Home Sports Australia Worth the weight: Why Kade Reed isn’t scarred by debut thrashing

Worth the weight: Why Kade Reed isn’t scarred by debut thrashing

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Source :- THE AGE NEWS

Kade Reed has just ended a pub debate.

His debut in St George Illawarra’s 62-16 capitulation to the Roosters on Anzac Day was the first chance for most footy fans to lay eyes on the club’s great halfback hope, and would have resulted in a common question.

Dragons debutant Kade Reed.NRL Images

His height and weight aren’t currently listed on his NRL profile page, but it quickly became evident that the Western Suburbs (Wollongong) Red Devils junior is giving away a considerable amount of bulk to the rest of the NRL.

So what does he tip the scales at?

“Seventy-eight kilos, 79,” Reed replied.

“Obviously, it’s the NRL, and it’s different, but I’ve always gone up against guys that have 20, 30 kilos on me. I just need to put the work in to get the weight on and work on my defence techniques, and different stuff like that. I know I’ll get that weight on and get that side of the ball better.”

Coincidentally, that’s the same officially listed weight of Roosters counterpart Sam Walker, who won his third Ashton Collier Spirit of Anzac Medal during the match.

Despite being on the end of a record Anzac Day scoreline, interim coach Dean Young has seen enough in Reed to guarantee the newbie the No.7 jersey for next weekend’s clash against Newcastle.

Reed said the vote of confidence “gives me plenty of confidence” and felt he wasn’t scarred by being on the wrong end of such a lopsided scoreline on debut.

“Obviously, as a team we need to get better, but I don’t think so,” he said.

It was a torrid initiation for Reed, who had a try and a try assist correctly taken off him by the bunker. Despite those setbacks – and missing a game-high six tackles – the 20-year-old felt he belongs at NRL level after his first 80 minutes.

“I felt like there were a couple of things that I’d done throughout the game where it was just playing my natural game, and it worked,” he said.

“I was happy with that. But there’s a few things I need to tidy up on both sides of the ball. But I do [feel like I’m an NRL halfback].”

Pressed on if he felt it was the start of a long NRL career, he said: “I think it is, and I definitely hope it is. I hope so.”

Reed came up with what appeared to be a highlight play early in his debut, throwing a sublime 30-metre double cut-out pass that resulted in a try to winger Matt Feagai. However, the video referee detected a tiny knock-on in the lead-up from teammate Tyrell Sloan.

Kade Reed’s defensive skills were tested during his NRL debut.Getty Images

“Obviously, I thought it was a try, I didn’t see [the knock on] at the time, I didn’t even know ‘Sloany’ jumped for it,” he said.

Reed’s debut came at the expense of Kyle Flanagan, who was dropped as halfback a day after his father and coach, Shane, parted with the club. The new playmaker said there were no hard feelings between the pair.

“Me and Kyle have always had a really good relationship, and we still do,” he said.

“Nothing has changed between me and Kyle. Kyle’s disappointed he’s not playing, but he’s happy for me too. He’s always looked after me and been really good to me, Kyle.”

The Dragons can’t win a game, but this is why Scott Drinkwater decided to sign

Adrian Proszenko

North Queensland fullback Scott Drinkwater has spoken for the first time since signing with St George Illawarra, describing his relationship with interim coach Dean Young as a “big factor” in his decision.

Drinkwater was contracted to the Cowboys for next year, but was given permission to explore other opportunities after the club earmarked Jaxon Purdue as their long-term No.1. That resulted in the 28-year-old accepting a three-year Dragons deal from 2027.

Scott Drinkwater in the Cowboys Friday night victory against the Sharks.Getty Images

Drinkwater said the bond he shared with Young, a former Cowboys assistant, from their time together in Townsville helped seal the deal.

“He was very important, I spoke to him a couple of times,” Drinkwater told this masthead.

“I felt like in 2022-23, while Dean was here, I played really good footy. Even though he was the defensive coach, he’s got a lot of smarts about the game and he gave me a lot of confidence before every game.

“He came to me before most games and we’d have a chat about what’s important for me to play well and gave me a few [tips] …

Dean Young is in charge of the Dragons for the rest of the season.Getty Images

“He also let me know about all the things they’re doing well down there, it’s not all doom and gloom as it [would suggest] results-wise.

“He made sure to mention a few things about what’s going on. I also have my own opinion about what’s going on from playing them and watching them.”

Dragons fullback Clint Gutherson also played a crucial role in Drinkwater’s decision. Gutherson publicly stated he wanted Drinkwater to join the club, even though it meant vacating his preferred No.1 jersey. It was a sentiment Gutherson also convened directly to Drinkwater.

“Before he said that or messaged me that, I know Gutho and expected that’s the way he would probably go about it,” Drinkwater said.

“He’s such a great guy. All the messages and those things, it’s nice to hear. He’s a person I’m keen to play with just with how hard he competes.

“He’s a really good leader and a guy I hope stays in that squad.”

