15.6 C
New York
Tuesday, May 21, 2024
No menu items!

Joey Manu is twice as destructive at fullback. So what do the Sydney Roosters do about it?

Excluding a 22-minute stint against the Bulldogs, when his game was cut short by a heavy concussion, Tedesco’s numbers this year reflect a return to the sterling form that began in the back half of 2023.

Still, Robinson gets to wrestle with the same question the Kiwis once did because there’s just no denying it – Manu is twice as dangerous when he’s roaming the paddock at fullback than he is at centre.

So how do the Roosters best work with and around him while keeping him at centre?

“He’s a completely different fullback to Teddy, and it suited them [the Roosters in their clash with Newcastle]; they played out of dummy half with that power game,” Johns said, with Manu and Brandon Smith’s influence last Thursday looming large in the memory, especially in Victor Radley’s first-half try.

“Teddy can do that, too, but you can construct sets where you have two fullbacks around the ruck and play through the middle. Manu’s a bit like Stephen Crichton at Canterbury. He’s too good a player to be sitting on an edge.”

Robinson had little interest in entertaining a clumsy question before Thursday’s clash against Melbourne that was meant to point towards getting the best out of Tedesco and Manu in the same back line.

The phrasing had his back up, weary of the criticism Tedesco has worn for 12 months.

“I think about the Australian, NSW and a premiership-winning fullback – what does he bring to the game? Watch the game,” Robinson bristled.

The Roosters have used Manu the centre as an attacking focal point more and more throughout his career. His 16 possessions a game are more than most NRL centres.

The 20-plus touches he often registers at centre these days can be more than double his involvement in 2017 and 2018. Manu has spoken previously about a roaming role, similar to Tom Trbojevic in State of Origin, because “sometimes in the centres you can go missing when it’s not your game”.

The idea of Manu doing so from the wing rather than centre was entertained by Bryan Fletcher and Matty Johns on SEN radio this week. It is unlikely to say the least, but not without merit.

Flitting in and out of attacking structure from the wing has less impact on a team’s structure, and Robinson swapped Anthony Minichiello and Roger Tuivasa-Sheck between the roles when he first took charge of the club.

How the Roosters bring Manu into every game is a tactical conundrum their 16 rivals would love to have, and one Robinson spoke about with Manu’s move to Japanese rugby in 2025 and 2026 now confirmed.

Loading

“It’s late to go and make a big splash in the market,” was his summation of the free agency landscape, where Zac Lomax is off to Parramatta and Penrith’s Sunia Turuva shapes as the best off-contract outside back. Brisbane’s Kotoni Staggs and Selwyn Cobbo lead the next crop available after 2025.

Internally, the club has high hopes for Queensland under-19s centre Robert Toia, while Billy Smith remains luckless with injury.

“But you can’t downplay losing Joey Manu,” Robinson said.

“There’s not anyone who can just walk in and do that role. I’m not sure whether he’ll be back here or not. I’d like him to be … but there’s definitely nothing there about him returning.

“Otherwise, I’d be a little bit happier right now.”

Sports news, results and expert commentary. Sign up for our Sport newsletter.

NRL is Live and Free on Channel 9 & 9Now

Source link

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Articles