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A complete spine, Tevita Pangai Junior and Trent Barrett: Five burning questions – Canterbury Bulldogs

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Captain Ibis

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It’s make or break for the Bulldogs in 2022.​


SCOTT PRYDE
EDITOR
JANUARY 17, 2022 - 10:37AM

NSWRL Rd 2 - Mounties v Panthers


SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 20: Matt Burton of the Panthers runs the ball during the round two NSWRL match between the Mounties and the Penrith Panthers at Bankwest Stadium, on March 20, 2021, in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

The Canterbury Bulldogs come into the new season on the back of a horrific stretch at the bottom of the table, but the lights are shining bright.

Trent Barrett’s side have made a monstrous off-season recruitment run, signing players left, right and centre as they look to right the ship and move back into the top half of the table.

It may not happen overnight, but their recruitment run suggests it should.

Matt Burton is the headline act to arrive at the club, but the Bulldogs have also brought in Tevita Pangai Junior, Paul Vaughan, Josh Addo-Carr and Matt Dufty among others, all under the watchful eye of Phil Gould, whose development work at the Panthers build a juggernaut which is only just being seen in its true form now.

All of that means the expectations on the Bulldogs are enormous, but that isn’t necessarily a surprise. They are expected to do incredible things despite the fact many of these players haven’t played together before.

Regardless, from the bottom four for so many years, the only way is up for the Belmore-based club, and their fans will turn quickly if they don’t get success.

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 20: Bulldogs coach Trent Barrett looks on during the round 15 NRL match between the Parramatta Eels and the Canterbury Bulldogs at Bankwest Stadium, on June 20, 2021, in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Nowhere in the NRL is there a team with more interest and intrigue around them before a ball has been kicked for 2022 than the Bulldogs.
Here are the burning questions they have to answer for success in 2022.


Can the team gel?

This is probably the question which will shape the Bulldogs 2022 campaign.

Some will say that “gelling” isn’t really an issue given every player is a professional, but it will take time when there are this many signings.

Almost half the squad has arrived at the club this season, and if you were to piece together the club’s best 17, then at least five will be fresh, and potentially up to seven or eight.

That is a recipe for disaster if things don’t work out, particularly given Matt Dufty and Matt Burton come straight into spine positions.

Of course, things probably can’t go any worse than they did last year regardless of how long it takes to gel, and the Bulldogs will show improvement at some point, but their run to the finals will depend on how quickly they can begin playing as one rugby league team, and whether all their arriving players maintain form from one club to the next into what is a new and improving system.


Who plays hooker?

Aside from the team gelling, this is another big one for the Bulldogs. Their recruitment rampage on the remainder of the competition might have been impressive, but they will be stuck with stop-gap measures or inexperience at hooker in 2022.

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 10: Jeremy Marshall-King of the Bulldogs celebrates scoring a try with team mates during the round 21 NRL match between the Canterbury Bulldogs and the Wests Tigers at ANZ Stadium on August 10, 2019 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Reed Mahoney is set to arrive in 2023 which will fix the problem once and for all, but for now, it’s either a half who has turned himself into a serviceable dummy half in Jeremy Marshall-King, or a signing from the South Sydney Rabbitohs in Joshua Cook.

Marshall-King has been solid in the number nine, but isn’t an out and out dummy half - something teams in the top eight all have outside of the Manly Sea Eagles, although it could be argued Lachlan Croker has become more than just “serviceable.”

Still, without a strong dummy half to hold it together, the Bulldogs might as well throw their recruitment drive in the bin.

Marshall-King is probably the best option, but he will need to continue improving in a big way.


Will Matt Burton find his feet in the halves?

The answer to this question could well be hidden in who partners Burton, with Jake Averillo, Kyle Flanagan and Bailey Biondi-Odo among the options.
It’s thought Averillo will get first crack in the halves alongside Burton, and that’s probably the right option given his running game will allow Burton to slot into a more conventional kicking and organisational position.

But then, that relies on Burton finding his feet as a full time half.

He had a handful of games there in 2021, but didn’t play amazingly well, while his time in the centres was excellent.

He is a half and will come good, but it could take some time.


Can Tevita Pangai Junior be the game-breaker?

The Bulldogs need a game-breaker. They haven’t lacked in forwards even during their run at the bottom of the table.

A pack led by Josh Jackson, they have had strong names who turn up and put in the effort, despite the scoreline often being a dismal reading by the end of the 80 minutes for the men in blue and white.

But what they haven’t had is a player to burst games wide open. Think David Fifita, Tariq Sims, Viliame Kikau. Players who with a run or two can change the game on a dime.
Tevita Pangai Junior, whether playing the middle or on the edge is this sort of player, and will need to do it time and time again for the Bulldogs in 2022.

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MACKAY, AUSTRALIA - SEPTEMBER 18: Tevita Pangai Junior of the Panthers watches on during the NRL Semifinal match between the Penrith Panthers and the Parramatta Eels at BB Print Stadium on September 18, 2021 in Mackay, Australia. (Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images)

Consistency - something he improved enormously on at the Panthers after his early release from the Broncos - is something he will need too, but he is going to be used as the game-breaker for Canterbury.


Does Trent Barrett have what it takes to coach at NRL level?

Trent Barrett finally has a team which looks competitive, and while there are natural roadblocks in the path of progression, if Barrett is a good enough coach, he will find a way to overcome them in a hurry as the season progresses.

This is almost make or break for Barrett.

His team have, at times, shown they want to play for him, even when grossly out-gunned and out-talented by opposition teams, but now they have the talent to run with other top-eight bound teams.

Can Barrett devise the right attacking structures, pick the right teams and get his team firing?

Only time will tell.
 

Captain Ibis

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I don't know about make or break. Obviously if there are few improvements (highly doubt it) Trent will be under fire, but 2023 is when we should be genuinely competitive as this squad together will be in their second year with Reed Mahoney and Kikau coming on board.

I think too many people think of Burton's time in the halves during the Origin period when the entire Penrith team was flat but forget that he was solid when they defeated the Storm earlier in the season without Nathan.
 
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Hooking options are also BBO and Jackson Topine.

Burton played so much in the centres that he didn't have a chance to show his true skillset in the halves.
 
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