The Daly Cherrygraph

You are kidding yeah?

Tell me again what he did to damage the Manly brand?

Just so we can be clear tell me whats not the true in the following list....

He came into a stacked side and won a Premiership as a rookie.

he wanted and got a contract upgrade. which put the nose out of joint of some older players.

He got us to another big dance with a side full of about to retire legends where he was crowned the best on ground.

He left to the titans BECAUSE the CLUB chose Foran.

Foran was the one Screwed the Club on purpose.

The club realising what a ****show they created offered DCE a huge contract to backflip.

DCE backflips and with the golden era coming to a close the sea eagles go through the inevitable rebuild signing some pretty ordinary players.

Many sack club Legend Toovey and employ a complete loser in TB who nearly takes manly to its first spoon. The great TB tries to reinvent DCE's game to more of a Thurston type which doesn't work at all well.

Des returns in 2019 and DCE finds some form again. Des takes a rag tag bunch minus turbo deep into the finals where we were robbed again against the bunnies.

2020 covid strikes and our entire gameplan was screwed by the PVL rule changes.

2021 rolls around and after a slow start we have a great year, this coincides with Turbo having a blinder.

During the DES years and Seibold time DCE has perhaps been our most consistent player and worth every penny.

Most other coaches would take him in a flash.

Manly decide not to offer a deal and instead to wait and see if someone else does first. it transpires the Club was shopping DCE around in 2024.

We all know what happens next.

So looking at facts to say DCE was the worst thing to happen to the club ever is a bit rich.

You obviously dislike the gut and that's cool. Hell I hate Seibold but at least i will admit when he does well or is heading in the right direction.

Oh and to say he was disliked by our club legends is one thing. To use cam smith, Thurston and co as backup for the DCE hate stinks. they were and still are absolute wankers.
You missed the bit about wanting a release in 2024, and going on TV to announce there is no problem with him and the club, but he is leaving and may play for any club but manly, and that manly never offered a contract, without saying he told the club he may retire or go to english SL instead.

There was a classier way to do this, but did it in a way that put a poor light on manly, the club he still captains and is trying to lead to a premiership this year
 
Is there anyone on this site gunna be embarrassed for tearing this guys nuts off if/when he JUST retires from playing with us and maybe takes a development/coaching role with us? It's a chance.
YES it could've been handled better by both parties but the guy doesn't deserve this kicking IMHO. And if you boo someone with our jersey on then you should be ashamed and relinquish your so-called support of our wonderful club. Just keep an open mind rather than just forming opinions based on conjecture and so-called journalism
You must believe in Unicorns as well.

Maybe you’ll be the one embarrassed when he announces he’s signed with the Roosters on a 2 year playing 5 year coaching / media “ mega deal”

Which quite frankly is about a 1000% more likely than your scenario.

BUT one thing we agree on , absolutely no booing.

He’s made his bed , we need to move on, there’s not a snowflakes chance in hell you’ll see him in anything Maroon & White after his last game.
 
I wouldn’t worry about this stuff too much and if I was Manly I would just give him the utmost respect at being a 15 year player and let’s see if we can win a comp in his last season.

Don’t worry where he will go and what will happen. We have had him for 15 years. He has been awesome , he has been very expensive as well and he will be 37 next year and we need to replace him at some stage and it may have come a year or so before we were quite ready but we have had him for 15. We can’t afford 1.5 or whatever he wants so we wish him the best of luck, he will always be welcome back once he retires and we look to the future.
 
Is there anyone on this site gunna be embarrassed for tearing this guys nuts off if/when he JUST retires from playing with us and maybe takes a development/coaching role with us? It's a chance.
YES it could've been handled better by both parties but the guy doesn't deserve this kicking IMHO. And if you boo someone with our jersey on then you should be ashamed and relinquish your so-called support of our wonderful club. Just keep an open mind rather than just forming opinions based on conjecture and so-called journalism
I heard Max Krilich interviewed this arvo, his take was along the lines (from memory): bit disappointing how it played out, but Cherry has given many years service to Manly, been a great player and he's entitled to choose what he thinks is best. Manly will be OK wthout him.
 
After thinking about this situation for a few days and comparing it to my own working life, I have come to a possible reason for his departure.

Being at the same place for so long (my job for almost 40 years) maybe he has seen too much change and is a bitter with some aspects of the organisation and feels under appreciated, so he wants to go out and ruffle a few feathers.

Maybe he is bitter at the management/coaching or even team mates, some of whom are 15 years younger than him.

I know in my job if I could get out I would, but at my age I need to let the clock run out until retirement. The workplace is no longer the place it once was.

That's a long career for a gigolo..!

Well done



lulz :angel:
 
Manly CEO Tony Mestrov opens up on Daly Cherry-Evans’ exit from the club

Manly CEO Tony Mestrov has broken his silence on Daly Cherry-Evans’ exit from the club revealing how and when he learned of his club captain’s plans – and the tough questions he had to answer from those closest to him.

Sea Eagles boss Tony Mestrov has revealed Daly Cherry-Evans sought a release to play for a Queensland club as he hit out at the “lies” and “mistruths” over the skipper’s Brookvale contract bust-up.
Mestrov has broken his silence on a bombshell meeting with Cherry-Evans before the 2024 pre-season in which the Manly playmaker formally asked for an immediate release to return home to Queensland.

“It really shocked me,” Mestrov says. “I didn’t see it coming.”

Mestrov rejected the request.

But for Manly bosses, the seeds for an eventual defection were clearly sown.

