Townsville Bulletin

How Cronk turned Keary into iceman

- MICHAEL CARAYANNIS

LUKE Keary has credited Cooper Cronk with helping develop an “ice cold” approach to his football.

Nine months ago it was a steely resolve the Sydney Roosters five- eighth said he did not possess. But Cronk’s arrival at Bondi helped narrow his focus.

It was evident in the lead- up to the grand final where he boldly declared he “did not give a s-- t” if Cronk played. That mentality helped Keary lead the Roosters to a 21- 6 win over Melbourne as he walked away with Clive Churchill honours. He now wants to use that same approach ahead of his Test debut tomorrow.

“Nine months I couldn’t get that job done,” Keary said of his grand final performanc­e. “I learnt a lot off Cooper. He doesn’t let emotions affect him. That’s how he got through the grand final. Whether he feels happy, sad, emotional he knows how to get it done.

“If you asked me what the biggest thing I’ve taken from him that would be it – how to deal with every kind of situation. High pressure, low pressure, people bagging you, people loving you. There is only way to get through it – that’s turning off everything upstairs.

“It’s a mentality. ( Cronk, Cameron Smith and Billy Slater) have had it their whole career. They don’t get carried away if they are going bad, good, playing Origin, Tests. They just have this steely focus they will get it done. Whether I feel happy – I am now – but it doesn’t faze me. I know the only thing that matters is what happens after the game on Saturday.

“I don’t think I was in the same mind frame or attitude ( before this season). It’s not a knock. It takes time.

“You want to be proud and you want to be thankful ( about being selected for Australia) but I have a job to do. It’s not about getting here. It’s about what I do once I get here.”

That grand final performanc­e helped book Keary a Test appearance that even he conceded was not on his radar at the start of the year. He managed to shut out the speculatio­n about Cronk’s injury and remarkably revealed he had barely spoken with his Roosters teammate in the lead- up to their match against Melbourne.

“I didn’t speak to him at all until Saturday, which was weird,” Keary said. “Saturday morning he took us in and said he had these injections and he was a chance but he didn’t know. I remember we were doing runthrough­s up and down the corridor ( during the grand final warm- up), I couldn’t see him and I thought maybe he isn’t playing.

“I did not know until I had a chat to him on the two- minute bell and he told me what he could and couldn’t do. He said I can ‘ pass kind of and I can kind of do some kicking but I’m not going to be able to really get hit’.”

Keary is yet find the time to watch over his grand final heroics. No one celebrated the Roosters premiershi­p win more than the 26- year- old but that changed when he was called to the Kangaroos squad as a late replacemen­t for Cameron Munster.

 ??  ?? STEELY RESOLVE: Luke Keary is ready to make his Test debut in Australia’s clash with New Zealand tomorrow.
STEELY RESOLVE: Luke Keary is ready to make his Test debut in Australia’s clash with New Zealand tomorrow.

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