours Discussion

@frullens said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1222567) said:
@tony-soprano said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1222559) said:
Jac
Nofo
Bj
4?
Aj

JAC
Nofo
BJ
AD
Momo

AJ to get a run through the season.

I'd like to see Talau have a go as a ball playing lock.
Talau 189 cm 92kg
Cam Murray 184cm 90kg
Victor Radley 182cm 92kg

Those 2 are punishing defenders though. Wouldn't mind seeing Tommy get an audition as a 5/8 this season.
 
Though we looked significantly better with Mbye at FB and Douehi at centre. Mayby we deon't need to be spending our money on another outside back when our front and back row need to be much better and when we need a new 5/8

Look I'll be happy with JAC signing too and it was only 1 game but our attack looked so much better with Mbye at the back and Douehi at centre and I think between AJ, Talau and Momers we can fill a 2nd wing spot
 
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/opinion/nrl-2020-james-tamou-contract-talks-could-make-or-break-wests-tigers-locker-room/news-story/2b543be644302c846d3ac610a5147987
 
@Red-Rugby said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1224088) said:
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/opinion/nrl-2020-james-tamou-contract-talks-could-make-or-break-wests-tigers-locker-room/news-story/2b543be644302c846d3ac610a5147987

Does anyone know what this article actually says cause Tamou is NOT the answer.
 
We’re about to discover how hard it is to remove the mud at the Wests Tigers.

By putting pen to paper with the Tigers in the next few days, former Test and NSW Origin and current Penrith prop James Tamou could help wipe clean the muck of perception.

Needless to say, it’s a tense time ahead for a club that no matter the season, the coach, the chair or the CEO, it just can’t get out of its own way.

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James Tamou is weighing up a move to Wests Tigers. Picture: Gregg Porteous/NRL Photos
James Tamou is weighing up a move to Wests Tigers. Picture: Gregg Porteous/NRL Photos
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If you’re a frustrated Tigers fan, you can be comforted by the fact Tamou has been in promising negotiations with the club.

Both the Tigers and Tamou’s current club, the Panthers, expect the 31-year-old to decide on his future this week.

Tamou represents the big fish the Tigers, despite using every jig, lure and hook, have failed to net in recent times.

A premiership winner, experienced and just an all-round decent family man, Tamou is a player the Tigers can use as a genuine figurehead of their pack.

Melbourne and NSW State of Origin winger Josh Addo-Carr is also in the final stages of deciding to come back to the Tigers — albeit as a fullback.

He has the Tigers offer in his email and only needs to settle on the final contract terms. Again, another big fish.

They are two players in a reduced roster of 26 — each position even more crucial.

Josh Addo-Carr is in the final stages of deciding to come back to the Tigers.
Josh Addo-Carr is in the final stages of deciding to come back to the Tigers.
For the Tigers’ rot to stop, it starts with their recruitment.

The duo represent a renewed confidence at Wests.

They also represent something few on the outside — and clearly given their nine-year finals absence — within the walls at Concord boast: belief.

To sign Tamou and Addo-Carr is to say that two elite players believe in the club. It’s huge.

Tigers chair Lee Hagipantelis is deeply passionate about the club but he’s not blinded by his love either. He knows if the Tigers are to make it back to the finals, they have to confront their own issues within.

For the principal of Brydens Lawyers, that’s belief.

He sees it in the leading clubs and he says the Tigers need to replicate it.

Wests Tigers chair Lee Hagipantelis.
Wests Tigers chair Lee Hagipantelis.
The mentality of the chair will irk a few Tigers fans, but here’s a newsflash: what the Tigers have been doing isn’t working, so Hagipantelis is willing to adopt a model that does.

“There has been a perception that the Wests Tigers have not been successful because there has not been that belief in ourselves,” Hagipantelis says.

“You look at those clubs who have enjoyed sustained success, the Roosters and Melbourne, and you look at them as a model, and you think ‘what are they doing right, what are they doing differently to us?’

“And you need to model yourself on them.

“Stability at the front office, great recruitment and a belief in what they’re doing — we need to create that here.

“This season, again to not achieve what we set out for, it’s unacceptable.

