Showing posts with label melbourne storm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label melbourne storm. Show all posts

Melbourne Storm: 2020 NRL Premiers



Cameron Smith and Craig Bellamy have combined – with almost 100 years of rugby league royalty between them – as the oldest player and coach to win a premiership in the game's history.


Rarely has that wealth of experience proven quite so definitive as their third title and ninth grand final together.


The Storm simply blew an overawed Panthers outfit off the paddock for almost an hour to lead 26-0, Penrith eventually finding their feet and their way back into it for the last stanza.


As a side with 17 straight triumphs to their name, the Panthers refused to wilt.


They found themselves up against 11 men to finish when first Jahrome Hughes (71st minute), then Brandon Smith (80th minute) was given an early breather.


Nathan Cleary even set up one last frantic, fantastic crack at going to golden point, with a superb solo effort in the final minute.


Yet as with all the Storm do, Smith, 37, marshalled his men with aplomb.


Not that they weren't nervous about it as Penrith finished fast.


"The last 10 minutes was certainly a bit helter skelter and when Jahrome went to the bin, I didn't feel comfortable then at all," Bellamy said.


Ryan Papenhuyzen was a Clive Churchill Medallist none in the 37,303-strong could argue.


But following the same lead their skipper has struck through 430 NRL outings, Melbourne were ruthless whenever given half a sniff.


If this is his last as many expect, it truly is a perfect Storm send-off.


For 123 days now, this club has lived out of home and out of state, keeping both their season and the NRL alive as their home town went through lockdown.


The graft and grit that has characterised their entire campaign, and every one of Bellamy's 61 years, was right there as Penrith first piled on the pressure from a mountain of early possession, then came at them with all guns blazing to finish.


"That's what good teams do," Smith said.


"They stay in the fight. We've done it a few times this year and that's why Penrith finished first, they're a champion team and they kept coming.


"When Jahrome went in the sin bin that was probably the point where a lot of us felt a little bit nervous about the last eight and half minutes.


"But we had the legs left in us to hold them out. The good teams find a way to finish those games, we've got a really tough, very resilient group in there."


That Melbourne led 10-0 after defending their line for five sets midway through the first half, said it all.


Ultimately, the final say came after just half an hour.


For all of Melbourne's big-game experience, it was Penrith's own marquee man Cleary with the play that told the tale of a definitive opening half.


Nigh on two decades of professionalism up against the impetuousness of a young side still on their way up.


With the Panthers pressing and already chasing that double-figure lead, Cleary rolled out a looping, loping long ball in search of vacant pastures for his outside men.


Waiting and watching was Suliasi Vunivalu. Swooping then stumbling, then striding and finally streaking away.


What could have been six points at one end was a turnaround of 12 at the other.


A 16-0 lead loomed large five seconds before halftime. Smith, as has always been his wont, duly slipped the knife in.


A similarly desperate play to Cleary's, this time from Api Koroisau, saw the ball fall from Smith's hands on Penrith's line.


Due to the Panther's dislodgement, Smith was well within his rights to fall on the football and claim the killer blow, the timing just as cruel as the tone it landed in.


Soggy scenes all day were reminiscent of the last time Penrith were present for a decider in 2003.


But the comparisons stopped there. From the outset, Melbourne were a class above.


As good as they were, Penrith provided plenty of favours, starting in the fourth minute.


Tyrone May was parachuted once more into Penrith's starting line-up, and immediately found himself the centre of attention when he needed a hole to crawl into.


With the Storm's first attacking foray a superbly slick one, Josh Addo-Carr's final pass in-field put Justin Olam over the line and the ball just six inches from it.


May's slide into defensive position, with his boot knocking the Steeden loose en route to the turf was deemed a penalty try.


Penrith's return of serve had venom to it. Only a mistimed decoy run by Stephen Crichton saw Josh Mansour unable to answer with a four-pointer.


But repeated fumbles from Viliame Kikau preceded an accidental offside penalty from the Fijian, then a late shot from James Fisher-Harris, that gave the Storm ample breathing room.


By the time they had truly spread their wings, it was 22-0 and halftime.


There was no respite afterward either.


Ryan Papenhuyzen dummied on his own 20-metre line. Beat Cleary on his outside by the 30 and was being sized up for sky blue by sideline eye Brad Fittler as he crossed the tryline.


The most dubious of late salvo tries went to Brian To'o despite Isaah Yeo running behind one of his teammates in the lead-up.