Sixteen months later, their worst fears were realised when Cherry-Evans on Monday night confirmed he would sever ties with the Sea Eagles at season’s end after a decorated, premiership-winning 15-season stint in Manly colours.

On Sunday, Cherry-Evans will run out to face Manly fans for the first time since his shock decision to quit the Sea Eagles when he takes on the Eels at 4 Pines Park.

As the Manly No.7 weighs up his future, this masthead can reveal:

* At least four clubs, including the Dolphins, have formally expressed interest;


* The Queensland Origin skipper would prefer to remain in Sydney if he plays on, but is open to a move north of the border;

* NRL salary-cap auditors would have registered a new deal with Manly for less than $750,000 because of Cherry-Evans’ age (36) and years of one-club service;

* Former Dolphins coach Wayne Bennett made no attempt to convince ‘DCE’ to break his Manly contract and shift to Redcliffe last year; and

* Cherry-Evans is on $900,000 this season, well shy of the $1.1 million-plus he was reportedly seeking to remain at Brookvale in 2026.

DCE’S SECRET EXIT

In a week of drama for the Sea Eagles, one of the most explosive developments is Mestrov’s revelation that Cherry-Evans wanted out of Manly well before the ructions of Monday night.

In November 2023, Cherry-Evans called an urgent meeting with Mestrov.

It was the off-season after Anthony Seibold’s first year in charge as Manly coach. As Seibold began planning Manly’s premiership assault in 2024, Mestrov was blindsided.

“Daly came to us wanting a release,” the Manly CEO told this masthead, speaking for the first time about the skipper’s secret Queensland exit strategy.

“He was our club captain and we didn’t plan for that.

“At that time, it was coming into the new pre-season, so we knocked it back.

“We couldn’t make a change that late.

“I was surprised because I had been here since August 2022 (as Manly CEO) and we had a lot of changes. Des (Hasler, former coach) had left and we had a tough period.

“It seemed to me like Daly was getting itchy feet and wanted a change

It came as a surprise to me that he wanted a release.”

Contacted by this masthead on the eve of the Eels clash, Cherry-Evans declined to comment, but confirmed asking for a release.

TITANS OR DOLPHINS?

Mestrov says he was not made aware of the club Cherry-Evans intended to join last year, but it is understood the only two options for the Maroons skipper in Queensland were the Dolphins or Titans.

The Cowboys had no dialogue with Cherry-Evans, while the Broncos were content with their halves pairing of Ezra Mam and Adam Reynolds, who had steered Brisbane to the grand final a month before DCE’s release request.

The Dolphins, as a new franchise, had the salary-cap millions to afford the Manly halfback, but club officials, including Bennett, insist they had no talks with the Redcliffe junior.

If the Dolphins are to be believed, that left only one Queensland suitor: the Gold Coast Titans.

A return to the Gold Coast would have been a head-spinning scenario given the toxic tensions of 2015, when Cherry-Evans sensationally reneged on a four-year deal with the Titans to sign a $10 million, eight-year contract at Manly.

But a decade on, Cherry-Evans had fresh links to the Titans. His former mentor at Manly, Hasler, had been appointed Titans coach for the 2024 season. Cherry-Evans still values him so much that Hasler was invited to the half-back’s wedding last November.

The Titans were also chasing a halfback. Ben Hunt was on the club’s radar for 12 months, but in the end, Manly blocked Cherry-Evans’ request to move to Queensland.

The skipper, who had cited personal reasons, copped the decision on the chin and told Mestrov he would give his all for Manly in 2024, which he did.

Asked why Cherry-Evans wanted a release, Mestrov says: “I think he was looking for new things. He has won a grand final, he has played for Queensland and Australia.

“He has done it all really.

“I don’t think he had an issue with anyone at the club but it was just ‘Chez’ himself. He was looking for new challenges, I believe, and I don’t believe it was a money thing then.

“Look, Daly is a Queenslander, he is from Queensland, it’s his roots, his family is from there.

“I think he wanted opportunities to do other things.”

THE BACKLASH

When Cherry-Evans runs out on Sunday, chances are he won’t be jeered by the Manly faithful. The boos could be reserved for Manly hierarchy, but Mestrov scoffs at the perception the Sea Eagles butchered contract negotiations with a favourite son.

“To be honest, I’m sick of the lies and mistruths and I want to set the record straight,” Mestrov said.

“Being a CEO of an NRL club is a lonely place at times. Even my wife asked me, ‘How can you let Chez go?’

“It’s OK for all the critics out there to bag us and say, ‘Pay Daly $1 million’, but they aren’t the ones in charge of managing a salary cap.

“I’m sure Penrith didn’t want to lose (Jarome) Luai and all their other guys.

“The innuendo does take a toll because people say you stuffed up, you didn’t make an offer.

“The claim we didn’t make an offer is not true.

We did make one, but Daly’s management wanted $1.1 million to $1.2 million and we simply couldn’t afford that much money, as much as we rate Daly as a player and his legacy.”

Sources close to Cherry-Evans claim he never sought $1.1m.

Ultimately, the Sea Eagles offered $750,000, a potential fiscal gulf of $700,000 over two seasons, enough to represent the last rites for Cherry-Evans’ career at Brookvale.

“We had to make a business decision,” Mestrov said.

“We had to say, ‘OK, Daly is a wonderful player, but he is turning 37’.

“We can’t afford to pay him big money because we need to re-sign guys like Haumole (Olakau’atu) and Lehi (Hopoate).

