In a game built on collisions and chaos, Alex Johnston has made a career out of being one of the most talented try-scorers and finishers in rugby league history.
While forwards crash and halves scheme, Johnston simply waits, and then runs, and rarely does he not score.
Since bursting onto the scene in what would be South Sydney Rabbitohs' premiership-winning 2014 season, the Rabbitohs winger has rewritten the record books in a way that felt almost inevitable once you'd watched him long enough.
Last Friday, he crossed for his 213th career try, surpassing Ken Irvine's record that was untouched for 57 years.
He cemented his place not just as the greatest try-scorer in NRL history, but as one of the underrated athletes the game has ever produced.
Here are the ten best tries of Alex Johnston's career.
1. The historic moment
12 years later after making his debut, Johnston would go over the line and put the ball down for the 213th time in his career.
At the start of the second half, the Bunnies received the ball.
After strong efforts from David Fifita and a pass from Cameron Murray to Latrell Mitchell, the Rabbitohs found space in the open field on the left edge.
Mitchell was able to draw Tedesco into him and pass the ball to Johnston, who used his agility to beat Siua Wong and score the most historic try in the game, slipping past Blake Steep's tackle attempt to tie the game 12-all one minute into the second half.
Rugby league fans experienced an all-time Australian sporting moment that no one expected to see happen, as fans ran onto the field and the moment created a 16-minute stoppage for the ages.
The Roosters would win 26-18, but it didn't upstage Alex Johnston being the new record holder for most tries of all-time, a record that Ken Irvine had with 212 total since 1973.






