It was followed by another from Crichton, making for a 26-12 ballgame with 10 to play.


Pandemonium then ensued. First Hughes was pinged for a professional foul, taking out Kikau as he chased a kick.


Mansour got his grand final try, with a brief period of calm to follow.


Brandon Smith then joined Hughes on the sidelines as Cleary stepping past Cameron, then powering through Papenhuyzen with 11 seconds on the clock.


At 26-20, the shot at goal was declined in lieu of one last play.


"I'd love to have the game again tomorrow, that's for sure," Ivan Cleary said.


"We turned over too much possession too often, and we were trying too hard in the second half. It was hard to believe we were 22-0 at half-time.


"We were still swinging at the end of the game so I was really proud of the boys."


For all of Penrith's pluck and pride though, this game belonged to the Storm.


And none have had more influence in Melbourne than the two old stagers with almost 100 years of rugby league royalty between them.

Melbourne Storm: 2017 NRL Premiers



A formidable performance from one of the most dominant club sides of the NRL era has culminated in a deserved 34-6 Grand Final win for Melbourne on the back of starring roles from big-game players Cameron Smith, Billy Slater and Cooper Cronk.

The North Queensland Cowboys battled bravely right to the end were barely in the contest right from the outset against a Storm side that were clinical and relentless from the opening whistle in Cronk's final game in purple.

It is fitting that the final club game from that trio saw all three bring their best to the game's biggest stage, scoring or helping create four tries. They got plenty of assistance from their dominant forward pack and some moment of brilliance from exciting young stars like Josh Addo-Carr.

The score-line reflected the sheer dominance of Melbourne's performances right from Round 1 this year but did not fairly reflect the effort the Cowboys put into a contest.


The match started in horrific fashion for the Cowboys with play held up for several minutes while prop Shaun Fensom received medical attention and was taken from the field after just four minutes.

Attempting to stop a charging Jesse Bromwich along with teammate Ethan Lowe, the latter landed awkwardly on Fensom's ankle. He immediately signalled for the trainer and there was a delay of several minutes while Fensom was administered pain relief and loaded onto a medicab.

While North Queensland managed to weather the storm for the opening 20 minutes the favourites started to flex their muscle from midway through the half.

First Will Chambers received a Cowboys bat-back from an attacking bomb near Melbourne's end and offloaded to a breakaway Josh Addo-Carr who streaked 70 metres to open the scoring.

After a few more sets of dominant and a Smith grubber for a repeat set, Melbourne extended their lead when Felise Kaufusi carved past Te Maire Martin off a nice Billy Slater pass in the 28th minute.

When Antonio Winterstein charged onto a Cooper Cronk attacking grubber and fumbled it at his own line it set the stage for yet another Storm assault and this time Slater went himself, slicing through an increasingly brittle-looking Cowboys left edge defence to make it 18-0 at the break.

The Cowboys desperately needed to be first to score in the second half against the competition's best front-runners and they got some help from the Storm, who handed over five straight penalties through offside and ruck infringements to camp the Cowboys in attacking range and allow Te Maire Martin to slice through.

That was as good as it got for the Cowboys though as an unstoppable Storm outfit exploded late in similar fashion to that in which they put Brisbane to the sword a week earlier.

Bega-born lock Dale Finucane exploded onto a Smith flat ball at the line to burst over in the 64th minute; a simple error from Kane Linnett coughed the ball up to Josh Addo-Carr who offloaded to an unmarked Curtis Scott three minutes later. Addo-Carr bagged his double in the 73rd minute after some lovely lead-up work from Cronk and Slater before a beautiful long-cut-out from Tohu Harris to seal the dominant 34-6 result.

Melbourne Storm 34 (Addo-Carr 2, Kaufusi, Slater, Finucane, Scott tries; Smith 5 goals) defeated North Queensland Cowboys 6 (Martin try; Lowe goal) at ANZ Stadium. Half time: Storm 18-0. Crowd: 79,722.


The Storm are back...


