Jamie Humphreys

Humphreys composure and willingness to stay in the contest—he doesn’t go missing for periods at a time—are impressive. I don’t see an incredible talent but Manly have heaps of incredible talent already and actually lack Jamie’s best attribute—composure. At this early stage, I’m already starting to wonder if he’d be better for us than Brooks.

As others have correctly pointed out, it is a very small sample size to be forming any concrete opinions.
 
There is just so much media around JH, you would think that he was an at least 50 player that showed in every game he was outstanding. I reckon a lot of the media is due to him leaving Manly - oh how stupid are we - I think a big part of this media blitz is to rub our noses into it. I am choosing to ignore all the hype right now
 
There is just so much media around JH, you would think that he was an at least 50 player that showed in every game he was outstanding. I reckon a lot of the media is due to him leaving Manly - oh how stupid are we - I think a big part of this media blitz is to rub our noses into it. I am choosing to ignore all the hype right now
And that Souths bought Lewis Dud and he is currently holding him out of the team. JH will have a few off games and the hype will die off and everyone can go back to loving Nathan Cleary
 
Humphreys composure and willingness to stay in the contest—he doesn’t go missing for periods at a time—are impressive. I don’t see an incredible talent but Manly have heaps of incredible talent already and actually lack Jamie’s best attribute—composure. At this early stage, I’m already starting to wonder if he’d be better for us than Brooks.

As others have correctly pointed out, it is a very small sample size to be forming any concrete opinions.
Couldn't agree more. He would have been the perfect counterbalance to DCE. No knock on Brooks, but that was a wasted piece of recruitment with a decent amount of money for what we actually needed at the time.

If a team is already paying for a $1.3M halfback, and a $1.1M fullback, but lacks a decent group of modern day forwards, then signing another elite half really came out of nowhere. It was a Moses opportunity that looks good on paper, but in practical terms, was very ill-suited to our needs - especially when we had Humphreys ready to step up alongside Chez.
 
Couldn't agree more. He would have been the perfect counterbalance to DCE. No knock on Brooks, but that was a wasted piece of recruitment with a decent amount of money for what we actually needed at the time.

If a team is already paying for a $1.3M halfback, and a $1.1M fullback, but lacks a decent group of modern day forwards, then signing another elite half really came out of nowhere. It was a Moses opportunity that looks good on paper, but in practical terms, was very ill-suited to our needs - especially when we had Humphreys ready to step up alongside Chez.
Are you implying Chez is on 1.3mil?

Haha he is not and he never has been, wow
 
One of the key points of that story is ... he had agreed to go before he made his 1st grade debut ... with DCE extending I'm not certain how much I would offer, or how hard I would have tried to retain an untested halfback/hooker ...

Especially when we could get what we needed more .. a couple of grunts to fill out our pack in Jazz and TKO
 
It’s such a lame argument, the article said South’s wanted him 2 years ago, JH choose to stay an Eagle, he was loyal as pointed out by Bennett, we had ample opportunity to find a way to bring him into our 1st grade side and that’s what he wanted, his debut was outstanding on the basis of fact, first game, his since franked that in his subsequent 2 appearances, he can’t do any more than that and no one is claiming he is a superstar, well not yet anyway.

Then theres our cap situation and yes we needed and still need some grunt in our pack, (what we really needed is mobile youthful, high energy grunt, but we got Dads army to the rescue) we had our chance to secure Jamie on a great deal for the club, before he chose to sign elsewhere.

And yes he would of bought plenty to the roster, we could of saved dollars on Brooks, Jazz, TKO and Co and looked at bringing in what we really need, not a Bateman, or other washed up forwards, until we get some youthful leg speed and high aerobic mungrels into our pack we are just making up the numbers, sad but true, you’ve all been watching the footy this year right.
 
There is just so much media around JH, you would think that he was an at least 50 player that showed in every game he was outstanding. I reckon a lot of the media is due to him leaving Manly - oh how stupid are we - I think a big part of this media blitz is to rub our noses into it. I am choosing to ignore all the hype right now
Whilst I don’t think it’s an anti-Manly agenda designed to rub our nose in it, I do think they’re latching onto a story with very little substance because it’s selling. The media do it all the time. They love hyping players because the fans buy into it. A mate of mine is a Souths fan and a couple of weeks ago, he told me Humphreys is great, based off seeing him play one match against the Dolphins?! It was the media that fed him that idea.
 
Humphreys has played three first grade games, all of which have been against pretty crap opposition. I'm not breaking out the Kleenex just yet.

He's solid but I have a strong feelings that by the time Walsh and Large are running around in First Grade we'll be saying "Jamie who?"
A bit like…umm…Clint who?🙂

Oh, wait.😉*

*And without the ACL (ultimately non-)issue.
 
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Weekend Read: How Rabbitohs landed cut-price halfback hero Jamie Humphreys

Jamie Humphreys’ impressive early season form for an undefeated South Sydney was no accident. The Rabbitohs had been clamouring for the unassuming playmaker for over two years.