Drinkwater said the chance to reunite with former Cowboys teammate Valentine Holmes, as well as a series of conversations with Dragons chief executive Tim Watsford, swayed him towards the joint-venture outfit.

“I had a good combination with Val when he was here, that’s another person who excited me,” he said.

“Speaking to Tim as well, we had a great chat and I loved what he had to say. He’s got high hopes and he sounds like a guy who is bullish about achieving his goals. We had some good communication.”

Valentine Holmes and Scott Drinkwater playing together for the Cowboys in 2022.Getty

The Cowboys have climbed into the top eight after winning five of their past six. The Dragons, meanwhile, are on a 12-game losing streak stretching back to last year. The Red V trumpeted Drinkwater’s signature last Friday, hours before the club was trounced 62-16 in their traditional Anzac Day encounter against the Roosters.

Asked if he had cold feet after that result, Drinkwater said: “Not at all. I’ve been part of a team that’s turned it around from almost coming last to make the prelims that year.

“I’m not really focused or worried about what the Dragons are doing this year, I’m all in with the Cowboys.

“I owe them and they deserve to have my full attention. I’ve made it clear to myself that’s how I want to go about it, I’m going to dial in with the Cowboys for the next five months. I appreciate the opportunities I’ve been given to live in Townsville, I’ve been here for eight seasons.”

Drinkwater has been in superb form, climbing to fourth spot in the Dally M standings behind Jackson Ford, Nathan Cleary and Dylan Edwards. But after a slow start to the season, he feared Cowboys coach Todd Payten was going to drop him for the round three clash against the Titans.

“I was battling a bit of an injury, I couldn’t train during the week,” he said.

“The way I was playing, Toddy asked me if I wanted a rest. I said ‘No way’ straight away, I’m not going to give up my jersey that easy.”

The tough Dog who is needling both shoulders just to take the field

Christian Nicolussi

Canterbury’s NSW Origin hopeful Jacob Preston has been playing with painkilling injections in both AC shoulder joints since the start of the season as he prepares for a shift to the left side of the field to cover injured teammate Viliame Kikau.

Bulldogs captain Stephen Crichton made a miraculous return from an AC joint injury last weekend, but said he had a new appreciation for Preston’s pain threshhold given he had been doing something similar most weeks.

Tough Dog: Jacob Preston has been playing with painkillers each weekNRL

Preston is one of the front-runners to start on the right edge for NSW in Origin I next month, but is expected to be just as effective when he moves to the left for Kikau (pectoral) for Friday’s clash with the North Queensland Cowboys.

“I had a needle before the game and again at half-time, I’ll probably keep doing that another couple of weeks; it was pretty sore 48 hours after the game … nobody talks about it, but he [Preston] is going through two ACs right now, and has been needling both sides,” Crichton said.

“A lot of people talk about my AC, but ‘Presto’ is really tough. He’s got two ACs, two guards, two needles before games. I think he did the first one in round one, then the second one in round two, and ever since he’s been [needling] both. It’s a credit to him how tough he is.”

Penrith’s Liam Martin’s knee injury has created a right-edge backrow vacancy, with Preston and Manly wrecking ball Haumole Olakau’atu in contention, as well as South Sydney’s Tallis Duncan.

“The way he’s been attacking games, his communication in defence, it’s what Origin is about, and his toughness … hopefully he’s in there,” Crichton said of Preston.

The Dogs are coming off two losses to Parramatta and Brisbane, and meet a confident Cowboys team, including former Dog Reed Mahoney, who would love nothing more than to get under the skin of his former teammates. Forward Jason Taumalolo also plays his 249th game for the Cowboys, equalling Johnathan Thurston’s club record.

In other team news, the Tigers have suffered a huge blow with Jahream Bula (shoulder) to miss Sunday’s trip to Cronulla, with Sunia Turuva shifting to fullback, coach Benji Marshall named Jeral Skelton on the wing, and Tristan Hope is at hooker for the suspended Api Koroisau.

Brisbane received a double boost with Pat Carrigan back from suspension and Reece Walsh overcoming a foot injury for Saturday night’s match of the round against the Sydney Roosters.

Reece Walsh is back for the Broncos ahead of Saturday’s clash with the Roosters. Getty Images

Kalyn Ponga (hamstring), Bradman Best (groin), Tyson Frizell (ribs) and Greg Marzhew (concussion) are all back for the Knights when they try to stop the in-form Rabbitohs in Newcastle on Sunday.

And Canberra were dealt a double blow with starting backrowers Noah Martin (ankle surgery) and Zac Hosking (concussion) unavailable. Ata Mariota and Simi Sasagi are their replacements for Saturday’s trip to the Gold Coast.

‘I’m not perfect’: Val Holmes opens up on shocker against Latrell Mitchell

Adrian Proszenko

St George Illawarra centre Valentine Holmes admits there are “no excuses” for the shocker he submitted against Latrell Mitchell and that he needs to repay the faith in coach Dean Young for not getting dropped.

