logo
Ricky Stuart's son Jed bracing to be dropped by his dad as Savelio Tamale nears return for NRL finals

Ricky Stuart's son Jed bracing to be dropped by his dad as Savelio Tamale nears return for NRL finals

7NEWS3 hours ago
Jed Stuart has had father Ricky's passion for Canberra ever since he was a kid.
Back in the day, the younger Stuart would dread going to school after a Raiders loss in case his emotions took over and made him want to fight the classmates taunting his father's team.
But that passion doesn't mean Ricky's son would take it personally if the coach chose to replace him with Savelio Tamale on the run to NRL finals.
The rise of Stuart Jr has been one of many success stories in the nation's capital this season.
The former Australian rugby sevens representative has managed seven games, and four tries, on the left wing for the ladder-leading Raiders amid Tamale's knee injury, with Canberra winning six of those.
'You've been dreaming about playing NRL your whole life, then finally doing it and actually getting a good stint of games, it's unreal,' Jed told AAP.
On the surface, Jed and his father appear cut from different cloths, with the older a freakish halfback in his day and the younger a rangy winger some 20cm taller.
But in his heart, Jed carries the love for the Raiders that has become synonymous with his father.
'His passion for the club rubs off on me, especially at home,' the 24-year-old said.
'Our whole family loves it here. I'm not to the extent where I'll get emotional talking about little things like he does, but I care a lot.'
That's always been the case since late 2013, when the Stuart family moved back to Canberra so Ricky could take his dream job: coaching the club where he won three premierships.
'I used to dread going to school after a loss, because I'd be so passionate and they'd be giving it to me. I'd want to get in a fight but I'd hold myself back,' Jed said with a smile.
But these days, Jed knows how to keep his emotions in check, and will remain level-headed as his father weighs up a big selection call on the wing in coming weeks.
Tamale had been in the rookie of the year conversation before being struck down by a knee injury in Round 14 and is expected to be available in the coming weeks.
Jed knows it could be the first time he's had a tough selection chat with his father.
'It'll probably be hard on him but I'll take none of it personally,' he said.
'Whoever the coaching staff pick to go there will do a job, which I think is what me and 'Savie' have both proved.
'We're there to do a job and we've both done a pretty good one. If he goes in over me and whatnot, I'm happy with what the coaching staff have picked. I just want the team to win.'
Ricky had long known of the 23-year-old's ability but was hesitant to plug him into Canberra's backline before Tamale's injury.
Jed responded on debut by taking a bomb in attack with his first play, saving a 40-20 with a bat back and then scoring to help secure a 16-12 win over Wests Tigers.
'This week has been the hardest moment I've had as a coach,' Ricky said at the time.
'Because from a father's point of view, I don't want him to come out and be man of the match, I just want him to hold his own. And he did that.
'The amount of times I've been waking up at 3am with real bad thoughts ... He didn't have any of those tonight, which was good.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

DCE stays silent on future as milestone looms
DCE stays silent on future as milestone looms

Perth Now

time44 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

DCE stays silent on future as milestone looms

Departing Manly captain Daly Cherry-Evans wants to be remembered as a reliable teammate who could be 'counted on' but refused to answer questions about his future ahead of his 350th NRL game. Speculation continues to rage around what the 36-year-old will be doing in 2026 having announced his exit from the Sea Eagles earlier in the season with links to the Sydney Roosters as well as talk of retirement. Reports on Wednesday indicated the former Queensland captain wouldn't be walking away from the game and he did nothing to quell talk after pre-empting his silence on the matter at a press conference to mark his milestone game. 'Thanks for coming. I'll just start off by saying hopefully we can stay away from the future stuff, I am not going to answer anything,' he said. Daly Cherry-Evans will play game 350th this weekend. Credit: Supplied 'I understand you might ask but I am just not going to answer anything, I want to try and keep the focus on this weekend and Manly and hopefully the celebrations this weekend. 'I hope you can understand that.' Cherry-Evans declared he was 'very private' and while happy to give a 'bit more of an insight' into his personality at times, would be keeping the matter of his future to himself, for now. 'I guess the privacy thing has always been around trying to protect myself, as you can understand I've had some pretty rocky times through media,' Cherry-Evans said. 'My first thing to do is protect myself and that usually means don't tell or do anything and just lock it down. 'So I guess over time I have tried to give more of myself for the fans, but I do as though my best work is done face-to-face with someone.' Cherry-Evans will become becomes just the fifth player in the rugby league's history to play 350 first grade games, joining Terry Lamb, Darren Lockyer, Cooper Cronk and Cameron Smith in the elite club. Daly Cherry-Evans won the 2013 Clive Churchill medal. Homebush. Picture Gregg Porteous Credit: News Limited His achievement, however, comes with a tinge of sadness knowing his time at Manly, who can't make finals, is drawing to a close. 'This weekend I feel is a great way to celebrate a milestone, whereas a farewell as such I feel like there's an opportunity for that in the next couple of weeks,' he said. 'But not this weekend, I guess that's how I've framed it. This week is not a farewell, this week is more of a celebration for the milestone. 'Then we can all laugh and cry on the hill together in the last round of the year.' Cherry-Evans, who played 26 times for Queensland and 21 times for the Kangaroos, winning Origin series, tests as well as an NRL premiership, taking the Clive Churchill Medal as the grand fina's bets player in 2013, said his legacy won't be about the personal achievements. 'I think at the end of the day all you want to be known for is being a reliable teammate that could do his job and be counted on,' he said. 'That's the main thing you want to walk away with... the thing I am going to take away is the connections, the friendships, the relationships. 'That's always the hardest thing, but I guess that's the thing that over time you realise there's players I have played with that have since gone on and retired but the relationship and friendship has still stayed strong. 'I trust that that's still going to happen with a fair few of the playing group I have now.'

