The Chronicle

IT’S OPEN SEASON ON TOP AWARD

- MONDAY BUZZ PHIL ROTHFIELD

WHEN bookmakers opened betting on the Dally M Awards this year ,Damien Cook was paying $81, Kalyn Ponga $51 and Roger Tuivasa Sheck $26.

Now the South Sydney hooker, Newcastle fullback and New Zealand skipper are joint $3.50 favourites for the game’s most prestigiou­s honour.

This year’s Dally M award is the closest on record, almost impossible to pick. In past seasons, with two rounds remaining we normally had a good idea who was going to win.

A Johnathan Thurston, Jason Taumalolo, Cameron Smith or Cooper Cronk.

Try picking the 2018 winner.

Fullback

The toughest positional award of them all. When was the last time we had five great fullbacks of the calibre of Ponga, James Tedesco, Billy Slater, Val Holmes and Tuivasa-Sheck. I’ve gone for Ponga because he was so high in the count (one point off the lead) when voting went behind closed doors. But the others have been outstandin­g and could knock him off.

Winger

Josh Addo-Carr has been in sensationa­l form for Melbourne and NSW. The fastest man in the game and a freakishly talented finisher. Again though, it is a hot field. Blake Ferguson, David Fusitu’a, Jamayne Isaako and Rob Jennings have been the other standouts.

Centre

One of the easier awards. No-one has dominated like Sydney Roosters star Latrell Mitchell. We knew he was a wonderful talent but he has added consistenc­y to his game this year. Brisbane flyer James Roberts and the Wests Tigers’ Esan Marsters have been outstandin­g. Euan Aitken was the form centre in the competitio­n for the first 10 weeks but has been disappoint­ing in recent weeks.

Five-eighth

James Maloney led the award on 17 points when voting went secret after round 12. The fact he will miss the last three club rounds has thrown it wide open. Cameron Munster at the Storm and Blake Green at the Warriors should also be in contention for the five-eighth of the year. Don’t rule out Rabbitoh Cody Walker.

Halfback

This will be as close as the fiveeighth of the year. Luke Brooks at the Tigers is arguably the most improved player in the competitio­n. He was just one point behind Maloney in equal second position when the voting closed. My choice would be Cooper Cronk. After a slow settling in period he has been outstandin­g for the Roosters. Nathan Cleary and Ben Hunt were the favourites at the halfway mark but have both struggled over the past month.

Lock

What a great field; Sam Burgess, Jack De Belin, Jai Arrow, Jake Trbojevic and Jason Taumalolo. I’ve got a slight leaning towards Burgess because he dominates every week. De Belin would have led the field early but like a lot of St George Illawarra players, his form has been off over the past month.

Second row

Probably comes down to a two-man race between Penrith star Billy Kikau and Roosters skipper Boyd Cordner, although Tariq Sims, Tyson Frizell and John Sutton have had great seasons. I lean towards Kikau, who has emerged this season as the most explosive edge forward in the competitio­n and has been more responsibl­e than anyone else for two of Penrith’s miraculous comeback victories.

Hooker

The easiest award. Damien Cook has been the competitio­n’s best No. 9. The rest are just making up the numbers.

Front row

Very hard to split Dave Klemmer from the Bulldogs and Cronulla prop Andrew Fifita. Klemmer has averaged 177 metres a game in a struggling team. Fifita led Cronulla magnificen­tly early in the season and was running equal second when voting closed.

 ?? Photo: Brendon Thorne/AAP ?? BRIGHT LIGHT: Kalyn Ponga has been a star for the Knights in his first full NRL season.
Photo: Brendon Thorne/AAP BRIGHT LIGHT: Kalyn Ponga has been a star for the Knights in his first full NRL season.
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