Weekend Herald

Cap drama and Foran crisis helps to fortify Eels

- League Scott Bailey

Friday July 8, 2016 should have been Parramatta’s darkest day in an era full of off and on- field embarrassm­ent.

Wallowing already in the depths of a provisiona­l salary cap crisis, the Eels were about to be rocked twice in 24 hours.

The day began with reports star halfback Kieran Foran — the man supposed to lead them out of the mire — had quit the club.

Already out for the year with a shoulder injury, the Kiwi internatio­nal had previously been granted leave for personal matters and was then sanctioned for missing rehabilita­tion sessions.

Within weeks Foran’s release would be confirmed and, indeed, he wouldn’t be seen in Parramatta colours again.

That morning, though, the Eels denied all. Yet it was the least of their worries. Hours later, rumours began swirling the league was set to finalise the club’s cap punishment­s.

Provisiona­lly sanctioned over the salary rorts in May, the Eels had submitted a response to the NRL’s breach notice that they they hoped would keep their season alive.

But by then it was clear their pleas had fallen on deaf ears. Within 24 hours the club would be stripped of 12 premiershi­p points and fined A$ 1 million.

When their players took to the field that night against the Sydney Roosters, it meant they knew they were playing without hope of taking part in September’s finals.

However, somewhere out of the rubble of that Friday, Eels’ captain Tim Mannah still identifies it as the day he knew the club had turned a corner and would return to finals footy in 2017.

“There were a few games last year that really impressed me,” Mannah said. “There was [ that] Roosters game at Parramatta Stadium last year and the boys showed a lot of fight.

“It just showed me that we had turned the corner and we were a different kind of Parramatta team than we had been in the past.”

The Eels trailed 18- 6 shortly after halftime against the Chooks but when Corey Norman made a scrambling last- ditch tackle in his own in- goal to force Joseph Manu out, they claimed a 22- 18 victory.

In reality, the round- 18 win meant nothing in terms of their season but in the minds of the players, it put them on course for a shot at glory in 2017.

“We knew with all the dramas happening last year it was going to take an extra 12 months to get to where we wanted,” Mannah said.

“We’re here now and we’re not surprised by where we are.”

If Mannah could have his time over, he concedes he would rather not have gone through the pain of 2016.

But in line with the fighting spirit of Parramatta this season, he’s quick to see the silver lining in the Eels’ annus horribilis.

Effectivel­y, he says, they were granted an extra four months of preparatio­n ahead of every other team this season.

And as they look to their first finals game in Sydney against North Queensland tonight, the club’s captain believes it has paid off in the long run.

“The lessons we learned along the way, there was a lot of resilience there,” Mannah said.

Melbourne and Canterbury both felt premiershi­p glory two years after their salary cap sagas of 2010 and 2002. Whether the Eels buck that trend or have to wait another year remains to be seen. But they too could be thanking the dramas of the cap if they end their three- decade title drought in 2017.

 ?? Picture / AAP ?? In July last year, the Eels were at their lowest ebb, with news a troubled and injured Kieran Foran had quit the club. That news was swiftly followed with the announceme­nt of they had been docked 12 premiershi­p points for a salary cap breach.
Picture / AAP In July last year, the Eels were at their lowest ebb, with news a troubled and injured Kieran Foran had quit the club. That news was swiftly followed with the announceme­nt of they had been docked 12 premiershi­p points for a salary cap breach.

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