Star Melbourne fullback Billy Slater steered the Storm to a 16-14 come-from-behind win over Newcastle on Sunday in their NRL clash at AAMI Park.
The victory was Melbourne's third straight and the Knights' fourth successive loss, leaving them outside the top eight.
Newcastle were well positioned for an upset - their first since 2004 on Melbourne's home turf - with a 14-10 lead at halftime thanks to a brace of tries by winger Joey Leilua.
But Ryan Hoffman and Slater combined with 11 minutes left on the clock to tie up the match before Storm skipper Cameron Smith converted to give his team the lead for the first time in the match.
NSW State of Origin star Hoffman was able to get a ball out the back of a tackle and fullback Slater stepped around his Queensland teammate Darius Boyd to score between the posts.
The Storm lacked their usual finishing polish, with gun Queensland halfback Cooper Cronk rested from the game.
His replacement Brett Finch was unable to make the same an impact with an ineffective kicking game.
The Knights, in contrast, started strongly with Leilua spinning out of a Slater tackle to cross in the fifth minute.
Slater was hampered by a knee to his thigh two minutes earlier, although he was able to run out the injury and return to his devastating best.
Newcastle halfback Tyrone Roberts converted and then added a penalty for an 8-0 lead.
The home side were able to get on the scoreboard after repeat sets took their toll on the Knights.
Smith found five-eighth Gareth Widdop, who sent the ball on to centre Maurice Blair to touch down.
But the lead was out to 10 points when Knights five-eighth Jarrod Mullen put a banana kick through which bounced straight into Leilua's arms for him to stroll across the line.
Sisa Waqa made amends late in the half when he scored at the end of a well-worked set move, with the Knights' defence caught short.
The second 40 minutes was an arm-wrestle with Slater's try the only points of the half, the Knights leaving Melbourne empty-handed again.
Craig Gower, who hadn't played in the NRL since 2007, made a successful return after cutting short his Super League contract to join the Knights this week.

Melbourne Storm: three years, rort-free


IT WAS only via a few subtle nods towards the desk calendars on Monday that the anniversary was even mentioned.
It was April 22, a day that should remain etched in the memory of Melbourne Storm players and officials who endured the darkest time in the club's short history.
But three years on the club has moved itself so far away from that shadowy period that the anniversary of the day Storm was revealed as salary cap rorters and penalised in such an unprecedented and unrepeated way went unnoticed.
Even the media, which set on Storm like a pack of hungry wolves for months afterwards, failed to note it.
Coverage of sport is a moveable feast and with more than enough current happenings to satisfy their curiosities stories of long ago very quickly fade to black.
But forgetting is easy too when the Storm has so successfully climbed out of the mire, on field and off, and emphatically silenced all the doubters who had the club falling in to the abyss.
Currently on a record-breaking winning streak that is nearly 300 days long, Storm's all-conquering football outfit, fresh from a premiership last year and a minor premiership the year before, are giving plenty of cause for celebration.
And the champagne could flow much sooner than September at headquarters, with a sale of the club to a consortium of highly credentialed businessmen now imminent.
And that's because, through Storm chief executive Ron Gauci and his team, Melbourne is closer than ever to getting the books in the black.
A profit remains the ultimate goal but Gauci said every number he recently crunched painted a glowing picture of the club, which in 2010 had a black mark on it most expected never to be erased.
"We're at record levels of everything; revenue, sponsorship, membership everything," Gauci said.
"The line dipped in 2010 but the recovery through to 2013 is more aggressive than the period before it. We've improved our bottom line by nearly 150 per cent. Our profit and loss was almost halved over that period.
"Sponsorship is up 150 per cent, membership, since 2006, has grown nearly 500 per cent. Everything is still on an upward trend too, at almost double the rate since 2010.
"The gains are quite substantial. We took a lot of pride this week in that fact not a single word was written about 2010. We don't even refer to it any more."
In sport mud is supposed to stick.
It's taken three years, plenty of wins and a lot of backroom hard work, but at Storm it has been shaken off, the dark skies have turned blue and red figures on profit and loss sheets are edging closer to being black.
The winning streak might soon come to an end on the field but as Gauci, then the new owners, continue to work on achieving "operational optimisation" Storm will continue to be winners off it. 

Rort that, South Sydney!



