2020 Review: Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles

NRL
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Wings clipped by injuries and inexperience

Having defied expert predictions to make the second week of the finals in 2019, many expected the Sea Eagles to challenge for the 2020 title.

Despite a strong nucleus built around skipper Daly Cherry-Evans and the Trbojevic brothers, Manly's 2020 season began to unravel before 2019 had finished. Tenacious linchpin Apisai Koroisau turned salary cap victim when Des Hasler opted for the long term prospects of energetic hooker Manase Fainu.

While Koroisau re-joined the Panthers, Fainu failed to lace on a boot - stood down under the NRL's no fault policy following off field charges.

Former Knight Danny Levi filled the gap and with four wins after six rounds, the seventh placed Sea Eagles were poised for takeoff. From there, a crippling injury toll exposed a lack of depth and with just another three victories over the remaining 14 weeks, Manly rounded out a year to forget in 13th position.

Wins over eventual finalists the Roosters, Raiders and Eels were highlights in a season that included only one victory at the club's spiritual homeground - the worst return in Manly's history dating back to 1947. Adding to the woes, the postseason departures of Joel Thompson (St Helens) and Addin Fonua-Blake (Warriors) leave a considerable void and sadly for fans, injuries robbed the duo of the standing ovation they so richly deserved.

Turning point

In a wicked twist of fate, the best and worst of Manly's season struck simultaneously on a Sunday afternoon against Canberra at a COVID sparse Campbelltown Stadium.

Following early injuries to Dylan Walker, Brad Parker and Tom Trbojevic, an undermanned Sea Eagles inspired by a miraculous try saving tackle from Curtis Sironen continued to repel raid after Green Machine raid to protect a narrow lead in what ranks among the club's most stirring victories.

That was round six, and like Trbojevic and Walker the Sea Eagles never recovered, and as the injury list lengthened so did Manly's distance to the top half of the competition.

What worked

Short of being labeled a one-man team, the early blast of Tom Trbojevic clearly worked in Manly's favour. With and without the ball, the fiercely competitive Sea Eagles junior carried the side to its first three victories. And with his hamstring on ice before the end of round six, Turbo had already done enough to top the Dally M leaderboard.

What didn't work

With only 27 games between them, the prolonged absence of Tom Trbojevic, Moses Suli and Walker saw the points dry up. For Reuben Garrick the loss was notable, a meagre four-try return a staggering 12 shy of the winger's 2019 tally.

And with the rotation of names, the defensive steel forged a year earlier began to corrode. Often exposed on the edges, it was a turnstyle-like final six rounds at a whopping 37 points per game that eventually brought Hasler's men to their knees.

Best Player

One of only four players to turn out every week, skipper Daly Cherry-Evans was the Sea Eagles' rock in a season where the dugout seated more big names than Manly registered victories. Finishing on 9 Dally M votes alongside Tom Trbojevic, the Queensland captain's persistence eventually paid-off when his man of the match performance in Adelaide guided the Maroons to an unlikely win.

Rookies

Three rookies cracked the top flight throughout the season. Tevita Funa, Albert Hopoate and Josh Schuster each took their chance in the absence of regular backline talent.

Making his debut on the wing, Funa crossed the stripe in each of his first three appearances before delivering his best at fullback to take out the Manly Rookie of the year award.

Following two years ruined by back-to-back ACL injuries good fortune finally found Hopoate, and with five games, the son of premiership winner John joined brothers Will and Jamil in the NRL books.

Confident 19-year-old Schuster failed to finish his only appearance, but the five-eighth showed enough against the Tigers for Benji Marshall to say it's the best debut he's ever seen. While out wide, midseason Bulldogs recruit Morgan Harper showed what all the fuss was about, dazzling opponents with fancy footwork to score three tries in just four outings.

2021 Chances

Kieran Foran remains Manly's most noticeable signing, and with Levi unsigned and Fainu's availability under fire, there's talk the 30-year-old may return in the unfamiliar number-nine. With an otherwise competitive lineup, the race for a reliable hooker could ultimately shape Hasler's finals destiny.

Manly's best side for next season, based on current signings:

1. Tom Trbojevic 2. Tevita Funa 3. Moses Suli 4. Morgan Harper 5. Reuben Garrick 6. Dylan Walker 7. Daly Cherry-Evans (C) 8. Martin Taupau 9. Kieran Foran 10. Taniela Paseka 11. Sean Keppie 12. Curtis Sironen 13. Jake Trbojevic
Interchange: 14. Toafofoa Sipley 15. Andrew Davey 16. Cade Cust 17. Jack Gosiewski

2020 results

RoundDateOppositionScoreCoachCaptainVenueRank
1Mar 15thHStormL4-18HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland14th
2Mar 21stARoostersW9-8HaslerCherry-EvansLeichhardt10th
3May 31stHBulldogsW32-6HaslerCherry-EvansGosford6th
4Jun 6thAEelsL16-19HaslerCherry-EvansBankwest8th
5Jun 11thHBroncosW20-18HaslerCherry-EvansGosford7th
6Jun 21stARaidersW14-6HaslerCherry-EvansCampbelltown7th
7Jun 28thHSharksL22-40HaslerCherry-EvansGosford8th
8Jul 5thHKnightsL12-14HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland10th
9Jul 12thADragonsL4-34HaslerCherry-EvansKogarah10th
10Jul 18thHEelsW22-18HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland10th
11Jul 24thACowboysW24-12HaslerCherry-EvansQCBS8th
12Aug 1stHPanthersL12-42HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland9th
13Aug 7thHWarriorsL22-26HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland9th
14Aug 16thAKnightsL24-26HaslerCherry-EvansMcD. Jones10th
15Aug 22ndARabbitohsL16-56HaslerCherry-EvansANZ11th
16Aug 30thAStormL6-30HaslerCherry-EvansSun. Coast12th
17Sep 5thHWests TigersL32-34HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland12th
18Sep 11thABulldogsW32-20HaslerCherry-EvansANZ10th
19Sep 19thHTitansL24-42HaslerCherry-EvansLottoland11th
20Sep 27thAWarriorsL28-40HaslerCherry-EvansGosford13th