Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue
The challenge of trying to play for the All Blacks is obviously appealing, and Ponga's Maori heritage and links to New Zealand are important to him.
The cold, hard fact is he won't win a premiership at Newcastle. Several senior players – Leo Thompson, Jackson Hastings, Jayden Brailey, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington – are going to follow Daniel Saifiti out the door and another rebuild looms.
From my point of view, if Kalyn requests a release from the last two years of his contract, I say goodbye, good luck and thank you for your service to the Knights.
He is a phenomenal, freakish athlete and probably deserves to be on the world stage that rugby can offer. He's attracted other players to Newcastle and helped deliver sponsors. If he truly wants to go to rugby, it's time to let him go.
The massive worry for Newcastle if Kalyn leaves at the end of this season is what does 2026 look like? Fletcher Sharpe would move to fullback, where his support play and speed are great assets, while Dylan Brown would play five-eighth or halfback on the richest deal in rugby league history.
But who would be his halves partner? I genuinely don't know who fits best alongside him. And with Brailey off to Canberra, the club sees Phoenix Crossland as a small No.13 going forward. So the only other dummy-half on the books is Matt Arthur, who has played one game this year and is yet to prove himself. The Knights missed out on Tallyn Da Silva.
That's two positions in your playmaking spine where you don't know what the plan is. Putting it politely, it's a complete mess.
Five recruitment managers in six years
Again, the club is apparently moving on from O'Brien, who seems to be on his last legs after taking Newcastle to four top-eight finishes in his five full seasons at the club. Finals football looks beyond them in 2025.
I think O'Brien has done a good job under extreme pressure in a league-mad town. Those results speak to something like stability on the field, but he has been let down terribly by instability around him.
Jack Gibson's old quote about winning starting in the front office rings so loud when you consider the five different recruitment managers Newcastle have had since 2018.
For a while, the Knights were averaging a new man in charge every 12 months, in arguably the most important position outside head coach. In 2018, Troy Pezet was shaping the roster. Then Alex McKinnon took over in 2019. By 2021, it was Clint Zammit calling the shots. Then Adam Doyle stepped in when Zammit went to the Roosters.
General manager Peter Parr ended up running recruitment when Doyle wrapped up, and now it's Peter O'Sullivan undertaking a massive overhaul.
Each recruitment man arrives with a different idea of what player suits the Knights DNA, and what that Knights DNA even looks like.
We see it at a club like Brisbane, with a great history of attacking players, who recruit and develop players like Reece Walsh and Ezra Mam. The Panthers have long been a grinding, tough side, where a guy like Liam Martin thrives.
The Storm are strong, disciplined and very defence-orientated, especially around the ruck. Craig Bellamy works his magic with tough, no-frills forwards.
Canberra are an unorthodox team. They've recruited players who can offload up front, and surrounded them with speed from players such as Kaeo Weekes, Xavier Savage, Chevy Stewart and Ethan Strange.
Each of these clubs are in the top six and going to play a massive part in this year's premiership race.
75 per cent: Development is the Knights DNA
Then there's Newcastle. The club has always been built on local juniors. This year, the club is running 14th in the NRL, 11th in NSW Cup and Jersey Flegg (under-21s) and 10th in SG Ball (under-19s), where the Knights have otherwise played finals in recent years.
The Harold Matthews (under-17s squad) were runners up to the Warriors in May. These are the kids the club needs to identify and coach the eyeballs out of, because there just hasn't been a progression of local juniors to first grade in the past six years.
This isn't O'Brien's fault. But this is where Newcastle need to rebuild – going right back to the very evening the Knights played their first game in 1988 and the club's DNA was set in stone with the 'three T's'.
Inaugural coach Allan McMahon, understudy David Waite and juniors coach Keith Onslow came in with the mantra that you had to be tough, you had to be able to tackle, and you had to have plenty of tomorrows – meaning you had a future ahead of you.
They came in with a 10-year plan, that by 1998, 75 per cent of the Newcastle side would be locals. In 1997, we won the club's first premiership with 11 of the 17 players in the grand final team local juniors. It was the same number in 2001.
The Knights are a development club, built from within because they just can't compete with richer, more powerful rivals.
It's time to blow up the junior system and ask Waite and Onslow how to do it. Because the Knights have Brown arriving on a $13 million contract next year, when the club should never have to import a half or hooker.
Places like Newcastle, the coalfields where I'm from, the Upper Hunter, Central Coast and Mid North Coast are rugby-league mad regions.
But the Knights haven't produced a representative-class halfback since Jarrod Mullen came into the NRL in 2005. Danny Buderus was the last representative-level dummy half from the region, more than 20 years ago. The system is broken.
Whoever the next coach of the Knights is, they're facing a huge challenge, and it will probably be years before they can challenge for premierships. And if Ponga leaves, it will just amplify the pressure on Brown.
