https://www.nrl.com/news/2019/01/27/stat-attack-the-most-effective-tacklers-in-the-nrl/
Stat Attack: The most effective tacklers in the NRL
Middle defenders in rugby league have the most physically taxing role on the field when the opposition has the ball, required to sprint up and back 10 metres on every play while stopping huge ball carriers in their tracks.
Edge defenders in rugby league may not have the biggest defensive workloads but they have arguably the toughest job, often getting isolated or being forced into tough split-second decisions.
As such the best effective tackle percentages (proportion of tackles completed rather than being broken or conceding an offload) frequently belong to props and hookers.
But who among them does the best job of hitting and sticking almost every time, wrapping up the ball as well as the man?
Applying a minimum of 100 tackles made in the 2018 Telstra Premiership, NRL.com Stats finds a name that may be surprising to some but won't be so surprising to either his teammates or his club's supporters – Wests Tigers front rower Alex Twal.
The former Eels lower grader has been a model of consistency since being promoted to first grade, getting through his tackles and carries in 40-odd minutes off the bench more often than not, rarely missing a tackle.
Twal made 598 tackles at 95.2% effectiveness and was the only player on the list to with an effective rate over 95%.
Another unheralded bench prop, Shark Ava Sumanufagai, was next best with 208 at 94.7%.
Two other men who could lay genuine claims to being the best defender in the NRL in 2018 had an effective rate almost as good but with far more tackles made. Dragons hooker Cameron McInnes (1134 tackles, most in NRL) and Manly's Jake Trbojevic (1032 tackles) each finished with a 93.7% effective rate, the equal ninth-best.
The Sharks are well represented with Aaron Woods (93.3%), Paul Gallen (93.0%) and Andrew Fifita (92.8%) making it four players in the top 25. The only other club with more than two is Wests Tigers, with Robbie Farah (93.0%) and Tim Grant (93.7%) joining Twal.
Every player in the top 30 is a middle forward (hooker, prop or lock) bar one – Penrith back-rower Isaah Yeo is the best of every other position on the field with 728 tackles at 92.5% effective giving him the 28th best effective rate.

Replies
When I read this I felt it had to be posted here. An eels junior who according to a heck of a lot on 1eeyed is not up to NRL standard, has no ball skills, cannot tackle, NO LOSS. I suppose these stats lie
For some reason the stats table did not come through, I cannot work out how to edit the main page so had to add this on as an extra.
Zzz. Zzz. Zzz.
Grunta, the man of many aliases. Have you been loitering around the Sydney Docks waiting for the next container ?
Woodridge Bahahahahaahahaha!!!
Hi Grunta
Is that you? Is so, you truly are one ugly tosser! I will try to me kinder towards you, you already have suffered greatly!
Quality decision to let go Twal while we kept a plodder like Mannah.
Alan Hunt: That decision was down to Arthur. He did it with his eyes wide open. He has a pathetic record with his treatment of juniors. Twal was an Australian schoolboy representative. The TCT"experts" backed Arthur 100% on the cutting of Twal. I hope the new Football Manager tucks this information away to a safe location and keeps the powder dry until he uses it.
Best you take up a 101 course in English blubber chops. Will need Prof Daz to unravel this dribble.
Ridiculous price??? How much was he and his management asking??? We didn't even want to offer him a top 30 spot, yet had absolute plodders like Rory O'Brein and old man Prichard on the books. Twal was a young 20 year old prop Tim Grant is well past it so hardly a fair comparsion. We thought he wasn't up to it yet he walked straight into the Tigers pack straight away and has proven the last 18months he is a very good first grader. But you lose blokes like him when you offer past it plodders like Mannah 3 year deals.
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