Earlier this evening, one hundred privileged Parramatta members were given a rare behind-the-scenes insights into the club’s vision at the Members Forum for 2026 and if it is anything to go by the Eels are building something really impressive. Something Special.
The panel included Jason Ryles (Head Coach), Jim Saratinos (CEO), Mark O'Neil (Head of Football) and Matthew Beach (Chairman).
While this blog won’t capture every detail shared on the night, below are the key themes discussed by each speaker.
Matthew Beach
Drawing a Line in the Sand on Lomax
Matthew Beach was the quietest of the bunch. He only really spoke when spoken to and did not get many fan questions, but he presented himself well and in a professional manner. He seems like he has a good head on his shoulders, a smart operator who knows what he is doing and looks well suited to the role he has within the club.
Like I said, he did not speak all that much, but he did not hide and was not afraid to address the elephant in the room regarding Zac Lomax. He said he could not talk or share too much as the matter is before the courts, but he stated it straight and honestly — the Storm offers are not good enough. We do not want financial compensation. We want to strengthen our football department and roster if we allow Lomax to play in Melbourne.
We Won't Roll Over
He said he does not want it to be a court matter, but the club makes no apologies that it is. We will continue to fight the good fight for the club and Melbourne will have a fight on its hands. It does not sound like this will be resolved any time soon.
Mark O’Neil
Building It the Right Way: Pathways Over Panic Buying
I know there is a lot of criticism around MON. Some of it is warranted, but he also presented himself well, fronted up, answered all questions and did not back away from anything.
He said the key focus at the club right now is junior and pathway development. We have a lot of kids coming through who can lead the club into the future over the next five to seven years.
Patience on Recruitment targets: outside back and a middle
On recruitment, he said the club is actively in the market for players who fit the culture and style of play Ryles wants to build. He also stated that for every target or signing, a background check is done on the player’s character before anything is signed to ensure they are the right fit, not just in terms of playing style but culturally as well.
We are in the market for an outside back and a middle forward, but he emphasised the club’s stance on remaining patient and waiting for the right players to become available. He believes that if they are not careful and spend money just for the sake of it, when the right player comes along who fits our style and roster needs, we risk not having the funds available.
So the money is there. We are just remaining vigilant and waiting for the right player and opportunity.
Keon Koloamatangi
He also fronted up and was honest that we were heavily in for Keon from Souths and had a red hot crack at it, but ultimately could not get it done. He did not say it specifically, but it was hinted that the fifth year offered by the Dragons was the breaking point.
He mentioned we currently have 28 of 30 roster spots filled.
Jim Sarantinos
Understanding the Cap Game: It Is Not Always What It Looks Like
Jim followed up on most of what MON said and also gave insight into the salary cap. He used Dylan Brown’s departure as an example, explaining that just because someone like him leaves and we do not replace him with a like for like signing does not mean we have the full value of his salary sitting there in the cap.He said that in most cases when big name players depart, a small percentage of their salary goes towards topping up other contracts and preparing for future re signings.
Raising the Bar at Home
He also mentioned that after he, Ryles, MON and Beach went on the United Kingdom tour late last year, the club will be changing up its game day and match day experiences in certain areas. The aim is to bring more of an English Premier League feel to games and make CommBank Stadium a daunting place for away sides to visit.
He used the Round 3 game against the Bulldogs last year as an example and the disappointment of having more Eels fans there but the Bulldogs being louder.
Eyes on the Bigger Stage
He also mentioned that the Round 7 game against the Bulldogs this year at CommBank will celebrate the 40th anniversary of the 1986 Premiership. It will be a big event with the 1986 team present at the Sunday 4pm blockbuster.
Vegas
He said that based on discussions with the NRL, the indication is that we will likely be one of the teams heading to Las Vegas in 2027. Nothing is official yet, but they are hoping to finalise it in the coming weeks.
Markets with Untapped Potential
He did touch on last night the club is looking at areas that are untapped markets for players for the club to sign and develop and turn into NRL players. He did mention as some of the Pasifka Nations as potientally somewhere the club is looking to scout.
Jason Ryles
A Coach With a Clear Plan
Absolute great talker, keeps you invested and by listening to him talk you find yourself so intrigued by his vision in what he is building and where we are going.
Back the Kids without pressure, But Win Now
Jason Ryles was an outstanding speaker. He keeps you invested, and listening to him talk, you find yourself genuinely intrigued by his vision and what he is building.
He followed up on some of what Mark O’Neil mentioned. When asked about debutants in 2026, he was calm and measured, telling fans not to put too much pressure on the young players. We have a good crop coming through and their time will come.
He gave insight into what a game week looks like for the players. He also spoke about Jonah Pezet and why the one year deal works. He reiterated that he does not want to block pathway players, but having Jonah in 2026 allows us to win now while the younger players continue their development.