“I liken this situation to Blake Solly (Rabbitohs CEO) with Adam Reynolds at South Sydney. I know exactly how he feels (after Reynolds quit Souths to join the Broncos in 2022).

“Souths had to make a tough call on Adam and there is backlash against the club, but we’re the ones managing the salary cap, not the critics, and we’re in a premiership window.

THE SHOWDOWN

The Sea Eagles have come under fire for initially tabling only a one-year deal last November, but Mestrov claims Cherry-Evans’ management never flagged any rival offers.

“The NRL salary-cap auditor was prepared to accept a lower offer (than $750,000) from us because Daly was the oldest half in the comp and he had been at the one club,” Mestrov said.

“That is a fact.

“I won’t reveal the exact figure the NRL would have accepted because it’s confidential, but it was considerably lower than what we offered.

“Daly’s team wanted at least $1.1 million.

“And to go to that level, we said, ‘OK, what interest is there?

“I asked Daly’s management, ‘Where are the offers?’

“They said, ‘We haven’t got one’.

“The reason I asked for an offer (from rival clubs) was because if some other club offered $1.1 million, then naturally we would have to consider countering it.

“But it would be irresponsible of me to the club and our salary-cap situation if I said, ‘No dramas, I’ll just give you $1.1m, even if you have no other formal offer’ and Manly are bidding against themselves.

“I am always here to protect the club first

THE BLUNDER

Mestrov is livid at claims Cherry-Evans only received a two-year offer when the Manly boss called the NRL 360 program last Monday night to pass on details of an extra year for the skipper.

NRL 360 host Braith Anasta hastily announced the two-year upgrade via Mestrov, who had called Fox Sports boss Steve Crawley, midway through the show around 7pm.

It came more than an hour after Channel 9 reported at 5.41pm that Cherry-Evans would quit the Sea Eagles.

Those chaotic machinations made Manly bosses look like negotiating amateurs left scrambling after Cherry-Evans called their bluff. Mestrov insists that’s not the case.

“I want to clarify this part. You can quote me on this,” Mestrov said.

“Around midday last Monday, Peter Gentle (Manly recruitment chief) made Daly’s management aware that we were making a two-year offer.

“We didn’t offer Daly two years during the NRL 360 program.

“I did call the 360 program, but much earlier in the day, we had already advised Daly’s team that we were offering a two-year deal.

“Because his form at the start of the year was so hot, we were already working on an improved offer well before the NRL 360 program.”

As it turned out, regardless of the precise timing, it was a futile exercise. Cherry-Evans had mentally checked out. He formally rejected Manly’s $1.5 million offer the next day.

THE FUTURE

Mestrov is adamant there is no bad blood with Cherry-Evans and scuppered fears the Brookvale brouhaha could derail Manly’s premiership push this season.

He admits the situation could have been handled better.

But he hopes the 333-game stalwart can lift the NRL trophy this year and skipper the Sea Eagles to their first premiership since 2011, Cherry-Evans’ rookie season.

“We have come to terms with it,” Mestrov said.

“The learnings are that it could have been done better and more together. The process wasn’t ideal and it didn’t work out like we hoped. That’s being truthful, from a club point of view.

“It was unsavoury at times and it leaves a dirty taste in my mouth.

“But I’m old enough and ugly enough to move on and I’m excited about the future.

“We knew there was a possibility that Chez would retire this year. That’s kind of the same thing as him leaving, so we had an idea that we wouldn’t have him on our books for 2026.

“We had plans in place, but it was the way it all happened that wasn’t ideal, I accept that.

“We wish Daly the best. We have been fine through the process, but we should all take responsibility that we could have done things better and we would have got the same result.

“This will not derail the team or the club.

“I have been really impressed with Daly, Tom and Jake (Trbojevic) this week and how they have handled the situation, how Seibs has got them together and our discussions with various players.

The boys are pumped, they have no issues with Daly.

“Daly Cherry-Evans is the most professional player in rugby league. If anyone can concentrate on the job and block out the noise, it’s him.

“He is the best in the business.”

Peter Badel
 

The real reason Cherry-Evans fell out of love with the Sea Eagle

Danny Weidler

The doublespeak and spin surrounding Daly Cherry-Evans’ relationship with Manly requires a team of investigators to sift through and understand. But the bad blood between the Sea Eagles and their skipper can be traced back to two separate incidents where the Manly great was sledged behind his back at public events.

Cherry-Evans revealed on Monday he would not be at the Sea Eagles beyond the end of this season.

Cherry-Evans' shock Manly decision

At Magic Round last year a senior Manly figure with significant sway at the club was highly critical of Cherry-Evans, suggesting he had too much power at the club. The comments were made within earshot of select people, including rival NRL club officials. That led other clubs to believe Cherry-Evans was on his way out of Manly and that he could be a good buy when his contract expired at the end of 2025.

Some clubs even discussed the potential of signing Cherry-Evans as a result of the disparaging remarks, which were made in a public forum by a person who would have a better than reasonable idea about what was going on at the Sea Eagles. The same person then made similarly unfavourable comments at the end of the year on a football club cruise.

We have chosen not to name the person to protect the identity of our sources, who did not want to be identified, because there were a limited number of people who heard it.

The disparaging comments reached DCE’s camp. That’s when Manly started telling media privately of the plan to return Luke Brooks to halfback and move Tom Trbojevic to No.6.

Rival clubs were certainly aware of the divide at the Sea Eagles, and again the idea of signing DCE was raised by many of them.


