‘Difficult to take': Tigers CEO slams ‘crap' reports, praises Benji for taking on ‘unenviable task'
Richardson also admitted that the exit of Lachlan Galvin 'hurt' both him and Marshall, and he explained the reasons behind letting young gun Tallyn Da Silva leave early.
The Tigers ended a six-game losing streak on Sunday without three of their most important players in Jarome Luai, Api Koroisau and Jahream Bula.
The 30-28 win came after another week of headlines surrounding the Tigers, including a story that alleged Adam Doueihi got into a fiery exchange with Marshall at training.
There were also claims that Richardson wanted to bring in former Dragons coach Paul McGregor as an assistant, but Marshall didn't allow it.
Marshall hit back at the reports in his post-game press conference and on Monday night Richardson backed his coach up while appearing on NRL 360.
'I just think the players stood up and said to the world that this crap about Benji is crap. You don't play like that with all the players we had out yesterday without having a real commitment to the coach,' he said.
'The articles written earlier in the week, I understand journalism, clickbait and all the rest of it but agenda-driven journalism is not true.
'The lies that were written in that article were very difficult for Benji to take.
'The players particularly knew it wasn't true, Adam Doueihi knew it wasn't true. I've never even met Paul McGregor so how I was even going to get him as a coach I don't know.
'At the end of the day, it was a statement by the players and how they feel about Benji.'
The Tigers have claimed three-straight wooden spoons — two of which have been under Marshall — but Richardson believes the 2005 premiership-winner is trading in the right direction.
He also praised Marshall for showing the courage to take on the 'unenviable task' of turning the Tigers around.
'Everybody in the press was bagging the Tigers for the last three or four years (saying) 'how terrible they were' and 'they weren't getting any better',' Richardson said.
'He's taken on the job that not many people would've ever taken on. He's taken it on without coaching before and he took it on because in a lot of ways they gave him the blaze of it because he tried to give them some face in the marketplace.
'Then all of a sudden the Tim Sheens stuff happened and he inherited the side. He inherited a tough roster, which I believe there was only 22 of the 36 players could play NRL. So he had no depth work with, we ran last in reserve grade.
'He's taken on that challenge and worked forward. This year we've gone in with the changes we can make and he's got better and better.
'He will be the first to say he was stunned when he went in there but he learns every day. You can't learn if you don't want to learn, you can't learn if you're not intelligent.
'He's intelligent and he's there for one reason and one reason only. I can assure it's not about the money, it's about the want to make Wests Tigers successful again.
'He's taken on an unenviable task and I think he's done a great job.'
The Tigers' roster management has been criticised of late following the exits of Galvin and most recently Tallyn Da Silva.
Galvin was a week-in, week-out starter but wanted out of the Tigers and made the move to the Bulldogs around a month ago.
Da Silva hasn't been able to nail down his role in the 17 and agitated once the club indicated they were going to re-sign co-captain and star hooker Api Koroisau.
That's why Richardson said their situations were 'very different.'
'Lachie just didn't want to be there,' he explained.
'He told us up front that he didn't want to be there and didn't want to be involved with Benji as a coach and he wanted to move on.
'He had to make a decision and then we had to make a decision after that.
'It hurt Benji and it hurt me too because I never want to lose a junior and I watched the tapes before I went there and I could see what a player he was and that we could build the club around him.
'And we did, we named him straight away at five-eighth in the first grade side — no one had ever heard of him.
'He's got a way of looking at things... I hope he's successful and I think he will be successful, he's a good player. We had to make a call on what was best for the club and the squad... we had to move on.
'The other one was different. It was a young kid who had made it clear to us that he wanted to be there. I went and saw his parents two weeks before this happened and they said 'if Api signs we want him to be able to move on'.'
Richardson then explained that when he approached the Knights about getting Kai Pearce-Paul to the club early they suggested a player swap involving Tallyn Da Silva for the rest of this year.
However the Knights then decided they wanted to sign Da Silva longer-term, so the Tigers decided to let him go to market immediately. The Eels ended up winning the race for Da Silva though and the 20-year-old made a mid-season move.
Koroisau is yet to put pen to paper on the new deal that will lock him in beyond 2026, however Richardson revealed the club 'accelerated the process' a fortnight ago and it's close to being signed.
'We've chosen his loyalty and leadership,' he said when explaining why the Tigers are investing in the 32-year-old.
'We don't have a lot of senior leadership and we felt that going forward that Api has done the right thing for the club. And more importantly he's still an outstanding player.'