Holmes is the Dragons’ highest-paid player, but hasn’t played up to his pay cheque during a 12-game Dragons losing streak that extends to last year. The nadir was being on the wrong side of a clinic a fortnight ago from opposing South Sydney three-quarter Mitchell, who scored four tries against him.

Valentine Holmes.Getty Images

In his first game in charge, interim coach Young opted not to axe Holmes for the encounter against the Roosters. While the Maroons and Kangaroos representative’s personal performance was slightly better than the previous week, it mattered little after the tri-colours put on a record Anzac Day score of 62-16 at Allianz Stadium.

The form of senior players Clint Gutherson, Damien Cook and Holmes has been under the spotlight in a barren run that ultimately cost coach Shane Flanagan his job. Flanagan’s last game in charge was the loss to the Rabbitohs, the worst performance of Holmes’ career.

“There’s no excuses for the way I played [that night],” Holmes said.

“It was very poor, obviously I’m very grateful I got the opportunity to redeem myself as much as I could [against the Roosters]. I was back on the left side, which was good, I got to play outside young Reedy [debutant halfback Kade Reed] as well.

“It wasn’t the performance I wanted him to have and for our team to put on for him. I can’t say I’m proud of that performance for myself [against the Roosters] because we lost like that. They still scored on our side, they scored on both sides. We were pretty poor all over the park.”

Holmes didn’t shy away from the criticism of his own recent form which included missing 10 tackles against the Rabbitohs.

“The performance side of it, I’m not perfect,” he said.

“I never play perfect footy every week as much as I’d love to, I’ve had some very bad performances in my past. I’ve been playing, fortunately enough, for over 10 years …

“We tried to get up for the [Roosters] game. We obviously know what the Anzacs mean to us, for Australia and New Zealand and what the women and men did for us to be here. At the end of the day, we just didn’t perform well, we didn’t play the jersey proud and ourselves and our teammates and our family.”

‘Let’s hope history repeats’: Why Panthers are perfect inspiration for battling Storm

Christian Nicolussi

Melbourne chairman Matt Tripp says the Storm is “a proud club who will stick together”. And they only need to look back 12 months for inspiration to turn their horror start to the season around.

“It’s probably the most embarrassed I’ve ever been in my footy life,” Storm coach Craig Bellamy said after the 48-6 loss to South Sydney on Saturday night.

It was the heaviest defeat for the club at AAMI Park, and left them with just two wins from their opening eight games.

To make matters worse, halfback Jahrome Hughes failed a HIA and will be unavailable for Friday’s clash against the Dolphins.

To put Melbourne’s start to the year into perspective, however, the Panthers were 2-6 last season before they exploded to life and made it all the way to the preliminary final, where they lost narrowly to eventual premiers Brisbane.

“Let’s hope history repeats, but it won’t happen by simply hoping,” Tripp said.

Melbourne’s start to the season went from bad to worse against the Rabbitohs.Getty Images

“We can take heart from what Penrith did, but at the same time there’s a lot of hard work ahead of us if we want to follow the same trajectory.

“I’ll be honest with you, there is cause for concern because we’re playing well below our best.

“We’re training well, they’re really putting in and there’s great enthusiasm at training, but it’s not translating on to the field.

“It’s concerning there’s this disconnect with what we’re doing at training and when it comes to game day.

Tallis Duncan crossed for three tries against some woeful Storm defence.Getty Images

“That’s the part that’s frustrating everyone – not just the players but the whole club. Everyone needs to dig in.

“The good clubs stick together. We pride ourselves on being a good club, an inclusive club, so we’re all in it together. We’ll dig our way out of this, and the only way you dig your way out of anything is through hard work. The good thing is nobody is dropping their heads.

“It’s not a case of going to ground zero, peeling everything back and starting again. Contrary to Saturday’s score, we’re not a million miles off.

“The squad we have is capable of winning many games and playing finals football. It’s just not showing at the moment.”

The Sea Eagles celebrate Haumole Olakau’atu’s try as Penrith slumped to 2-6 in 2025.Getty Images

TV cameras captured Bellamy throwing his arms in the air and then storming out of the dressing room during the half-time break.

Bellamy has only missed September once during his time at the club, is regarded as one of the best coaches of all time, and for that reason alone, Tripp said, there will be no extra personnel brought in to assist him.

“Plus he’s already got a great support cast there – there’s no panic in that respect,” Tripp said.

“All of Craig’s assistants are first-grade coaches in waiting. [Queensland Origin coach] Billy Slater is also there as an assistant. We have plenty of footy smarts to get us through.”

Tyran Wishart is expected to come into the halves for Hughes, while Origin winger Xavier Coates is set to return from an Achilles injury in the coming weeks.

Souths had never won in their previous 20 starts playing in the Victorian capital, with Latrell Mitchell again at his physical best, while Tallis Duncan scored three tries and did his best to get under the skin of Queensland captain Cameron Munster.

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