The Cairns Post

No niggles in knee for McCullough

- TRAVIS MEYN AND PETER BADEL

WAYNE Bennett will thrust Andrew McCullough into his starting side for Friday’s blockbuste­r derby against the Cowboys in a bid to stifle North Queensland’s all-star forward pack.

The Broncos will start underdogs in the Suncorp Stadium showdown after being burned 34-12 by the Dragons in last Thursday’s NRL season opener.

The defeat to St George-Illawarra raised serious questions about Brisbane halves Anthony Milford and Kodi Nikorima, while Bennett turned the blowtorch on his misfiring forwards.

But one positive from the Kogarah debacle was McCullough emerging unscathed in his return from a knee reconstruc­tion. McCullough, 28, is considered to be the heart-andsoul of the Broncos and his season-ending knee injury in July last year was a dagger to Brisbane’s premiershi­p campaign.

McCullough’s defensive influence against the Dragons was so prominent he topped Brisbane’s tackle count (33) despite playing only 46 minutes from the bench after Sam Thaiday started at hooker.

The Broncos have been carefully managing McCullough’s return, however the feisty No.9 told Bennett he was ready to start at dummy-half in the 2015 grand final rematch.

“He will start,” Bennett told News Corp.

“We will play it by ear (whether he plays 80 minutes) but he is certainly starting.

“He wanted to start after the game. He was happy.

“It was his first game and he was happy with the way it all went. He got some confidence out of it. That’s what we were trying to achieve with him.”

The Cowboys’ all-star starting pack, led by Test stars Matt Scott, Jason Taumalolo and Jordan McLean, were excellent in last Friday’s defeat of Cronulla, while interchang­e forwards Scott Bolton and Coen Hess were also among North Queensland’s best.

Brisbane’s engine room face a stern test against their Cowboys counterpar­ts but the sight of a relaxed McCullough in the Broncos’ sheds was one ray of hope to emerge from their insipid 34-12 loss to the Dragons.

Most NRL players returning from a knee reconstruc­tion seek mental comfort in applying heavy strapping around their rebuilt knee.

Not McCullough. He felt no need for strapping. There was no ice pack in sight after putting his left knee through its first serious test since last July, when he snapped his ACL against Parramatta in a collision with former teammate Adam Blair.

“The knee pulled up really well. There were no mental scars, so I’m right now,” McCullough said after the game.

 ?? Picture: ANNETTE DEW ?? SILVER LINING: Despite a round 1 loss, the Broncs are cheering Andrew McCullough’s successful return.
Picture: ANNETTE DEW SILVER LINING: Despite a round 1 loss, the Broncs are cheering Andrew McCullough’s successful return.

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