Jason Ryles... Report so far

Before diving in, it's important to acknowledge where we currently sit on the ladder. We must acknowledge as fans that our position is far from ideal nor acceptable, however, we must also consider the challenges we've faced throughout the early part of the season:

  • The extended absence of Mitchell Moses, both at the beginning of the season and more recently

  • Mid-to-long term foot injuries to key players Zac Lomax and Bailey Simonsson

  • The off-field distraction and uncertainty surrounding Dylan Brown’s contract situation

  • A wave of suspensions, including two for Kelma Tuilagi, along with bans for Ryley Smith and Josh Addo-Carr

  • The inexperience of a rookie head coach still finding his feet at NRL level

  • The departure of several experienced and influential players — including Clint Gutherson, Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Maika Sivo, and Joe Ofahengaue

  • A very raw and inexperienced squad — at the start of the season, players like Iongi, "Kit Kat", Sam Tuivaiti, Ryley Smith, and Joash Papalii had fewer than 10 first-grade games combined. And with inexperience inevitably come error

Positives: 

Signings:

Our recruitment for the season has undoubtedly been one of the brighter aspects. With signings including; Jack Williams, Iongi, Kit Kat, Lomax, JAC, Dylan Walker, Dean Hawkins, Joash & Jordan Samrani. Across the board, each player has at the very least met expectations, while many have exceeded expectations. Jack Williams, Iongi, and Kit Kat have stood out with consistently strong performances. There was initial scepticism — myself included — around the signings of Josh Addo-Carr and Dylan Walker. However, both have proven to be excellent additions. Addo-Carr has added a new dimension to our edge attack, offering a different style to what we were accustomed to with Maika Sivo. Meanwhile, Walker has been exceptional off the bench, regularly shifting momentum with his impact and versatility. Importantly, there hasn’t been a signing I’d categorise as a “miss.” Even those brought in primarily for development or Cup-level depth — such as Hawkins, Joash, Samrani, and Volkman — have shown encouraging signs when given the opportunity at NRL level.

Style of Football:

Gone are the days of Parramatta relying mainly on our left edge to generate points. While the Gutherson sweep play to Maika Sivo was highly effective, over time it became predictable and overused. This season, however, we’ve shown far more variety and creativity in our attacking structures. We’re now threatening across the park — not just down one channel. Through the middle, we’ve seen promising link-up play, often sparked by a Dylan Walker burst or a smart tip-on from Junior Paulo. On the right edge, we’ve found success through short balls to Kelma Tuilagi/Jack Williams or well-placed last-tackle kicks targeting Zac Lomax. Meanwhile, the left side continues to fire, with Isaiah Iongi and Josh Addo-Carr combining dangerously. Overall, our attack has evolved into a far more balanced and unpredictable system, capable of striking from multiple areas of the field.

Player Development:

A key example of our Player Development this season is Sean Russell. I’ll be the first to admit that over the past two years, I wasn’t a fan — whether he was on the wing or in the centres, I often felt he offered little in either attack or defence. But credit where it’s due: this year, Russell has taken a clear step forward. While he’s still not among the elite centres in the game, he’s become far more reliable defensively and noticeably stronger in attack.

Luca Moretti is another standout. He showed glimpses of promise in previous seasons, but before his injury this year, he was truly beginning to deliver on that potential with consistent, tough performances through the middle.

The emergence of young players like Ryley Smith, Sam Tuivaiti, and Joash Papalii has also been a welcome boost. All three have shown encouraging signs in their early NRL outings and bring much-needed energy to the squad.

We’ve also seen a resurgence in Junior Paulo’s form — back to playing with real intent — and continued strong contributions from players like Bailey Simonsson when fit.

Player Rention:

When the decision was made to release Clint Gutherson to the Dragons, it was met with heavy criticism. Many viewed Gutherson as the “heart” of the team — a leader whose effort and presence were invaluable. However, coach Jason Ryles saw things differently and placed his trust in Isaiah Iongi at fullback. So far, that call has paid off. Iongi has shown immense potential and looks every bit a future star. While Gutherson, as we saw on Saturday, can still be effective, it’s clear he’s beginning to slow down. I wouldn’t be surprised if next year is his last season at fullback.

Other key departures include Reagan Campbell-Gillard, who has struggled for form and impact this season, and Maika Sivo, who had become a shadow of his former self. Joe Ofahengaue was averaging just 65 run metres per game — a significant drop-off for a middle forward. Shaun Lane, ruled out indefinitely, had unfortunately not returned to his best football over the past two to three years.