Reality check for big-noting NRL
Reality check for big-noting NRL

Perth Now

time44 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Reality check for big-noting NRL

A national survey has delivered NRL officials a reality in check in their rivalry with the AFL and posed questions about the Perth venture. More than 1000 people across all states and territories were asked which code they regarded as the 'national sport' and the AFL was the overwhelming winner. Nearly 46 per cent of respondents picked the AFL, which has teams in five states compared with the NRL's three, despite rugby league boasting an international presence and amid claims from ARL Commission boss Peter V'landys that his code had eclipsed their rivals as talks ramp up for a new TV deal Nationally, cricket came in as the second pick (20.5 per cent) with rugby league (14 per cent) third. Only in one state, NSW, was rugby league chosen ahead of other sports. Rugby League only won the popularity contest in NSW. NRL Photos/Gregg Porteous Credit: Supplied Even in NSW, only 27 per cent picked rugby league as the national sport, marginally ahead of cricket (24 per cent) and AFL (21 per cent). The most respondents in the survey came from NSW. In Queensland, a state long thought to be a rugby league stronghold, AFL came out on top, with just less than 35 per cent of the vote, on the back of the growth of the Brisbane Lions, last year's premiers, and the emerging Gold Coast Suns. In the Sunshine State, which boasts four NRL teams and only two AFL teams, rugby league came in third, behind the AFL and cricket, with only 20 per cent of those surveyed choosing it as the national sport. Worryingly, ahead of the NRL's push into Perth in 2028, less than 5 per cent of West Australian respondents chose rugby league as the national sport compared with 69 per cent choosing AFL. The results of the 'sports perception' survey, conducted by Net World Sports, come after V'Landys said the NRL had 'overtaken' their AFL rivals. 'They always looked down at us as the poor cousin, but we've overtaken them in audience. They thought we were inferior, but we're not,' he said. That's despite the AFL smashing the seven million mark for match attendance in 2025, with crowd averages of 37,000 spectators per game compared with the NRL's 20,000.

Big love, Payno! - What Luai said on Samoa defection
Big love, Payno! - What Luai said on Samoa defection