It makes the spin, from both sides – that there are no issues between club and player – difficult to swallow.

But the spin is understandable given Manly’s desperation to avoid having their season totally derailed by their captain’s looming exit.

This column was hearing whispers of a potentially significant development last week, but no one from either camp would provide information. That’s why I led last week’s column with a piece indicating Manly believed DCE was going to retire at the end of the season, but that they had learnt how little they might have to pay him if he decided to play on.

In fairness, the journalists on the show did their best when hit with the thunderbolt Cherry-Evans news. You can’t blame the program for not knowing what was going on, despite having half-a-dozen News Corp journalists and their chief reporter on call.

DCE’s decision to leave Manly was a well-kept secret. It happens, and it has happened to this hack.

But for their reporters to peddle the line on podcasts since then that some kind of deal had been done between DCE and Nine Entertainment (publishers of this masthead) is fantasy stuff


The story was there for everyone to chase. And even after plenty of digging, and with the knowledge that DCE was to be a guest on 100% Footy on Channel Nine that night, at 2pm on Monday there was no story. The developments came after that. Not days or weeks in advance. It was a few hours before the 6pm news bulletin that Sydney Morning Herald journalist Michael Chammas and I knew we had the information we were able to share across Nine News and Nine newspapers.

The backside-covering later peddled by News Corp was preceded by the inept actions of an arrogant Manly club. The club that mismanaged the pride jersey situation took their bumbling show onto live TV to insist they had made an offer to their departing captain.

It was high farce – or silliness, as Wayne Bennett described it – as Manly gave one of the great rugby league knee-jerk reactions to a situation they thought they had under control.

It was Manly’s smugness that cost them their captain. Whether they actually wanted to keep him is doubtful. They did not make an offer for months when they had the chance. Throwing in an offer on live television after Cherry-Evans had announced he was leaving was ridiculous.

But the most confusing part was their claim they had made an offer to Cherry-Evans at midday on Monday. That simply did not happen.

One day, I’ll be able to explain how I know that is not true. But right now, the story is too hot. It’s fair to say there were several stories coming out of Manly that did not match up.

We were being told that there was a Monday afternoon meeting between Manly owner Scott Penn and chief executive Tony Mestrov to discuss an offer to Cherry-Evans. At the same time, we were told that an offer had been made at midday. The first the DCE camp knew of an offer was when it was announced on live television that night.

Manly need to have a serious look at the way they operate. There are many questions to be asked about who was ultimately responsible for what has taken place in the past week. A strong club would re-evaluate the way it does its contracting. Manly have considerable work to do in this area

DCE not fighting Wehbe’s battles

The heavy influence of prominent manager Isaac Moses at Manly has been touched upon during the week. Moses manages coach Anthony Seibold, several players and also backroom staff. Cherry-Evans is managed by a company headed up by the Wehbe family. Joe Wehbe and Moses were business partners before an ugly split in 2018.

The two parties do not get on. But to suggest Wehbe is pushing DCE to get out of Manly to square up with Moses is not right. That’s an insult to DCE, as a 15-season veteran of the game. He is not going to make life decisions to fight other people’s battles, and knowing the Wehbes, they would never influence a player to do that.

Roosters in box seat, but ...

So, after all that, where will Cherry-Evans end up?

He has told his agents he doesn’t want to make a call or talk until October, after the season is over. With the Bulldogs not in the race, it appears the Roosters are in the best position to sign him. I put it to the club several times and was dismissed with a smirk by club heavyweights.

The Roosters are surprised Canterbury have ruled themselves out. But they are also delighted. There was concern they were the genuine opposition.

The Dolphins are also still in the hunt for DCE’s signature.
 
Yep he has been mentioned in the past.

On ability i'd rank him between Cooper Johns and Dame Edna Everidge.
Made me lol, thanks!

At Magic Round last year a senior Manly figure with significant sway at the club was highly critical of Cherry-Evans, suggesting he had too much power at the club

The same person then made similarly unfavourable comments at the end of the year on a football club cruise
I didn't even know there were any senior Manly figures with significant sway over the club and who go on football cruises. That would be upsetting for anyone @:D @:D
 
After thinking about this situation for a few days and comparing it to my own working life, I have come to a possible reason for his departure.

Being at the same place for so long (my job for almost 40 years) maybe he has seen too much change and is a bitter with some aspects of the organisation and feels under appreciated, so he wants to go out and ruffle a few feathers.

Maybe he is bitter at the management/coaching or even team mates, some of whom are 15 years younger than him.

I know in my job if I could get out I would, but at my age I need to let the clock run out until retirement. The workplace is no longer the place it once was.
That is exactly how I feel too. I've been at my job for 33 years. Things have changed so much and after some recent events which showed how little regard they have for their employees I have zero empathy or loyalty to the management in charge now. If I could retire tomorrow I would gladly but I've got a couple of years left I need to see out before retirement. It's poor management that let's workplaces become toxic. I just hope the Manly playing group hasn't become that way.
 
You are kidding yeah?

Tell me again what he did to damage the Manly brand?

Just so we can be clear tell me whats not the true in the following list....

He came into a stacked side and won a Premiership as a rookie.

he wanted and got a contract upgrade. which put the nose out of joint of some older players.

He got us to another big dance with a side full of about to retire legends where he was crowned the best on ground.

He left to the titans BECAUSE the CLUB chose Foran.

Foran was the one Screwed the Club on purpose.

The club realising what a ****show they created offered DCE a huge contract to backflip.

