13669024463?profile=RESIZE_710x

The Kaizen Way 改善. Constant Improvement. All for One, One for All.

That journey continues tonight against the high-flying fifth-placed Broncos on a five-game winning streak are looking to win five-straight against the Eels for the first time since 1992. Perhaps, triple-five is the new triple-six as the Eels battle to dodge the dreaded spoon.

Reinforcements arrive. The Broncos gets Haas, Jensen and Arthurs back. The Eels regain Penisini, Moretti and Mitchell Moses for his seventh game this year. Momax is back. Still Warming up. It helps ease Eels pain of losing Iongi. This season appearing destined to be one where a full-strength Eels squad is less sighted than Bigfoot.

 

Team Lists

Brisbane Broncos vs Parramatta Eels, 8pm AEST, Friday July 24th, 2025, Suncorp Stadium
Weather: Some cloud cover, rain unlikely (unless you're an Eels' fan), around 15˚C, 6-11km/h winds, 68% humidity
Ground: Expected to be good
Sportsbet: $1.21 Broncos, $4.45 Eels
Referees: Todd Smith (on-field), Phil Henderson (touch judge), David Outram (touch judge), Ashley Klein (senior review official, bunker)

Broncos: 1. Reece Walsh 2. Josiah Karapani 3. Kotoni Staggs 4. Gehamat Shibasaki 5. Jesse Arthars 6. Ezra Mam 7. Adam Reynolds 8. Xavier Willison 9. Ben Hunt 10. Payne Haas 11. Brendan Piakura 12. Jordan Riki 13. Patrick Carrigan
Bench: 14. Billy Walters 15. Kobe Hetherington 16. Corey Jensen 17. Jack Gosiewski
18th man/reserves: 18. Tyson Smoothy  
Cut: 19. Deine Mariner 20. Selwyn Cobbo 21. Ben Talty 22. Jaiyden Hunt

Eels: 1. Joash Papali’i 2. Zac Lomax 3. Viliami Penisini 4. Sean Russell 5. Josh Addo-Carr 6. Dean Hawkins 7. Mitchell Moses 8. J’maine Hopgood 9. Ryley Smith 10. Junior Paulo 11. Charlie Guymer 12. Jack Williams 13. Dylan Walker
Bench: 14. Tallyn Da Silva 15. Luca Moretti 16. Matt Doorey 17. Sam Tuivaiti
18th man/reserves: 19. Jordan Samrani  
Cut: 18. Dan Keir 20. Bailey Simonsson 21. Toni Mataele 22. Dylan Brown

 

Recent History Grimaces

Eels have lost 4-straight to the Broncos.

Eels have conceded almost 40 points per game in last three clashes vs Broncos (38pg).

Eels average losing margin vs Broncos is 22 points over the last three games.

At Suncorp, the Eels have lost 5 of their last 6; Broncos have won 7 of 10 there this year.

 

Milestone Watch

13668895059?profile=RESIZE_710x

Addo-Carr: Will he break the drought? He needs one more to hit 150 NRL tries. He hasn't scored in a month since R17 (see above, Getty Images).

 

13668896265?profile=RESIZE_710x

Reynolds, Captain Courageous, needs 14 points to hit 2500 career points (Getty Images).

 

13668893672?profile=RESIZE_710x

The rejuvenated journeyman Shibasaki has 8 tries in his last 6 Suncorp games (centre above, Getty Images).

 

Edge of Disaster

Get the fire extinguishers ready.

Statsinsider shows the Broncos right edge (Staggs' bull-like charges, Arthurs' hair, Reynolds scheming) seems lethal, and should pose issues for the Eels' left-edge (Hawkins, Russell, the Fox). But it's the Broncos left-edge (Karapani, Shibasaki, Mam) where the points have been scored, while the Eels leak the most on their right (Moses, Penisini, Lomax). 

Broncos
Score:  55% left / 19% middle    27% right
Leak:    39% left  /  22% middle /  39% right

Eels
Score: 42% left /  11% middle  /  47% right
Leak:   34% left  16% middle  /  50% right

13669026857?profile=RESIZE_710x

Joash Papali'i shifts from six to one, while Dean Hawkins steps into six (3 NRL games there v Joash's 2).

The Future is Still Now, With a Plot Twist

Ryles is sticking with the Kaizen Future is Now theme. There's no going Back to Brown for now. But Ryles never said never. Dylan still claws onto a possible inclusion come the final hour in the top 19.

