What a difference a halfback makes

bradtalo

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In 2021, Canterbury-Bankstown and North Queensland were below average. The Dogs managed just three wins and the Cows seven, in seasons that tested their fans’ resolve.
The Bulldogs appeared to be at the back end of a three-season jettisoning of deadweight that would directly lead to the arrival of a new wave of signings in 2022. Along with the return of Phil Gould, the freed up finances and names like Matt Dufty, Paul Vaughan, Josh Addo-Carr and Matt Burton gave fans of the blue and white great hope that would surely see an end to recent Bulldog suffering.
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The Cowboys’ situation was a little different, with a young and developing 2021 squad blessed with talent yet lacking the direction required to turn it into a serious top-eight contender. The Paul Green era had brought the highs and nothing better than a 13th-placed finish between 2018 and 2020.
When Todd Payton assumed control of the team in 2021, the errs had been firmly ingrained in terms of recruitment and retention and the 2015 NRL champions had bottomed out in every sense.
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Thus, both clubs required an injection heading into this season.
Perhaps it was ideas, talent, support staff and coaching nous that was required, yet after three weeks of the 2022 NRL campaign it appears that the solution to the issues faced by both clubs may well have been answered in a manner far simpler than many would have expected.
The Dogs recruited in numbers.

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Gould aside, an entire new back line was employed, forwards added to provide extra grunt and a handful of young and still unproven men were brought into the club in the hope they would become the next generation of Canterbury stars in a few years’ time.
It all looked compellingly positive and promising on the outside and the potential for long-term Bulldog improvement under Trent Barrett does appear possible.
Bulldogs coach Trent Barrett looks on

(Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)
However, after three rounds of the NRL premiership, the Bulldogs face the same issues of recent seasons, with just 28 points scored across the opening three rounds of the competition and a lone win, ironically against the Cowboys, to show for all the investment and change that has taken place.

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At the heart of the Bulldogs’ continued inability to seize opportunity and score points when afforded the field position to do so, is the absence of a controlling and dominant number seven.
Jake Averillo set out to make that position his own over the opening fortnight of the season, yet late in the week leading into the clash against the Sea Eagles in Round 3, Barrett made a stunning change and reverted to a Brandon Wakeham/Burton partnership in the halves, off the back of Wakeham’s stunning performances in the lower tier.
Ultimately, the change did little to improve the fortunes of the team and with two men seemingly in front of him, Kyle Flanagan now seems to be in something of a limbo, as the third halfback option in a club desperate to find someone capable of steering a rudderless attack in scoring situations.


North Queensland’s recruitment during the off-season was less prolific. Peta Hiku is a solid signing and Jamayne Taunoa-Brown has immense upside, yet the acquisition of Chad Townsend already has signs of master stroke written all over it.
As the Bulldogs signed flashy backs and the odd fire-brand in the forwards, the Cowboys signed what every side requires; a steady-headed, skilled and composed halfback.
Take a look back through the NRL championship teams over the last four decades and find me a poor halfback. There isn’t one.
And as heavily invested as the Bulldogs may be in their highly skilled and potentially flashy new back line, after three weeks of the season, the Cowboys appear to have improved far more thanks to the signing of a man capable of settling the team and controlling the tempo of games.

With Valentine Holmes rampant and Tom Dearden causing all sorts of damage against the Broncos on Sunday afternoon, it would have been easy to look past the foundational influence Townsend had on the contest.
Tom Dearden of the Cowboys runs the ball

(Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)
The 2016 premiership winner with the Sharks allowed Dearden his own space, never missed a tackle across the 80 minutes, kicked the ball 19 times for 632 metres and forced two drop-outs. His passing was mostly impeccable and the balance he provided to the Cowboy’s attack pivotal in the thrashing they handed to their southern Queensland rivals.
At 31, Townsend will never win the Dally M Medal, nor many accolades from those looking at individual achievement above the more important and often quiet contributions made that result in team success.
The Bulldogs have a host of fresh talent on board and look to be improving, yet still have no solution at the scrum base. After three weeks of play, North Queensland sit second on the ladder and are probably a little unlucky not to be on the top rung.
Chad Townsend has been a key contributor to that early season success and clear evidence as to just how important a controlling half-back is and forever will be in rugby league.
https://www.theroar.com.au/2022/03/29/what-a-difference-a-halfback-makes/#comments-section
 

B-Train

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So they're saying we should have paid 800k for Chad Townsend?

