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    I texted in a question to Cam George on Sport Nation this morning.
    How many spots are available in the top 30, and are EIT / Fatialofa on the top 30 (as those are 2 that there's confusion over) ?

    He confirmed we have 28 players.
    Then when asked about EIT/Fatialofa he said ahhh I think they're in the development space.

    So, probably one of them is the 28th player and one is on a development deal, i don't know?

    But definitely 28 👍

    Good interview if you have time.

    https://open.spotify.com/episode/0gIFJ8mPNtTEaxTWFw3AOu?si=DWLDbmWMTlKkXpRoWRilCw
     
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    Just goes to show how strong our club has become, all this talk of which new recruits or juniors will make the top side on the back of the top side making the finals with many debutants and young guns filling in along the way for key senior players now returning from injury whilst the NSW cup team sweeping all aside took the trophies and Harald Mats doin the business back to back..

    Loving the new standards the club is forging!!
     
    But then you have guys like Tuiloma and Sikuvea coming through who Gannon will have to fend off as well, who are very clearly far better than Gannon at the same age
    Gannon made his professional debut at 17. That ship has already sailed for both Tuiloma & Sikuvea. Neither are likely to do so before they are 20 years old so I'm unsure how you can be so adamant that they're better than Gannon was at the same age.
    His talent is unknown to pretty much everyone in Australasia
     
    With all the talk being around Niukore's role moving forward, and it sounds like most people are in agreeance that the issues are more around how much he's being paid compared to what he offers, what are peoples thoughts about keeping Niukore around but on a pay packet that reflects his current role in the team?

    Is there still a place for him now that we have a lot of boom rookies coming through?
    If we did keep him, what kind of money would you be happy for him to be on moving forward?
    a lot of our boom rookies are backrowers, not middles. Marata still has a place in the middle rotation alongside Barney and JFH. At times he was our most physically damaging middle. The issue has been when injuries has forced him to move into the back row where his old legs and limited lateral movement gets exposed. Simplify his role to bench middle and he still has so much to offer.
     
    Vaimauga is perhaps the one I’m less worried about with him being relatively inconspicuous compared to the headlines Halasima is getting, though interestingly it was Halasima to 18th man for Tonga while Vaimauga maintained his position. I think with Vaimauga and his partner having a child he realises need to provide and hopefully will be a positive individual who’s close to him. We’ve got an amazing group to set the standard in JFH, Capewell, RTS, CNK, Barnett, DWZ
    Vaimauga has just been around the set up for longer too. He's been earmarked as long term first grader since he was 17 in Redcliffe and has been training full time with the first grade team since then too.

    Halasima has had a more hard and fast rise to the top. He wasn't on many people's radar at the start of that SG ball season in 2023. He's gone from SG ball to NSW cup in one season and then playing a full season of first grade within 2 years of that. That's usually a recipe for second season syndrome. Hopefully he continues to lock in and improve. Could be one of the goats if he does.
     
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    I know what not to get you for Christmas
    When I was about 10 my friend came back from a trip to Australia with a big league mag- I was blown away to learn about the Winfield cup and thought the jerseys were amazing- especially the bears and broncos.
    I spent about 6 months dreaming of getting one then a kid at school told me his cousin was selling his sharks one for $20- I begged my mum to buy it and said it could be my Xmas present so it was arranged to meet him after school the next day- his mum was there too and said he had a couple other ones that were too small if I wanted them- I couldn’t believe it- scored the roosters and dragons too!
    One of the best days of my life 😂
    Although then mum made me wait the 5 weeks till Xmas 😒
     
    Kane Evans tops him for me, cant believe we had them both at the same time.
    Nah, lodge was worse. Came over after his conviction, we gave him a lifeline via Peter O’Sullivan who was his father in law, when no one would touch him. We were forced to pay him $700000, after him and mark robinson had a falling out. Hes toxic through and through. Yes Kane evans was shit, embarrassing & a waste of time but at least he didn’t set us back financially & fuck our culture as much as lodge. Every club lodge has been to, he’s up to 6 now, has moved him on. Bloody handy player but clubs can’t deal with him.
     

