Wests Tigers rookie Pheonix Godinet has always been a goal setter.
And he hasn’t let multiple rejections derail him.
As an eight-year-old, he scribbled down his dream of making an NRL debut as an 18-year-old, but it wasn’t at the Tigers.
All the young Godinet wanted to do was play for western Sydney rivals Parramatta.
“The first ever highlights I watched were of Jarryd Hayne, I watched him a lot growing up,” Godinet said.
“Hayne was the reason I supported the Eels growing up and wanted to play for them.”
The 18-year-old Godinet, an Australian Schoolboys star and the Tigers’ SG Ball (under-19s) player of the year, took the first step in making his first grade dream a reality, has kicked off his first NRL pre-season at Concord.
'That's my goal': Tigers junior Phoenix Godinet on preparing for the NRL
Coach Benji Marshall has not shied away from blooding the club’s best teenage prospects, handing Lachlan Galvin a debut in Round 1 in 2024 and Heamasi Makasini a start in Round 27 this year - both at the age of 18.
Godinet’s Magpies teammate Christian Tupou-Moors and Balmain Tigers hooker Jared Haywood, both highly rated prospects, will also complete their first NRL pre-season.
But Godinet, who is and one of the hottest prospects in the game, is also widely viewed as the Tigers’ next blue chip talent to be rolled off the club’s Western Suburbs Magpies production line after Galvin and Makasini.
“I’m excited but I’m also a bit nervous because all the boys talk about how hard it (pre-season) is,” Godinet said.
“I just came back from a Jersey Flegg (under-21s) pre-season, yeah, and that was hard, so I’m just wondering what the NRL will be like.
“When I was eight, I wrote down that I wanted to debut when I was 18-years-old.
“Benji reckons I can debut next year. I just need to keep improving on my game, yeah, and then we’ll see what happens from there.”
These days, Godinet’s goals - which included Australian Schoolboys selection and a Jersey Flegg and NSW Cup debut - are hung on his bedroom wall in a picture frame as daily motivation.
The back rower, who turned 18 in June, ticked off every goal except for one - selection in the NSW Blues under-19s.
This year, the note scribbled as a kid will be at the top of a list of new goals ahead of the 2026 season.
“I’m still eligible for SG Ball but if I go really well in pre-season, they’ll probably take me out of SG Ball and just focus on Flegg and NSW Cup,” Godinet said.
“I’m about to set out my new goals and once they’re written, I’m gonna go hanging on my wall just like the last one.
“One of them is going to be an NRL debut, obviously that’s the one that’s been my goal since I was eight.”
BRUSHED BY THE EELS
Godinet, a Cabramatta junior from Parramatta’s nursery, did try to make his dream of playing for the Eels come true, not once but twice.
He was rejected for a spot in the club’s development squad both times.
“When I was a little bit younger, I never made the Parramatta development squad. I missed out on that,” Godinet said.
“There were a number of clubs that didn’t really want me.
After that initial knock-back, Godinet landed in the lap of the Canterbury Bulldogs - who immediately identified the youngster’s potential, and tried to lock him in on a long-term deal.
“I ended up at the Bulldogs, and they wanted to sign me for three or four years. But it just felt like too long, especially as a young player,” Godinet said.