People are blowing their loads way too much over the Cowboys. They've beaten Canberra who have been shit and the Broncos who are improved but are still a bottom 8 team. And they lost to us, another likely bottom 8 team.

I'll wait til later in the year before I give the Cowboys a ticker tape parade. Townsend is a solid organising half but he's barely worth a third of what he's on and the Cowboys will regret that contract soon enough.
 

JackDog

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What the Cows needed was an experienced half to control all of the talent they already have. They won't win the premiership because, for one thing, the Storm and Souths have almost complete rep spines whilst Pennies/Eels/Beagles/Rorters are close behind that.

As we all know, the Dogs needed almost everything replaced. Backline, forward pack, spine. Can you replace all of that in the first year free of cap debt (for lack of a better word)? No. Should we have bought Townsend instead of Tevita? Maybe, lets see. My gut feel at the moment is Townsend would've struggled with our side more than he will with the Cows.

Lets wait until later in the year and see how these "experienced halves" are fairing. Pearce was meant to be all that for the Knights, between bad behaviour, bad attitude and injury, I reckon they'll get more out of the halves they have now than they ever did out of Pearce.
 

D- voice

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In 2021, Canterbury-Bankstown and North Queensland were below average. The Dogs managed just three wins and the Cows seven, in seasons that tested their fans’ resolve.
The Bulldogs appeared to be at the back end of a three-season jettisoning of deadweight that would directly lead to the arrival of a new wave of signings in 2022. Along with the return of Phil Gould, the freed up finances and names like Matt Dufty, Paul Vaughan, Josh Addo-Carr and Matt Burton gave fans of the blue and white great hope that would surely see an end to recent Bulldog suffering.
FacebookTwitterRedditEmail
Share
The Cowboys’ situation was a little different, with a young and developing 2021 squad blessed with talent yet lacking the direction required to turn it into a serious top-eight contender. The Paul Green era had brought the highs and nothing better than a 13th-placed finish between 2018 and 2020.
When Todd Payton assumed control of the team in 2021, the errs had been firmly ingrained in terms of recruitment and retention and the 2015 NRL champions had bottomed out in every sense.
Sports opinion delivered daily


Advertisement

Thus, both clubs required an injection heading into this season.
Perhaps it was ideas, talent, support staff and coaching nous that was required, yet after three weeks of the 2022 NRL campaign it appears that the solution to the issues faced by both clubs may well have been answered in a manner far simpler than many would have expected.
The Dogs recruited in numbers.

Advertisement
Gould aside, an entire new back line was employed, forwards added to provide extra grunt and a handful of young and still unproven men were brought into the club in the hope they would become the next generation of Canterbury stars in a few years’ time.
It all looked compellingly positive and promising on the outside and the potential for long-term Bulldog improvement under Trent Barrett does appear possible.
Bulldogs coach Trent Barrett looks on

(Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)
However, after three rounds of the NRL premiership, the Bulldogs face the same issues of recent seasons, with just 28 points scored across the opening three rounds of the competition and a lone win, ironically against the Cowboys, to show for all the investment and change that has taken place.

Advertisement
At the heart of the Bulldogs’ continued inability to seize opportunity and score points when afforded the field position to do so, is the absence of a controlling and dominant number seven.
Jake Averillo set out to make that position his own over the opening fortnight of the season, yet late in the week leading into the clash against the Sea Eagles in Round 3, Barrett made a stunning change and reverted to a Brandon Wakeham/Burton partnership in the halves, off the back of Wakeham’s stunning performances in the lower tier.
Ultimately, the change did little to improve the fortunes of the team and with two men seemingly in front of him, Kyle Flanagan now seems to be in something of a limbo, as the third halfback option in a club desperate to find someone capable of steering a rudderless attack in scoring situations.
:sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping:

North Queensland’s recruitment during the off-season was less prolific. Peta Hiku is a solid signing and Jamayne Taunoa-Brown has immense upside, yet the acquisition of Chad Townsend already has signs of master stroke written all over it.
As the Bulldogs signed flashy backs and the odd fire-brand in the forwards, the Cowboys signed what every side requires; a steady-headed, skilled and composed halfback.
Take a look back through the NRL championship teams over the last four decades and find me a poor halfback. There isn’t one.
And as heavily invested as the Bulldogs may be in their highly skilled and potentially flashy new back line, after three weeks of the season, the Cowboys appear to have improved far more thanks to the signing of a man capable of settling the team and controlling the tempo of games.

