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Smith, Cameron

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Making the Nut: Top 50 NRL players in 2011
Thu October 13, 2011
by Nick Tedeschi
Source: www.makingthenut.com

Another season done and dusted and after 201 games played by 472 players, I list the top 50. There will be arguments, there will be criticisms but this is the list of the top 50 players in the game in 2011.

A quick note: The number in the bracket is where the player finished last year with a * indicating they didn't play in 2010.

50. Alex Glenn (Brisbane, -)
The Brisbane backrower had a very nice year and was one of the more improved players in the competition. His stock numbers of 28 tackles and 83 metres per match were solid but it was his threat running on the edge that really impressed. Glenn managed seven tries and set up another and finished 12th among forwards in tackle breaks. A real handful who has quickly become a senior player at Brisbane.

49. Nathan Merritt (South Sydney, -)
It is tough to leave out the top tryscorer in the NRL and by the backend of the season Merritt was brilliant in his ability to find the tryline, crossing 23 times. He was much better when he was moved to fullback but he was generally reliable wherever he played with only 19 errors all year. Perennially underrated.

48. Jarryd Hayne (Parramatta, 49)
His numbers again read reasonably well: 24 try assists, seven tries, 78 tackle breaks, 140 metres per game. But they don't tell half the tale of another wasted season from Hayne, who this year shuffled between fullback and five-eighth, unsure of either his role in his team or his commitment to the game. He has the talent ? see his 2009 form where he ranked No.2 in this list ? but he rarely plays anywhere near his best as he did in the final game of the year where he ran for 295 metres and laid on five tries.

47. Feleti Mateo (New Zealand, -)
Mateo's first season at the Warriors was a fruitful one with the skilful backrower enjoying his best year since 2008. Mateo led the league in offloads with 74 and led all forwards in tackle breaks with 99 but his most improved quality was his ability to show a more discerning nature with the ball, limiting the stupidity of his passing and the looseness of his ball-use. Mateo hasn't been the Warriors' most critical player but his signing has added a new dimension to New Zealand's pack.

46. Simon Mannering (New Zealand, -)
The Warriors skipper continues to get better, playing a key role in his team's cultural change from enigmatic to hardworking and structured. His numbers of 31 tackles and 82 metres per match don't do nearly enough justice to Mannering's contribution. He is a genuine leader and a player who can be relied on to play with discipline.

45. Trent Merrin (St George-Illawarra, -)
Merrin had a breakout year in 2011 with the third-year prop playing in the first two Origin matches and leading the Dragons pack as the new No.1 bookend at the club. The burly prop was very good this year, making 25.8 tackles and 118.9 metres a match. He was tough to tackle and showed some real zeal in his running. He will be one of the three or four best props in the game in three seasons' time.

44. Fuifui Moimoi (Parramatta, -)
The Ken Thornett Medal winner was fighting a losing battle all season but he gave his all and was without risk the most dangerous Eel in 2011. Ranked second among forwards and led all props in yardage with 133.4 metres a match and was tough to tackle with 57 tackle breaks. Despite his team's poor showing, he never stopped putting in an A-grade showing.

43. Micheal Luck (New Zealand, -)
To gauge Micheal Luck's importance to New Zealand, just look at how the Warriors performed without him when he went down with an injury in the middle of the season. The Warriors blew a massive lead against the Tigers after Luck went off, they were hammered by the Cowboys and lost to the Storm. When he returned, New Zealand won four straight. Luck is critical to keeping the middle of the Warriors' defensive line stable. He doesn't do much with the ball but his 38.91 tackles per match have been crucial to New Zealand's fifth-ranked defence.

42. Luke Douglas (Cronulla, -)
Another remarkably consistent season from the Cronulla prop in his last season in The Shire. Despite signing on with the Titans early, Douglas showed his true professionalism, astonishingly recovering from an MCL strain that should have ruled him out for six weeks the very next round to allow his consecutive games streak to continue to what is now 146. In a losing cause, Douglas was again one of Paul Gallen's most reliable lieutenants by hitting the outstanding 30/100 with 31.92 tackles and 107.17 metres a game. He will be impossible to replace at Cronulla next year.

41. Jason Nightingale (St George-Illawarra, -)
The Dragons flanker has become the most reliable winger in the game in 2011. He is not the most dangerous, but he rarely makes an error and is never afraid to roll his sleeves up to do some hard work. Scored nine tries and set up another three and made 128.91 metres a match. Has surpassed Brett Morris as the Dragons' top winger.

40. Brett Stewart (Manly, -)
In the Manly fullback's last three season where he has managed 16 or more games, the Sea Eagles have won two premierships and lost another Grand Final. In the two years that Stewart was sidelined with two separate knee injuries, Manly limped into the finals and were duly eliminated in the first round by substantial hammerings. Stewart took a while to return to his best but by season's end he was running freely and playing well, scoring a try in the decider and getting selected for Australia. Made 27 handling errors but scored 11 tries and laid on another 13 in a fine return.

39. Ashley Harrison (Gold Coast, 46)
It was an horrific year for the Titans but that was no fault of the hardworking lock, who finished eighth on the tackle list with 40.6 per match and threw in 95 metres a game on top. Only managed 13 games due to injury and Origin duty but was one of the few Titans not to suffer a major drop in form. Held off some strong challengers for the Queensland No.13 jersey, such is the regard he is rightfully held in.

38. Issac Luke (South Sydney, 19)
Despite my disgust at his attitude towards the game by laying down to win penalties, Luke was again one of the most dangerous hookers in the game. His great strength is his ability to run out of dummy half. In 2011, he made 122 metres per match. The next closest hooker was Matt Hilder on 73 and Hilder spent much of the season at lock. Luke's tackling was poor this year but as an attacking weapon he rated among the elite hookers.