DCE backflips and with the golden era coming to a close the sea eagles go through the inevitable rebuild signing some pretty ordinary players.

Many sack club Legend Toovey and employ a complete loser in TB who nearly takes manly to its first spoon. The great TB tries to reinvent DCE's game to more of a Thurston type which doesn't work at all well.

Des returns in 2019 and DCE finds some form again. Des takes a rag tag bunch minus turbo deep into the finals where we were robbed again against the bunnies.

2020 covid strikes and our entire gameplan was screwed by the PVL rule changes.

2021 rolls around and after a slow start we have a great year, this coincides with Turbo having a blinder.

During the DES years and Seibold time DCE has perhaps been our most consistent player and worth every penny.

Most other coaches would take him in a flash.

Manly decide not to offer a deal and instead to wait and see if someone else does first. it transpires the Club was shopping DCE around in 2024.

We all know what happens next.

So looking at facts to say DCE was the worst thing to happen to the club ever is a bit rich.

You obviously dislike the gut and that's cool. Hell I hate Seibold but at least i will admit when he does well or is heading in the right direction.

Oh and to say he was disliked by our club legends is one thing. To use cam smith, Thurston and co as backup for the DCE hate stinks. they were and still are absolute wankers.
I never said he's the worst thing ever to happen to the club? That's Trent Barrett.

I think he's a good player. He's a fantastic kicker.. great support player when someone makes a break and a great field goal kicker. But you can make all the excuses in the world.. he hadn't delivered since rookie year. He had chances to. He's been the highest paid player most his career... what he did to the club was disrespectful. I don't hate the guy. I don't know him. Just not a fan of his actions.
 
I find it very hard to believe that a Footballer earning millions of dollars and having men trying to destroy them on the field would want to leave the club because he said that she said that he said DCE has too much influence at the club at some function or on a cruise. That is ludicrous and if true is extremely weak.
 
I find it very hard to believe that a Footballer earning millions of dollars and having men trying to destroy them on the field would want to leave the club because he said that she said that he said DCE has too much influence at the club at some function or on a cruise. That is ludicrous and if true is extremely weak.
Honestly , don’t bother with that crap , journos are just making **** up now to keep the story going.

For “ click bait “ the story has been the biggest in NRL for as long as I can remember.

Fox were pumping out stories about every 10 minutes , and Nein about every 30 minutes , there were literally 100’s of them happening , why ??

Every time you click , you see advertisements.

They then go to the advertisers and say “ we’ve had 5 million views this week , this is THE place to advertise.
 
and the circus continues......

Manly CEO Tony Mestrov tells a fib in order to keep his word to Daly Cherry-Evans
Two weeks ago Phil Rothfield called Tony Mestrov about a rumour sweeping through rugby league circles about Daly Cherry-Evans. So why did the Manly boss lie?

Phil Rothfield

Two weeks ago Manly boss Tony Mestrov felt obliged to tell a lie to protect his club captain Daly Cherry-Evans.

Your columnist had phoned the Sea Eagles CEO about a rumour sweeping rugby league circles that DCE would be moving on from the northern beaches at the end of the season.

No, I was told everything was sweet and talks were ongoing.

It has since emerged DCE had informed the club late last year that he was leaving.

“I couldn’t dog him,” Mestrov told me on Friday.

“I gave him my word that it would stay in the vault; that nothing would be leaked to the media. Sorry mate, but you’ve gotta look after your players.”

Mestrov did so to protect Cherry-Evans from fan outrage, and the backlash he’s now likely to face at Brookvale Oval on Sunday against Parramatta.

The Manly boss also was wary of the potential unsettling effect to have the story played out in the media in a season in which the Sea Eagles are such a genuine premiership contender.

Mestrov is hardly the first rugby league official to tell me a ‘pork pie’.

As legendary Canterbury boss Peter Moore once told me: “It’s sometimes unavoidable – but you only tell a lie when you have to.”

What I have learnt – from the same source who told me DCE wanted out – is Manly put a solid offer to DCE and his management team last October.

It was a one-year extension at $750,000, sent to his camp by email.

Some might say it was below market value, but they had to keep money in the cap to upgrade Lehi Hopoate and Haumole Olakau’atu – or risk losing at least one of them.

Plus the fact most players are prepared to take a pay cut in their final years, like Paul Gallen did at the Sharks and Ben Hunt more recently at the Broncos.

DCE’s camp came back and said he was looking for between $1.1 million and $1.2 million.

And that’s when he decided to quit and look elsewhere.

Cherry-Evans has done particularly well out of 15 seasons at Manly.

There’s the family home – valued at $5.3m – at Curl Curl on Sydney’s northern beaches. Plus three investment properties at Freshwater, Pendle Hill and North Parramatta.

His latest purchase was the $1.35m unit in North Parramatta through his manager Joe Wehbe, who developed the apartment block

DCE also bought on the Gold Coast at Mermaid Beach for $1.45m in 2015 when he signed at the Titans. After backflipping on the deal, he sold four years later for $1.65m.

No one can begrudge the champion half for setting himself so well for life after footy. I wish all NRL players were as smart as DCE and hadn’t butchered their money.

He has given Manly as much as it has given him.

This club even cheated the salary cap for him. I broke the story back in 2015 how the Sea Eagles got caught cheating when they convinced the star No.7 to backflip on the Titans.

An NRL investigation found Cherry-Evans was being paid $400,000 outside of the cap.

There are no suggestions DCE was aware of the payment discrepancies.

I actually fronted him the night the story broke at Fox Sports studios, and he denied any knowledge of it.