Additionally, players like Wiremu Greig and Ryan Matterson have reportedly been encouraged or granted permission to explore other opportunities — a move many fans would agree is overdue given their limited impact in recent seasons.

Negatives:

Jmaine Hopgood & Will Penisini:

Throughout the Brad Arthur era, J’maine Hopgood was one of our most consistent performers — regularly punching out over 60 minutes with minimal errors and a strong defensive work rate. However, this season, he’s looked a shadow of that player. His minutes have been reduced, and he's become more prone to handling errors and giving away unnecessary penalties. That said, there’s no doubt the talent is still there — which is likely why Billy Slater has kept faith in him, selecting him in Queensland’s squad for Game 3. If Hopgood can rediscover his best form, it would go a long way toward stabilising and strengthening our forward pack.

As for Will Penisini, I was anticipating a breakout year. With two of the game’s most powerful wingers outside him, I expected a significant boost in both his attacking output and defensive stability. So far, though, that lift hasn’t materialised. There's still time, but he’ll need to find another gear in the back half of the season to reach the level many were expecting.

Lapses:

While the team is still relatively inexperienced, that can’t fully excuse some of the lapses we've seen in both attack and defence this season. The most recent examples — our abysmal first half against the Dragons and Chris Randall’s try last week — highlight just how costly these moments can be. Randall’s effort, in particular, was one of the softest tries you’ll see a back-rower score at this level.

These kinds of breakdowns can be momentum-killers and swing games dramatically. While there has been some improvement in addressing them, there’s still a long way to go before we become a consistently disciplined and resilient side.

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            • A lot of these issues surfacing from the industrial revolution and a consciousness of immediate gratification in a materialism world of alienation and diminishing human contact.. Just have a look at the creations of the 19 th century where human activity was centered more around human creativity in Arts Science, Philosophy 

            • NOS, I think we still have plenty of time to ban AI. These LLM's everyone is talking about are really only about 5 years old. The push to see them as 'inevitable' is a very old trope in technmology and society relations, that says all people do is adapt to new technology. NO, we make both strong and subtle choices. So let's consider part of what is at stake in a blase or what I think of as naive take on AI, that the horse has bolted so just adapt.

              Adapting is not just part of human evolution, but part of the ageing cycle of humans. The threat AI poses is most acutely located in those places where we might adapt our cognitive output, basically breeding laziness injto our ageing process.

              An example: my kid and I have a few of those Amazon Alexa's in the house. The name of the one in my room is 'computer', of course (Scotty? Star Trek?). She loves them. They control a whole group of functions in the house: lights, some dumb devices made smart via smart plugs. We mostly use them to turn things on/off inside the house and the backyard, as timers, weather updates, etc.

              These devices are mostly saving physical labour. Turning switches on/off and setting timers etc. Sometimes voice search commands versus typing. One gimmick feature is that my kid is your typical teen: she struggles to get ready for school, just out of absent mindedness etc. Nowadays I do not even bother leaving the kitchen where I might be getting brekky ready etc, and I will just ask Alexa (downstairs) to 'call' her in her room upstairs. "Brekky ready" or "are you ready to head to school" etc. This SAVES me walking up the stairs.Not walking up the stairs is not radically different than not coding that excel database yourself, when you already know how to input algorithms to work on inputted data sets. But what if you don't know the relevant algorithms? Are you deskilling yourself?

              Hence why, when we turn to cognitive labour, the picture changes. As we age, we physically decline. Knees lose cartilege, hands get arthritis, etc. The cure is to scale back extreme physical stuff: we eventually get to long walks not uphill runs, or use grips to open jars, etc. Zero physical activity is it's own danger, but we generally scale back physical labour. I still go to the gym but the weight selected is a weight I can do 8 sets of, not a weight designed only for 4 sets. We adapt, physically, sacrificing power and stamina for greater resilience.

              The AI device helps scale some of that physicality back, via a simple call feature rather than bound up the bloody stairs. Now do AI and cognitive labour. What is the effect of scaling back cognitive labour? A dimunition in memory and thinking capacities, like getting slow on the recall or struggling with mulit-modal tasks.

              However, sustaining high degrees of cognitive labour is positively correlated with warding off such declines. There is no downside, like there can be with physical labour, which has to be modified and circumscribed as we age to ward of injury (which is harder to manage as we age). Mental effects of ageing, like dementia and alzheimers, have been shown to occur less frequently in those who sustain a higher degree of ''cognitive reserve" (the term used for capacities that result from either professions or activities that sustain higher degrees of cognitive labour).

