HOOKER
Damien Cook (HOK) $621,000 – I expect everyone to go mad about Harry – Grant that is – and so being the contrarian that I am I’ll pivot (one of my least favourite 2020-isms) to the tried and tested Damien Cook from the Rabbitohs. Cook’s average was down on his 2019 numbers (76PPG in 2019 but 70PPG in 2020) but his consistency was up (70% of games 60+ in 2020 as cf 61% in 2019). His tackle count was up and his run numbers bounced back, where he declined was try assist/linebreak assist - and as a Cody Walker owner I can attest that he was a mere fingernail on Walker away from at least two of each in 2020. Cheaper than Grant and I expect less popular, Cook feels a solid safe gun selection.
Jake Simpkin (HOK) $173,700 – The Wests Tigers are likely to roll with a dual-hooker rotation in 2021 with Jacob Liddle the lead and Simpkin his understudy. So why take the understudy you ask? In two words – upside and value.
Simpkin prospects to be the more exciting with better attacking stat potential and he’s around $70K cheaper than Liddle. Simpkin impressed through the junior ranks playing Qld under-18 Origin in 2019 (41 tackles, 86 running metres and a try) before COVID-19 restricted him to just one game of NSW Cup in 2020 (45 minutes with 26 tackles made, 32 running metres and a try assist).
FRONT ROW FORWARD
Payne Haas (FRF) $668,600 – Starting without Payne Haas was tempting because the $80/100K I saved by going with one of the Newcastle bookends (see below) was useful elsewhere. However, in the end I could not ignore the big man’s outstanding reliability. In the 17 games Haas played in 2020 he scored under 60 points just twice (54 in round six and 55 in round 20) and he scored 80+ eight times. Just too good to start without.
Tino Fa’asuamaleaui (FRF/2RF) $504,900 – Big Tino is one of the big name recruits by the Gold Coast Titans and as such I expect him to be given all the game time he can handle. And the young enforcer can handle plenty as he showed in making the jump from very limited minutes in 2019 (23MPG at 1.04PPM) to a mid-major role in 2020 (46MPG at 1.23PPM). There were plenty of attacking stats included with seven tries in 19 games and that does give me some cause for worry, but for now I have him in the team on upside and opportunity.
Christian Welch (FRF) $453,500 – Injury delayed Welch’s start to the 2020 season and saw him play restricted minutes when he did return. But from round nine to round 20 Welch played 10 games (missing two due to a COVID quarantine breach) averaging 59.6PPG in 51.4MPG and in the final five games of that stretch he averaged 67.6PPG in 55.2MPG. Those are very close to keeper numbers for a mid-ranger price.
Stefano Utoikamanu (FRF) $186,800 – The young prop has had huge raps on him for a couple of years now. Was under-utilised at the Eels but now at the Wests Tigers I expect him to carve out a solid role and he should be a decent money maker.
Honourable mentions:
David Klemmer/Daniel Saifiti – Klemmer and Saifiti were superb over the first half of 2020 with Klemmer tackling everything in sight and chucking offloads seemingly at will. Saifiti has a lower workrate but makes up for it with nifty footwork at the line creating attacking stats. Both come at a hefty discount to Haas and would not look out of place leading your FRF.
SECOND ROW FORWARD
Cameron McInnes (HOK/2RF) $676,200 – The Dragons did not have a great season in 2020, if they had not had McInnes tackling everything in the middle they would have had a worse one. Averaging a sensational 66PPG in base, McInnes is a tremendously safe option to start the season with. His DPP Hok/2RF eligibility is a big bonus for those, like me, who have started with just the one gun hooker as should Damien Cook go down injured you have the flexibility to draft in either a hooker as a direct replacement or shift McInnes to hooker and buy a gun 2RF.
Jason Taumalolo (2RF) $641,700 – Stopping Taumalolo from monstering the middle would no doubt be a pre-game focus of every team that plays the Cowboys, and yet no team can do it. A human wrecking ball, Taumalolo passed 8 metres with better than 80% of his runs in 2020 on his way to a fourth consecutive season averaging better than 70PPG. And Taumalolo did that despite being injured in round 15 and on a minutes restriction upon his return in round 19, if you excise those two games from his season average ‘Lolo’ averaged 77PPG.