He was then managed by the Orr brothers, Gavin and Chris – not his current agent.

But it again illustrates how far Manly has gone to look after Cherry-Evans over 15 NRL seasons.

Not that it counts for anything now.
 

The real reason Cherry-Evans fell out of love with the Sea Eagle

Danny Weidler

The doublespeak and spin surrounding Daly Cherry-Evans’ relationship with Manly requires a team of investigators to sift through and understand. But the bad blood between the Sea Eagles and their skipper can be traced back to two separate incidents where the Manly great was sledged behind his back at public events.

Cherry-Evans revealed on Monday he would not be at the Sea Eagles beyond the end of this season.

Cherry-Evans' shock Manly decision

At Magic Round last year a senior Manly figure with significant sway at the club was highly critical of Cherry-Evans, suggesting he had too much power at the club. The comments were made within earshot of select people, including rival NRL club officials. That led other clubs to believe Cherry-Evans was on his way out of Manly and that he could be a good buy when his contract expired at the end of 2025.

Some clubs even discussed the potential of signing Cherry-Evans as a result of the disparaging remarks, which were made in a public forum by a person who would have a better than reasonable idea about what was going on at the Sea Eagles. The same person then made similarly unfavourable comments at the end of the year on a football club cruise.

We have chosen not to name the person to protect the identity of our sources, who did not want to be identified, because there were a limited number of people who heard it.

The disparaging comments reached DCE’s camp. That’s when Manly started telling media privately of the plan to return Luke Brooks to halfback and move Tom Trbojevic to No.6.

Rival clubs were certainly aware of the divide at the Sea Eagles, and again the idea of signing DCE was raised by many of them.


It makes the spin, from both sides – that there are no issues between club and player – difficult to swallow.

But the spin is understandable given Manly’s desperation to avoid having their season totally derailed by their captain’s looming exit.

This column was hearing whispers of a potentially significant development last week, but no one from either camp would provide information. That’s why I led last week’s column with a piece indicating Manly believed DCE was going to retire at the end of the season, but that they had learnt how little they might have to pay him if he decided to play on.

In fairness, the journalists on the show did their best when hit with the thunderbolt Cherry-Evans news. You can’t blame the program for not knowing what was going on, despite having half-a-dozen News Corp journalists and their chief reporter on call.

DCE’s decision to leave Manly was a well-kept secret. It happens, and it has happened to this hack.

But for their reporters to peddle the line on podcasts since then that some kind of deal had been done between DCE and Nine Entertainment (publishers of this masthead) is fantasy stuff


The story was there for everyone to chase. And even after plenty of digging, and with the knowledge that DCE was to be a guest on 100% Footy on Channel Nine that night, at 2pm on Monday there was no story. The developments came after that. Not days or weeks in advance. It was a few hours before the 6pm news bulletin that Sydney Morning Herald journalist Michael Chammas and I knew we had the information we were able to share across Nine News and Nine newspapers.

The backside-covering later peddled by News Corp was preceded by the inept actions of an arrogant Manly club. The club that mismanaged the pride jersey situation took their bumbling show onto live TV to insist they had made an offer to their departing captain.

It was high farce – or silliness, as Wayne Bennett described it – as Manly gave one of the great rugby league knee-jerk reactions to a situation they thought they had under control.

It was Manly’s smugness that cost them their captain. Whether they actually wanted to keep him is doubtful. They did not make an offer for months when they had the chance. Throwing in an offer on live television after Cherry-Evans had announced he was leaving was ridiculous.

But the most confusing part was their claim they had made an offer to Cherry-Evans at midday on Monday. That simply did not happen.

One day, I’ll be able to explain how I know that is not true. But right now, the story is too hot. It’s fair to say there were several stories coming out of Manly that did not match up.

We were being told that there was a Monday afternoon meeting between Manly owner Scott Penn and chief executive Tony Mestrov to discuss an offer to Cherry-Evans. At the same time, we were told that an offer had been made at midday. The first the DCE camp knew of an offer was when it was announced on live television that night.

Manly need to have a serious look at the way they operate. There are many questions to be asked about who was ultimately responsible for what has taken place in the past week. A strong club would re-evaluate the way it does its contracting. Manly have considerable work to do in this area

DCE not fighting Wehbe’s battles

The heavy influence of prominent manager Isaac Moses at Manly has been touched upon during the week. Moses manages coach Anthony Seibold, several players and also backroom staff. Cherry-Evans is managed by a company headed up by the Wehbe family. Joe Wehbe and Moses were business partners before an ugly split in 2018.

The two parties do not get on. But to suggest Wehbe is pushing DCE to get out of Manly to square up with Moses is not right. That’s an insult to DCE, as a 15-season veteran of the game. He is not going to make life decisions to fight other people’s battles, and knowing the Wehbes, they would never influence a player to do that.

Roosters in box seat, but ...

So, after all that, where will Cherry-Evans end up?

He has told his agents he doesn’t want to make a call or talk until October, after the season is over. With the Bulldogs not in the race, it appears the Roosters are in the best position to sign him. I put it to the club several times and was dismissed with a smirk by club heavyweights.

The Roosters are surprised Canterbury have ruled themselves out. But they are also delighted. There was concern they were the genuine opposition.

The Dolphins are also still in the hunt for DCE’s signature.
Wow, someone from Manly has upset the Weidle.