37. Ben Barba (Canterbury, -)
It was very hard to get a grip on Barba's season. On one level, he was among of the most dangerous players in the game, topping the tryscoring table with 23, setting up a further seven and busting the line 30 times, 11 more than second-placed Matt Cooper. But he was also error-prone and extraordinarily shaky under the high ball, recording 40 errors throughout the year. A gifted attacking player, Barba could win a game off his own back but could be dreadful at times. A move to five-eighth could be on the cards in 2012.

36. Nathan Hindmarsh (Parramatta, 18)
The first time in four years that Hindmarsh has slipped out of the top 20, regardless, Hindmarsh had another typical Nathan Hindmarsh year. Surpassed the 300 game milestone this year but suffered a tough year in his first as skipper of the Eels with Parramatta spending much of the season trying to avoid the wooden spoon. With little playmaking quality at the Eels, Hindmarsh's attacking game slipped but his defence was near-perfect as always, leading the tackle count with 49.92 a match. Parramatta certainly would have won the spoon without Hindmarsh.

35. Shaun Johnson (New Zealand, *)
You are doing something right if in your debut season you lead your team to the Grand Final, get selected in the Kiwis squad and elicit comparisons with Benji Marshall. And that is just what happened to Shaun Johnson, who also managed to score the most remarkable individual try of the year. Electric and smart, Johnson is a triple-pronged threat with an ability to pass, kick and run. Even at this stage of his 16-game career, he may be the best running halfback in the NRL. Didn't debut until round 13 but scored six tries and set up another 12 in 12 regular season matches and produced seven of the Warriors' nine finals try assists. A talent who will be much higher next year.

34. Chris Heighington (Wests Tigers, 43)
The Wests Tigers locked again slipped under the radar and was again one of the top forwards in the game. His workrate was again outstanding, racking up 109 metres and 28 tackles a match. He was also incredibly dangerous with the ball, recording 90 tackle breaks, third among all forwards in the NRL and giving off 39 offloads. Heighington was also well disciplined, making only 10 errors and giving up only 14 penalties. Shamefully overlooked for Origin again, Heighington has defected to England where he will get a well-deserved shot at international football.

33. Sam Thaiday (Brisbane, 17)
The new Broncos captain makes the top-50 for the fourth straight season. Thaiday again played well, presumably off the darts and the turtle meat, and was again one of the first picked for Queensland this year. He topped the 30/100 mark again with 30.4 tackles and 109.5 metres a match, also managing three tries and three try assists. But his great quality ? aggression ? is unquantifiable. Was one of the primary reasons the Broncos had such a stellar year.

32. Jake Friend (Sydney Roosters, -)
It has been a year of total redemption for Jake Friend who, unlike teammate Todd Carney, didn't go off the rails, rather working hard and giving the Tricolours his all. After a stellar season where Friend made 45 tackles per match and was again the backbone of the Roosters' often flimsy defence, the hooker was awarded the Jack Gibson Medal. But it was his attack which improved out of sight, scoring three tries and setting up another nine. He plays 80 minutes and works his butt off and rates atop the second level of hookers after Cameron Smith and Robbie Farah.

31. Jamie Soward (St George-Illawarra, 9)
Soward's season was up-and-down but for the most part he was again one of the top playmakers in the NRL. Unquestionably the best kicker in the game in terms of length and accuracy, Soward finally won a deserved Origin call-up, wearing the No.6 jersey on three occasions and getting better with each run. He laid on 17 tries and scored four himself and for the most part played in good nick. He could have run the ball a little more and he went through a month where he played abhorrently while injured but remained one of the most effective five-eighths in the NRL.

30. Robbie Farah (Wests Tigers, 4)
He started off the season slowly and definitely took a step backwards from his career-year in 2010 but come July and August, Farah was once again in above average form. He finished the regular season with 17 try assists and six tries and was once again involved in everything, providing action out of dummy-half, a helpful kicking game and a secondary playmaking option for Marshall. His workrate was down a little and his error rate up but Farah again played an important role in the Tigers' run to the finals.

29. James Maloney (New Zealand, -)
2011 was a breakout year for the young Warriors five-eighth, who is now seen to be in a neck-and-neck race with Jamie Soward for the Blues No.6 jersey next season. From a fringe first grader to a poised and reliable five-eighth, Maloney had an outstanding year. He gets a tick for every aspect of his game: his passing, his kicking, his direction, his running, his goalkicking, his leadership. Missed a key conversion in the Grand Final but scored two tries in the finals and carried the Warriors against the Storm. The Orange boy has done good.

28. Matt Bowen (North Queensland, -)
Bowen has thrown back the clock and had a rejuvenated season where he was once again an integral part of the Cowboys team. After three injury-hampered seasons, Bowen seems to have rediscovered his old form, a shock for those of us who thought he was gone. Playing as the secondary playmaker and return specialist, Bowen scored eight tries and set up 17. Perhaps the best indication of his return to form though was his tackle break count: his 124 ranked behind on Akuila Uate and Billy Slater. It was good to see the livewire fullback return to his best.

27. Chris Sandow (South Sydney, -)
A year on from winning the Willie M Medal, Sandow became South Sydney's match-winner. He ran well, kicked even better, minimised his liability in defence and was always the go-to player when the game was on the line. He endeared himself to me with his seven field goals but it was his ice-cool nerves and ability to organise South Sydney's often directionless attack that was most impressive. He cashed in with a big-money deal at Parramatta, much to the chagrin of the South Sydney faithful,

26. Kurt Gidley (Newcastle, 13)
Gidley was again Newcastle's most important player and was again the club's Mr Fix-It, shuffling between fullback, halfback and five-eighth. His numbers were again excellent: 14 tries/try assists, 101.7 metres a game, 60 tackle break, all from just 17 matches. He can do everything at an elite level and he was the key reason the Knights snuck into eighth spot.

25. Chris Houston (Newcastle, -)
The Newcastle backrower made a magnificent return after missing 2010 over a drug trafficking charge. Houston was the Knights' best forward, a hard running threat on the fringes who could bust a line when on song yet a player who was always in the thick of it defensively. Houston averaged 35 tackles and 80 metres a match and was a genuine 80-minute forward who was stiff not to get an Origin call-up this year. He will surely get the nod in 2012.