    Luke Metcalf: Warriors star says he was never going to leave, despite wide NRL interest​


    Rumours of Luke Metcalf’s potential departure from the Warriors were greatly exaggerated.

    The halfback, who signed a two-year extension at the end of last month, was the subject of some feverish speculation in the time before that. Various Australian media outlets reported that he was planning to “go to market” and “test his value” post November 1.

    One newspaper said that he wouldn’t sign anything before the deadline - when he would have been permitted to engage with other clubs - while another postulated that the club could be drawn into a “talent auction”.

    To be fair, Metcalf had found himself in an enviable position, as one of the few elite halves coming off contract at the end of next season. Almost every other No 7 – aside from Nathan Cleary – was tied up for 2027 or beyond. That meant that any club looking to upgrade their playmaking options could knock on his door, while his outstanding personal campaign (he led the Dally M voting and was one of the form players in the competition before his cruel knee injury last June) only increased his worth.

    But despite that, he was always likely to stay in Auckland. Negotiations had started early in the season but were then put on hold after his injury. Once they restarted, it was never going to be too difficult to find common ground.

    Metcalf is happy at the Warriors and unlike some past Australian imports has truly bought into the culture of the club and the city. He is a popular member of the group and relates well to his teammates, especially the young core. He also has a strong bond with coach Andrew Webster and co-captain Mitch Barnett.

    Being on the inside, Metcalf believes in the potential of the squad. While the Warriors aren’t yet ready to win a premiership – they are certainly tracking in the right direction. That’s not necessarily the case for some other clubs chasing a halfback, while opting to join the new Perth Bears would be an adventure but the expansion club face a long road to be competitive.

    The only caveat is his family situation, given he and his wife Brodie welcomed their first child last April. They don’t have any family here and that might become tricky to manage in the future. At some point in time – whether it is at the end of his career or earlier – he will have to go home. But for the medium term, it is feasible.

    For the club, they saw enough last season to know that Metcalf could become a truly elite half. While he has limited experience as a number 7 and chief playmaker his progress was impressive and his ceiling is high. The only concern is his luckless run with injuries, after an earlier ACL at Manly in 2019, persistent hamstring issues and the broken leg suffered in 2024, though he has come back stronger each time.

    The club and Metcalf’s representative were content to settle on a two-year extension, which gives him a further three seasons as a Warrior, given he is already signed for 2026.

    1764294766554.webp

    Those close to the negotiations have described them as “fairly smooth”. There was “no angst”, as one insider put it, even if financial figures went back and forth. That was normal, as Metcalf has landed on a significant upgrade, which puts him inside the five highest earners at the club.

    But Metcalf is grateful that the club backed him as long ago as November 2021, when the deal was first done to bring him to the Warriors. There is a debt there, that he hasn’t forgotten.

    The 26-year-old was also aware of the hidden danger of moving on from a place where he has played the best football of his career and the team is built around him to leave for a different coach, different structure, different ideas and different pressures.

    Conversely, the Warriors were thrilled with Metcalf’s progress in 2025. He sought the No 7 jersey, wanted to take control of the team and delivered. There were big shoes to fill with the retirement of Shaun Johnson, but he never looked overawed. It wasn’t perfect at times – as there is so much to learn about being an on-field general - but you can see the trajectory and the Warriors believe he can be the elite playmaker they need to chase the biggest prize.

    While the November 1 deadline loomed warily for outsiders, it wasn’t really an issue for both parties. The contract probably would have been signed earlier but for a busy October. Metcalf married his long-time partner Brodie in Queenstown on October 11 before they went on their honeymoon. They returned to Auckland on October 22 and the contract was signed the following day.

     
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