The Northern Advocate

Time to man up, says prop

Warriors looking good but results are what counts now

- Troy Whittaker of nrl.com This article was first published on nrl.com and is reprinted with permission.

Addin Fonua-Blake knows a star-studded team sheet doesn’t count for much in the heat of battle. The prop is among several Warriors recruits, including Ben Murdoch-Masila, Bayley Sironen and Kane Evans, who will combine to form one of the Telstra Premiershi­p’s strongest packs.

On paper, at least.

Evans wasn’t picked for tomorrow’s opening round in Gosford due to a lack of training, but the likes of Jamayne Taunoa-Brown, Leeson Ah Mau, Eliesa Katoa and Bunty Afoa will be locking horns with the Titans.

“We’ve got a lot of size and mobility,” Fonua-Blake told NRL.com.

“On paper, we have a really good team and a really good forward pack, but I’ve played in some sides where we’ve had an outstandin­g team on paper but it doesn’t transfer onto the field.

“We’re not getting too far ahead of ourselves as a team. We know the benchmark — the Roosters, Souths, Melbourne and Panthers . . . we want to get our name up there.”

After narrowly missing the finals last year, the Warriors are banking on the aggressive Fonua-Blake to stamp his dominance.

The former Sea Eagle believes he can rise to another level — a scary thought for opponents given the 25-year-old was voted the game’s best front-rower by his peers in NRL.com’s 2020 player poll.

“That’s one of my personal goals, to outdo what I did the year before. Hopefully, this year I can take another step,” he said.

“I felt like last year I was limited in my opportunit­ies. I played a few good games but injury plagued my season.”

Perhaps the forgotten man of their pack is Ah Mau, who played two matches in 2020 before suffering a pectoral injury. He could have returned for the last round but would’ve needed to quarantine for two weeks after flying from New Zealand.

Ah Mau, 31, establishe­d himself in the Kiwi test team from 2018-19 and the prop will be a valuable asset if he can recapture that form.

“It’s a forward pack where everyone has got their own strengths. There are some big boys, so if we can play as a pack and build that momentum for the team, I think we can do some good stuff.”

Having watched much of the Warriors’ 2020 campaign from afar, with the squad staying on the NSW Central

Coast — as they will until at least June 21 this year — due to Covid-19 restrictio­ns, Ah Mau said he felt the tight-knit connection when he rejoined the group.

While the Warriors have the NRL’s heaviest roster, including the 110kg-plus Fonua-Blake, Evans and MurdochMas­ila, they aren’t concerned about the game’s frenetic pace after the rule changes.

“We’ve got a lot of big boys in our team and everyone’s really good on their feet, very skilful with the ball in hand,” FonuaBlake said.

“I think it’s about getting the right balance between not dropping the ball and not making it hard on ourselves so we can come up the other end and show our talent with the ball.”

Coach Nathan Brown said he didn’t think any teams would be “overly shocked” by the impact of the new rules.

“I’m sure we all learnt something from the [trial] experience of it, but we’d like to think we were putting things in place to help suit the new rules a little bit,” Brown said.

“Last year, the change happened in the Covid break so clubs, one, didn’t know how it was going to unfold, and two, didn’t have the time to really prepare for it, whereas we’ve had the time [this year] to prepare for a bit of a quicker game.”

Brown admitted his players weren’t surprised about having to extend their stay in Australia because of travel restrictio­ns despite originally planning to return home in early April.

He said the prospect of loaning players had not been discussed.

“There are only one or two families at the moment who aren’t here but will be coming soon,” Brown said, adding that he doesn’t envisage players requesting to return to New Zealand like last year.

“Once all that happens and the kids are in school or in daycare, the partners have got their lives sorted — we’re staying in a really nice location and they’ve all settled in really well at the minute.

“That could change through a family illness, that’s a part of life whether we’re living in New Zealand or here, so we’ll deal with that if it happens. But I’m not foreseeing any problems in the near future.”

Democrats in the United States Congress passed one of the largest economic stimulus measures in US history yesterday with a US$1.9 trillion ($2.6t) coronaviru­s relief bill handing Joe Biden the first major victory of his presidency.

The financial relief package will provide direct payments to most Americans, with tens of millions of households set to receive US$1400 cheques as well as extended child tax credits and enhanced unemployme­nt support.

The stimulus bill passed the House of Representa­tives, where Democrats hold the majority, without a single vote from Republican congressme­n, despite Biden’s hopes of gaining bipartisan support for the measure.

Democrats praised the vote as a “historic day” and the “beginning of the end of the great Covid depression”, comparing the stimulus package to US government relief in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. The White House said Biden plans to sign the bill into law on Saturday NZT.

The bill’s passage occurred before the Democrats’ self-imposed March 14 deadline, when current unemployme­nt benefits expire, despite opposition from Republican­s, and represente­d the first of Biden’s major policy agendas.

Polling suggests the majority of Americans support the stimulus package, which Biden called the American Rescue Plan, and if it succeeds it could offer a major boost to Democrats ahead of the 2022 Midterms.

Republican­s dismissed the bill as a wishlist of liberal priorities and argued it placed too much of a burden on the public purse.

Key features of the package include up to US$1400-per-person direct payments that will be sent to about 85 per cent of US households, a US$300 per-week top up to unemployme­nt benefits and an expansion of the child tax credit of up to US$3600 per child.

The sweeping bill also includes US$350 billion in aid to state and local government­s, as well as billions of dollars for schools to help students return to the classroom, vaccine research and developmen­t and aid to small businesses hit by the pandemic.

The bill was scaled back from its original proposal during its passage through the Senate, narrowing the scope of eligibilit­y for the US$1400 direct payments.

 ?? Photo/ Photosport ?? Damaging prop Addin Fonua-Blake is looking to push on this season.
Photo/ Photosport Damaging prop Addin Fonua-Blake is looking to push on this season.

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