              Thus, farming out cognitive labour is a disanalogy to farming out physical labour. It's a short term fix that is only going to bring long term problems. And besides, who is really getting most of the benefit of that short term fix? Deskilling jobs has always been the way Capital devalues Labour.

              • HellYeahFuckYeah!!!

                Daz. Your creative human thought has given this other human other angles with which to apply his creative human thought. Your expression will affect my future output, neatly illustrating:

                The threat AI poses is most acutely located in those places where we might adapt our cognitive output, (chefs kiss)

                If 1EE had a comment upvote button, I would break it on your and NOS's comments

                 

              • Hey Daz,

                Some great points here, and over all I hope you are right.
                 
                Your examples of cognitive labour is exactly what I am referring too, however, purely in a creative space - which many believe can also be a defence against degenerative diseases of the mind / brain.
                 
                With AI we simplify, or skip, experience, development & growth from learning, from failing, from quitting, from starting over, then most importantly, the sense of achievement, from hard work, the pride, from overcoming fear & obstacles.
                 
                Those processes, alike your examples around cognitive labour, mould us into what we become or have been in life, it builds resilience, courage, confidence, understanding, empathy, and it makes us unique.
                 
                Perhaps, thats naive? I mean we already were simplifying such tasks in other ways, but, AI is different.
                 
                100% understand the value in physical domains, as you mention, thats where things can be improved for billions of people who have lost physical cognitive ability.
                 
                But Dazza, the less times you walk up those stairs, the less time those muscles get used, strengthened, the faster they will deteriorate.
                 
                In other words, stop being a pussy & get up your stairs. You are not that old & Karen tells me even Pops is still doing hill sprints every Friday.
                 
                In seriousness though, I hear you, less trips up stairs is definitely a win.
                • Randy/Daz,

                  We yahoo sexy Kill-Ai-Ban-Ai ideas calling Ai a "psychopathic bullshitter"  but then use smartphones, google,  email, youtube, GPS navigators, social media, apps — all use Ai. The mind is full of mysteries.

                  Anyhows, Super will address the AI issue soon. If you're lucky he might go full on Ban-Ai radicalism — then close the site — as it uses Ai in its operations.

                   

                • Good responses in this blog NOS. Certainly, we have progressed through technology, but at what cost to human identity, authenticity and soul presence, which are so important in preserving fundamental emotional needs tying us to a family culture. William Morris strongly resisted what the Industrial Revolution was doing to the cottage industries in the late 19 th century. He set up an artisan community to enhance creative pursuits in so many areas of Architecture, home interior design, and furnishings, as well as items for decorative domestic use.Lots of those creations gave credit to the people who made these things, and all works gave recognition to the maker who put their name or initials on the works. People who bought these items valued and, in many instances, cherished the authenticity of the soul who created them. Unfortunately, William Morris,s dream fell apart due to the cost, which made it uneconomical to continue. I love his work an the hominess he created,

                  13650425655?profile=RESIZE_930x

                   

                  For me, the Industrial Revolution started the process of alienation and of breakdown of community. People-to-people contact has become more detached from one another as Industrialisation has progressed to where we are now.

                  13650427293?profile=RESIZE_930x

                  1800s

                  13650427695?profile=RESIZE_710x

                  1950,s

                  13650427897?profile=RESIZE_584x

                  2020s

                   

                   

                   

                  13650428487?profile=RESIZE_930x

                  • My simplistic take. I also still wear some knitted sock slippers my mum made for me in the 1960s. Helps my bond with the authenticity of my dear mums creation

                    • My father used to carve heads of wolves on walking sticks carved with floral decoration.He made it for me when I was 6.Very special to me as he passed away when I was 14.. Would I keep a commercially made one from China? You know the answer to that.Thanks NOS for pushing me into a nice headspace.

              • There are benefits to cognitive decline Daz. Forgetting why you went to the shed to get something and then having to go back a few times till you remember what you wanted to get is great exercise.

                • Now your talking Tad.....leg power is the new renewable.....I was talking to a 70 plus  mate of mine and saying how well we will look in our "cooly hats" pulling a rickshaw when the Chinese finish the Silk Rd  from Port Moresby to Brisbane. 

                  The alternative of course is nuclear power but it was too expensive with "yellow cake" much cheaper from the local bakery?

                  Looks like Mary Antoinette was right!

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