24. Shaun Fensom (Canberra, -)
The Canberra lock just continues to improve and took his game to the next level in 2011, maintaining his high work-rate in defence but adding more oomph in attack. Despite the Raiders having a year to forget, Fensom proved himself a player Ricky Stuart should look to for Origin next year and beyond, an enthusiastic player always happy to do the dirty work with plenty of energy. Finished second on the average tackle board with 47.29 and added 82 metres a match on top, who was one of only three players (with Corey Parker and Nathan Hindmarsh) to run 80 metres and make 40 tackles a match. Throw in running 12th in offloads, he had an outstanding season for a player in only his second full year of first grade.

23. Josh Hoffman (Brisbane, -)
The young Broncos custodian continues to thrive and in a year where a number of young fullbacks have emerged, Hoffman rates right up with the best. He was electric in his second year, finishing third in metres/game with 158.75 to go with 101 tackle breaks. The Broncos certainly suffered in losing Darren Lockyer for their preliminary final but the situation was exacerbated by having their second best attacking weapon, Hoffman, sidelined. He is starting to look like Matt Bowen in his prime.

22. Kevin Locke (New Zealand, -)
Locke has always shown the potential to be a star but it wasn't until this year, his third in first grade, that he showed his best. It all came about with a permanent move to fullback, which saw Locke move from a fringe first grader to an integral part of the Warriors line-up. His regular season numbers paint a pretty telling picture: 126 metres per game, 85 tackle breaks, 21 offloads, six tries, eight try assists. He is the perfect fullback for the Warriors' halves pairing. Has tremendous courage and a real game-winning ability. The biggest compliment you can pay him is that he is viewed as a Billy Slater clone.

21. Michael Gordon (Penrith, 32)
Despite playing only nine matches before a season-ending knee injury in the victory against Brisbane in round 10, Gordon was excellent. Gordon had a breakout year in 2010 and he continued to enhance his reputation in 2011 with a combination of dynamic and reliable that allowed him to excel when given the chance at fullback. In his nine games, he averaged 179 metres per match, scored four tries and set up another six and made 50 tackle breaks (at an average of 5.56, eighth highest for those who played five or more matches). He can do it all and hopefully he will get the chance to play fullback under Ivan Cleary in 2012.

20. Jamie Lyon (Manly, 9)
The Manly skipper never appears to be setting the world on fire but this is his fourth straight year where he has finished top-35 in this list, over the course of which he has won two premierships. Lyon was again outstanding in 2011, playing a key role in Manly's resurgence. His great value as a centre is that he is equally adept as both a playmaker and a runner. He scored eight tries and set up 14 in the regular season games and scored a try and set one up in the finals. With the addition of his goalkicking, where he knocked them over at an acceptable 73%, Lyon remains one of the top three-quarters in the game. If anything, he is the most consistent.

19. Ben Hannant (Brisbane, -)
After a disappointing, injury-riddled final season with Canterbury, Hannant re-established himself as one of the best props in the game in his return to Brisbane, re-joining the top 30 as was the case in 2008 and 2009. Hannant was excellent for the Broncos. His 34 tackles and 109 metres per match was an excellent workrate for a big man and his footwork ensures he nearly always wins the momentum in the ruck. It is good to see the burly prop back to his best.

18. Aiden Tolman (Canterbury, -)
The Ben Hannant clone was the ideal replacement for the former Bulldog bookend. Tolman joined Canterbury as a hot prospect but one who was struggling for much game time at the Storm. At the Bulldogs, he thrived as the number one prop and leading forward. His taste for hard work was incredible, making 35.82 tackles and 129.27 metres a match, outstanding numbers for a prop. He should have been picked for the Blues this year. He is the kind of prop you can build a premiership contender around.

17. Gareth Ellis (Wests Tigers, 7)
Three seasons in Australia for Ellis have netted the English international three top-35 finishes and two finals campaigns for a team who hadn't made the playoffs since 2005 before he arrived. Ellis was again the backbone of a team that is more known for its glitz and attack, laying the foundation with rattling defence and bustling running. His numbers ? 30 tackles and 99 metres per match ? don't really do his contribution justice. Ellis is one of those players who adds so much value to a team: toughness, leadership, grit, smarts. As long as he is at the Tigers, they will contend.

16. Luke Bailey (Gold Coast, 26)
Bailey has again finished among the top props in the competition after an outstanding season in what shaped as a hopeless cause very early on. Managing to avoid injury for the most part and without the spectre of rep football hanging over his head, Bailey led the way for the Titans with 33 tackles and 123 metres a match. He also was the spiritual leader for much of the year. He is such a hard-runner, heavy tackler and inspirational figure that it is fair to say there was no player who deserved the wooden spoon less this year.

15. Darren Lockyer (Brisbane, 27)
What an incredible farewell season it was for Lockyer, his best year as a footballer since arguably the 2006 premiership season. Lockyer was the key figure behind Brisbane's preliminary final run and Queensland's historic sixth-straight series win. To look at Lockyer's value to the Broncos, just look at the last two weeks of Brisbane's season: he kicks the winning extra-time field goal with a fractured cheekbone before the Broncos look like a directionless rabble without him in the preliminary final loss. Lockyer led the NRL in regular season try assists with 24 (tied with Benji Marshall and Jarryd Hayne), was one of the premier kickers in the game and was critical to giving the Broncos both direction and inspiration. The Broncos have an almighty task trying to find his replacement next season.

14. Daly Cherry-Evans (Manly, *)
Debut seasons don't come much better it did for the Manly halfback, who quickly cemented his spot in the starting team before playing a key role in the run to the premiership and winning a spot in the Australian Four Nations squad. In the Grand Final, he was arguably the best afield, showing the maturity of a far more senior player and the zip of a quality footballer. He has shown it all this year: smarts, pace, an ability to kick both long and short, a super pass and real toughness. Scored six tries and set up another 14 and broke 95 tackles, to lead all halves in the category including Benji Marshall. He has a bright, bright future.

