2026 Deep Dive 7. What has happened to our defensive resolve?
I want to move past the generic "they didn’t show up" or "they lack heart" rants. Let's look at the mechanics of our edge defence. Recently it hasn’t just leaked. It has, at times, capitulated.
NRL defence is a game of microscopic trust. We started the season on a high defensively, but major issues have been exposed in our “edge connection
” and the split-second decisions our outside backs are making under pressure once injuries hit.
In our defensive system, the edge is supposed to move like a rubber band. The halves and back-rowers form a "hinge"; their job is to push hard off the line to freeze the ball-player, and then lock with the centre to slide outward as a single, unbreakable wall.
Due to a combination of inexperience and a lack of NRL quality depth we have not hinged the rubber band and have suffered from a combination of ball watching and a loss of physical and spatial connection with the outside backs. It is dead easy to pick; panic as players shoot out of the line un-necessarily, players not following the decisions of the inside player (even if they are wrong) creating yawning gaps instead of pushing the play to the outside to allow the scramble defence to compensate for the mis-read.
When the inside connection fails, it leaves the outside backs stranded. This causes two distinct mechanical failures on the fringes:
- The Centre Panic (Inward Jam): A centre's chief role is to mirror his opponent and hold his line until the ball is committed. Seeing a 3-on-2 overlap brewing in open space, our inexperienced players commit the cardinal sin of edge defence: jamming in on the lead runner before the playmaker releases the ball. At NRL level playmakers hold the pass or double pump waiting for the centre to commit, before making the pass decision. If the centre decides to jam – his winger needs to jam also; otherwise he provides an open passage to the try line for the opposition centre.
- The Winger’s No-Man's Land: In good structure, if the centre jams, the winger should also jam, providing only one opportunity for the attackers; to go around he defence. This is where the sideline comes into play as the extra defender and the inside pressure forces them to cut back inside or risk being bundled into touch.
Makasini has all the physical tools to be a great FG centre, but his play so far has exposed the technical gap between an outstanding junior talent and first-grade structures. Similar can be said for LL and Tino. They all suffer from the same inexperience and there are a couple of tell-tale signs:
- The 'Eye-Magnet'. These three juniors constantly have their eyes glued to the inside runners. When an opposing team runs a block-sweep shape, they tend to bite inward with their shoulders turned flat toward the ball. This stops their lateral footwork dead, preventing them form making adjustments quickly and losing the flexibility of the rubber band.
- Over-reliance on Physical Recovery: In the juniors, they could afford to make an incorrect read because their raw speed allowed them to chase down a ball-carrier. In first grade, they are being punished instantly.
Good edge defence requires the centre to be the 'brain' and the winger to be the 'muscle'. Right now, we tend to be making isolated decisions rather than coordinated team reads. When Makasini jams, it is a solo choice that catches his outside winger off guard. This can also be said, to a lesser extent, for Madden in his role.
This is only part of the problem though. If the junior players are struggling to execute the defensive plan is the problem something we can overcome with training, is it a skill deficiency in the system or the way the system is applied across the grades. Surely, if we have the same system in all of our grades we should not see this dysfunctionality (next man up).
The big questions:
- Is this a Benji System Problem (complex system), an Execution Problem, a Club System Problem (inconsistent application across the grades) or are we simply short of experience (depth)? In short: are we asking our outside backs to play a complex spatial reading game that they just don't have the first-grade experience to pull off yet?
- Should we move to a simpler, more aggressive block/jam (up and in) defence that is easier for NSW Cup depth players to execute when injuries hit?
I have my thoughts. What are yours?