The slow rise of the Ryles era

There's a growing segment of historians who demonstrate that empires do not rise and fall through a single, decisive event.

Instead small, incremental, sometimes unnoticeable changes are made until the result has already occurred.

The challenge for Jason Ryles lies in changing not just Parramatta’s personnel, but their attacking and defensive styles.

A change that is being made incrementally instead of all at once.

For so long under the Brad Arthur regime, the focus was on sending large bodies through the middle to lay the platform before spinning it wide.

That method now lies outdated as the smaller, more mobile forward we once saw in the early 2000s are preferred.

Penrith built their 4 time premiership pack around suffocating defence and a forward pack built for speed and intensity, rather than pure brute force.

Bookends James Fisher-Harris and Moses Leota both weigh less than 110kg with JFH starting his career as a lock, while the 13 in Isaah Yeo made the transition from outside back and the edge into the middle as a ball player.

They were rolling with this middle, while the Eels carried heavyweight props in Reagan Campbell-Gillard and Junior Paulo. Effective when having the ball, but too heavy to handle when possession tipped against them.

So far Jason Ryles has clearly demonstrated a focus on a more mobile forward pack. Paulo has dropped weight, Jack Williams has shifted into the front row, while the likes of Luca Moretti and Matt Doorey have been part of the middle rotation when fit.

Perhaps most telling has been the recruitment and immediate impact of Dylan Walker.

The former centre and five-eighth has become key cog coming off the bench where his versatility and skill allow the Eels to go at the edges in attack.

Walker tips the scales at around 100kg, the same as former Eels lock Daniel Wagon.

In many ways, the game is heading towards the style once spearheaded by Brian Smith. 

Unfortunately for Jason Ryles he will not have 4 internationals fall into his lap courtesy of the Super League War to try and drive home his changes.

As the weeks have gone in the 2025 season, Parramatta has gradually shown more confidence in their ball movement. 

The return of Mitchell Moses and the recruitment of Dylan Walker have been key factors here. Once Walker enters the fray, the Eels seem to attack more towards the edges with Junior Paulo popping up wider where his size and footwork create more headaches for defenders.

Looking at the backline and Isaiah Iongi has shown that he was more than ready for NRL football following his recruitment last year.

The speed, agility and underrated ball playing of the fullback has slotted into an Eels backline that was crying out for a more creative custodian last year.

While Clint Gutherson was everything and more for the Eels throughout his tenure, by the end his lack of speed was glaringly obvious and a key issue for a very slow backline.

Combined with the recruitments of Josh Addo-Carr and Zac Lomax, Parramatta is starting to craft a powerful and speedy backline.

Yet to fully realise their full strength back 5, it’s clear what Ryles prefers. And that’s either a speedy back, or a powerful one.

Like many of their more fancied opponents, Parramatta is looking to their back 5 to take on more of their metre-eating workload than they did under Brad Arthur.

Lomax and Bailey Simonsson have led this change with their combination of size and strength allowing them to win first contact. It’s a shame neither have managed to really be on the field together with Sean Russell continuing to feature in first grade.

That being said, Russell, JAC and Will Penisini haven’t shied away from their workload.

What is clear though, is the change underway for the Eels. 

What they could do with though is an emergence of a Nathan Hindmarsh-like backrower on an edge and a powerful bench prop capable of flipping the momentum after the 20th minute. Sam Tuivaiti was starting to show that ability until his injury.

The Eels are far from the finished product and there is unlikely to be a game where it all “clicks”.

But the Ryles era continues marching on as it looks to rebuild from the ashes of 2024.

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          • NOS, thanks for the heads up on that buddy.

            I haven't listened to that SC playbook podcast (yet) but have listened to Adam Druissi talk over the years. He's got a good head on his shoulders. A smooth operator. 

            Great summary. I'm also a big believer in "personality" qualification on top of an organization's "alignment". They go hand in hand.

            You need the right people in the place - between the ears and with the right habits. People that are capable of toughing things out and staying commited to the cause on the bus. It's a bumpy road. You need to let the fickle ones who can't be team-club first off - even if it's painful.

            Ponissi once admitted he decided on the Storm role decades ago, over say Manly, because he was impressed with the Storm's alignment as an organization. Love his inspiring mantra, "We can disagree, but we remain committed to the cause." 

             

             

            PS: Dogs have a few advantages over us. Gus is the most connected guy in the game and as wily as they come. Few administrators could compare. Plus, they have got some sugar daddy help. We're repairing old relationships "we" damaged ourselves during our dsyfunctional past.

  • I always thought he was the best option, he starting to show why. He doesn't rush, he truthful & loves his footy. 

  • I just hope this isn't steve Kearney all over again in regards to not being able to attract talent. Resorting to reserve graders and has beens.

    • Truthfully SK looked out of his depth here and combined with completely inept recruitment was never going to turn things around. Unlike SK, JR does seem to have an understanding of where he wants to take the team and we've made a group of signings either just prior to or after him joining that sees the club looking to either develop that top line talent, or recruiting established first graders.

      • Yeah good point. Kearney didn't have a plan to bring juniors along or have an idea of who he wanted to bring in really. Just seemed like they made the GF 2 years prior, just a bit of polish and all good. I actually think Kearney came in a bit arrogant, in a lot of predictions and season previews listed him as our best buy. Then realised quickly how hard the job is including where he was and crumbled. Ryles came in knowing the job at hand and he was ready for the hardships as he created some of them. Ryles has come in as a realist. He knows he will be scruitnized, he knows it is risky but it is how he wants to do it and feels it is best for the club. 

        To be fair though, our board is slightly better than what Kearney had. Plus Osborne was not very good at his job. He signed a few players that Kearney didn't really want or know were coming. Willie Tonga one of those. Where it seems Ryles and MON at least have some sort of understanding.

        But Kearney showed at the Warriors he had an ok set up and still could not really get the job done. Just was not suited to being an NRL head coach.

    • Most head coaches fail & don't last. However, if you research R&R strategies you'll find Ryles & Kearney sit on opposite sides of the planet.

      Kearney brought in older players like Webb, Walker, Whatuira and Tonga whom were on their last legs. Meanwhile, Sandow was a liability for all his skills while Roberts also had limited life-shelf left in the NRL.

       

  • We have "risen" from Rock-Bottom to Just-Bottom. I am not trying to be negative, but all i see is improving competence, maybe (still last)

    Greatness, or potential greatness, does not even enter my word-cloud for anything we have seen so far.

    I am hopeful for a Ryles era,  but at this point it is just hope, 50/50.....and us Eels fans know a thing or two about what hope gets you

    I do like the "cut of his jib", if that means anything.....actually, I think it does mean something so for me, 60/40 he succeeds(still shit odds)

    • odd's ??? children could be reading this.....woke up!

      • get off the internet and go to bed you little shits

        • 12244764491?profile=RESIZE_584x

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