13. Darius Boyd (St George-Illawarra, 6)
Found himself a top-15 player for the second straight season after another very good year as the Dragons custodian. Boyd again didn't seem to be doing a lot but his contribution was immense, owning that left side, scoring eight tries and setting up another 11. Combined with 99 tackle breaks and an average yardage of 135 metres made him an extraordinarily dangerous player in attack. The Dragons are certainly going to feel his absence in 2012.

12. Gareth Widdop (Melbourne, -)
Gareth Widdop had an outstanding first full season in the top grade, made even more impressive by the fact he spent it out of position with the usual fullback forced to play five-eighth with Billy Slater at the back. Widdop slotted straight into the Storm team, playing a significant role in the club's run to the minor premiership. On the left side in attack, Widdop devastated defences with a brilliant step, underrated strength and a wonderful ability to ball-play. Finished sixth in the NRL in line breaks, leading all halves, and set up 15 tries with his ability to bust a hole and play short. The Storm have a new Big Four.

11. Akuila Uate (Newcastle, 23)
Wingers simply don't have the impact on a football game that Akuila Uate does. He is a legitimate match-winner with his speed and strength but it is his kick return and his ability to get into the middle and bend the line that makes him such a good player. He again finished near the top of all the important wing indicators: 19 tries (3rd), 18 line breaks (3rd), 148 tackle breaks (1st) and 143.5 average metres (6th). Such was his threat, coaches had to specifically plan to stop him. Uate is just a beast who always gives his all and will thrive under Wayne Bennett next year.

10. Matthew Scott (North Queensland, 42)
The Queensland prop had a breakout season in 2011 and is now widely viewed as the best prop in the game after being the best afield in Queensland's loss to New South Wales in Origin I. Scott's numbers don't hold up against some props, his 25 tackles and 116 metres a game being above average but not outstanding. But his discipline is something to behold, spilling the ball only six times and conceding a penalty only eight in an outstanding effort from a prop. A genuine leader and a line-bender in attack, Scott deserves to lauded as the top prop in the code.

9. Kieran Foran (Manly, -)
While Cherry-Evans finished off the season for Manly, it was Kieran Foran who got everything rolling early. As Cherry-Evans found his feet, Foran took control of the Manly backline and did an outstanding job. He ran hard, was always putting on shots in defence, loved giving a short ball and has a very good short kicking game. He was a little quiet towards the backend of the year but for two-thirds of the season he was arguably the best No.6 in the game. He scored seven tries and set up 16 and his 24 handling errors were acceptable for a player who handles the ball as much as Foran.

8. Johnathan Thurston (North Queensland, -)
Returns to the top-10 after a disappointing 2010 where his form was well down before his season was ended prematurely with injury. Started 2011 with a bang and continued his quality form right up to the point he was injured in Origin III. Led the Dally M Medal count when voting went behind closed doors and deservedly so, having helped the Cowboys lift from wooden spooners to a top-four team for much of the year. In 18 games, scored 10 tries and set up another 22 and was as brilliant as any player in the comp for the first two-thirds of the year. Rushed back from injury and wasn't the same but regardless, he had a major impact on season 2011.

7. Glenn Stewart (Manly, -)
Returned to form, this top-30 and rep football after a very disappointing 2010 where he seemed to lose his way. Had he not been involved in the Brookvale Brawl, he could well have been Dally M medallist while he did win the Clive Churchill Medal after an outstanding show in the Grand Final. He has a great set of skills that make him such a danger. He hits hard and runs with intent but has the soft touch of a halfback as well and leads the way in the Ben Kennedy mould. He is a player of absolute quality.

6. Corey Parker (Brisbane, 29)
Parker had another outstanding season, racking up the big numbers, a testament to the amount of quality work he gets through. Finished seventh in average tackles with 41.2 per match and 13th in metres with 135.2 a game. Those numbers are utterly astonishing. To throw in the fact he had 87 tackle breaks and 56 offloads and booted 74 goals, it is clear Parker has become an elite player. The Broncos need Corey Parker, who has a hand in everything the club does. Continues to be highly underrated.

5. Cooper Cronk (Melbourne, 34)
The ever-consistent Cronk had another magnificent season for Melbourne, playing a key role in the Storm's run to the minor premiership. Ultra-competitive, a wonderful kicker and one of the premier organisers in the game, Cronk rarely turned in a poor game. He certainly never turned in a poor effort. In arguably his most dominant season, Cronk scored a career-high 12 tries and set up another 16. In a year when the Storm needed the Big Three to step up, Cronk certainly stepped up to the mark ? again, as he always does.

4. Benji Marshall (Wests Tigers, 14)
Marshall was again brilliant for the Tigers in 2011, very nearly pinching the Dally M Medal after an outstanding attacking year that netted him 24 try assists and 11 tries of his own. The Tigers No.6 had some magnificent games this year and overcame the spectre of a court case to guide the Tigers to a top-four position that seemed highly unlikely two months out from the finals. Marshall sets the benchmark in all areas of attack with his creativity, brilliant passing, electric running and magnificent kick. There is arguably no more valuable player to his team in the competition.

3. Cameron Smith (Melbourne, 39)
For the third time in four years, Smith has finished in the top-15 with the two-time premiership winning captain, new Queensland skipper and soon-to-be Australian leader having another wonderful year. It took a wonderful leader to help drag the Storm back into contention after the disaster of 2010 and Smith is just that. He does everything at an elite level and is arguably now the greatest hooker to ever play the game. He just doesn't make a mistake, just doesn't take the wrong option. He is an elite defender with a high workrate, a creative runner and playmaker out of dummy half, a top-level kicker and a footballer unmatched in on-field smarts. Astonishingly, Smith made five errors, remarkable for a player who touches the ball more than anyone else in the game. No player has mastered the fundamentals like Smith.