This week it's Hawkins turn at six with Joash returning to his more comfortable fullback position. Another candidate? Last week, Ryles praised Joash for doing ‘some good things’ at six. He’s shown a deft short-kicking game (setting up Russell last week in the 37'), but it's a bit unrealistic to expect too much of the 21-year-old. Additionally,  Joash’s explosive Cup-level running game hasn’t yet translated into first grade. At times his defence has been found out when isolated. But, not something unusual for a rookie with a handful of games.

So what are Joash's 'Future' prospects at six? The 'Now' has mixed signals. Or is he depth cover for one? A future utility? Will the future six be Hawkins, Twiddle, Hunter, or another unforeseen rookie? It's too early for Iongi to be considered. Or does the answer lie in a yet-to-be-named recruit?

The Goethe Dilemma

In the 18th century's Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, Goethe warned that 'too many options and choices can lead to confusion and indecision'. Cohesion alert.

The young Wilhelm, not unlike Joash and a few of our rookies, is trying to find his way amidst the illusions of freedom and an abundance of tempting directions.

In a way, the Eels mirror Wilhelm’s journey: full of youthful exuberance, potential and artistic expression. Expansive footy. Pretty. Young. Brave. But like Goethe's protagonist, often betrayed by harsh real-world realities.

Poor ball-handling and error counts (top-four highest for both, via nrl stats). Poor completions (bottom five). Getting dominated through the middle (bottom four for run metres per game). Getting pinged more by referees these days (seventh-highest for penalties conceded). Playing on the back foot exposes our kick chases, which are still far from Panther-esque. We're often losing the grind, despite staying in the arm wrestle until exhaustion.

 

 

13668951061?profile=RESIZE_710x

Doorey makes a linebreak but his lone support is too far behind (Getty Images)

Small Moments, Big Consequences

Here are some missed opportunities last week. What is the common theme in each? Check the highlights and compare our busts to the Raiders.

  • 10' The Fox almost scores after picking up a sublime Hawkins kick as he's held up; naturally there was no effective support.
  • 11' The Fox makes a 60-70m linebreak with only Papalii late in support and in the wrong position, swamped by Green jerseys.
  • 16' Dylan Walker busts the line, but has no support as he's mowed down 20m from the Raiders' line.
  • 22' Lomax takes an intercept, then jags and weaves 70m upfield, UFC wrestling a Green-army, looking for support no-where to be found before getting swallowed whole by Green jerseys 30m out.
  • 31' Doorey makes a 50m break from the Eels red zone off a deft Hopgood short ball;  running like a pepped-up-gazelle checking left-right side mirrors for non-existent support with Da Silva late to the party.
  • Note: The Raiders made 8-0 linebreaks in the second-half, with 4 of those in the final eight minutes (nrl.com). The second-half was an Eels' horror-show (32% territory, 35% possession, 217-123 tackle-count against us via Foxlab).


Hypothetical. We convert three of those five opportunites and we're leading 34-22 (instead of behind 22-16) with eight to go. Better Support. Better execution. More ball for us, less for them. Less tackles for us, more for them. Less fatigue for us, more for them. More wins.

13668991075?profile=RESIZE_710x

Lomax played Prop last week

Second-Half Collapses

Over the last two weeks, rounds 19-20, the second-half scoreline hasn't been an oil painting. 20-0, 28-0. End-of-season fatigue setting in? Fitness issues? Mental issues? Is 2024 returning where we practically lost every last quarter?

Let's stand back. 

Those last two games were against the Raiders (1st) who have won 13 of their last 14 on an eight-game winning streak and Panthers (6th), four-peat champions on a six-game winning streak. Against the Panthers, it was 22-16 with under 8 minutes to play before the spectacular seven-minute nose-dive. 

Overall, we've lost about half (8 of 17) of our second halves this year. Almost all of those second-halves lost (8 of 9) were to the current best-nine teams (Canberra twice, Penrith twice, Dogs, Cronulla, Dolphins, Manly). 

In contrast, most of the second-halves we won (5 of 8) were against current bottom-eight team (Tigers, Knights, St George twice, Titans). Only three times have we won second halves against top-eight teams (Melbourne, Manly, Dogs).

Takeaways? It suggests is we're not able to keep up with the best often enough. Ergo, rather than being a 2024-like perfected habit of second-half implosions, we more often than not get out-grinded by the best even when we're in the arm wrestle. 

 

Final Word

Goethe's rookie Wilhelm Grew. Matured into Reality. Small changes. Gradually. Eventual Transformation. He was Kaizen. Maybe the Eels will too. Iongi, Joash, Smith, Guymer, Tautoga, Da Silva, Tuivaiti are the future with more to come. There is improvement. A faithfulness to The Kaizen Commitment. But we need more. To own the scoreboard.