THE contenders threw down the challenge but Melbourne once again proved why it remains the NRL yardstick.
The Storm were resolute in their 17-10 victory over South Sydney in tonight's battle of the league's only two unbeaten teams.
Now only the Storm can boast a perfect record after six rounds, the premiers unbeaten since July last year after emerging three-tries-to-two winners in a match which lived-up to its blockbuster billing.
In their first visit to ANZ Stadium since securing the 2012 title, the Storm were directed brilliantly by halfback Cooper Cronk, who set up tries with both passes and kicks before icing the game with a field goal four minutes from fulltime.
The Rabbitohs only made two errors in the opening half but both were punished as Cronk first set up Kevin Proctor and then Mahe Fonua.
Burgess brothers Sam and George were bending the line with every run, but calls for a Billy Slater knock-on on his own line went ignored when another try loomed.Former Storm star Greg Inglis did his best to drag Souths over the with an athletic leap for his side's first try eight minutes after halftime to make it 12-6, and at that stage the home side was full of running and the 32,671-strong crowd full of voice.
A minute later the Storm were out by 10 points when Gareth Widdop beat three defenders from 10 metres out.
Some Souths heads dropped but there was still life when Andrew Everingham dived over in the corner with eight minutes to go, but this is a Storm side that just knows how to win as Cronk extended their lead beyond a converted try.
Late drama threatened when Slater was sin-binned after a try-saver on Nathan Merritt with less than two minutes remaining, but time and a relentless Storm were against the Rabbitohs.
Despite the dominant start to the season, Storm skipper Cameron Smith warned his side had yet to hit top gear.
“Being 6-0 is a pretty good spot to be in leading into all this rep footy,” Smith said.
“The good thing about the way we're going about things is we're not satisfied with the way we're playing at the moment.
“Obviously we're very pleased with the results, but we've still got our best footy ahead of us.
“You can still feel out on the field that we're a little bit off the mark with the things we want to do.”
Storm coach Craig Bellamy said he anticipated having as many as 10 players involved in next weekend's representative fixtures.
The Rabbitohs are also likely to have a heavy representation, but coach Michael Maguire said the loss to the Storm highlighted the gulf between the the premiers and the rest.
“It came down to moments in the game which the Storm have been doing for a long, long time - they take their opportunities when they arise,” Maguire said.
“We're building as a group - each week we're taking lessons as we go.”
MELBOURNE 17 (M Fonua K Proctor G Widdop tries C Smith 2 goals C Cronk field goal)SOUTH SYDNEY 10 (A Everingham G Inglis tries A Reynolds goal) at ANZ Stadium. Referee: Shayne Hayne, Alan Shortall. Crowd: 32,671.
AAP

"We'll blow the others off the ground..."



CLAIMS and counter-claims about the validity of a lopsided penalty count last night couldn't cloud the fact the Storm can't be beaten by 60 minutes of good football.
Wests Tigers took to AAMI Park with what Storm coach Craig Bellamy said was a clear plan to slow his team down and for two-thirds of the game it worked.
But when the home side finally fired up, the visitors' game plan unravelled as the premiership favourites romped home.
After falling behind twice, Melbourne rallied to secure a club-record 13th straight win, 26-12.
And Bellamy hoped the 14-7 penalty count, which cruelled the Tigers in the final 20 minutes, would sound a warning to any rivals who thought they knew the way to bring down the Storm.
"The Tigers came here to play a slow game. The rucks were as slow as we've had all year," Bellamy said. "I didn't know the (penalty) count, but we got some in the second half. Perhaps we could have got some more.
"I know everyone is going to be saying that's how you beat the Melbourne Storm.
"If that's what they want to do we have to trust the referees that if they want to slow us down in the ruck and they do have hands on the ball, we are going to get penalties.
"We are not going to change."
The feeling was the reverse in the Tigers rooms, where coach Mick Potter hinted the "adversity" his team had to overcome wasn't as much about what Melbourne was doing with the football.
"The influence people have over other people to cause results, we just couldn't withstand that pressure," he said.
"There is a lot of influence from senior guys and I just don't think we get the rub of the green sometimes. Different people have different influences. It does effect what happens out there."
or all the bluster about penalties, Potter conceded his men had to learn to play for 80 minutes, having twice secured six-point leads on Melbourne.
In the first half especially the Tigers were more energetic and more efficient.
But that didn't result in any more than a single first-half try, which was matched by Melbourne just before half-time.
A blast from Bellamy at half-time didn't spark Melbourne straight away and again the Tigers scored first as they put the Storm under pressure with kicks.
While it took 20 minutes for Bellamy's men to fully respond, when they did they were hard to stop.
Down 12-6 and on the back foot with an hour gone, Melbourne seized on a penalty against former Storm boy Adam Blair.
The Tigers prop was put on report for pulling the leg of Kevin Proctor, and from the next play Melbourne worked their best move of the night for Mahe Fonua to score in the left corner.
Scores were level and from the restart Melbourne worked the ball to halfway before an unforgivable miss by Tigers winger James Tedesco allowed Storm centre Will Chambers into space.
All he had to do was to pass left and Cooper Cronk took the ball to score, and put Storm up for the first time.
Returning winger Sisa Waqa put the icing on the cake with a double-pump effort that confounded Tedesco, and the Fijian flyer raced 30m to put the game out of the Tigers' reach.
The Storm now play South Sydney in a top-of-the-table clash at ANZ Stadium on Saturday night.
MELBOURNE 26 (C Cronk M Fonua S Vave S Waqa tries C Smith 4 G Widdop goals) bt WESTS TIGERS 12 (B Marshall J Tedesco tries B Anasta 2 goals) at AAMI Park. Referee: Jason Robinson, Adam Gee. Crowd: 18,866.