“That level of mediocrity has entrenched itself and unless we start doing things drastically different, it’s going to remain the same.

Tigers aren’t proud of the way they dealt with the Benji Marshll saga.
Tigers aren’t proud of the way they dealt with the Benji Marshll saga.
“We do not accept that mediocrity as being our standards.”

Publicly, the Tigers have hitched their sail to coach Michael Maguire’s mast.

Behind the scenes, they’re sticking with the coach despite the dressing room chatter of discontent making its way into the public.

The playing group need to know that while they may have won battles with the coach in the past, they won’t win the war any time soon.

It’s not that Maguire is without flaw as a coach either — it’s just simple logic.

Are the Tigers really going to pay out another coach? His sacking would amount to six coaches in seven years.

And further, are they going to sack their coach given the lack of options available — evident in the Dragons struggle to replace Paul McGregor?

No.

What the Tigers are going to do is wait until the season is over, sit Maguire down with a pen and extend his contract beyond his current deal, which expires at the end of 2021.

The Tigers have hitched their sail to coach Michael Maguire’s mast. Picture: Phil Hillyard
The Tigers have hitched their sail to coach Michael Maguire’s mast. Picture: Phil Hillyard
At that point, Maguire will need to deliver results.

Again, the key to the Tigers revival is recruitment, and if the club has struggled to sign the likes of Latrell Mitchell, Matt Moylan, Kurt Capewell and AJ Brimson in the past, what chance are they of attracting players if they can’t tell their target who the coach will be in year two, three or four of their contract. The Dragons’ missing out on Storm forward Christian Welch last week is a perfect example of that.

Aside from stability at coach level, what the Tigers need to promise Tamou, Addo-Carr and any other player target, is the way the club failed miserably on Tuesday in managing a club icon in Benji Marshall out the door, will never happen again.

Hagipantelis admits the extraction of Marshall, who learned of his exit from the club at the end of the season via a newspaper leak was “embarrassing”, ”disappointing” and ”disgraceful”.

“If anyone represents what the Tigers have achieved since the joint venture commenced in 2000, it’s Benji Marshall,’’ Hagipantelis said.

“That’s not the way anyone wanted it to happen.’’

That’s the lesson for the Tigers. Because you just know it wouldn’t have happened at the Storm or Roosters.
 
Those 2 are punishing defenders though. Wouldn't mind seeing Tommy get an audition as a 5/8 this season.

I thought we showed in the last 10 mins tonight how much better we look with a ball playing smaller lock.

Can tackling be taught?
 
NRL 2020: James Tamou contract talks could make or break Wests Tigers | Locker Room
It’s been a brutal time for Wests Tigers. But with James Tamou poised to declare if he’s joining the Wests Tigers next year – it could be the signing that changes the perception of the club forever.

David Riccio, The Daily Telegraph
Subscriber only
|
September 5, 2020 12:00pm
Close

We’re about to discover how hard it is to remove the mud at the Wests Tigers.

By putting pen to paper with the Tigers in the next few days, former Test and NSW Origin and current Penrith prop James Tamou could help wipe clean the muck of perception.

Needless to say, it’s a tense time ahead for a club that no matter the season, the coach, the chair or the CEO, it just can’t get out of its own way.

James Tamou is weighing up a move to Wests Tigers.

If you’re a frustrated Tigers fan, you can be comforted by the fact Tamou has been in promising negotiations with the club.

Both the Tigers and Tamou’s current club, the Panthers, expect the 31-year-old to decide on his future this week.

Tamou represents the big fish the Tigers, despite using every jig, lure and hook, have failed to net in recent times.

A premiership winner, experienced and just an all-round decent family man, Tamou is a player the Tigers can use as a genuine figurehead of their pack.

Melbourne and NSW State of Origin winger Josh Addo-Carr is also in the final stages of deciding to come back to the Tigers — albeit as a fullback.

He has the Tigers offer in his email and only needs to settle on the final contract terms. Again, another big fish.

They are two players in a reduced roster of 26 — each position even more crucial.

For the Tigers’ rot to stop, it starts with their recruitment.

The duo represent a renewed confidence at Wests.

They also represent something few on the outside — and clearly given their nine-year finals absence — within the walls at Concord boast: belief.

