Simply The Best: It’s taken a few years, but Talau is finally delivering on the hype
Remember the NRL’s
Simply The Best promo in 2020? The advert, which revamped Tina Turner’s iconic rugby league campaigns of the 1980s and 90s, ended up getting scrapped due to a backlash over images of Latrell Mitchell draped in the Indigenous flag.
Wests Tigers fans might recall seeing a baby-faced Tommy Talau sprinting across Leichhardt Oval, as club greats Pat Richards, John Skandalis and Brett Hodgson watched him from the Wayne Pearce Hill, as part of the promotion.
Talau was just 19 and had only played the one NRL game for the Tigers the previous season. The rookie’s presence in the campaign pointed to the level of excitement in the game around Talau at the time.
But seeing Talau in the same commercial as Jake and Tom Trbojevic, Mitchell, Tyson Frizell and Jarrod Croker, also pointed to the perhaps unrealistic expectations on his young shoulders at the time.
It is only now, four years on, and at a new club, Manly, that he is finally living up to the hype.
Talau scored four tries in the Sea Eagles’ 32-22 loss to Penrith last weekend. He has quickly nailed down the left wing spot and his match-up against St George Illawarra’s Zac Lomax will be a standout at a packed 4 Pines Park on Sunday afternoon.
Tommy Talau has settled into life at Manly
Since his move to the northern beaches, he’s avoided injury and is stringing games together. Off the field, he’s loving life and in a relationship with NRLW star Jess Sergis.
“Jess is just an awesome human being; my family are healthy, she’s healthy, so life is good,” Talau told this masthead. “When I first came into first grade, I lacked discipline and it all happened so quickly for me. Looking back, I probably took it for granted. Then I got injured.
I had a rough 2022. I did my right knee and didn’t play at all. I was out for almost 550 days. You’re away from the team, you’re away from the fans, and it’s tough. You never hear about the mental side of the game until you actually deal with it.
“I started to worry I might never reach my potential. You know you’re the only one who can dig yourself out of a hole. I got this tattoo, ‘Thug It Out’, above my knee. It was basically a whatever tattoo. That’s how I was feeling. But my younger self wouldn’t let me quit. I still had goals to achieve.”
Talau credited his dad, Willie - who played 101 games for the Bulldogs, then moved to the Super League where he became a fan favourite at St Helens - with giving him a strong work ethic.
“He was always big on discipline, and our punishment as kids was never chores, but fitness sessions and running at the local park,” Talau said. “Watching his tapes now, he was a fair player. If I grow up to be half the player he was, I’ll be all right.
I’ve told him a few times how much I would have loved to have gone up against him. He was a centre, too. But I’m pretty sure he would have folded me in half.”
Willie had two other sons come through the junior grades, but Tommy was the most passionate about football.
He’d sit and watch games with me when he was younger, but he also moved well, had good hand-eye co-ordination, and competed hard at everything,” Willie said. “If he was in a running race, he’d go in every one of them. He’d want to puke at the end of the 1500m, but he’d always be giving it a good crack.”
Willie chipped his son for walking one day in a junior game in England, only to play for St Helens later in the day, and then hear a high-pitched nine-year-old Tommy yell from the stands during a break in play, ‘Dad, stop walking’
“Dad gave me the ‘stink eye’; I **** myself,” Tommy recalled.
Willie added: “I turned around and the crowd burst into laughter. I guess it was funny. We still laugh about that now.”
Willie, 48, works in the pathways at St George Illawarra and will be at 4 Pines Park on Sunday. He coached the club’s SG Ball team to title success this year, their first in that age group since 1992.
When Willie presented Tommy his jersey before his first NRL game for Manly, he told him, “I wish you and your teammates all the best for the season, just not when you play the Dragons.”
“And nothing will change on Sunday,” Willie said this week.
One of the few regrets Tommy has was not reaching his full potential at the Tigers. Like another former Tiger, Luke Brooks, Talau has flourished at Manly surrounded by a group of strong senior players like Daly Cherry-Evans and the Trbojevic brothers.
Talau can still remember his NRL debut in 2019 at Brookvale when Tom Trbojevic “run amok and had five tackle breaks against me”.
“I wasn’t at my best at the Tigers, I’m not happy about that, but I’ll always be grateful they gave me my first opportunity to play first grade,” Talau said.
“The players around me at this club have been massive. I know I’m not a reserve grader. I know I’m not a fringe player. I want to be one of the best in the competition in the position I play. I’ve represented Samoa. I want to represent NSW. I just want to be consistent.”
Who knows, in another few years, Talau might feature in another NRL commercial.