Diddums
 
Manly CEO Tony Mestrov opens up on Daly Cherry-Evans’ exit from the club

Manly CEO Tony Mestrov has broken his silence on Daly Cherry-Evans’ exit from the club revealing how and when he learned of his club captain’s plans – and the tough questions he had to answer from those closest to him.

Sea Eagles boss Tony Mestrov has revealed Daly Cherry-Evans sought a release to play for a Queensland club as he hit out at the “lies” and “mistruths” over the skipper’s Brookvale contract bust-up.
Mestrov has broken his silence on a bombshell meeting with Cherry-Evans before the 2024 pre-season in which the Manly playmaker formally asked for an immediate release to return home to Queensland.

“It really shocked me,” Mestrov says. “I didn’t see it coming.”

Mestrov rejected the request.

But for Manly bosses, the seeds for an eventual defection were clearly sown.

Sixteen months later, their worst fears were realised when Cherry-Evans on Monday night confirmed he would sever ties with the Sea Eagles at season’s end after a decorated, premiership-winning 15-season stint in Manly colours.

On Sunday, Cherry-Evans will run out to face Manly fans for the first time since his shock decision to quit the Sea Eagles when he takes on the Eels at 4 Pines Park.

As the Manly No.7 weighs up his future, this masthead can reveal:

* At least four clubs, including the Dolphins, have formally expressed interest;


* The Queensland Origin skipper would prefer to remain in Sydney if he plays on, but is open to a move north of the border;

* NRL salary-cap auditors would have registered a new deal with Manly for less than $750,000 because of Cherry-Evans’ age (36) and years of one-club service;

* Former Dolphins coach Wayne Bennett made no attempt to convince ‘DCE’ to break his Manly contract and shift to Redcliffe last year; and

* Cherry-Evans is on $900,000 this season, well shy of the $1.1 million-plus he was reportedly seeking to remain at Brookvale in 2026.

DCE’S SECRET EXIT

In a week of drama for the Sea Eagles, one of the most explosive developments is Mestrov’s revelation that Cherry-Evans wanted out of Manly well before the ructions of Monday night.

In November 2023, Cherry-Evans called an urgent meeting with Mestrov.

It was the off-season after Anthony Seibold’s first year in charge as Manly coach. As Seibold began planning Manly’s premiership assault in 2024, Mestrov was blindsided.

“Daly came to us wanting a release,” the Manly CEO told this masthead, speaking for the first time about the skipper’s secret Queensland exit strategy.

“He was our club captain and we didn’t plan for that.

“At that time, it was coming into the new pre-season, so we knocked it back.

“We couldn’t make a change that late.

“I was surprised because I had been here since August 2022 (as Manly CEO) and we had a lot of changes. Des (Hasler, former coach) had left and we had a tough period.

“It seemed to me like Daly was getting itchy feet and wanted a change

It came as a surprise to me that he wanted a release.”

Contacted by this masthead on the eve of the Eels clash, Cherry-Evans declined to comment, but confirmed asking for a release.

TITANS OR DOLPHINS?

Mestrov says he was not made aware of the club Cherry-Evans intended to join last year, but it is understood the only two options for the Maroons skipper in Queensland were the Dolphins or Titans.

The Cowboys had no dialogue with Cherry-Evans, while the Broncos were content with their halves pairing of Ezra Mam and Adam Reynolds, who had steered Brisbane to the grand final a month before DCE’s release request.

The Dolphins, as a new franchise, had the salary-cap millions to afford the Manly halfback, but club officials, including Bennett, insist they had no talks with the Redcliffe junior.

If the Dolphins are to be believed, that left only one Queensland suitor: the Gold Coast Titans.

A return to the Gold Coast would have been a head-spinning scenario given the toxic tensions of 2015, when Cherry-Evans sensationally reneged on a four-year deal with the Titans to sign a $10 million, eight-year contract at Manly.

But a decade on, Cherry-Evans had fresh links to the Titans. His former mentor at Manly, Hasler, had been appointed Titans coach for the 2024 season. Cherry-Evans still values him so much that Hasler was invited to the half-back’s wedding last November.

The Titans were also chasing a halfback. Ben Hunt was on the club’s radar for 12 months, but in the end, Manly blocked Cherry-Evans’ request to move to Queensland.

The skipper, who had cited personal reasons, copped the decision on the chin and told Mestrov he would give his all for Manly in 2024, which he did.

Asked why Cherry-Evans wanted a release, Mestrov says: “I think he was looking for new things. He has won a grand final, he has played for Queensland and Australia.

“He has done it all really.

“I don’t think he had an issue with anyone at the club but it was just ‘Chez’ himself. He was looking for new challenges, I believe, and I don’t believe it was a money thing then.

“Look, Daly is a Queenslander, he is from Queensland, it’s his roots, his family is from there.

“I think he wanted opportunities to do other things.”

THE BACKLASH

When Cherry-Evans runs out on Sunday, chances are he won’t be jeered by the Manly faithful. The boos could be reserved for Manly hierarchy, but Mestrov scoffs at the perception the Sea Eagles butchered contract negotiations with a favourite son.

“To be honest, I’m sick of the lies and mistruths and I want to set the record straight,” Mestrov said.

“Being a CEO of an NRL club is a lonely place at times. Even my wife asked me, ‘How can you let Chez go?’

“It’s OK for all the critics out there to bag us and say, ‘Pay Daly $1 million’, but they aren’t the ones in charge of managing a salary cap.

“I’m sure Penrith didn’t want to lose (Jarome) Luai and all their other guys.

“The innuendo does take a toll because people say you stuffed up, you didn’t make an offer.

