
Penrith at risk of 72-year low in NRL grudge match
Not since Western Suburbs, who went from grand final winners in 1952 to wooden spooners a year later, has an NRL premier struggled to ignite their season for as long as the four-time reigning champions.
The only exception is Melbourne in 2010 but the Storm's 2009 premiership was declared void amid salary cap breaches that barred them from accruing competition points as defending premiers.
Penrith fell back to bottom place on the ladder with last Saturday's 25-6 loss to fellow strugglers Newcastle, leaving coach Ivan Cleary to warn the Panthers they must begin realising their potential.
The playing group is focusing on a first win since adopting CommBank Stadium as their home ground this year, not their lowly ladder position.
"I'm not losing sleep over it," said winger Tom Jenkins.
"I care about winning games and winning premierships and stuff like that. But if you're too focused on that (ladder position), it's just going to make you play bad. It's that simple.
"(Cleary) also spoke about - it's seeing how far away you are from those top teams. We don't feel like we're that far away. It's about things going right and making things go right."
The Panthers' season risks slipping away amid the always disruptive State of Origin period but the club is hopeful their five representatives - Nathan Cleary, Isaah Yeo, Brian To'o, Dylan Edwards and Liam Martin - will face the Eels on Sunday.
Veteran second-rower Scott Sorensen did not feel the Panthers' situation was becoming more urgent as the season approached its halfway point.
"You want to win every week," he said.
"There might be a little bit (of urgency) there but I just think everyone's very level-headed, very grounded.
"We might be out there and the story might be that we're here on the ladder but for us, it's honestly just what's in front of us right now and that's Parramatta."
Sorensen returns from the three-game suspension he received for his shoulder charge on Nathan Brown in round eight and has been named to line up on the left edge.
"I got a little bit of time there to take a breath, reset, get some quality training in and I'm excited to get back into it this weekend," he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
3 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
NRL 2025 LIVE updates: Moses returns as Eels take on Broncos in Brisbane
Latest posts Pinned post from 7.25pm Your say – Broncos or Eels? 7.25pm Team lists: How they'll line up Brisbane Broncos 1. Reece Walsh 2. Josiah Karapani 3. Kotoni Staggs 4. Gehamat Shibasaki 5. Jesse Arthars 6. Ezra Mam 7. Adam Reynolds 8. Xavier Willison 9. Ben Hunt 10. Payne Haas 11. Brendan Piakura 12. Jordan Riki 13. Patrick Carrigan. Bench: 14. Billy Walters 15. Kobe Hetherington 16. Corey Jensen 17. Jack Gosiewski Parramatta Eels 1. Joash Papali'i 2. Zac Lomax 3. Viliami Penisini 4. Sean Russell 5. Josh Addo-Carr 6. Dean Hawkins 7. Mitchell Moses 8. J'maine Hopgood 9. Ryley Smith 10. Junior Paulo 11. Charlie Guymer 12. Jack Williams 13. Dylan Walker Bench: 14. Tallyn Da Silva 15. Luca Moretti 16. Matt Doorey 17. Sam Tuivait 7.25pm Welcome Hello and welcome to tonight's coverage from the Broncos' clash with Parramatta at Suncorp Stadium. Loading Payne Haas is back for Brisbane while Mitch Moses makes his long-awaited return for the Eels, who are searching for a turnaround after three losses on the bounce. The Broncos have won five straight and are short-priced favourites here, though Parramatta very much have an eye on the future with the Newcastle-bound Dylan Brown again left out of the team. One big part of that future is young gun Joash Papalii, who shifts from five-eighth to his favoured position of fullback to cover for the injured Isaiah Iongi.

The Age
3 hours ago
- The Age
NRL 2025 LIVE updates: Moses returns as Eels take on Broncos in Brisbane
Latest posts Pinned post from 7.25pm Your say – Broncos or Eels? 7.25pm Team lists: How they'll line up Brisbane Broncos 1. Reece Walsh 2. Josiah Karapani 3. Kotoni Staggs 4. Gehamat Shibasaki 5. Jesse Arthars 6. Ezra Mam 7. Adam Reynolds 8. Xavier Willison 9. Ben Hunt 10. Payne Haas 11. Brendan Piakura 12. Jordan Riki 13. Patrick Carrigan. Bench: 14. Billy Walters 15. Kobe Hetherington 16. Corey Jensen 17. Jack Gosiewski Parramatta Eels 1. Joash Papali'i 2. Zac Lomax 3. Viliami Penisini 4. Sean Russell 5. Josh Addo-Carr 6. Dean Hawkins 7. Mitchell Moses 8. J'maine Hopgood 9. Ryley Smith 10. Junior Paulo 11. Charlie Guymer 12. Jack Williams 13. Dylan Walker Bench: 14. Tallyn Da Silva 15. Luca Moretti 16. Matt Doorey 17. Sam Tuivait 7.25pm Welcome Hello and welcome to tonight's coverage from the Broncos' clash with Parramatta at Suncorp Stadium. Loading Payne Haas is back for Brisbane while Mitch Moses makes his long-awaited return for the Eels, who are searching for a turnaround after three losses on the bounce. The Broncos have won five straight and are short-priced favourites here, though Parramatta very much have an eye on the future with the Newcastle-bound Dylan Brown again left out of the team. One big part of that future is young gun Joash Papalii, who shifts from five-eighth to his favoured position of fullback to cover for the injured Isaiah Iongi.

