Home Latest Australia How a coffee cart is driving Bulldogs’ unbeaten start to NRL season

How a coffee cart is driving Bulldogs’ unbeaten start to NRL season

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Source : ABC NEWS

The lure of free coffee paid for by coach Cameron Ciraldo and an Instagram burner account are being used to motivate Canterbury’s players to break defensive records and long-standing try-scoring droughts.

Ciraldo’s unbeaten Bulldogs remain top of the NRL ladder after Good Friday’s 32-0 win over South Sydney at Stadium Australia.

The clean sheet represented the first time in the club’s history the Bulldogs have kept two teams scoreless in consecutive weeks, having beaten Newcastle 20-0 in their previous outing.

Canterbury has not won the opening six matches of a season since 1938, when it claimed the first of its eight premierships.

Each time Canterbury holds a team to nil, Ciraldo rewards his players, coaching team and office staff by hiring a coffee cart for the club’s Belmore training base.

Ciraldo reckons it sets him back $300 each time, with a devout Bulldogs fan giving him a discounted rate.

Bulldogs winger Jacob Kiraz said he loved seeing his coach dip into his own pocket to reward the players.

“He’s on too much money, he’s not worried about that (the cost),” Kiraz joked.

“That’s two weeks in a row, he has to keep his promise.

“It was nice seeing that coffee van roll up the other week and it’ll be great to see it at training this week.”

Prop Max King broke the game’s longest try-scoring drought when he crossed in Friday’s win, ending an 80-match stretch.

But King is not a coffee drinker.

Instead of being motivated by a free caffeine hit, in-form prop King said Ciraldo had been using social media to push him to new heights.

Max King celebrates

Max King (right) is thriving under Cameron Ciraldo’s coaching. (Getty Images: Darrian Traynor)

“I woke up this morning and I was just on social media, and some sort of burner account was on there, spraying me, giving it to me, like, ‘You can’t even score a try’,” King said.

“I laughed at it and I actually told Ciro, I said to him, ‘Are you sure that’s not your burner account trying to fire me up to get a response?’.

“He looked at me at half-time, gave me a wink and said, ‘It was me’.

“It’s something to laugh about but scoring a try in front of 65,000 and to celebrate in front of a crowd like that … I feel so blessed.

“In my eyes, I’m just a footballer running around on the big stage and I feel really blessed to be a part of it.”

The Bulldogs face the Broncos in Brisbane on Thursday night after putting on a show in front of a new NRL record regular-season crowd of 65,305 spectators against the Rabbitohs.

“It felt like finals and that’s a good thing for us, because we need to embrace it,” Kiraz said.

“If we want to be in those games at the end of the year, it’s a good thing we don’t let the pressure get to us.”

AAP