For & Against: Tom Trbojevic will be Manly's best ever fullback

  • We had an issue with background services between march 10th and 15th or there about. This meant the payment services were not linking to automatic upgrades. If you paid for premium membership and are still seeing ads please let me know and the email you used against PayPal and I cam manually verify and upgrade your account.
  • We have been getting regular requests for users who have been locked out of their accounts because they have changed email adresses over the lifetime of their accounts. Please make sure the email address under your account is your current and correct email address in order to avoid this in the future. You can set your email address at https://silvertails.net/account/account-details

BOZO

Journey Man
Tipping Member
Here you go @The Wheel , This is for you feathered friend .


Tom Trbojevic's stocks are rising by the week as he leads Manly back into finals contention but where does he rank alongside the club's best-ever fullbacks?

The Sea Eagles have been blessed with a host of fine custodians dating back to Bob Batty in the 60s and early 70s, Hall of Famer Graham "Wombat" Eadie, Kiwi point-scoring machine Matthew Ridge and the Prince of Brookvale, Brett Stewart.

On current form Tom Turbo may zoom past them all but there's plenty of water to pass under the Narrabeen Bridge before that comes to pass.

Each of Manly's eight premiership sides have been driven from the back by a gun No.1 and Trbojevic will be looking to one day join that exclusive group.

Tom Trbojevic will be Manly's best-ever fullback​

For - Paul Suttor (NRL.com editor in chief)​

There are only two things preventing Tom Trbojevic from becoming Manly’s No.1 player to have worn the No.1 jersey and they’re the muscles at the upper rear of his legs that defenders are getting used to see run off into the distance.

The Sea Eagles have a proud history of superb fullbacks from Kangaroos star Graham Eadie in the 1970s, goal-kicking Kiwi Matthew Ridge in the ‘90s and prolific try-scorer Brett Stewart during their last golden era of a decade ago.

trbojevic_20210510.jpg



Trbojevic has the talent to trump them all, as long as he can stay on the field.

His purple patch in maroon over the past month since returning from his most recent hammy holiday has produced numbers that are off the charts.

No less than 13 try involvements (five tries plus eight assists) is Trbojevic's greatest four-game stretch of his career which hit the 100-game milestone in Sunday’s comeback win over the Warriors.


Trbojevic made his Telstra Premiership debut six years ago and it seems like he’s been a part of the furniture out Brookvale way for longer but he’s still only 24.

With modern sport science hopefully rectifying his muscular maladies, he’s potentially got another decade of tearing opposition defences apart and giving lazy headline writers the ongoing gift of Turbo-powered puns.

Despite an armada of top-quality fullbacks in the game, the calibre of Latrell Mitchell, Ryan Papenhuyzen, Kalyn Ponga, Valentine Holmes, Clint Gutherson and AJ Brimson, if James Tedesco was unavailable for Kangaroos duty, Trbojevic should be the next custodian off the rank for the green and gold No.1 jersey.

He’s better at making teammates better than arguably any player in the competition, including this white-hot crop of ball-players bursting in from the backfield.

With 53 tries from his first century of appearances in Manly maroon, he is still a long way from chasing down Stewart’s tally of 163.


Stewart enjoyed premiership success in 2008 and 2011, Ridge did likewise in 1996 and Eadie, an NRL Hall of Famer, spearheaded four Manly title wins in the ‘70s.

Trbojevic is yet to go close to grand final glory but has shown at Origin and Test level that he truly belongs in elite company. He’s a big-game player that would propel his team to great heights if Manly can make their way back into the playoffs.

The way he’s playing lately, they could easily keep rising up the ladder to snare a finals berth.

When he was absent and Manly started the season 1-4, coach Des Hasler was mindful of not putting too much pressure on Trbojevic to be the Sea Eagles’ saviour.

Even when his own position was being questioned despite inking a contract extension.

We heard the Hasler spiel multiple times over a few weeks that Trbojevic was not going to be the saviour, the Sea Eagles couldn’t just rely on him to turn their season around on his own and his return would not guarantee wins.

They’ve won three of the four games he’s played since.

He has been their saviour, the Sea Eagles could indeed just rely on him to turn their season around on his own and his return has all but guaranteed wins.

Trbojevic has done everything for the side apart from drive the team bus and given Manly a realistic chance of a finals run that seemed fanciful just a month ago.

If his hamstrings can allow him to keep performing such feats over the next decade, he will surely go down as the greatest fullback in club history.

Against - Martin Lenehan (NRL.com senior reporter)​

If Tom Turbo continues in his current vein of form he may well zoom past 'Wombat' and the "Prince of Brookvale" to take the mantle as Manly's best-ever fullback but there's plenty of water to pass under the Narrabeen Bridge before that happens.

At 24, Trbojevic is at the peak of his powers, and 100 games into a career that has the potential to be absolutely anything.

Should his body hold together, the gifted No.1 will rack up around 250 NRL games and a truckload of Origins and give strong chase to Brett Stewart's club record of 163 tries.

Those 163 tries came in 233 games, an extraordinary strike rate for a man whose dazzling acceleration and uncanny anticipation made him a hero to the Manly faithful across a 14-year career.

Affectionately dubbed "The Prince of Brookvale", Stewart was a central figure in Manly's golden decade from 2005-14, in which time they played in four grand finals, won two premierships and never missed the finals.

Ten years in a row in the finals. Just take a moment to soak that in and appreciate what a stunning achievement it was under the coaching of Des Hasler (2004-11) and Geoff Toovey (2012-15).

Stewart's freakish ability to sniff out a try one minute and snuff one out the next with a clasic cover tackle or bomb defusal elevated him to legend status at Manly.

