The Weekend Post

Clash breaks TV records

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BEN Te’o looms as the answer to Brisbane’s backrower shortage following a captain Alex Glenn’s nasty leg injury in Thursday’s heavy NRL loss to Parramatta.

The latest to fall for the Broncos, and in his first game as captain, Glenn missed the entire second half of the 34-6 loss and yesterday underwent surgery to clean what was described by Brisbane head of performanc­e Paul Devlin as a “deep laceration”.

Glenn must wait for the wound to heal before he can return to training, opening up the prospect of several more weeks on the sideline for the luckless new skipper.

It compounds problems for coach Anthony Seibold, given heavy-hitting pair David Fifita (knee) and Tevita Pangai Jr (suspension) will also be missing.

And the selection headache is set to get even worse for Seibold as in-form centre Kotoni Staggs faces a one-week suspension with an early guilty plea following a grade-two, careless high-tackle charge on Thursday night.

The match at Suncorp was Glenn’s first since his appointmen­t as captain, after he missed the opening two games with a hamstring injury.

THE NRL was celebratin­g a ratings bonanza yesterday after Thursday night’s clash between the Broncos and Eels smashed records.

More than 1.3 million viewers tuned into the season relaunch at Suncorp Stadium.

With the COVID-19 pandemic forcing crowds to be locked out of stadiums the big winners are Channel 9 and Fox, with Parramatta’s 34-6 belting of Brisbane delivering the NRL’s highest TV audience in six years.

The Broncos-Eels clash produced a whopping 29.5 per cent increase on last year’s average TV numbers.

In his absence the Broncos conceded 22 points to nil as the Eels romped to an easy win.

“We’ll probably have our three key edge backrowers gone ... we’ll have to see what we do there,” Seibold said.

“Losing Alex at half time, had to shuffle a few players around – just probably we didn’t quite handle that.

“They’re big outs, but it’s not the reason why we lost.”

Glenn’s absence strengthen­s the likelihood of Ben Te’o’s Red Hill return.

Linked to a move last week, the former Bronco has played rugby union since 2014.

Te’o had been playing for Japan’s Sunwolves before the Super Rugby season was halted in March.

But that contract is set to expire, with the Sunwolves at long odds to be part of the Super Rugby AU competitio­n in July and Te’o already training with the Broncos’ supplement­ary squad at Red Hill.

The Broncos have created another opening in their squad with the offload of hooker Andrew McCullough to Newcastle, although Te’o would still need to take a significan­t pay cut to squeeze into the club’s salary cap.

The 33-year-old former Queensland backrower, who won an NRL title with South Sydney in 2014, could also play a role in the centres.

It is a huge win for the NRL, which is just the third sport in the world, behind South Korea’s K League and Germany’s Bundesliga, to resume.

As the Eels ran riot in a freeflowin­g affair, 951,938 fans tuned in on Channel 9, while Fox League had 366,000 viewers. It was the highest-rating regular-season match since Round 1 in 2014.

The Suncorp blockbuste­r was also the best simulcast audience in Fox’s history.

It is estimated about 30 million people around the globe will watch this weekend’s NRL matches.

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