2. Paul Gallen (Cronulla, 5)
For the fourth straight season, Paul Gallen has finished as a top-20 player and for the third time in four years he has finished in the top-six. Gallen has always had a great taste for work. He has carried the Sharks on his back for a half-decade now, consistently showing up with few others by his side. As such he has been forced to play a combo prop/backrow/five-eighth role. The result has been some astounding numbers: 183.5 metres per match (highest in the NRL and 50.3 metres a game ahead of the second-ranked forward), 25.8 tackles a match, six tries, six try assists, 76 tackle breaks and 48 offloads, all in 20 games. It is perhaps his improved discipline which is the most notable part of his game. Once a renowned grub, he has shown much better self-control this year, giving away only 11 penalties. His display in Origin I was one of the great Origin showings and he did so at the unfamiliar position of prop. Gallen is the best forward of his generation.

1. Billy Slater (Melbourne, 12)
The Melbourne, Queensland and Australian fullback won his first Dally M Medal this year and he tops this list for the first time as well after finishing third in 2008, fourth in 2009 and 12th last year. In an era of wonderful fullback play, Slater is unquestionably the best. His kick return is outstanding, his ability to inject himself into a playmaking role is magnificent and his understanding of the game is immense. Slater is a real student of the fundamentals and his relationship with both Cameron Smith and Cooper Cronk has resulted in some spectacular football. Slater scored 12 tries and set up another 14, usually bobbing up as a second five-eighth option, while busting 131 tackles, second in the NRL. Throw in 143.5 metres per game and you get a picture of Slater's magnificent year.

Table of Top 50 finishes 2008-2011

www.makingthenut.com


Disclaimer: All views are those of the author and not Rleague.com Pty. Ltd


Smith 2011 Storm Player of the Year
Mon October 10, 2011
Source: www.melbournestorm.com.au

Melbourne Storm captain Cameron Smith has capped off an outstanding season, winning his fourth club Player of the Year trophy.

Smith, who also won the award in 2005, 2006 and 2007, took out this year's award by two votes ahead of last year's winner Ryan Hinchcliffe (28 votes) and Billy Slater (26 votes).

In front of more than 700 people at Crown's Palladium Ballroom, Head Coach Craig Bellamy presented Smith with the bronze trophy.

The Queensland and Australia vice-captain took his game to another level this season with his ultra consistency, ferocious tackling and his on-field leadership.

Smith adds his latest accolade to the sweep he took out at the Dally M Awards, where he claimed Hooker, Captain and Representative Player of the Year. This season Smith only missed one game (due to Origin commitments) and became only the second player to play 200 games for Melbourne Storm behind Matt Geyer.

Both Hinchcliffe and Slater enjoyed impressive seasons. Known for his versatility, consistency and real toughness, Hinchcliffe was this season added to the club's leadership group, a testament to the regard he is held in at Storm. While Slater became Storm's record try-scorer and was awarded the Dally M Medal as the league's best player for his outstanding work in the No.1 jersey.

Voting for Storm's Player of the Year award is done after each round by the players and coaches.

Other award winners at the 2011 Storm Presentation ball were:

Rookie of the Year - Jesse Bromwich and Gareth Widdop
Most Improved - Kevin Proctor
Best Forward - Ryan Hinchcliffe
Best Back - Billy Slater
U20s Best Forward - Krys Freeman
U20s Best Back - Kirisome Auva'a
U20s Player of the Year - Slade Griffin
Greg Brentnall Young Achievers Award - Mahe Fonua
Michael Moore Clubman of the Year - Robbie Kearns
Life membership - Peter Robinson (former player), Billy Slater, Jonce Dimovski (current staff)

Smith, Cameron Statistics
======================================================================================================
2011 State of Origin
Queensland Origin 
3 games; 2 tries, 1/2 goals, 10 points. 
		 
[View] Origin [25 May 11] W 16-12 v NSW Origin (H). [DH]
[View] Origin [15 Jun 11] L 8-18 v NSW Origin (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 1t
[View] Origin [06 Jul 11] W 34-24 v NSW Origin (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 1t, 1/2g
======================================================================================================
2011 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
23 games; 2 tries, 76/90 goals, 160 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [12 Mar 11] W 18-6 v Sea Eagles (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 2 [19 Mar 11] W 40-12 v Gold Coast (H). [DH] 16 Pts; 1t, 6/7g
[View] Round 3 [28 Mar 11] L 6-34 v Cowboys (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 4 [04 Apr 11] W 30-16 v Canterbury (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Round 5 [10 Apr 11] W 38-0 v Eels (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/6g
[View] Round 6 [17 Apr 11] W 25-10 v Panthers (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/5g
[View] Round 7 [25 Apr 11] L 14-18 v Warriors (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 8 [30 Apr 11] W 42-12 v Knights (H). [DH] 14 Pts; 7/7g
[View] Round 9 [07 May 11] W 29-22 v Broncos (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/5g
[View] Round 10 [14 May 11] L 12-20 v Canberra (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 12 [29 May 11] W 14-8 v Cronulla (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 13 [05 Jun 11] W 16-6 v Rabbitohs (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 1t, 1/2g
[View] Round 15 [19 Jun 11] W 12-4 v Wests Tigers (A). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 16 [26 Jun 11] W 16-8 v Warriors (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 18 [09 Jul 11] W 28-18 v Canterbury (A). [BE] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 19 [17 Jul 11] W 26-0 v Canberra (A). [BE] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 20 [22 Jul 11] W 26-6 v Broncos (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/5g
[View] Round 21 [01 Aug 11] W 22-18 v Eels (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 22 [06 Aug 11] W 26-6 v Panthers (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/5g
[View] Round 23 [13 Aug 11] W 40-16 v Titans (A). [DH] 12 Pts; 6/7g
[View] Round 24 [19 Aug 11] W 8-6 v Dragons (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 25 [26 Aug 11] L 4-18 v Sea Eagles (A). [DH]
[View] Finals Week 1 [11 Sep 11] W 18-8 v Newcastle. [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
======================================================================================================
2011 International Test Matches
Australia 
2 games; 1 goals, 2 points. 
		 
