Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Bulls’ strength for the Birds

- NIC DARVENIZA goldcoastb­ulletin.com.au

TOM and Will Bird are the smash and dash, fight and flight brothers different in every way but for their singlemind­ed determinat­ion to lead the Nerang Bulls to victory over Colleges in Saturday’s Gold Coast rugby grand final.

Tom Bird is the elder by four years; a 190cm, 110 kilogram tradie turned rugby wrecking ball on weekends.

Younger brother Will Bird is only just 170 centimetre­s tall.

He’s the 68 kilogram clean freak who demanded his brother play on his knees to even up the fight in their backyard footy skirmishes growing up.

Now 22, Will is Nerang’s fearless first-year fullback who says nothing would mean more to him than snapping his club’s 14-year winless streak in Gold Coast rugby’s top grade.

The two brothers are as different as they come, which could be why their yin and yang combinatio­n in the Bulls backline has inspired Nerang into Saturday’s decider.

Their love for their club has spanned their entire lives.

The Birds began their footballin­g careers on Pappas Way at five years old and after 21 years for Tom and 17 years for Will have never looked back.

“This club means everything to me and my family,” Will said.

“Three years ago me and Tom arrived at the first preseason training of the year and there were only nine of us there.

“We said that’s it, we were going to transfer to Helensvale - but we couldn’t do it.”

The Bird brothers got on the phone and recruited to save their club instead.

There is no chance Nerang would be contesting their first A Grade final in over a decade if not for their efforts on that sweaty Tuesday night in 2018.

The Bulls rebounded from rock bottom to win the reserve grade premiershi­p that season, demanding their place back in the top flight in 2019.

With the Bird brothers front and centre Nerang finished within a match of the 2019 decider as well.

The Bulls fairytale comeback will reach a crescendo at 4pm when they take the field in a grand final televised on goldcoastb­ulletin.com.au.

Tom will line up at his usual outside centre position while coach Johnny Maniapoto’s season-long gamble on backing a 170cm scrumhalf to anchor the team’s backline at fullback will reach its final test.

Converting Will Bird from the ruckbase to the outside backs has proven a masterstro­ke thus far.

The diminutive custodian has been an attacking terror throughout 2020, using a combinatio­n of speed and swerve and footwork to make opposition­s double his size wish they were invisible instead.

“I love it,” Will said of his new position.

“This is my first year playing fullback, I’ve been a half

back all my life.

“I get more space, more time.

“I can see a lot more and move a lot more, use my speed and footwork.”

Not that there haven’t been hurdles along the way.

The first was no less humorous for its predictabi­lity.

“The 15 jersey is a size Large,” the fullback said.

“I’m only a Medium so I wear the 21 jersey because it fits.”

Bird could escape the ruckbase but not the jersey that flagged him as a member of rugby’s most colourful species.

The second was a near miss.

“Our regular halfback Bryson Rukuwai broke both his hands in the Navar Herbert Cup game against Helensvale about a month ago,” he said.

“There was a plan to move me to halfback but our coach wanted to keep me at fullback, so he moved Grubby (winger and skipper Josh Edmond) there instead.”

Nerang lost their first two matches after making the switch but stuck to their guns.

It all clicked in a 41-20 win over Gold Coast Eagles, which parlayed into a three-game winning streak and a grand final berth with undefeated Colleges in the decider.

“It’s been amazing,” Tom Bird said.

“I’ve always known what Will can do.

“People question his height and his size but you watch, he plays like’s six-foot tall and bulletproo­f.

“He’s a wonderful player and in my eyes he’s the best player on the Coast.”

Tune in from 4pm on the Bulletin website to catch Nerang take on Colleges in a grand final blockbuste­r live for Bulletin digital subscriber­s. Subscribe for just $1.

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 ?? Pictures: Scott Powick ?? Left: GCDRU grand final captains Jaye Paton (left) and Josh Edmonds. Right: Nerang Bulls teammates and brothers Will (left) and Tom Bird.
Pictures: Scott Powick Left: GCDRU grand final captains Jaye Paton (left) and Josh Edmonds. Right: Nerang Bulls teammates and brothers Will (left) and Tom Bird.
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