News Million Dollar Man: Can Tevita Pangai Jr finally put it all together at the Bulldogs? (Roar Article)

djdeep4172

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Over the coming weeks, we will have a look at each club’s million-dollar man – the player broadly acknowledged to be taking up the largest individual chunk of the salary cap (even if they aren’t actually quite grossing seven figures).

We’ll run the rule over how they fared in 2021 and put forward some targets they likely need to achieve for 2022 to be considered a personal success.

At this point it’s worth noting a few things: firstly, NRL salaries aren’t published (don’t even get me started), so this is going to be based on what players are reported to be earning.

Secondly, this is about the players who make the most money – so, even though Matt Burton might be the man Dogs fans are most hanging out to see suit up, we won’t be talking about him (at least, not this year).

Lastly, in cases where two or more top earners are on similar coin, I’ll make an editorial choice based on the highly mathematical formula of ‘who is the more interesting yarn’.

We will work our way up from 16th place on last year’s ladder and thus start with one of Burton’s new teammates at the Bulldogs.

And the biggest earner at the Dogs is coming off an unprecedented 2021.

Tevita Pangai Junior
What a wild 2021 it was for TPJ.

One of the crop of amazing young forwards to have come through the Brisbane system in recent years, issues off the field and inconsistency on it ultimately saw Pangai released from Red Hill last July.

It came just hours after the announcement Pangai was heading to Belmore, with the Broncos apparently deciding there was no point continuing to pay his hefty salary since they wouldn’t be making the finals regardless of how well he played.

But the Bulldogs’ freshly installed general manager, Phil Gould, apparently reached the same conclusion regarding Pangai’s value for 2021 and so rather than join the Dogs for the back-end of the year, the Tongan international headed over to the Panthers for a disco shift that both parties hoped would end in grand final glory.

However, through no fault of his own, Pangai endured a fractured time with the eventual premiers. He missed the first few weeks after the devastating loss of his baby daughter, then suffered a knee injury in Penrith’s preliminary final win, which ultimately ruled him out of the grand final.

All of which means he arrives at Belmore ready to wear what will be his third club jersey in less than a year and presumably in possession of a grand final ring that he’s put in his sock drawer, only to be pulled out for motivational – rather than celebratory – purposes.

Which, you would hope, is all to the benefit of Trent Barrett’s side.

Pangai is one of the most destructive forwards in the game on his day, can play in the middle or on an edge, led the comp for offloads last year, and has a decent motor for a big man.

His issue has always been a lack of discipline. His departure from the Broncos may have come about largely because of bubble breaches and bikie barbers, but it was surely exacerbated by the large chunks of time he spent on the sidelines as a result of high shots, crusher tackles and general unnecessary crap.

If he can get that garbage out of his game, he could be a pillar of Brad Fittler’s State of Origin side – which Pangai has put himself forward as eligible for – for years to come, as well as the alpha dog in a club pack that is at rock-bottom now but therefore only has one way to go.

As for the fear that an old dog can’t learn new tricks, Pangai seems older than his years due to making his debut in 2016 at the age of 20, meaning he’ll have only just turned 26 when the season begins. Essentially he’s at the age where many hotheads learn to harness their aggression and use it more effectively.

What’s more, after a number of years at the Broncos where a lack of leadership was a serious problem, he spent short but invaluable time at Penrith learning from the likes of James Fisher-Harris and Isaah Yeo – who may be of similar vintage but are far more mature – and will now line up alongside Josh Jackson, who is a total pro and now one of the game’s elder statesmen.

Give him a few encouraging words from new Dogs staffer Willie Mason – a fellow Novocastrian who could prove a worthwhile mentor – all under the watchful eye of Gus Gould, and then let Pangai rip in alongside fellow tearaway Luke Thompson (who is admittedly said to be on similar money to TPJ but, as aforementioned, isn’t as good a narrative).
It could be a terrifying site to behold, let alone face up against.

Best-case scenario
If it all goes according to the new plan, we could be talking about 2022 being the year Pangai finally put it all together, leading the Bulldogs to the cusp of the eight, making his State or Origin debut, helping his beloved Tonga to the World Cup final, and seeing his name on the Dally M Team of the Year sheet.