[View] Bill Kelly Cup [06 May 11] W 20-10 v New Zealand (H). [DH]
[View] Bill Kelly Cup [16 Oct 11] W 42-6 v New Zealand (H). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
======================================================================================================
2011 Four Nations Test Series
Australia 
2 games; 1 tries, 4 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [28 Oct 11] W 26-12 v New Zealand. [DH]
[View] Round 2 [05 Nov 11] W 36-20 v England (A). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2010 World Club Challenge
Melbourne Storm 
1 games; 5 goals, 10 points. 
		 
[View] WCC [28 Feb 10] W 18-10 v Leeds (A). [HB] 10 Pts; 5g
======================================================================================================
2010 State of Origin
Queensland Origin 
3 games; 
[View] Origin [26 May 10] W 28-24 v NSW Origin (A). [DH]
[View] Origin [16 Jun 10] W 34-6 v NSW Origin (H). [DH]
[View] Origin [07 Jul 10] W 23-18 v NSW Origin (A). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2010 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
20 games; 2 tries, 54/73 goals, 116 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [13 Mar 10] W 14-10 v Sharks (A). [HB] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 2 [20 Mar 10] W 20-14 v Knights (A). [HB] 8 Pts; 4/5g
[View] Round 3 [27 Mar 10] W 16-10 v Panthers (A). [HB] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 4 [02 Apr 10] W 17-4 v Dragons (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/5g
[View] Round 5 [09 Apr 10] L 16-20 v Titans (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 6 [19 Apr 10] L 16-18 v Sea Eagles (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 7 [25 Apr 10] W 40-6 v Warriors (H). [DH] 16 Pts; 1t, 6/7g
[View] Round 8 [01 May 10] W 34-6 v Cowboys (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/6g
[View] Round 13 [04 Jun 10] L 10-24 v Eels (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/2g
[View] Round 15 [19 Jun 10] W 58-12 v Cowboys (H). [BE] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Round 16 [26 Jun 10] L 14-16 v Rabbitohs (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 18 [10 Jul 10] L 18-20 v Bulldogs (A). [BE] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 19 [17 Jul 10] L 6-13 v Warriors (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 20 [24 Jul 10] W 18-10 v Panthers (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 21 [01 Aug 10] W 36-12 v Raiders (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/5g
[View] Round 22 [07 Aug 10] L 6-26 v Sea Eagles (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 23 [15 Aug 10] W 18-16 v Rabbitohs (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 24 [21 Aug 10] W 24-4 v Sharks (H). [DH] 12 Pts; 1t, 4/4g
[View] Round 25 [29 Aug 10] L 14-26 v Tigers (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 26 [05 Sep 10] W 34-4 v Knights (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/4g
======================================================================================================
2010 International Test Matches
Australia 
1 games; 
[View] Anzac Test Match [07 May 10] W 12-8 v New Zealand (H). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2010 Four Nations Test Series
Australia 
4 games; 1 tries, 15/21 goals, 34 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [24 Oct 10] W 42-0 v PNG (H). [DH] 14 Pts; 1t, 5/8g
[View] Round 2 [31 Oct 10] W 34-14 v England (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/7g
[View] Round 3 [06 Nov 10] W 34-20 v New Zealand (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Final [13 Nov 10] L 12-16 v New Zealand (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
======================================================================================================
2009 State of Origin
Queensland Origin 
3 games; 1 tries, 4 points. 
		 
[View] Origin [03 Jun 09] W 28-18 v NSW Origin. [DH]
[View] Origin [24 Jun 09] W 24-14 v NSW Origin (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 1t
[View] Origin [15 Jul 09] L 16-28 v NSW Origin (H). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2009 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
25 games; 3 tries, 65/90 goals, 142 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [13 Mar 09] W 17-16 v Dragons (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 2 [20 Mar 09] L 14-16 v Broncos (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 3 [28 Mar 09] W 26-12 v Cowboys (A). [F8] 10 Pts; 5/5g
[View] Round 4 [04 Apr 09] L 6-18 v Titans (H). [F8] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 5 [11 Apr 09] W 16-14 v Panthers (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/4g
[View] Round 6 [20 Apr 09] L 6-16 v Tigers (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 7 [25 Apr 09] D 14-14 v Warriors (H). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 8 [01 May 09] W 22-8 v Sea Eagles (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/5g
[View] Round 9 [11 May 09] W 28-12 v Roosters (A). [BE]
[View] Round 10 [18 May 09] W 46-6 v Raiders (H). [DH] 12 Pts; 6/7g
[View] Round 11 [23 May 09] L 10-26 v Bulldogs (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/2g
[View] Round 13 [05 Jun 09] W 48-4 v Broncos (H). [BE]
[View] Round 14 [13 Jun 09] W 28-22 v Rabbitohs (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/5g
[View] Round 16 [28 Jun 09] L 16-26 v Raiders (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 1t, 2/2g
[View] Round 17 [04 Jul 09] W 18-14 v Knights (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 20 [25 Jul 09] W 30-10 v Sharks (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 1t, 2/5g
[View] Round 21 [31 Jul 09] L 12-26 v Dragons (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 22 [07 Aug 09] W 20-8 v Cowboys (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/4g
[View] Round 23 [17 Aug 09] L 14-26 v Knights (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 24 [23 Aug 09] L 16-20 v Sea Eagles (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 25 [29 Aug 09] W 38-4 v Roosters (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Round 26 [05 Sep 09] W 30-0 v Warriors (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/5g
[View] Finals Week 1 [11 Sep 09] W 40-12 v Sea Eagles. [DH] 14 Pts; 1t, 5/6g
[View] Finals Week 3 [26 Sep 09] W 40-10 v Broncos. [DH] 12 Pts; 6/7g
[View] Grand Final [04 Oct 09] W 23-16 v Eels. [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
======================================================================================================
2009 Four Nations Test Series
Australia 

======================================================================================================
2008 World Cup
Australia 
5 games; 1/1 goals, 2 points. 
		 
