December 28, 2024

Seven-grade dominance that defines Penrith

Penrith #Penrith

They are the numbers that display three years of rugby league dominance across all grades and show the vast depth behind Penrith’s shot at another NRL grand final.

From the NRL to the fourth-tier Sydney Shield, and right down to the under-17 Harold Matthews Cup, the Panthers have won 80 per cent of their matches since the start of 2020 in a level of dominance not matched this century.

That pre-eminence will be displayed crystal clear this weekend.

On Saturday night, Penrith will push for a spot in a third straight NRL grand final by overcoming South Sydney.

The next afternoon, players will head to CommBank Stadium to support their NSW Cup and under-21s Jersey Flegg teams in grand finals.

Already this year, Penrith have won the under-19s SG Ball competition and were finalists in the under-17s Harold Matthews Cup.

Feeder-club St Marys finished second in the third-tier Ron Massey Cup, potentially making them the only team in the Penrith senior system not to play in a decider, after the club’s Sydney Shield side beat Penrith Brothers in that competition’s grand final.

Across the NRL and NSWRL’s seven senior and junior men’s competitions in the past three years, Penrith’s record stacks up with 202 victories and just 51 losses.

“I was proud of that,” coach Ivan Cleary said of Penrith’s lower-grade triumphs.

“It’s a lot of people that are all on the same page. The number one thing we have is alignment from the top all the way through.

“It’s easy to say but it’s harder to do.

“A lot of talented players helps as well, but it’s because of a lot of people working really hard and moving in the right direction.”

In reality, only COVID-19 has stopped Penrith winning more.

While they claimed last year’s NRL grand final, the club’s other men’s teams sat first in the NSW Cup, Ron Massey Cup and Sydney Shield when Sydney’s lockdown stopped play.

Penrith’s reserve-grade strength has long come in handy during the State of Origin period, while former Panthers Sam McKendry and Geoff Daniela headline a slew of former Penrith under-20s players in lower-grade sides.

“It’s pretty crazy at the moment,” captain Isaah Yeo told AAP.

“The club’s tapped into really good junior development in Penrith and obviously with the country as well.

“But then you need good leadership and that starts with Ivan as coach and Matt Cameron as our CEO.”

That strength in depth also has first-grade implications.

The quality of Penrith’s system has allowed the likes of Taylan May to enter first-grade this year without skipping a beat, while 24 of Penrith’s 30-man squad came through the club’s elite pathways system.

“That’s our mandate here, to produce our own players from within,” Cleary said.

“We’ve been very fortunate that a couple of those young guys, Taylay May and Izack Tago, have fitted in really well.”

PENRITH’S W-L RECORD ACROSS THE GRADES SINCE 2020

NRL: 66-10

NSW CUP: 31-6

JERSEY FLEGG: 22-14

RON MASSEY CUP: 24-7*

SYDNEY SHIELD: 29-2*

SG BALL: 14-7

HAROLD MATTHEWS: 16-5

TOTAL: 202-51

* Feeder-club St Marys

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