The NRL All Stars finally brought rugby league back to Sydney, and back to TV screens with the season rapidly approaching last night at a wet and wild CommBank Stadium in Parramatta, with the Maori team running out 16 points to 10 winners over the Indigenous side.

In a display of passion and culture, the game, for the second straight year, went down to the final minute.

A draw last year was followed this time around by the Maori team clinging onto their six-point lead to turn it into a victory by the slimmest of margins, keeping out a last-ditch attacking raid by the Indigenous.

It was exactly what the game - close all the way - deserved. While there were questions in the lead up as players, worried by COVID and a lack of preparation for the new season, withdrew, but there were no questions on the night.

The pre-match ceremony was something to behold, and so was the match. Fights are rare in the regular season, but the teams came together in scuffles on a number of occasions on Saturday evening as passion and intensity spilt over.

It might yet cost Jordan Rapana and Andrew Fifita, who were both put on report and will face a nervous wait for the judiciary to determine their fates, but the game proved once and for all that it belongs, with a crowd of more than 26,000 on hand to witness it, despite the prevailing COVID threat and horrid weather conditions.

Here are the big points from the game.

2. David Fifita must start at the Titans

Frankly, David Fifita was mostlty ineffective during the game - not helped of course by spending a portion of it injured.

But it only took a single run to remind everyone, and more importantly, his coach at the Gold Coast Titans Justin Holbrook why he must be in the starting side when their season commences with a difficult clash against the Parramatta Eels.

As Indigenous coach Laurie Daley described it after the game, Fifita made it look like the under-12s when he received a ball from Nicho Hynes and proceeded to trample absolutely everyone.

VFre players have the ability to turn a game on its head in the same way that Fifita does, but in setting up a try last night against the run of play, he did just that.

He did it on multiple occasions for the Titans last year too, whether starting or coming off the bench, but there is no point having him come off the bench and into a team which is behind.

Consistency will be the key this year for the barnstorming State of Origin calibre second-rower, but it's up to Holbrook to use him in the right times.

Those right times are the first 20 minutes as the Titans look to set the tempo.

NRL Rd 2 - Titans v Broncos
GOLD COAST, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 19: David Fifita of the Titans celebrates during the round two NRL match between the Gold Coast Titans and the Brisbane Broncos at Cbus Super Stadium on March 19, 2021, in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images)

2 COMMENTS

  1. Good summation Scott, I would agree with those. Fifita played 61mins? After that run and hit I thought he was off much longer. I hope he didn’t reaggravate the rib cartilage? Agree about Clark but my concern is that this game brings out a lot of emotion and it’s hard to maintain that level all NRL season. Was super impressed with Trindall’s defence as well.

  2. “This game belongs…” it sure does. This game will, should, take over as the NRL season opener; the game with the passion to remind us how good rugby league is. The women showed they need prime time exposure too. They were great.
    The only downside, that disengaged sounding Ch9 commentator. Compare the Ch9 commentary with an AFL game where there is not so much technical commentary just pump up the emotion with an outpouring of adjectives and superlatives! Ch7 commentators must have to read the thesaurus to qualify for an on air job. Is it too much to ask Ch9 to at least sound interested?