Worst-case scenario
If it all goes according to the old plan, we’ll be talking about 2022 being another year Pangai showed flashes of brilliance that were overshadowed by reckless hits and a basic inability to pull his head in, leading to extended time on the sidelines, with the Bulldogs ultimately happy to offload him and his hefty salary to the next club brave or dumb enough to believe they can change him.
 

Dogs Of War

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I think a change of scenery and a chance to rewrite the script will be the best thing for his career. So much drama at the Broncos the last few years, which as we saw at the Bulldogs, doesn't make the club the best place to be.
 

Yougra

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We have many players with interesting stories to unfold in 2022, TPJ is just one of them.


Always a Bulldog
Agree. So many of our players have major upsides to their game that if even half of them kick on this year we will be in for a good year
 

Baby Blues

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I think TPJ will have a great year. I have so much faith in him he’s currently in my SC lineup
 

D- voice

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Over the coming weeks, we will have a look at each club’s million-dollar man – the player broadly acknowledged to be taking up the largest individual chunk of the salary cap (even if they aren’t actually quite grossing seven figures).

We’ll run the rule over how they fared in 2021 and put forward some targets they likely need to achieve for 2022 to be considered a personal success.

At this point it’s worth noting a few things: firstly, NRL salaries aren’t published (don’t even get me started), so this is going to be based on what players are reported to be earning.

Secondly, this is about the players who make the most money – so, even though Matt Burton might be the man Dogs fans are most hanging out to see suit up, we won’t be talking about him (at least, not this year).

Lastly, in cases where two or more top earners are on similar coin, I’ll make an editorial choice based on the highly mathematical formula of ‘who is the more interesting yarn’.

We will work our way up from 16th place on last year’s ladder and thus start with one of Burton’s new teammates at the Bulldogs.

And the biggest earner at the Dogs is coming off an unprecedented 2021.

Tevita Pangai Junior
What a wild 2021 it was for TPJ.

One of the crop of amazing young forwards to have come through the Brisbane system in recent years, issues off the field and inconsistency on it ultimately saw Pangai released from Red Hill last July.

It came just hours after the announcement Pangai was heading to Belmore, with the Broncos apparently deciding there was no point continuing to pay his hefty salary since they wouldn’t be making the finals regardless of how well he played.

But the Bulldogs’ freshly installed general manager, Phil Gould, apparently reached the same conclusion regarding Pangai’s value for 2021 and so rather than join the Dogs for the back-end of the year, the Tongan international headed over to the Panthers for a disco shift that both parties hoped would end in grand final glory.

However, through no fault of his own, Pangai endured a fractured time with the eventual premiers. He missed the first few weeks after the devastating loss of his baby daughter, then suffered a knee injury in Penrith’s preliminary final win, which ultimately ruled him out of the grand final.

All of which means he arrives at Belmore ready to wear what will be his third club jersey in less than a year and presumably in possession of a grand final ring that he’s put in his sock drawer, only to be pulled out for motivational – rather than celebratory – purposes.

Which, you would hope, is all to the benefit of Trent Barrett’s side.

Pangai is one of the most destructive forwards in the game on his day, can play in the middle or on an edge, led the comp for offloads last year, and has a decent motor for a big man.

His issue has always been a lack of discipline. His departure from the Broncos may have come about largely because of bubble breaches and bikie barbers, but it was surely exacerbated by the large chunks of time he spent on the sidelines as a result of high shots, crusher tackles and general unnecessary crap.

If he can get that garbage out of his game, he could be a pillar of Brad Fittler’s State of Origin side – which Pangai has put himself forward as eligible for – for years to come, as well as the alpha dog in a club pack that is at rock-bottom now but therefore only has one way to go.

As for the fear that an old dog can’t learn new tricks, Pangai seems older than his years due to making his debut in 2016 at the age of 20, meaning he’ll have only just turned 26 when the season begins. Essentially he’s at the age where many hotheads learn to harness their aggression and use it more effectively.

What’s more, after a number of years at the Broncos where a lack of leadership was a serious problem, he spent short but invaluable time at Penrith learning from the likes of James Fisher-Harris and Isaah Yeo – who may be of similar vintage but are far more mature – and will now line up alongside Josh Jackson, who is a total pro and now one of the game’s elder statesmen.