[View] Pool A [26 Oct 08] W 30-6 v New Zealand. [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Pool A [02 Nov 08] W 52-4 v England. [DH]
[View] Pool A [09 Nov 08] W 46-6 v PNG. [DH]
[View] Semi Finals [16 Nov 08] W 52-0 v Fiji. [DH]
[View] Final [22 Nov 08] L 20-34 v New Zealand. [DH]
======================================================================================================
2008 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
23 games; 4 tries, 77/111 goals, 170 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [17 Mar 08] W 32-18 v Warriors (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Round 2 [23 Mar 08] L 16-17 v Sharks (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 3 [29 Mar 08] L 6-10 v Roosters (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 4 [04 Apr 08] W 28-8 v Broncos (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/5g
[View] Round 5 [11 Apr 08] W 26-4 v Sea Eagles (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/6g
[View] Round 6 [21 Apr 08] W 23-16 v Raiders (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 7 [26 Apr 08] W 12-10 v Cowboys (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 9 [12 May 08] W 18-4 v Knights (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 11 [24 May 08] W 15-10 v Rabbitohs (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 12 [31 May 08] W 46-0 v Bulldogs (H). [DH] 18 Pts; 1t, 7/8g
[View] Round 15 [21 Jun 08] W 48-20 v Cowboys (H). [DH] 12 Pts; 6/9g
[View] Round 17 [06 Jul 08] W 30-14 v Raiders (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/6g
[View] Round 18 [14 Jul 08] W 30-18 v Tigers (A). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/5g
[View] Round 19 [21 Jul 08] W 26-0 v Dragons (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/5g
[View] Round 20 [27 Jul 08] L 6-8 v Warriors (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 21 [01 Aug 08] W 44-4 v Gold Coast (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/9g
[View] Round 22 [08 Aug 08] W 16-10 v Sea Eagles (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 23 [15 Aug 08] W 30-6 v Roosters (H). [DH] 14 Pts; 1t, 5/6g
[View] Round 24 [25 Aug 08] W 40-6 v Panthers (A). [DH] 12 Pts; 1t, 4/8g
[View] Round 25 [30 Aug 08] L 16-17 v Knights (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 26 [07 Sep 08] W 42-4 v Rabbitohs (H). [DH] 12 Pts; 1t, 4/7g
[View] Finals Week 1 [14 Sep 08] L 15-18 v Warriors (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Finals Week 2 [20 Sep 08] W 16-14 v Broncos (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
======================================================================================================
2008 International Test Matches
Australia 
1 games; 1 tries, 4 points. 
		 
[View] Centenary Test [09 May 08] W 28-12 v New Zealand (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 1t
======================================================================================================
2007 State of Origin
Queensland Origin 
3 games; 
[View] Origin [13 Jun 07] W 10-6 v NSW Origin (A). [DH]
[View] Origin [23 May 07] W 25-18 v NSW Origin (H). [DH]
[View] Origin [04 Jul 07] L 4-18 v NSW Origin (H). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2007 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
24 games; 4 tries, 88/121 goals, 192 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [16 Mar 07] W 18-16 v Tigers (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 2 [24 Mar 07] W 32-16 v Raiders (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/4g
[View] Round 3 [01 Apr 07] W 30-12 v Warriors (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/6g
[View] Round 4 [07 Apr 07] W 22-12 v Knights (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 5 [14 Apr 07] W 24-10 v Dragons (A). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/4g
[View] Round 6 [21 Apr 07] W 30-20 v Panthers (H). [DH] 18 Pts; 2t (56th, 73rd), 5/6g
[View] Round 7 [27 Apr 07] W 28-18 v Broncos (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/6g
[View] Round 8 [05 May 07] L 12-30 v Tigers (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 9 [14 May 07] W 38-14 v Bulldogs (H). [DH] 14 Pts; 7/7g
[View] Round 11 [26 May 07] L 12-13 v Sea Eagles (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 12 [02 Jun 07] W 26-10 v Rabbitohs (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/5g
[View] Round 14 [16 Jun 07] W 58-12 v Cowboys (A). [DH] 18 Pts; 9/10g
[View] Round 15 [24 Jun 07] W 28-6 v Dragons (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/7g
[View] Round 17 [07 Jul 07] W 12-8 v Rabbitohs (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 18 [16 Jul 07] W 44-0 v Knights (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/6g
[View] Round 19 [21 Jul 07] W 34-6 v Raiders (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Round 20 [27 Jul 07] L 16-26 v Roosters (A). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 22 [12 Aug 07] W 14-6 v Broncos (H). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 23 [17 Aug 07] W 14-10 v Eels (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 1t, 3/3g
[View] Round 24 [24 Aug 07] W 38-6 v Bulldogs (A). [DH] 12 Pts; 6/6g
[View] Round 25 [02 Sep 07] W 50-6 v Titans (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Finals Week 1 [09 Sep 07] W 40-0 v Broncos (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 1t, 3/7g
[View] Finals Week 3 [23 Sep 07] W 26-10 v Eels (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/6g
[View] Grand Final [30 Sep 07] W 34-8 v Sea Eagles. [DH] 6 Pts; 3/8g
======================================================================================================
2007 International Test Matches
Australia 
2 games; 1 tries, 6/10 goals, 16 points. 
		 