Sydney Morning Herald
7 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
The NRL's representative eligibility rules are broken. Here's how to fix them
He was born in Meadowbank in Sydney's west and played junior footy for Mascot Jets. How is he any less of a New South Welshman than the others who wear the sky blue? Why can't the Sydney-born, Bronte-raised Victor Radley play for NSW if he chooses to honour his heritage and represent England instead of Australia? The Samoa-born Stephen Crichton represents NSW. The West Australia-born Kalyn Ponga dons the Maroons jersey. After all, they all fulfil the main Origin criteria, which is to have resided in NSW or QLD prior to their 13th birthday. No one wants to change that aspect of the eligibility, but the tiering system was designed for an era before the second generation of migrant families, who call Australia home but are proud of their ancestral roots, had such an impact on the game. If you go back two decades, the NSW Blues used 22 players in the 2005 State of Origin series. None of them were eligible to play for any regularly playing rugby league nation other than Australia. In this year's series, across NSW and Queensland, there were 15: Brian To'o, Stephen Crichton, Jarome Luai, Payne Haas, Spencer Leniu, Stefano Utoikamanu, Ponga, Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, Xavier Coates, Robert Toia, Valentine Holmes, Mo Fotuaika, Josh Papalii, Tino Fa'asuamaleaui and Jermiah Nanai. Everything the NRL does over the summer needs to be done through the lens of what is best for international rugby league. There will be an argument that a player must choose which country he wants to represent at a young age and be held to that nation for the remainder of his career. That model, however, is to the detriment of the international game. Take Isaiya Katoa for example. He has the cultural ties to play for Tonga, New Zealand and Australia. If he was forced to choose Australia when he entered the NRL, he would have been waiting years to get in front of the likes of Nathan Cleary, Mitchell Moses and Daly Cherry-Evans. The international game, however, would be poorer for not having Katoa represent Tonga. To avoid that situation of having a plethora of quality players on the sidelines, allegiances should be tied to World Cup cycles. At the end of the 2026 Rugby League World Cup, each player must elect who they intend to represent over the next four years culminating in the 2030 World Cup. Turn it into a television event. Have people on stage opening an envelope announcing that in 2027, Ponga will be taking his talents to New Zealand for the next four years. Give the nations an incentive to go out and find third-party agreements with prospective corporate partners looking to aid the country's hopes of convincing a player to represent their nation over others they may also be eligible for. It's the best way to try and minimise the discrepancy between the $30,000 Origin match payments and the $3000 players receive for Test matches, a move designed to make international football the pinnacle of the sport. Forcing players to stick with their country of choice also doesn't allow for father time. Petero Civoniceva was a mainstay in the Australian team for a decade, playing 45 games for the Kangaroos. It would be doing the international game a disservice to deny him the chance to represent Fiji in the latter stages of his career when he wasn't playing at a standard that warranted selection in the Australian team, all because he made a decision to represent Australia 15 years earlier. Why shouldn't Utoikamanu represent his Tongan father, his Samoan mother, his Australian-born children and his Kiwi ancestory if he chooses to do so. He just needs to wait every four years to change. Loading At the end of the World Cup, any player from Harold Matthews all the way up to the NRL needs to select who they want to represent for the next four years. It will then also provide a clear and competitive junior representative program that will allow under 17s, 19s and 21s international games for the younger players, rather than the schoolboy programs run at the moment. The legacy of the V'landys-Andrew Abdo regime in rugby league is cemented. They will be remembered for saving the game during the COVID-19 pandemic, the venture into America through the Las Vegas season openers and the expansion into Perth and Papua New Guinea. Now they could help transform rugby league into a genuine global sport by overhauling the outdated rules.