Give him a few encouraging words from new Dogs staffer Willie Mason – a fellow Novocastrian who could prove a worthwhile mentor – all under the watchful eye of Gus Gould, and then let Pangai rip in alongside fellow tearaway Luke Thompson (who is admittedly said to be on similar money to TPJ but, as aforementioned, isn’t as good a narrative).
It could be a terrifying site to behold, let alone face up against.

Best-case scenario
If it all goes according to the new plan, we could be talking about 2022 being the year Pangai finally put it all together, leading the Bulldogs to the cusp of the eight, making his State or Origin debut, helping his beloved Tonga to the World Cup final, and seeing his name on the Dally M Team of the Year sheet.

Worst-case scenario
If it all goes according to the old plan, we’ll be talking about 2022 being another year Pangai showed flashes of brilliance that were overshadowed by reckless hits and a basic inability to pull his head in, leading to extended time on the sidelines, with the Bulldogs ultimately happy to offload him and his hefty salary to the next club brave or dumb enough to believe they can change him.
Get it right...He isn't a million dollar man.
But we are hopeful he'll become our Six Million Dollar Man...Steve Austin :tearsofjoy:
Now he is back home and fully fit !
 

H-dog

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He will be better next year when he is playing in the middle, complete waste playing in 2nd row when he is just keeping the spot warm for Kiks next year
 

Doggone1975

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I think a change of scenery and a chance to rewrite the script will be the best thing for his career. So much drama at the Broncos the last few years, which as we saw at the Bulldogs, doesn't make the club the best place to be.
I think his personal life will have a massive (hopefully positive) impact on the field
 

Doggone1975

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I think a heap of new faces helps us to bond quickly.. I also know the fox will be a morale booster... “Once you step on that field you ain’t got your mama no more. You got your brothers on the team and you got your daddy.“
 

vegny

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Watching broncos cowboys game on fox atm. I think fron couple of years ago. He waa having a big game. Outplayed taumalolo that night.

Have rated him as one of the best forwards. Got size, agression, offload skills etc. Can play in the middle or edge. Cant explain why he hasnt dominated the game more or carried broncos further. Been great in some of the games but just havent been able to put it together on a consistent basis for the whole season. Not lazy cos he normally plays with lots of agression and energy.
 

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He looked the goods fro Panthers, and will only get better.

I think we'll see either his best, or a return to his best.
 

CrittaMagic69

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He will be better next year when he is playing in the middle, complete waste playing in 2nd row when he is just keeping the spot warm for Kiks next year
Because we have no edge forwards, unfortunately that's where they're going to play him now.
 

Alan79

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The Broncos seemed to have a huge issue with attitude IMO. Team wasn't bad, but they just had a few players in the bunch that probably set a poor example. I look at guys on marquee money that were just coasting like Milford. Probably leaves some of the harder workers feeling bitter.

I hope that TPJ follows the example of some past players that went from being potentially great to being consistently great when pulling on the blue and white.
 

Benno Bulldog

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There are huge expectations on this team from a deeply disappointed and rightfully so support base. It seems the over emphasis on him TPJ being a middle or edge is so crucial. I think the greater reality is that we finally have a pack of genuine bullies with some bite. Vaughn, TPJ, Thompson, maybe Ray and Hetho getting a boost and a cast of others and more coming.
 

Doge

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Watching broncos cowboys game on fox atm. I think fron couple of years ago. He waa having a big game. Outplayed taumalolo that night.

Have rated him as one of the best forwards. Got size, agression, offload skills etc. Can play in the middle or edge. Cant explain why he hasnt dominated the game more or carried broncos further. Been great in some of the games but just havent been able to put it together on a consistent basis for the whole season. Not lazy cos he normally plays with lots of agression and energy.
That game against the Cowboys was his career highlight, since then he has only had 1 or 2 games where he has dominated.

We just need him to play consistent footy. Give him a simple role in the team and make sure he sticks to it, he looked good at Penrith when he wasn’t trying to be the main man, forcing offloads etc
 

Malla

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Oddly enough for someone who was a major signing for us this year we haven’t heard much from him or about him which I think is great for him.
I reckon he will benefit a lot from having someone like Mason on our coaching staff.
 
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