[View] Bundaberg Rum Test [20 Apr 07] W 30-6 v New Zealand (H). [DH]
[View] Centenary Test [14 Oct 07] W 58-0 v New Zealand (A). [DH] 16 Pts; 1t, 6/10g
======================================================================================================
2006 Tri-Nations Test Series
Australia 
5 games; 
[View] Tri-Nations Match 1 [14 Oct 06] W 30-18 v New Zealand (A). [DH]
[View] Tri-Nations Match 2 [21 Oct 06] W 20-15 v New Zealand (H). [DH]
[View] Tri-Nations Match 4 [04 Nov 06] L 12-23 v Great Britain (H). [BE]
[View] Tri-Nations Match 6 [18 Nov 06] W 33-10 v Great Britain (H). [DH]
[View] Tri-Nations Final [25 Nov 06] W 16-12 v New Zealand (H). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2006 State of Origin
Queensland Origin 
3 games; 
[View] Origin [24 May 06] L 16-17 v NSW Origin (A). [DH]
[View] Origin [14 Jun 06] W 30-6 v NSW Origin (H). [DH]
[View] Origin [05 Jul 06] W 16-14 v NSW Origin. [DH]
======================================================================================================
2006 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
25 games; 5 tries, 79/109 goals, 178 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [12 Mar 06] W 22-16 v Warriors (A). [BE] 4 Pts; 1t
[View] Round 2 [19 Mar 06] W 22-18 v Roosters (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 3 [25 Mar 06] L 8-40 v Cowboys (A). [DH]
[View] Round 4 [02 Apr 06] L 28-30 v Tigers (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/5g
[View] Round 6 [15 Apr 06] W 40-18 v Panthers (A). [BE] 16 Pts; 1t, 6/8g
[View] Round 7 [22 Apr 06] W 52-6 v Knights (H). [DH] 16 Pts; 8/10g
[View] Round 8 [29 Apr 06] W 24-10 v Dragons (H). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/6g
[View] Round 9 [06 May 06] W 38-14 v Rabbitohs (A). [DH] 18 Pts; 1t, 7/8g
[View] Round 10 [13 May 06] W 18-6 v Cowboys (H). [DH] 10 Pts; 1t, 3/4g
[View] Round 12 [28 May 06] W 17-16 v Panthers (H). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/2g
[View] Round 13 [03 Jun 06] W 20-16 v Roosters (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/4g
[View] Round 15 [18 Jun 06] W 22-12 v Raiders (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 16 [23 Jun 06] W 16-12 v Bulldogs (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/3g
[View] Round 18 [07 Jul 06] W 10-4 v Broncos (H). [DH] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 19 [16 Jul 06] W 24-16 v Knights (A). [DH] 8 Pts; 4/4g
[View] Round 20 [21 Jul 06] W 28-12 v Sharks (H). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 21 [30 Jul 06] W 34-24 v Dragons (A). [DH] 10 Pts; 5/7g
[View] Round 22 [05 Aug 06] W 46-4 v Tigers (H). [DH] 12 Pts; 6/8g
[View] Round 23 [13 Aug 06] W 18-12 v Broncos (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 24 [19 Aug 06] L 20-24 v Warriors (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/4g
[View] Round 25 [26 Aug 06] W 22-18 v Raiders (A). [DH] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 26 [02 Sep 06] W 30-20 v Sea Eagles (H). [DH] 12 Pts; 1t, 4/6g
[View] Finals Week One [10 Sep 06] W 12-6 v Eels (H). [DH] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Finals Week Three [23 Sep 06] W 24-10 v Dragons. [DH] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Grand Final [01 Oct 06] L 8-15 v Broncos (H). [DH]
======================================================================================================
2005 State of Origin
Queensland Origin 
3 games; 9 goals, 18 points. 
		 
[View] Origin [25 May 05] W 24-20 v NSW Origin (H). [BE] 10 Pts; 5/5g
[View] Origin [15 Jun 05] L 22-32 v NSW Origin (A). [BE] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Origin [06 Jul 05] L 10-32 v NSW Origin (H). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/2g
======================================================================================================
2005 NRL Telstra Premiership
Melbourne Storm 
23 games; 3 tries, 30 goals, 72 points. 
		 
[View] Round 1 [13 Mar 05] W 48-10 v Knights (H). [BE]
[View] Round 2 [19 Mar 05] W 46-12 v Dragons (A). [BE] 10 Pts; 1t (53rd), 3/4g
[View] Round 3 [27 Mar 05] L 18-25 v Sea Eagles (A). [BE] 6 Pts; 3/3g
[View] Round 4 [02 Apr 05] W 50-4 v Broncos (H). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/3g
[View] Round 5 [08 Apr 05] L 16-36 v Panthers (A). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 6 [16 Apr 05] L 14-26 v Eels (H). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/2g
[View] Round 7 [24 Apr 05] W 46-10 v Raiders (A). [BE] 6 Pts; 3/4g
[View] Round 8 [30 Apr 05] L 10-30 v Sharks (H). [BE]
[View] Round 10 [14 May 05] W 38-12 v Souths (A). [BE] 6 Pts; 3/8g
[View] Round 12 [29 May 05] W 24-16 v Dragons (H). [BE] 6 Pts; 1t (54th), 1/1g
[View] Round 13 [05 Jun 05] W 30-14 v Tigers (A). [BE] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 15 [18 Jun 05] L 14-28 v Panthers (H). [BE]
[View] Round 16 [25 Jun 05] W 48-6 v Souths (H). [BE] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 18 [09 Jul 05] W 20-0 v Raiders (H). [BE] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Round 19 [17 Jul 05] L 15-28 v Broncos (A). [BE]
[View] Round 20 [24 Jul 05] W 24-10 v Roosters (H). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 21 [30 Jul 05] L 18-37 v Knights (A). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/1g
[View] Round 22 [06 Aug 05] L 16-40 v Sharks (A). [BE] 2 Pts; 1/2g
[View] Round 23 [13 Aug 05] W 22-10 v Warriors (H). [BE]
[View] Round 25 [27 Aug 05] W 34-22 v Tigers (H). [BE] 4 Pts; 1t (18th)
[View] Round 26 [03 Sep 05] L 24-30 v Cowboys (A). [BE] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Finals Week One [10 Sep 05] W 24-18 v Broncos (A). [BE] 4 Pts; 2/2g
[View] Finals Week Two [17 Sep 05] L 16-24 v Cowboys. [BE] 2 Pts; 1/1g
======================================================================================================





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