To sign Tamou and Addo-Carr is to say that two elite players believe in the club. It’s huge.

Tigers chair Lee Hagipantelis is deeply passionate about the club but he’s not blinded by his love either. He knows if the Tigers are to make it back to the finals, they have to confront their own issues within.

For the principal of Brydens Lawyers, that’s belief.

He sees it in the leading clubs and he says the Tigers need to replicate it.

The mentality of the chair will irk a few Tigers fans, but here’s a newsflash: what the Tigers have been doing isn’t working, so Hagipantelis is willing to adopt a model that does.

“There has been a perception that the Wests Tigers have not been successful because there has not been that belief in ourselves,” Hagipantelis says.

“You look at those clubs who have enjoyed sustained success, the Roosters and Melbourne, and you look at them as a model, and you think ‘what are they doing right, what are they doing differently to us?’

“And you need to model yourself on them.

“Stability at the front office, great recruitment and a belief in what they’re doing — we need to create that here.

“This season, again to not achieve what we set out for, it’s unacceptable.

“That level of mediocrity has entrenched itself and unless we start doing things drastically different, it’s going to remain the same.

“We do not accept that mediocrity as being our standards.”

Publicly, the Tigers have hitched their sail to coach Michael Maguire’s mast.

Behind the scenes, they’re sticking with the coach despite the dressing room chatter of discontent making its way into the public.

The playing group need to know that while they may have won battles with the coach in the past, they won’t win the war any time soon.

It’s not that Maguire is without flaw as a coach either — it’s just simple logic.

Are the Tigers really going to pay out another coach? His sacking would amount to six coaches in seven years.

And further, are they going to sack their coach given the lack of options available — evident in the Dragons struggle to replace Paul McGregor?

No.

What the Tigers are going to do is wait until the season is over, sit Maguire down with a pen and extend his contract beyond his current deal, which expires at the end of 2021.

At that point, Maguire will need to deliver results.

Again, the key to the Tigers revival is recruitment, and if the club has struggled to sign the likes of Latrell Mitchell, Matt Moylan, Kurt Capewell and AJ Brimson in the past, what chance are they of attracting players if they can’t tell their target who the coach will be in year two, three or four of their contract. The Dragons’ missing out on Storm forward Christian Welch last week is a perfect example of that.

Aside from stability at coach level, what the Tigers need to promise Tamou, Addo-Carr and any other player target, is the way the club failed miserably on Tuesday in managing a club icon in Benji Marshall out the door, will never happen again.

Hagipantelis admits the extraction of Marshall, who learned of his exit from the club at the end of the season via a newspaper leak was “embarrassing”, ”disappointing” and ”disgraceful”.

“If anyone represents what the Tigers have achieved since the joint venture commenced in 2000, it’s Benji Marshall,’’ Hagipantelis said.

“That’s not the way anyone wanted it to happen.’’

That’s the lesson for the Tigers. Because you just know it wouldn’t have happened at the Storm or Roosters.
 
if we get tamau it sats to others come to the tiges, him and JAC will make a huge difference.
A front row if Aloia and Tamau would be huge for us.
 
when we won the comp we ha a skando hard head
We need that hard head, that leader in 2003 and 2004 we had Sattler
Tamau is a key signing
 
The worse outcome would be to get Tamou and miss JAC. It would be the same rubbish we have been doing for years. What we need more than anything else at the moment is speed. JAC without Tamou is OK, Tamou without JAC would be a disaster.
 
We will improve. It’s slow. Plenty of unwanted cattle still to flick but I think our roster is only going to get stronger from here.
 
Media keep saying Moylan rejected us and that not correct... We rejected him as he wanted a 4 year deal and we only prepared to offer 2 years due to injury history... Things like this don't help when you are trying to recruit...
That win tonight hopefully says to JAC and Tamou that we have the foundations and just need some class to helps us to the next step... Fingers crossed for a good week ahead in recruitment..
 
I'm in two minds about Tamou. He provides leadership but he's not really an enforcer and his best days are behind him. I'm concerned we're taking on another veteran looking for a final payday, although I suspect he'd start in our current pack. Welch from the Storm would have been ideal, but that's obviously not to be.
 
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