Geelong Advertiser

Papenhuyze­n: We’ll rise again

- MELISSA WOODS

MELBOURNE excitement machine Ryan Papenhuyze­n says he needs to play smarter as the Storm attempts to keep its NRL season alive in a sudden-death semi-final.

The minor premier plans to host a preliminar­y final went up in smoke when Canberra snatched a 12-10 victory at AAMI Park on Saturday night with a last-ditch try to English centre John Bateman.

One thing Melbourne coach Craig Bellamy loves about Papenhuyze­n is the young fullback’s desire to be around the ball, unafraid to make big carries through the middle despite his light frame.

In the past month of football Papenhuyze­n has run for an incredible 934 metres and he again topped the Storm’s run metres tally in the qualifying final loss.

But the 21-year-old said he was still learning to pick his opportunit­ies as opposing teams get to know more about his game, with Canberra putting plenty of heat on him in defence.

“I need to be a bit smarter when I get to the ball now — maybe instead of getting 25 carries I need to get 16 or 18 and just make them effective,” Papenhuyze­n said.

“Last week was a good example; I ran for 300 metres but I didn’t feel like I had a great game. It’s about having those 15 or 16 carries and making sure I’m effective.”

He said that Melbourne will be looking for a better start, having given away a fourth minute try to the Raiders which put them on the back foot.

They trailed until just after half-time but a better second half saw the Storm wrestle back control of the game until the Bateman try.

“To be 6-0 down early and come back, we had a good mentality in that regard but we have to start games a lot better and get on the front foot,” Papenhuyze­n said. “We showed when we do that we can blow teams away.”

It was the first taste of finals football for rookie Papenhuyze­n, along with centre Justin Olam and forwards Tui Kamikamica and Matt King, and he said they were already focused on Saturday’s night mission.

“Everyone is pretty disappoint­ed … the good thing out of it is that we can roll into what’s coming now, we don’t have a week off, we can just charge that momentum back up,” he said.

“We will be ready and we’ve shown this year we can bounce back pretty good.”

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