And when it came to defusing bombs, there weren't too many better than Graham "Wombat" Eadie, who patrolled the back for Manly from 1971-83 and savoured four premierships along the journey.

The powerfully built Eadie was just 18 when he helped the club to their maiden premiership as part of a star-studded backline featuring Ken Irvine, Ray Branighan, Dennis Ward and future Immortal Bob Fulton.

Eadie's ability to inject himself into the backline at precisely the right moment made him a constant threat and he almost single handedly tore Cronulla apart in a man of the match display in the 1978 grand final replay.

"Wombat" played in 22 finals matches for Manly, the same number of times he pulled on the green and gold in a Test match.

Manly's other two premiership-winning fullbacks are Dale Shearer in 1987 and Matthew Ridge in 1996 ... pretty fair players in their own right as well.


It's a red-hot field Tom Trbojevic must run down if he's to one day be regarded as Manly's best-ever No.1 and right now my vote goes to the "Princ"' in a photo finish from "Wombat".

 
I don't think 'best-ever' is a hyphenated word. Surely it is just 'best ever'. @:p

Anyway. For me as a supporter of Manly, in the end it all comes down to about what a player adds to the Manly premiership tally. I know its all about the talent of the team you have around you, but in the end winning grand finals is what we aim for and remember.

Wombat: 13 seasons, 6 grand finals, 4 premierships
Snake: 14 seasons, 4 grand finals, 2 premierships
Tom T: 6 & a bit seasons, 0 grand finals, 0 premierships

For Tom T to be the greatest, then Manly over the next 8 years will be a great time to be a fan.
 
He’s more talented than wombat and snake, but needs to match their records of tries and premierships before he outstrips them
 
He is already one of the Great fullbacks and he has the potential to be the Greatest
But he must withstand the test of time of consistency and durability

To all those Manly fans that whinge for players that our club let go

We have always kept the Greatest

So, No more whinging
 
I don't think 'best-ever' is a hyphenated word. Surely it is just 'best ever'. @:p

Anyway. For me as a supporter of Manly, in the end it all comes down to about what a player adds to the Manly premiership tally. I know its all about the talent of the team you have around you, but in the end winning grand finals is what we aim for and remember.

Wombat: 13 seasons, 6 grand finals, 4 premierships
Snake: 14 seasons, 4 grand finals, 2 premierships
Tom T: 6 & a bit seasons, 0 grand finals, 0 premierships

For Tom T to be the greatest, then Manly over the next 8 years will be a great time to be a fan.
The stats only tell part of the story. Best is an ambiguous term, are we talking about most successful, most talented, most valuable or most memorable. Seeing as history remembers the successful he has a long way to go but as far as his importance to a manly team being as good as their talent allows them to be Tom is right up there.

Side note, has there ever been an immortal that hasn't won a premiership?
 
If he ends up better than wombat through time on the paddock, he has to be an immortal, because Wombat should be
The Wombat was a players player an all round player who has won every award medal , Broken most points records ans contributed to 4 premiership wins .
That is Immortal material

The Snake was phenomenal at his peak as well .
 
Needs to stay on the park for essentially the next 10 years to stand a chance of coming close..
I'm 90% sure that will never happen...
Man I'ma hate to see them hammys when he's a 30year old...
Great player in his own right but needs to add 2 or 3 titles to pass snake and stay on the field
 
Side note, has there ever been an immortal that hasn't won a premiership?
Great trivia question!
Wally Lewis and Frank Burge.
Wally though won comps in Brisbane, so arguably only Burge.
Burge spent most of his career at Glebe.
He was in the St George team in 1927 that lost the premiership decider to Souths.

 
I really, really hope someone gets back to you @bob dylan

We all would be happy little Silvertails if that happened.

Oh me too.

Don't get me wrong that was mainly me fishing for comments.

Tom is of course a wonderful wonderful player. Maybe our next Fulton.

I was just looking up Eadie's records and noticed he rarely missed a game. In fact his worst years were, '81 he played 14 games and '82 played 15.. Starting in 71 and finishing for us in 83 (he scored 226 points that final year and played all 27 games).

I remember back in the day fearing the games Eadie was out, i will check it out and post the results.
 
Early days. Brett Stewart and Graeme Eadie were champion full backs over a long period. Turbo is outstanding and has the potential of being No 1 but lets not make assessments before we've seen the guy over a long period.

No question Turbo is up there and in my opinion the best full back presently in the game bar none. But I remember Brett being No 1 until he went through that dreadful period of injuries, the court matter, and the League's disgraceful, shameful and unrepentant handling of his case, that in my mind brought them, more than the players they ban, into disrepute of the game. However had Stewart remained fit I don't doubt he could have been Manly's greatest.

Eadie was a different generation and lasted longer. For his time he was the best full back playing. Different style but just as effective.

Sorry but I considered Ridge a level down from those guys.

Really hard to judge different generations. But Turbo is certainly up there with those champions and in time may surpass them..
 
He's certainly got the talent and ability to be more than just our club's best number 1 but the all-time greatest number 1 in the NRL. For him it's just about staying on the field and competing to his elite standards till his 30s whilst also building up his resume (premierships, dally ms, origin, world cup etc.) No doubt he will. Only time will tell but I know deep down in my heart what a icon he will become.
 

Latest posts

Team P W L PD Pts
8 7 1 109 16
9 7 2 72 16
8 7 1 56 16
9 6 3 57 14
10 6 4 58 12
9 5 4 -14 12
10 5 4 31 11
9 5 4 95 10
9 4 5 19 10
9 4 5 -16 8
9 4 5 -19 8
9 4 5 -70 8
9 3 6 -71 8
9 3 5 11 7
8 2 6 -63 6
8 1 7 -89 4
8 1 7 -166 4
Back
Top Bottom