Sunday News

Mannah from heaven for Eels

- CHRIS BARRETT

THE last time Parramatta finished a season in the NRL’s top eight, Tim Mannah had played only a couple of dozen first-grade games. Barring injury, in the next month he will reach 200 matches.

In between, coaches have walked out and been sacked, boards have been rolled and banned, and competitio­n points have been deducted. Mannah, in the meantime, has lost a little pace and a little hair, and added zilch to his semifinals tally.

That interminab­le wait should be coming to an end shortly after the Eels captain and front-rower, the only remaining member of their 2009 grand final team, marks his milestone.

Their schedule for the final seven rounds is such that a finals berth is theirs for the taking. Their for-and-against record is not ideal, but they’re drawn against the NRL’s bottom four teams, including today’s opponent Wests Tigers at their de facto home ground ANZ Stadium, and only one top-eight side, Brisbane, who they play twice.

Even so, you won’t hear Mannah or anyone else at the Eels talking as if a top-eight spot is in the bag. Dysfunctio­n and disappoint­ment have been the prevailing themes here for so long that they don’t want to jinx it.

‘‘It’s better to be in that half of the table than the other half, but we’re not getting too carried away,’’ said Mannah, 29.

‘‘It’s really important that we don’t get too far ahead of ourselves. [2009] was my first year. I thought, ‘How good is this, [you] make grand finals every year’. It’s obviously been a pretty disappoint­ing few years for the club since.’’

The healing is ongoing. Parramatta are seventh and have set a club membership record this year, but they remain without a major sponsor. What should be one of the most highly soughtafte­r pieces of polyester in the competitio­n hasn’t been snapped up, although there is said to be interest for 2018 and 2019.

After years of factionali­sm and later fraudulenc­e that only the interventi­on of the NRL and the state government could ultimately remedy, the continuing absence of a front-of-jersey backer seems a relatively minor affliction. Just ask Mannah, who even before a salary cap scandal engulfed the club last year, had seen enough drama to be an Academy Awards judge.

When Ricky Stuart quit the Eels in 2013 he was ready to take off himself. Only the return of Brad Arthur, a caretaker head coach the year before, had convinced Mannah to stay.

‘‘To be honest, I was very close to leaving when Ricky left,’’ Mannah said. ‘‘At the time the club was all over the shop. The coach walked out on the club, half the squad was sacked, there wasn’t much of a bright light shining at all.

‘‘I remember me and Jarryd [Hayne] were pretty set on [Arthur] coming back and when he came back to the club it didn’t take us long to see that he was steering the ship in the right direction.

‘‘I’m very glad I did stay because he’s kind of created the culture and vibe around the club that makes you want to be here.’’

While there is optimism about their run in to the finals, it is rightly restrained. The Eels have planted themselves in the top eight without what would constitute a big kill this season. They’ve beaten three teams above them on the ladder, but met a slow-starting Manly in round one, knocked off a North Queensland side without Johnathan Thurston and hit the jackpot by drawing the Storm in Melbourne while Cameron Smith, Billy Slater, Cooper Cronk and Cameron Munster were preparing to blow away NSW.

Parramatta’s army of supporters, however, won’t care if they can chalk up the three wins from their remaining games that should ensure they figure beyond the first weekend of September.

‘‘I think I know exactly what it’d mean to the fans because I know what it means to me,’’ Mannah said. ‘‘They’re just as passionate. It’s obviously something that they want, and it’s obviously something that we want.

‘‘I don’t want to be too boring, but we really don’t want to start thinking too far ahead of ourselves and stumbling on things that we should be doing at the moment.’’

After what they’ve been through, and if it means a return to the finals, right now boring is something the blue and gold faithful will take. The Sun-Herald GETTY IMAGES said. ‘‘Those goals have been achieved and there is now every opportunit­y for the Knights to become a powerhouse of the game in the years ahead.

The Knights are on track for their third successive wooden spoon since Nathan Tinkler lost ownership of the club four years ago.

However, second-year coach Nathan Brown has taken the long road to fix the team’s results on the field, and there has been clear improvemen­t shown despite their 2-16 record on the field.

It’s widely tipped Wests will be in support of Brown’s plans, key given he is off contract next year and they will have full control of the board by the end of 2017.

Brown indicated he believed it would be a step in the right direction following Friday night’s loss to the Sydney Roosters.

‘‘It’s not for me to comment on . . . I suppose that’s for the NRL and Wests. It’d be a great thing for the club,’’ he said.

Meanwhile, Knights chairman Brian McGuigan was happy his board had delivered stronger governance throughout the threeyear stint, while chief executive Matt Gidley promised the likely transition period between August 15 and November 1 would have little impact on players.

The move leaves the Gold Coast as the last club in full control of the NRL. - AAP

‘ I think I know exactly what it’d mean to the fans because I know what it means to me.’ TIM MANNAH

 ??  ?? Barring injury, Tim Mannah is set to rack up 200 NRL matches for the Parramatta Eels in the next month.
Barring injury, Tim Mannah is set to rack up 200 NRL matches for the Parramatta Eels in the next month.

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