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

Big love, Payno! - What Luai said on Samoa defection

It's the homecoming for Samoa that Jarome Luai will happily take credit for. When he captains Samoa against New Zealand in a Pacific Championships clash in October, Wests Tigers star Luai is set to be joined for the first time by NRL heavyweight Payne Haas. Brisbane prop Haas, after playing four Tests for Australia, announced earlier this week he had switched international allegiances in large part due to the love for his mother's country. The 25-year-old has mixed heritage, which also includes Filipino and Swiss bloodlines, but his mother Joan Taufua is Samoan. Still, Luai reckons he had a big hand in the matter. "Yeah, I did. Put it down to me. Big love 'Payno', brah," Luai joked. "It was good to see the photo and him kitted out in the ula (Samoan necklace). It really suits him. "I'm glad he's, not come back, but he's felt the passion and I'm really excited." Haas's talent is a massive boost for a trophy-chasing Samoa outfit ahead of the 2026 World Cup to be hosted by Australia and Papua New Guinea. Already established in the Samoa team are NRL talents Brian To'o and Stephen Crichton, with Australian duo Tino Fa'asuamaleaui and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow also considering the switch. "He's (Haas) a world-class player," Luai said on Wednesday. "We've obviously got a big job to do for our clubs but hopefully, God willing, all fit and healthy at the back end of the year and we can put on that jersey together (at the Pacific Championships)." The "big job" for Luai in the Wests Tigers jersey comes in the form of attempting to pull off a slim finals spot hunt. Benji Marshall's side are mathematically still in the race for a top-eight berth ahead of Sunday's clash against North Queensland at Leichhardt Oval. Not only do the 11th-placed Tigers (9-12) need to win their final three matches, but other results also need to fall their way. Those already slim hopes will be hanging by a thread if the eighth-placed Sydney Roosters beat Parramatta on Saturday night. Luai has already been busy using the ladder predictor. "I like seeing what things have to go our way to make the eight, but that's just me as a competitor," Luai said. "I've played finals for the last five years, so I always want to be there at the back end of the year. "It's still there mathematically." It's the homecoming for Samoa that Jarome Luai will happily take credit for. When he captains Samoa against New Zealand in a Pacific Championships clash in October, Wests Tigers star Luai is set to be joined for the first time by NRL heavyweight Payne Haas. Brisbane prop Haas, after playing four Tests for Australia, announced earlier this week he had switched international allegiances in large part due to the love for his mother's country. The 25-year-old has mixed heritage, which also includes Filipino and Swiss bloodlines, but his mother Joan Taufua is Samoan. Still, Luai reckons he had a big hand in the matter. "Yeah, I did. Put it down to me. Big love 'Payno', brah," Luai joked. "It was good to see the photo and him kitted out in the ula (Samoan necklace). It really suits him. "I'm glad he's, not come back, but he's felt the passion and I'm really excited." Haas's talent is a massive boost for a trophy-chasing Samoa outfit ahead of the 2026 World Cup to be hosted by Australia and Papua New Guinea. Already established in the Samoa team are NRL talents Brian To'o and Stephen Crichton, with Australian duo Tino Fa'asuamaleaui and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow also considering the switch. "He's (Haas) a world-class player," Luai said on Wednesday. "We've obviously got a big job to do for our clubs but hopefully, God willing, all fit and healthy at the back end of the year and we can put on that jersey together (at the Pacific Championships)." The "big job" for Luai in the Wests Tigers jersey comes in the form of attempting to pull off a slim finals spot hunt. Benji Marshall's side are mathematically still in the race for a top-eight berth ahead of Sunday's clash against North Queensland at Leichhardt Oval. Not only do the 11th-placed Tigers (9-12) need to win their final three matches, but other results also need to fall their way. Those already slim hopes will be hanging by a thread if the eighth-placed Sydney Roosters beat Parramatta on Saturday night. Luai has already been busy using the ladder predictor. "I like seeing what things have to go our way to make the eight, but that's just me as a competitor," Luai said. "I've played finals for the last five years, so I always want to be there at the back end of the year. "It's still there mathematically." It's the homecoming for Samoa that Jarome Luai will happily take credit for. When he captains Samoa against New Zealand in a Pacific Championships clash in October, Wests Tigers star Luai is set to be joined for the first time by NRL heavyweight Payne Haas. Brisbane prop Haas, after playing four Tests for Australia, announced earlier this week he had switched international allegiances in large part due to the love for his mother's country. The 25-year-old has mixed heritage, which also includes Filipino and Swiss bloodlines, but his mother Joan Taufua is Samoan. Still, Luai reckons he had a big hand in the matter. "Yeah, I did. Put it down to me. Big love 'Payno', brah," Luai joked. "It was good to see the photo and him kitted out in the ula (Samoan necklace). It really suits him. "I'm glad he's, not come back, but he's felt the passion and I'm really excited." Haas's talent is a massive boost for a trophy-chasing Samoa outfit ahead of the 2026 World Cup to be hosted by Australia and Papua New Guinea. Already established in the Samoa team are NRL talents Brian To'o and Stephen Crichton, with Australian duo Tino Fa'asuamaleaui and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow also considering the switch. "He's (Haas) a world-class player," Luai said on Wednesday. "We've obviously got a big job to do for our clubs but hopefully, God willing, all fit and healthy at the back end of the year and we can put on that jersey together (at the Pacific Championships)." The "big job" for Luai in the Wests Tigers jersey comes in the form of attempting to pull off a slim finals spot hunt. Benji Marshall's side are mathematically still in the race for a top-eight berth ahead of Sunday's clash against North Queensland at Leichhardt Oval. Not only do the 11th-placed Tigers (9-12) need to win their final three matches, but other results also need to fall their way. Those already slim hopes will be hanging by a thread if the eighth-placed Sydney Roosters beat Parramatta on Saturday night. Luai has already been busy using the ladder predictor. "I like seeing what things have to go our way to make the eight, but that's just me as a competitor," Luai said. "I've played finals for the last five years, so I always want to be there at the back end of the year. "It's still there mathematically."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store