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News.com.au
6 hours ago
- News.com.au
Broncos hit with injuries, Ezra Mam report in belting of the hapless Rabbitohs
The Broncos thrashed the Rabbitohs 60-14 on the back of a Reece Walsh masterclass for their highest score in 14 years, but Xavier Willison suffered a broken arm at Suncorp Stadium. Payne Haas was also ruled out pre-match due to an infection, while Ezra Mam was placed on report to tarnish an otherwise stellar night for the home side. Walsh had four try assists and a try, while Kotoni Staggs, Deine Mariner and Ezra Mam grabbed doubles in the 10 tries to two rout. Staggs put Selwyn Cobbo through a hole before he found Mam who passed back and forth to Walsh to race away and score and give the Broncos the lead. Mam was placed on report for high contact on Souths fullback Jye Gray. Adam Reynolds put the ball on a dime for Jack Gosiewski to dive on a grubber to score the Broncos' second. Lewis Dodd put up a pinpoint cross-field kick for Bayleigh Bentley-Hape to produce a brilliant catch to score and get Souths on the board. Walsh put Staggs through a hole as the Broncos scored a dagger just before the break. However Tallis Duncan charged over on the stroke of half-time, but Souths' second missed goal of the night made it 18-8 at the interval. A costly error from Jacob Host allowed Cobbo to pounce and race away to score a 50-metre try against the run of play. In a big blow for the Broncos prop Willison suffered a suspected broken forearm. Walsh produced some magic quick hands to put Mariner over for another try as the Broncos looked to run away with it. Ben Talty charged over from close range off a pass from Billy Walters as the Broncos threatened a cricket score. Mariner finished off a slick Broncos raid to dive over in the corner for his second as the Broncos extended their lead. Mariner turned provider to put Staggs over for his double as the Broncos pushed towards a half century. Mam sliced through a gaping hole to score a double of his own as the Broncos passed 50. Lachlan Hubner scored a consolation try for Souths after Ashton Ward saved a try at the other end with a try-saving tackle on Jordan Riki. Patrick Carrigan put Walsh over for a late try to cap a big win for the Broncos in style on another sad night for the Rabbitohs. Walsh came bounced back from one of his worst performances of the season to produce one of his best in the thrashing of the Rabbitohs. Walsh's run metres were down with just 63 from eight runs, but everything he touched turned to gold in a masterclass display. Walsh finished with four tackle busts, an offload, two linebreaks, four linebreak assists and four try assists to go with the final try of the night. Mam was also brilliant with 209 run metres, four tackle busts, two linebreaks and a classy double in a superb display. With Walsh and Mam in their team and firing the Broncos will be very hard to beat in the finals and they could push into the top four after improving their points differential and the Warriors lost. But Haas had to go to hospital and be put on an IV drip due to a skin infection, while Willison's injury is another headache for Michael Maguire.


The Advertiser
7 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Dolphins overcome loss of star centre to take thriller
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Starting round 22 in eighth spot and chasing a maiden finals berth, it helps the Dolphins keep Manly and the Sydney Roosters at bay. The win was all the more remarkable with strike centre Herbie Farnworth assisted from the field with a hamstring injury. The England international, who has been the Dolphins' most consistent performer in 2025, opened the scoring in the fourth minute, crossing for his 12th try of season. But tragedy struck soon after when the 25-year-old made a break and was charging downfield, only to crash to the turf clutching at his hamstring. Initial reports from the Dolphins were that Farnworth was looking at four to six weeks on the sidelines, with scans booked back in Brisbane. The Dolphins had only got playmaker Kodi Nikorima back for the clash with the fourth-placed Warriors after five weeks on the sidelines with his own hamstring injury. 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Daring Dolphins skipper Isaiya Katoa said he believed they had to attack to roll the dice. "I thought we were attacking really well, we just needed to give ourselves an opportunity to go down there and play some footy," the halfback said. "I was definitely confident that we were playing good enough and I was confident in the attack and being able to score a try to win the game." Starting round 22 in eighth spot and chasing a maiden finals berth, it helps the Dolphins keep Manly and the Sydney Roosters at bay. The win was all the more remarkable with strike centre Herbie Farnworth assisted from the field with a hamstring injury. The England international, who has been the Dolphins' most consistent performer in 2025, opened the scoring in the fourth minute, crossing for his 12th try of season. But tragedy struck soon after when the 25-year-old made a break and was charging downfield, only to crash to the turf clutching at his hamstring. Initial reports from the Dolphins were that Farnworth was looking at four to six weeks on the sidelines, with scans booked back in Brisbane. The Dolphins had only got playmaker Kodi Nikorima back for the clash with the fourth-placed Warriors after five weeks on the sidelines with his own hamstring injury. Despite missing key trio Chanel Harris-Tavita, James Fisher-Harris and Wayde Egan, the Warriors looked like they had bounced back to form after their shock loss to battling Gold Coast. Hard-running winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak crossed twice in the first half although the Warriors trailed 16-12 at halftime, with Marshall-King and Oryn Keeley also getting on the board for the visitors. The home side took the lead in the 60th minute when second-rower Leka Halasima leapt high to take a Tanah Boyd bomb and dived across the line for a converted try. Nikorima blew a chance to take the lead with seven minutes remaining when he knocked on an Katoa grubber in the in-goal. 