Townsville Bulletin

CIRALDO’S BET PAYS OFF AS PANTHERS PUT UP DEFENSIVE WALL

- DAVID RICCIO

KIM Ciraldo walked into the Commonweal­th Bank and asked to withdraw $500.

“But could I have please,” she asked.

The bet would be paid – but nothing inside the always-buzzing Penrith dressing-room ends without a punchline.

The best defensive side in the NRL has cost Penrith assistant coach and ‘Minister for Defence’, Cameron Ciraldo, $500 of his own. it in $5 notes

Much has been written and said about the sizzling attack of this powerful, fast and freewheeli­ng Panthers side.

But if defence wins premiershi­ps, Penrith are halfway to victory against Melbourne tomorrow night.

Ciraldo, always searching for an inspiring angle, a story to share about the club’s history or a colourful form of motivation for his players to keep tackling, decided he’d cough up his own cash if he had too.

Ahead of Penrith’s final game of the regular season against Canterbury at ANZ Stadium, Ciraldo proposed a bet to his players.

If the Panthers could finish the entire season by keeping their opposition to an average of 12 points or less, he would part with $500.

The kicker was, to record the rare feat and collect their cash, the Penrith unit couldn’t allow Canterbury to score a point.

The Panthers beat the Bulldogs 42-0 in the final round to finish the season with an incredible average of 11.9 points conceded per-game.

At the end of a team meeting,

Ciraldo flung the fives into the air, happy to part with the cash, but not as happy as the hooting and hollering players.

Penrith director Greg Alexander praised Ciraldo’s coaching and said as much as he’s proud of the Panthers cohesion in attack, he knows the backbone to the team and to winning competitio­ns is defence.

“When you look at games over the last 20 years, it’s the best defensive sides that normally play in the grand final,’’ Alexander said. “This year we’ve got teams one and two.”

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