The Roar

2022-08-19 19:51:37 By : Mr. roy cui

Captured a great grassroots sporting moment? We want to see it!

Become a member to join in Australia's biggest sporting debate, submit articles, receive updates straight to your inbox and keep up with your favourite teams and authors.

Oops! You must provide an email address to create a Roar account

When using Facebook to create or log in to an account, you need to grant The Roar permission to see your email address

By joining The Roar you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions

Contribute without a Roar account

New to The Roar? Register for an account

Oops! You must provide an email address to create a Roar account

When using Facebook to create or log in to an account, you need to grant The Roar permission to see your email address

Contribute without a Roar account

Anyone can contribute to The Roar and have their work featured alongside some of Australia’s most prominent sports journalists.

Anyone can contribute to The Roar and have their work featured alongside some of Australia’s most prominent sports journalists.

Try as he might, Kevin Walters couldn’t stop the questions coming about Cameron Munster heading back to Queensland to join the state’s biggest club.

And while he did his best to douse talk of their pursuit of Munster, he conceded the Broncos would love to have someone of his calibre while insisting the club hadn’t met to discuss putting an offer to the 27-year-old.

A halves pairing of Munster alongside Adam Reynolds would be a dream scenario for the Broncos but in reality, the ongoing uncertainty about marquee prop Payne Haas’ future in Brisbane could hamper their salary cap planning.

Storm coach Craig Bellamy did not seem too fussed about Munster’s potential departure at the end of next season when asked at his media conference on Thursday in the lead-up to Friday night’s Suncorp Stadium showdown with the Broncos.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Unwilling to accept a contract extension from the Storm, Munster will test the open market and could be wooed north to the Broncos or to Redcliffe with the Dolphins expansion side for the 2024 season.

“Every club would be (interested) I reckon,” Walters said. “There’s two or three of those guys in that category (as the best players in the NRL); he’s had a great Origin and backed it up in the last couple of weeks.

“As a player and a coach you want to go against these guys and see what kind of plans we can come up with to limit them.”

The Dolphins, who still have several roster spots open for next year and plenty of money to spend on new recruits, are the favourites to sign Munster.

He has been dominant at five-eighth all season and continued that form at fullback recently after starring in the State of Origin arena for Queensland in an emphatic response to a turbulent off-season.

Bellamy hopes to grab a quiet moment with his star man in the next week, saying it had been “probably six weeks” since the pair had last discussed his future.

“There’s a lot of noise, especially at the moment,” Bellamy said. “Hopefully I might be able to have a chat to him in the next couple of days or whatever. We’ll go all out for what we can do to keep him here.”

Cameron Munster. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

But the coach is hopeful they can convince Munster to stay, impressed by his response since the off-season white powder drama almost cost him his contract. He said Munster’s drinking ban after a rehabilitation stint had been a critical step in the process.

“A couple of times it (his drinking) got out of hand; I’m really proud of how he’s changed his life around,” he said.

“The change for his footy was really important, but even more important for his personal life.

“He’s got a wonderful partner in Bianca and a little boy Jackson, eight months old. He didn’t want to take a chance of losing that.”

Munster’s agent, Braith Anasta, said Melbourne had been “unbelievable throughout the process” but conceded they would need to significantly upgrade their offer, reportedly at $2.4 million over three seasons, to ensure he stayed in Victoria.

“I think ideally Cameron and myself would like them to move more on the salary cap than where they are at right now (to stop him going to market),” Anasta said.

“When they signed Papenhuyzen, Hughes, Grant and Coates that unfortunately limited their ability to move on the cap because they prioritised those players.

“That is where we are at the moment. Hopefully they may be able to move somehow between now and November 1.

“It doesn’t mean that he won’t sign before then because he loves the club. He may sign after November.”

Bellamy’s men have won the last 11 head-to-head battles with Brisbane by an average of 22 points and have incredibly remained unbeaten at Suncorp Stadium against the Broncos since 2009.

Walters can rubber-stamp a finals return for Brisbane with victory as his side eyes a return to the playoffs after two years well and truly on the outer.

PlayUp is a proudly Australian-owned bookmaker with the best customer service in the business. Looking for a punt? PlayUp is your best. Please gamble responsibly.

The Storm thrashed the Broncos 60-12, for the club's third loss in the past four weeks.

It was only consolation, but the Brisbane winger did an excellent job to get the ball down.

Melbourne have underlined their late season surge with a mammoth 60-12 win over Brisbane at Suncorp Stadium, endangering the Broncos' place in the finals in the process.

When the Melbourne Storm centre lines up an opponent, he doesn't miss them!

The Storm winger flicked the ball back into play without looking, and it went straight into the hands of Kurt Capewell who raced away…

NRL news, as it happens.