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But they earned a penalty 35 metres out and opted against going for a score-levelling kick, instead chasing a match-winning try. It paid off, scoring on the final tackle, with Jeremy Marshall-King sending a long ball out for winger Jamayne Isaako to break the hearts of the Warriors. Daring Dolphins skipper Isaiya Katoa said he believed they had to attack to roll the dice. "I thought we were attacking really well, we just needed to give ourselves an opportunity to go down there and play some footy," the halfback said. "I was definitely confident that we were playing good enough and I was confident in the attack and being able to score a try to win the game." Starting round 22 in eighth spot and chasing a maiden finals berth, it helps the Dolphins keep Manly and the Sydney Roosters at bay. The win was all the more remarkable with strike centre Herbie Farnworth assisted from the field with a hamstring injury. The England international, who has been the Dolphins' most consistent performer in 2025, opened the scoring in the fourth minute, crossing for his 12th try of season. But tragedy struck soon after when the 25-year-old made a break and was charging downfield, only to crash to the turf clutching at his hamstring. Initial reports from the Dolphins were that Farnworth was looking at four to six weeks on the sidelines, with scans booked back in Brisbane. The Dolphins had only got playmaker Kodi Nikorima back for the clash with the fourth-placed Warriors after five weeks on the sidelines with his own hamstring injury. Despite missing key trio Chanel Harris-Tavita, James Fisher-Harris and Wayde Egan, the Warriors looked like they had bounced back to form after their shock loss to battling Gold Coast. 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"No-one is going to lie, you get your hopes up ... and then it gets taken away from you and that's hard, but we've got to move on."

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
‘S**t show': Aussie Mollie O'Callaghan falls just short of passing Thorpedo
Thorpedo, your record has survived to see another day. Mollie O'Callaghan had a chance to surpass the legendary Ian Thorpe and stand alone at the very top of the country's World Championship swimming history on Friday night. Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. But the 21-year-old fell agonisingly short, grabbing silver in the 100m freestyle final in a time of 52.67 seconds, just 0.12 seconds behind Dutchwoman Marrit Steenbergen. After already winning three gold medals this week, including the 200m freestyle and then the 4x200m freestyle relay just 24 hours earlier, O'Callaghan admitted she was tired after the race and pointed to her schedule compared to her 100m competitors. Watch the 100m freestyle final in the video player above 'I'm tired,' she said right after the swim. 'I'm not going to lie, last night was a big night. 'None of those girls did what I did last night. 'I'm happy to walk away with a medal. Honestly I always want to win, but to get on the podium after such a s**t show of a year, I'm pretty happy. 'And it just shows the strength that I have in the book. I've barely done any training for this.' O'Callaghan came into Friday night's final level with Thorpe on 11 World Championship gold medals, one ahead of another great in Grant Hackett. After finishing fourth in the two-lap sprint at the 2024 Paris Olympics, the 21-year-old O'Callaghan was keen for redemption in Singapore. After making the turn in fourth, O'Callaghan lifted but couldn't quite overhaul Steenbergen. Prior to the race, Thorpe himself was hoping O'Callaghan would move one gold medal clear of his record. 'I'd be more than happy to see it go tonight,' he said on Channel 9. 'Mollie O'Callaghan is an incredible talent. It's gone a little bit under the radar but I'm really happy for her.' It wasn't quite to be on Friday night, but the youngster still has plenty more opportunities to pass Thorpe's mark and set a record way out all by herself. It's been an incredible week for the Queenslander, who backed up her 200m Olympic title by blowing her rivals away over the final 50m of the race on Wednesday night. O'Callaghan powered away after the final turn and touched the wall in a time of 1:53.48 to edge out China's Bingjie Li (1:54.52) and America's Claire Weinstein (1:54.67). Then in Thursday's relay, Channel 9 commentators noticed O'Callaghan could barely keep her feet after exiting the pool and celebrating with teammates Lani Pallister, Jamie Perkins and Brittany Castelluzzo. They finished in a time of 7:39.35, ahead of USA in 7:40.01 and China (7:42.99) in third. O'Callaghan's gutsy effort came just 90 minutes after she secured her spot in the 100m freestyle final in winning her semi-final. 'It was pretty rough backing it up after the 100 free … you can't really take it easy in the 100 free,' O'Callaghan said. 'I do it for the team, for the country. I know these girls put their whole work into this. 'It's a dream to be part of this team and I did it for these girls.' She started favourite for the 100m freestyle final, but walked away with silver as Thorpe's name remained in equal first for now.