“The claim we didn’t make an offer is not true.

We did make one, but Daly’s management wanted $1.1 million to $1.2 million and we simply couldn’t afford that much money, as much as we rate Daly as a player and his legacy.”

Sources close to Cherry-Evans claim he never sought $1.1m.

Ultimately, the Sea Eagles offered $750,000, a potential fiscal gulf of $700,000 over two seasons, enough to represent the last rites for Cherry-Evans’ career at Brookvale.

“We had to make a business decision,” Mestrov said.

“We had to say, ‘OK, Daly is a wonderful player, but he is turning 37’.

“We can’t afford to pay him big money because we need to re-sign guys like Haumole (Olakau’atu) and Lehi (Hopoate).

“I liken this situation to Blake Solly (Rabbitohs CEO) with Adam Reynolds at South Sydney. I know exactly how he feels (after Reynolds quit Souths to join the Broncos in 2022).

“Souths had to make a tough call on Adam and there is backlash against the club, but we’re the ones managing the salary cap, not the critics, and we’re in a premiership window.

THE SHOWDOWN

The Sea Eagles have come under fire for initially tabling only a one-year deal last November, but Mestrov claims Cherry-Evans’ management never flagged any rival offers.

“The NRL salary-cap auditor was prepared to accept a lower offer (than $750,000) from us because Daly was the oldest half in the comp and he had been at the one club,” Mestrov said.

“That is a fact.

“I won’t reveal the exact figure the NRL would have accepted because it’s confidential, but it was considerably lower than what we offered.

“Daly’s team wanted at least $1.1 million.

“And to go to that level, we said, ‘OK, what interest is there?

“I asked Daly’s management, ‘Where are the offers?’

“They said, ‘We haven’t got one’.

“The reason I asked for an offer (from rival clubs) was because if some other club offered $1.1 million, then naturally we would have to consider countering it.

“But it would be irresponsible of me to the club and our salary-cap situation if I said, ‘No dramas, I’ll just give you $1.1m, even if you have no other formal offer’ and Manly are bidding against themselves.

“I am always here to protect the club first

THE BLUNDER

Mestrov is livid at claims Cherry-Evans only received a two-year offer when the Manly boss called the NRL 360 program last Monday night to pass on details of an extra year for the skipper.

NRL 360 host Braith Anasta hastily announced the two-year upgrade via Mestrov, who had called Fox Sports boss Steve Crawley, midway through the show around 7pm.

It came more than an hour after Channel 9 reported at 5.41pm that Cherry-Evans would quit the Sea Eagles.

Those chaotic machinations made Manly bosses look like negotiating amateurs left scrambling after Cherry-Evans called their bluff. Mestrov insists that’s not the case.

“I want to clarify this part. You can quote me on this,” Mestrov said.

“Around midday last Monday, Peter Gentle (Manly recruitment chief) made Daly’s management aware that we were making a two-year offer.

“We didn’t offer Daly two years during the NRL 360 program.

“I did call the 360 program, but much earlier in the day, we had already advised Daly’s team that we were offering a two-year deal.

“Because his form at the start of the year was so hot, we were already working on an improved offer well before the NRL 360 program.”

As it turned out, regardless of the precise timing, it was a futile exercise. Cherry-Evans had mentally checked out. He formally rejected Manly’s $1.5 million offer the next day.

THE FUTURE

Mestrov is adamant there is no bad blood with Cherry-Evans and scuppered fears the Brookvale brouhaha could derail Manly’s premiership push this season.

He admits the situation could have been handled better.

But he hopes the 333-game stalwart can lift the NRL trophy this year and skipper the Sea Eagles to their first premiership since 2011, Cherry-Evans’ rookie season.

“We have come to terms with it,” Mestrov said.

“The learnings are that it could have been done better and more together. The process wasn’t ideal and it didn’t work out like we hoped. That’s being truthful, from a club point of view.

“It was unsavoury at times and it leaves a dirty taste in my mouth.

“But I’m old enough and ugly enough to move on and I’m excited about the future.

“We knew there was a possibility that Chez would retire this year. That’s kind of the same thing as him leaving, so we had an idea that we wouldn’t have him on our books for 2026.

“We had plans in place, but it was the way it all happened that wasn’t ideal, I accept that.

“We wish Daly the best. We have been fine through the process, but we should all take responsibility that we could have done things better and we would have got the same result.

“This will not derail the team or the club.

“I have been really impressed with Daly, Tom and Jake (Trbojevic) this week and how they have handled the situation, how Seibs has got them together and our discussions with various players.

The boys are pumped, they have no issues with Daly.

“Daly Cherry-Evans is the most professional player in rugby league. If anyone can concentrate on the job and block out the noise, it’s him.

“He is the best in the business.”

Peter Badel
Hmmm. Suddenly the slightest scent of the bitter, grubby whisper of Hasler in the player's ear.
 

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3 Broncos 4 3 0 1 44 6
4 Storm 3 2 0 1 38 6
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6 Warriors 4 3 0 1 8 6
7 Rabbitohs 4 3 0 1 -2 6
8 Knights 3 2 0 1 -4 6
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10 Sharks 4 2 0 2 19 4
11 Dragons 3 1 0 2 -3 4
12 Raiders 4 2 0 2 -6 4
13 Panthers 4 1 0 3 -16 2
14 Cowboys 4 1 0 3 -54 2
15 Roosters 4 1 0 3 -56 2
16 Dolphins 4 0 0 4 -36 0
17 Eels 4 0 0 4 -86 0
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