Mark Ellison had his eye on Jamie Humphreys for two years. Maybe longer.
Ellison, South Sydney’s head of recruitment, saw something in Humphreys long before the playmaker arrived at Heffron Park and snaffled the No.7 jersey.

Funnily enough, his failed pursuit of Humphreys two years ago only made Ellison more determined to land his signature.

At the time, Humphreys felt he owed Manly some loyalty. He wanted to take his shot at the Sea Eagles, where his father Steve was the former chief executive.

So as hard as Ellison tried a couple of years ago, he couldn’t convince Humphreys to leave.

“We were close,” Ellison said.

“He considered it. At the time I understood why he wanted to stay. He wanted to have a crack. It said to me that he is a loyal kid.

“There’s no BS about him.”

Humphreys stayed on Sydney’s northern beaches, sat behind Daly Cherry-Evans, spent some time training at hooker and got one shot at the big time – against Newcastle in round 19 last year.


He produced an eye-catching performance but by then, a determined Ellison had already worked his magic. About a fortnight or so before Humphreys showed he could handle the big stage, Ellison shook hands on a deal with Humphreys over a meal at The Oaks Hotel in Neutral Bay with Humphreys’ manager George Mimis.

They ordered a steak, chewed the fat, and talked about Humphreys’ time in England, where he spent time with the London Broncos academy, moved to halfback and played against Rabbitohs half Lewis Dodd in the lower grades.

They also spoke about how Humphreys’ window was closing at Manly – Cherry-Evans had been re-signed and the club invested in young halves Joey Walsh and Onitoni Large.

Steak polished off, Ellison finally had his man. That decision, which came after the club had already signed Dodd to a long-term deal, has turned out to be a masterstroke.

Two games into the NRL season and Humphreys has been a lifesaver for South Sydney. He has stepped into the breach and saved their bacon.

Not that you would know it. Last week, as his game-deciding field goal sailed through the sticks against St George Illawarra, Humphreys almost self-consciously raised a hand in the air and then just as quickly turned around and started walking back towards the halfway line.

Contrast that with the reaction of Dragons winger Christian Tuipulotu, who celebrated his try earlier in the game by performing a show-me-the-money celebration.

If anyone had a right to suggest he deserved a bigger pay cheque, it was Humphreys. He is on a modest deal at Souths, far less than his coterie of star-studded teammates.

It isn’t necessarily about money for Humphreys.

The move to Souths was about opportunity and the chance to work with coach Wayne Bennett. If he fell short, it wouldn’t be through lack of trying.

Humphreys’ journey has been one of grim determination and good genes. As a kid growing up in Sydney’s shire, he would run the famed Wanda sand hills from the age of 10.

He was born with a work ethic and the DNA to be a rugby league player – father Steve and grandfather Kevin both played in the premiership.

When the family moved to England for Steve’s job, he found himself in the London Broncos system. His parents worried it may stymie his development.

Jamie was determined not to let that happen. It’s the same determination that has caught Bennett’s eye so early in his return to Souths.

Bennett knew little about Humphreys before he arrived at the club but a couple of weeks before Christmas, he knew had a footballer on his hands.

“I think I said to him, ‘You’ll be in the 17’,” Bennett said.

“He’s a wonderful trainer, a very, very well-mannered young man. He has a lot of lovely attributes besides playing football.

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“But, you know, you have a background that’s full of a football life, so he kind of gets it around the club and the players.

“He’s a great trainer. He’s up in the top 10 per cent of trainers in the club. Look, he does everything right.”

The field goal showed as much.

“In all fairness to the game, he was the only one thinking about it,” Bennett said.

“They had just gone to the other end and they didn’t even attempt a field goal. Then we came back down and we weren’t attempting one either.

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“ (Siliva Havili) just picked the ball up and threw it to him.

“No one was thinking field goal except him.”

Asked what that moment told him about Humphreys, Bennett said: “I think he’s got a brain that operates under pressure. That’s what I think.

“I think he’s got the footy smarts and his mind’s in the right place most of the time.”

Humphreys has managed to keep Dodd at bay through the early rounds of the season.

Dodd was suspended in round one but was back in the NSW Cup in round two and showed some encouraging signs.

No doubt, the Englishman won’t give up without a fight. Nor will Humphreys.

Brent Read
Wow. That is really bad writing. Really bad.

As for the kid, I'd be very surprised if the stuff with his father didn't have an influence on his not resigning.
 
$150K for JH to go to Souths. Clearly didn't want to stay for money so he saw no chance in 1st grade with DCE and Brookes soaking up so much cap. Think of the sort of forwards you could've put around JH and Metcalf or Fainu. Like was said by many when DCE signed the 10 year deal and then the Trbojevics a couple yrs later. "We'll never win a premiership under this."
 

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