The Chronicle

Playmaking champs show how it’s done

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IT’S not always the most brilliant playmakers that win big NRL finals in September.

At this time of the year it’s as much about mental and physical toughness.

We’ve seen that over a weekend of high-intensity finals football.

The two best examples of this are the Roosters’ Cooper Cronk and the Panthers’ Jimmy Maloney.

The other example – on the opposite side of the scale – is New Zealand Warriors halfback Shaun Johnson, who is a more naturally gifted playmaker than both of them. A scintillat­ing player on his day. Yet when the going got tough at ANZ Stadium on Saturday evening, Johnson went missing and you hardly noticed he was out there.

(It’s one of the reasons I left him out of my top 50 NRL players at the start of the season.)

Then you look at Maloney and understand why he has such a striking grand final record with the premiershi­ps at the Roosters and the Sharks.

The big hit he copped from Warriors hooker Issac Luke would have put a normal player on a stretcher.

Somehow he got back to his feet and steered the Panthers to victory. Unbelievab­le toughness.

Across town at Allianz Stadium, Cronk was equally as brave and as dominant.

This guy mightn’t have the ‘c’ next to his name in the Big League program but there is no question about his leadership and durability on the football field.

It’s a credit to both Boyd Cordner and Jake Friend that their egos don’t get in the way and that they are happy for the former Storm halfback to run the show.

Cronk had to cope with as much physical punishment as Maloney.

The Sharks’ markers were in his face all night to try to nullify his kicking game.

Plus he took all his possession­s right to the defensive line before offloading.

In the end it was his wonderful game management that got the Roosters home. Not just with his field goal but the way he calmed down his teammates when the pressure was on.

It was a masterful exhibition which fully justified why Trent Robinson and Nick Politis wanted him in preference to Mitchell Pearce last off-season. Now back to Maloney.

When the Warriors led 10-2 early, the Panthers skipper got his side back into the game with a beautiful 40/20. From that moment Penrith took control of the game.

About a month ago I interviewe­d former Panthers coach Anthony Griffin in the week he was sacked by Phil Gould.

He started talking about his favourite player: “Jimmy’s the brainiest footballer I’ve coached.” A huge compliment considerin­g he had Darren Lockyer at the Broncos.

Next weekend Maloney is up against his old club the Cronulla Sharks.

He was under contract for 2018 but the Sharks offloaded him in a swap with Matt Moylan.

It will be a fantastic one-on-one confrontat­ion that will almost certainly determine the result.

 ??  ?? MONDAY BUZZ PHIL ROTHFIELD
MONDAY BUZZ PHIL ROTHFIELD

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