Ryles is excited by the new interchange rules and believes we will benefit due to our depth and versatility. He gave Bailey Simonsson a big wrap and believes he is in for a big year, noting that his effort areas last season were through the roof despite an injury plagued year.
Game Plans
In terms of game plan, not much changes in attack. We will play fast and direct with short passes and second phase play. Defence has been a major focus this off season, particularly around the edges and ruck.
He has no inflated expectations, but he wants to win now. The goal is to finish as high on the ladder as possible.
Unless something major goes wrong, he looks like the man to lead Parramatta for a long time.
Final Thoughts
Something Is Building. Overall, it was a great evening, a great initiative with valuable insights from the club.
From what I heard from these four key figures, we are in good hands. The club is heading in the right direction and 2026 shapes as an exciting year for Parramatta. The future looks bright.
Replies
Ha, mate I reckon we missed the part pies etc. No issue - just went home hungry!
I feel the club are definitely saying ' we won't be trodden on' in reference to Lomax issues. They basically want their cut of it all and its how Easts etc would be.
I missed the first 10 mins or so Lurker, but felt Ryles is v forthright and glad to hear this. I also feel he knows that Parra have the juniors there and the 'consistency of coaching' is prevalent here as he mentioned next year will be the 3rd off season etc. also having fulltime staff was mentioned a few times by all of them.
I don't mind Jim, as he talks with plain language and was adamant about the fans getting behind the game days etc.
Bring on Sparky and Sparkles mate; I just wish the cheerleaders were back as my girl would be trying out one day.
Spot on mate. Lots like to like and to be excited about in the short & long term future.
I hope my gut feeling is right but I walked away and went home last night feeling the club is in very good hands, we are heading right down the right path for success and we are going to have a very good year in 2026.
I feel the same mate, as long as we have a strong spine - thats paramount with good competition for spots. I also have noted that coaching across the club is more evident along with the club self evaluating to be better each year.
Lurker, did Ryles say anything around the absence of Morretti and Mataele? Are they injured and what's your impression of keeping both going forward as it was reported Newcastle were interested in Moretti. Some reports saying even for 2026
Chiefy,
Ryles said there were a few niggle injuries during the pre season that kept some players out for 2-3 weeks due to the players pushing the boundaires and working to there limits. A few calves & hammys but nothing to be concered about, quite common for pre season he said. He said the only major injury was Dylan Walker who broke his hand in a freak accident attempting a tackle but has made a full recovery.
He said touch wood we get through the 2 Trials ok and he expects to have the full squad available for selection Round 1. So to answer your question mate there are no injury concerns around Moretti & Mataele.
Ryles also doubled down and said 28 was the max players he could play on Sunday and why some players aren't playing. He said if he could play more players he would have. I say this because there was some questions asked earlier in the week why Tyrese Lokeni & Saxon Pryke were named in the NSW Cup Trial. Ryles explained why. Every player will get game time in an NRL Trial before Round 1.
Would have the message around browns replacement been different if they had have landed Galvin ?
Similar to all of a sudden the kids who were there when they went hard for Galvin are the ones who are actually the future.
Gents,
This “kids vs opportunistic recruitment” framing is a good question, but ultimately a false binary. Why not do both?
If we had landed Galvin, sure the messaging probably shifts, but only superficially.
The real question is, who or what actually gets affected?
Let’s narrow it down. Lorenzo probably feels it most, but he’s contracted for a few years (pending confirmation). Cameron Bamblett and Talen Risati aren’t regular sixes in reggies yet. Joash Papali’i is versatile. We’d absolutely want to keep him.
The overwhelming majority of juniors, most of whom are already signed long-term, aren’t directly impacted at all. Even a Fletcher Lincoln is being groomed as a future 7 post-Moses. He mioght be better off with Galvin in three years time.
Rugby league is a brutal weak-link sport. So depth matters. Elite pathways matter.Internal competition matters. Succession planning matters. Opportunistic recruitment matters too. Getting as many of your ducks lined up is increasing your probablity for success.
You’d probably agree Galvin is more NRL-ready right now than Lorenzo, right? Hypothetically, if you sign him for a few years and he helps win more games, that strengthens the whole system. Meanwhile, you still have Lorenzo developing. At some point, performance makes the decision for you.
To me, being adaptive, building depth is smarter than committing to one ideological basket even if the “vibes” feel better that way.
Great read Lurker. Appreciate the effort and also the others who also contributed.
The season is around the corner and the excitement is building nicely.
That's the only real thing that's missing is the ability to attract and replace with reciprocal talent.
The off field opportunities TPAs and alike we have to up that to compete with the best.
Transference are our systems good enough to produce talent that other clubs are producing that's the key.
These are the only issues I've had with the guys up top they set the table everything else is everything else after that.
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