David Fifita (2RF) $569,900 – The other big name Gold Coast recruit to make my initial squad, Fifita is the sort of player I tend to avoid early in a season. Not on ability, Fifita has that in spades, but rather I tend to prefer starting the season with base stat monsters and Fifita and his 40PPG base from 76MPG is not that. Rather, Fifita is a destructive force, an edge second rower who terrorises centres and halves defending against him piling up tackle busts and linebreaks. I’ve tried to embrace more risk for reward with this team and Fifita is a large part of that.
Corey Horsburgh (FRF/2RF) $445,100 – I originally had Englishman Luke Thompson listed at this spot but thankfully a reader reminded me that Thompson is suspended for the opening four rounds of the 2021 season. So to avoid having to completely rip the team apart at this stage - and to maintain my quota of redheads - I will pivot to Corey Horsburgh. ‘Horse’ was superb in the middle for the Raiders in the opening rounds of 2020 averaging 56PPG of which 49PPG came in base and a rather excellent 6PPG came in offloads. Able to cover lock, prop and at a pinch second-row I’m not sure where Horsburgh will play in 2021 but provided he has fully recovered from the foot injury which ended his season just seven rounds into 2020 I’m confident the young bull will get the minutes rewuired to make an impact. Luckily Horburgh is a similar price to Thompson and also has DPP 2RF/FRF which works handily with Fa’asuamaleaui above.
Shawn Blore (2RF) $210,500 – Little bit of a placeholder this one. Blore is an impressive young player, but his NSW Cup stats are just good not great and his stats in five games off the interchange bench where he averaged 26PPG in 26MPG are, again, good but not great. However, there are whispers Blore might nab the vacant right edge at the Tigers and were that to happen he would be very popular indeed.
Zac Saddler (2RF/FRF) $173,700
A tall versatile forward in the Shaun Lane mould, Saddler can play edge or middle. His NSW Cup stats were good but it was playing on an edge for the Indigenous All-Stars that Saddler really announced himself running for 83 metres, with 34 tackles (none missed), two offloads and two tackle busts in 60 minutes. The Sea Eagles have a good stock of middle forwards, but not much in the way of edges with Jack Gosiewski and new recruit Andrew Davey seemingly competing to fill the shoes of Joel Thompson. I expect we’ll see a fair bit of Saddler in first grade in 2021 – and the DPP doesn’t hurt either.
Honourable mentions:
Ryan Matterson – the decision between Matterson and McInnes was a tight one. Matterson has more attacking stats in him, but he also has some concussion issues and I do like the flexibility McInnes gives me should something happen to Cook.
Joseph Tapine/Adam Elliott – a couple of $540K area forwards that I gave plenty of thought to. In the end I couldn’t be sure where Tapine’s minutes fall in a full-strength Canberra pack while Elliott was very impressive before he was injured in 2020 but I want to see him repeat that in 2021 before jumping on.
HALFBACK
Nathan Cleary (HFB) $734,300 – I doubt even Cleary can replicate his incredible 2020 heroics which saw him finish with an average of 83PPG. Yet even if his average drops 5 points he’ll still likely finish 10 points clear of the next best at the position. A true stat stuffer, the only statistical category in which Cleary led his position in 2020 was forced drop outs; but he’s right near the top in pretty much every other category and that’s why he finished a whopping 14.8PPG clear of his next best (Shaun Johnson) by PPG and scored 204 points more than the next best for total points (Daly Cherry-Evans) despite playing two fewer games than DCE.
Sam Walker (HFB) $173,700 – The Roosters rookie probably won’t play in round one, but I am confident he will play sooner rather than later in 2021 and I just hope that when he does get his chance he is given time to find his feet. Because 1. SuperCoach (I want a price increase) and 2. Roosters fan (in case my annoying arrogance had not made that clear already).
Honourable mentions:
Daly Cherry-Evans – The only other halfback I toyed with selecting. The $160K discount on Cleary can go a long way to upgrading another position and Cherry-Evans has been a picture of consistency averaging 62, 62, 62 and 64 from 2017-2020, but Cleary has averaged 70, 62, 68 and 83 over that period so …
Jayden Sullivan – The St George rookie got one game in 2020, the last one the Dragons played, and his 58 point effort against the Storm included 39 in base. Sullivan’s only a little guy but he’s all heart, and there’s ability to go with the bravery which makes him an intriguing SuperCoach prospect. If Sullivan does win a starting halves spot I‘ll need to find the money to upgrade Walker to him.