Meanwhile, tonight looms. It cares naught for future nor ideology. History suggests more pain against yet another team running red-hot. Still, Wilhelm can't ever surrender hope nor fight.

 

 

 

PS: Currently, Sportsbet has the Eels as second favorites for the Spoon ($5.50) after the Titans ($1.72), while the Rabbits ($6) and Knights ($7) round up the top-four shoe-ins.

 

You need to be a member of 1Eyed Eel to add comments!

Join 1Eyed Eel

Votes: 0
Email me when people reply –

Replies

        • Get your best quote tad, and go back to your original supplier.

          I'm with Origin both power and gas and they immediately matched the gas offer and did a bit better on Electricity. The only reason I checked was my receiving a letter to say they were raising rates. That motivated me to get alternative quotes because I believed they were exploiting existing subscribers. It's such a pain in the arse to actually do the change, otherwise I would have pissed them off as punishment for their exploitation.

          • Good comment Poppa.I will do that before going through the agonising process of changing.

            • Pops, TAD. It would be good to hear from anyone in Perth. West-coast have a Gas Reservation Policy from what I understand that should reduce their bills, relatively, especially for peak heating/cooling periods (when gas-fired electricity kicks in and really bites the east-coast).

              • Probably DAZ would best to answer that HOE. I think gas has issues with emissions as well. I know a lot think that climate c hange is a hoax. I suppose it's who you believe the shop owner or the Doctor. In the long run what are the final costs on so many fronts.?

                • TAD,

                  Here's irony. Global warming shouldn't be happening. We should be in a cooling cycle via nature and the Milankovitch cycles. Any guesses why not?

                  Believing climate change is a hoax is like believing an erupting volcano has zero impact. A big volcano spewing sulphur and carbon can effect climate for years. We are hundreds of volcanoes spewing carbon and other greenhouse gases 24/7.

                  How can spewing gigatonnes of fossil waste 24/7, month after month, decade after decade since the late 19th century have zero consequences?

                  Spewing gigatonnes of fossil wastes into atmosphere 24/7 since the late 19th century = thickening of the greenhouse blanket around the earth from its natural baseline = warming planet = affecting natural balances.

                  Cause and effect 101.

                  I'm not sure what the solution is though. Fossils underpin modern society, even renewables.

                  On the bright side, at least plants (along with denialists) love the extra carbon if not the extra heat, methane, nitrates, and flourides so much. 

                   

                   

                   

                  • Earth and nature has a self preservation voice HOE. Pretty active at the moment and there is not much we can do to placate it. (7 days Armageddon fires and 7 or 8 days over 40 degrees. Lots of major water events predicted as well this year. Costs to economy around the world??)

        • Sorry Tad I probably misled you a little with my comment but really it had nothing to do with the cost of electricity. More so the people complaining about it and the cause of the problem was anything but their own life choices. No individual player is a big (or quick) fix for our club. The daily blogs on us getting player X become a little tiring after a while and why I rarely comment.

          I watched a personal finance podcast yesterday and the advisor was saying the biggest problem he has with his baby boomer clientele is getting them to spend their money. After leading a frugal life and accumulating a significant net worth so often they can't change their mindset to become a spender (I have had this very same experience with my mum). Just relax Tad, there's better things in life to concern yourself with than a few dollars here or there from a power bill.

          • Thanks Adam. I often get things wrong mate. I can relate to where your mum is at. My wife always wants to go away on trips and I hold back. We have decided to go to Inverell for a few days before the hot weather season starts.

            • Crowd noise and player high fives great for the ego but a distraction for the soul 

  • HOE If I was looking for a player nursery I would look very carefully at players with a Kaizen way psychological makeup. About 30% of people you can't teach at all  .The higher you go in those qualities the better success you have 

This reply was deleted.

More stuff to read

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER replied to ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER's discussion Parramatta closing in on a back rower
"Ye i dont know all players unless they say there full name
Sorry "
15 minutes ago
Randy Handlinger replied to ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER's discussion Going home
"hahaha Meelk...how does 20yrs in hospital sound to ya Arnie?"
35 minutes ago
Randy Handlinger replied to ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER's discussion Parramatta closing in on a back rower
"You're a good dude Johnny"
48 minutes ago
Johnny Suede replied to ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER's discussion Parramatta closing in on a back rower
"OK"
52 minutes ago
More…