Melbourne Storm - 2012 NRL Premiers



MELBOURNE 14 (R Hoffman J O'Neill B Slater tries C Smith goal) bt BULLDOGS 4 (S Perrett try) at ANZ Stadium. Referee: Tony Archer, Ben Cummins. Crowd: 82,976.

FINALLY, Melbourne have won a premiership no-one can question. The Storm can party like they did in 1999.

Two years after the salary-cap scandal saw them stripped of their 2007 and 2009 premierships, the Storm clinched a title on bona fide terms with a 14-4 defeat of Canterbury in a grand final epic at ANZ Stadium.

Match centre: Game details and stats, plus vote for man of the match

But the Storm's first legitimate title win in 13 years before 82,976 fans was riven with drama after Bulldogs prop James Graham was reported for sensationally biting the ear of Melbourne fullback Billy Slater.

In one of the most vicious acts in grand-final history, TV replays showed Graham attack Slater after he collided with Sam Perrett as the Bulldogs winger scored in the 26th minute, sparking an all-in brawl.

Taste of defeat: More on Graham's bite

When the dust settled, Slater formalised the biting allegation with referee Tony Archer, who then told Graham and Bulldogs skipper Michael Ennis: "Can you see the blood on his (Slater's) ear?"

The British-born bookend faces a lengthy ban, but the ice-cool Storm overcame the saga to bury the Bulldogs and give master coach Craig Bellamy his first untainted premiership.

"What do you say at moments like this?" said Storm skipper Cameron Smith.

"There was a part of the season where people a lot of people were writing us off, but we stuck strong. We just got back to our basics at training and on the field and it happened.

"It happened for us tonight and we played against a quality opposition. We got the job done.

"I've been asked a few times if we won would this be sweeter than the others. There is a small spot that says yes."

"We were gutted a few years ago, morale wasn't at its highest, but we built this club back up and made it count."

A Bulldogs title would have turned Belmore into Crazy Town. Instead, the Storm were too hungry and too clinical, driven to victory by a magnificent performance from Cooper Cronk, who won the Clive Churchill Medal.

Cronk set up tries for Slater (32nd minute) and Justin O'Neill (39th minute) to give his side a 14-4 half-time lead - and the Storm hung on in the second stanza to break the Bulldogs' hearts.

The match began in glorious conditions, a far cry from the partly moist and overcast conditions that greeted the Manly-Warriors NRL decider 12 months previous.

The death-or-glory clash started at a high-octane pace and it took just five minutes for Bulldogs centre Krisnan Inu to thump Cronk. The Storm halfback hit the turf like a sack of spuds. Boom. Crash. Pachang. It was one of the hits of the NRL season.

Undeterred, the Storm were on the board within 60 seconds, Ryan Hoffman reaching out to score after a scintillating ball from Gareth Widdop to give the visitors a 4-0 lead.

After a frenetic opening, Graham turned the melodrama up a notch when he chomped hard on Slater's ear amid a flurry of pushes and punches. But nothing would deter the Storm. The juggernaut simply rolled on.

Five minutes later, Slater exacted revenge, slicing through after a sublime double-pump from Cronk. And when O'Neill soared high to score from a Cronk cross-kick 60 seconds before half-time to give his side a 14-4 lead, the Storm had one hand on the trophy.

They weren't about to let go.

"Lost for words. Gutted," said Michael Ennis.

"It’s been such an enjoyable year and to go out like this is just devastating.

"Take the emotion out of it, I’m just so proud of our boys and where they’ve come from. They can really hold their heads up high.

"They really turned the corner at this club and we’re going to be around for a few more years yet.

"Our defensive was brilliant in the first half, but there were too many unforced errors that just allowed a good side like Melbourne into the game.

"I thought 10 points at half-time was a credit to our defence and honestly I thought we were a chance to come back there.

"Full credit to Melbourne. They’re a good side and they deserve it."