With Valentine Holmes rampant and Tom Dearden causing all sorts of damage against the Broncos on Sunday afternoon, it would have been easy to look past the foundational influence Townsend had on the contest.
Tom Dearden of the Cowboys runs the ball

(Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)
The 2016 premiership winner with the Sharks allowed Dearden his own space, never missed a tackle across the 80 minutes, kicked the ball 19 times for 632 metres and forced two drop-outs. His passing was mostly impeccable and the balance he provided to the Cowboy’s attack pivotal in the thrashing they handed to their southern Queensland rivals.
At 31, Townsend will never win the Dally M Medal, nor many accolades from those looking at individual achievement above the more important and often quiet contributions made that result in team success.
The Bulldogs have a host of fresh talent on board and look to be improving, yet still have no solution at the scrum base. After three weeks of play, North Queensland sit second on the ladder and are probably a little unlucky not to be on the top rung.
Chad Townsend has been a key contributor to that early season success and clear evidence as to just how important a controlling half-back is and forever will be in rugby league.
https://www.theroar.com.au/2022/03/29/what-a-difference-a-halfback-makes/#comments-section
:sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping: Can someone wake me up for when there is news :sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping::sleeping:
 

From the area

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Shit article but they’re not wrong. We do need a genuine experienced half. The game may change. Positions may require more skill but if one thing is for certain a controlling 7 is something every team needs. It’s that simple.
 

JackDog

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Problem? No magic bullet HB options for 2 years at least.
DCE could but will never move and will never-ever play for us.
If we were ever going to consider Clifford it should have been for 2021 (when we didn't have much coin).
Ben Hunt...just no.
SJ's disrespect at the thought of playin for us means he can take along fuck off from a short pier.
Walker will never be allowed to leave the Rorters for his whole career.

Does any of the others offer that much more than what we already have (Flamingo excluded) considering ours are still young? I'm thinking the club will use our juniors and fans will just have to suffer for a few years yet.




HBs off contract 2022
Phoenix Crossland, Kurt Falls, Chanel Harris-Tavita, Cooper Johns, Albert Kelly, Jock Madden, Anthony Milford, Kodi Nikorima, Sean O'Sullivan, Brandon Wakeham, Sam Williams

HBs off contract 2023
Jakob Arthur, Bailey Biondi-Odo, Luke Brooks, Daly Cherry-Evans, Jake Clifford, Adam Clune, Kyle Flanagan, Ben Hunt, Drew Hutchison, Lachlan Ilias, Shaun Johnson, Soni Luke, Lachlan Miller, Cory Paix, Jonah Pezet, Brad Schneider, Blake Taaffe, Braydon Trindall, Sam Walker, Tyran Wishart
 

B-Train

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This clown also fails to mention that the Cowboys let go of Clifford who is better than Townsend and Dearden.

No shit a good halfback is important. The bigger issue that people like this guy fail to realise is that there's a massive shortage on halfbacks these days, and mediocre ones like Townsend are overpaid because of the lack of available options. So while it's easy to say they need a halfback, no one ever provides realistic options of who to get.
 

Jebbundy

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Didn’t we just play a team with a rep half, a rep 5/8 and one of the best fullbacks in the game? And they beat us by 1……..I agree that we need a better half but I do believe we are building on something. Very proud of our defence over the last 3 games compared to the last 6 yrs.
 

senshidog

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Ahhh The Roar.... where anyone can register and write articles!
 

Scoooby

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So they're saying we should have paid 800k for Chad Townsend?

People are blowing their loads way too much over the Cowboys. They've beaten Canberra who have been shit and the Broncos who are improved but are still a bottom 8 team. And they lost to us, another likely bottom 8 team.

I'll wait til later in the year before I give the Cowboys a ticker tape parade. Townsend is a solid organising half but he's barely worth a third of what he's on and the Cowboys will regret that contract soon enough.
Agree. A little premature.. but we shall see.!!!
 

w00t

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If we managed to snare Shaun Johnson this would be a complete moot point.

There's a reason that halfbacks pushing past 30+ can command pretty decent sums because the competition in general is lacking greatly in decent halfbacks. Not sure as to reason why but it's pretty astounding. We seem to have athletes as opposed to footballers these days.
 

Riggs80

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Well doesn’t know squat , didn’t broncos win with a useless half back around 2006
townsend Himself not considered a top line halfback when sharkies won
 
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