Townsville Bulletin

Time to deliver for top Titan

- PAUL CRAWLEY

IT’S one thing to be labelled the NRL’S next best player. It is another living up to that huge potential.

Until now, Ash Taylor has appeared burdened by the expectatio­n.

But after dropping 7kg over the summer, Gold Coast coach Garth Brennan has challenged his gun No. 7 to grab hold of his own destiny in 2019.

This time last year it was Matty Johns who came out and declared “it is just a matter of time” before Taylor took the title as the game’s best player.

But 12 months on and Brennan concedes the career of the prodigious playmaker is at the crossroads.

Taylor turns 24 on March 17, the same day Gold Coast kicks off its season against Canberra.

And Brennan said every indication was that Taylor is set for his biggest season yet.

“Hopefully. Everyone has been waiting for it, haven’t we?” Brennan said.

“At least he has got himself in the best shape. He has given himself every chance to get himself right. He is the lightest he has been for a long time. He is down to 87kg.

“I think he played between 92-94kg last year. It was too heavy and he knew that.”

Taylor was forced to withdraw from this week’s All Stars game in Melbourne after undergoing a shoulder clean-out to ensure he is ready to start the season, with Brennan’s aim to play Taylor in the trial against Brisbane on March 2. “In November we were doing some wrestling and he landed awkwardly on it,” Brennan said.

“We had it scanned and there was no real damage to the shoulder, there was just a bit of impingemen­t going on. “It just hadn’t come good. “So I said to the doctor, ‘look, what are our options?’

“He said we either go along the way we are going, and needle it and try and get it right and eventually it might come good throughout the season, or we operate.

“Ash was a bit disappoint­ed about missing All Stars but he understand­s that he can’t go carrying a shoulder through the whole year.

“Otherwise that is not going to help him get to his ultimate goal of playing semi-final football for the Titans and also playing for Queensland Origin. You are not going to do that with a bung shoulder.”

Brennan also believes the arrival of Mal Meninga as the Titans’ head of performanc­e and culture can only benefit Taylor’s developmen­t.

Meninga is not the type to hold back from having a tough conversati­on, even with the greatest of players.

It’s legendary how he told Darren Lockyer, Petero Civoniceva and Steve Price that they were on their last chance for Queensland in 2006.

“Obviously having Mal in his ear at times to say, ‘mate, this is what we need from you’ is also going to be a massive bonus for us,” Brennan said.

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