Be patient Newcastle fans. I feel for you. We're in for another rebuild.
Why young halves need to study Tom Dearden
Onto the footy, and the Dolphins should have beaten Cronulla last week. If Jeremy Marshall-King dived on the ball that Toby Rudolf batted dead, that result would have gone the other way.
Even with Isaiya Katoa pulling the strings and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow coming back, I'm always drawn to Gorden Tallis' favourite line: forwards win the game; the backs decide by how much.
The Dolphins are hurting up front, with Daniel Saifiti, Tom Gilbert, Felise Kaufusi and Tom Flegler – all representative forwards – sidelined. Given they're joined by Max Plath, Jack Bostock, Kodi Nikorima, Mark Nicholls and Kulikefu Finefeuiaki, that injury toll has me thinking Thursday night is a bridge too far for the home side.
Like the Dolphins, North Queensland could easily have beaten the Bulldogs last weekend, and I think their Origin players will be freshened up this week for a fast, open game that favours attacking skills. I see Scott Drinkwater, Tom Dearden and Reece Robson getting the Cowboys home.
And on Dearden, it's incredible to think how far he's come from his first few years at the Broncos. I watched him closely as a young talented half, and that wooden spoon run in 2020 seemed to break him – he just looked so devoid of any confidence, and he's admitted that.
Then you look at the way Dearden, Todd Payten and the club have rebuilt him into the playmaker he is now.
I think his Origin III showing will go down as one of Queensland's classic individual performances – just pure toughness and competitiveness, with Dearden's kicking game and ball playing improving out of sight.

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The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Knights rookie off to England after signing with Super League club
A rookie Knights forward is set to depart the club, locking in his future with a Super League club. Brock Greacen, who made his NRL debut in June, has signed with English side Castleford Tigers for the next two years. The 23-year-old will depart his home-town NRL team at season's end, and potentially after just one first-grade appearance, unless he wins a call-up in Newcastle's remaining five games. A Denman Devils junior, Greacen has been on a third-tier deal at the Knights and balanced university studies with football in recent years. He has played 34 NSW Cup games since 2022. "I'm over the moon to have been able to bring Brock to the Tigers," Castleford's director of rugby Chris Chester said. "Brock is a young, hungry middle that has come highly recommended by a couple of my old teammates Blake Green and Michael Dobson at the Newcastle Knights. "He is a hard-working middle that can also play edge. "His effort levels both sides of the ball are second to none and I can't wait to start working with Brock in pre-season." Greacen added: "I'm really excited to be joining the club. I've heard some really good things about the fans, and the atmosphere over there. I can't wait to get over there." The Knights were happy to let Greacen depart to play at a higher level more regularly. The forward, who only featured for 16 minutes in his NRL debut, has been named to come off the bench for Newcastle's NSW Cup side against North Sydney on Sunday. The NRL team has a bye. A rookie Knights forward is set to depart the club, locking in his future with a Super League club. Brock Greacen, who made his NRL debut in June, has signed with English side Castleford Tigers for the next two years. The 23-year-old will depart his home-town NRL team at season's end, and potentially after just one first-grade appearance, unless he wins a call-up in Newcastle's remaining five games. A Denman Devils junior, Greacen has been on a third-tier deal at the Knights and balanced university studies with football in recent years. He has played 34 NSW Cup games since 2022. "I'm over the moon to have been able to bring Brock to the Tigers," Castleford's director of rugby Chris Chester said. "Brock is a young, hungry middle that has come highly recommended by a couple of my old teammates Blake Green and Michael Dobson at the Newcastle Knights. "He is a hard-working middle that can also play edge. "His effort levels both sides of the ball are second to none and I can't wait to start working with Brock in pre-season." Greacen added: "I'm really excited to be joining the club. I've heard some really good things about the fans, and the atmosphere over there. I can't wait to get over there." The Knights were happy to let Greacen depart to play at a higher level more regularly. The forward, who only featured for 16 minutes in his NRL debut, has been named to come off the bench for Newcastle's NSW Cup side against North Sydney on Sunday. The NRL team has a bye. A rookie Knights forward is set to depart the club, locking in his future with a Super League club. Brock Greacen, who made his NRL debut in June, has signed with English side Castleford Tigers for the next two years. The 23-year-old will depart his home-town NRL team at season's end, and potentially after just one first-grade appearance, unless he wins a call-up in Newcastle's remaining five games. A Denman Devils junior, Greacen has been on a third-tier deal at the Knights and balanced university studies with football in recent years. He has played 34 NSW Cup games since 2022. "I'm over the moon to have been able to bring Brock to the Tigers," Castleford's director of rugby Chris Chester said. "Brock is a young, hungry middle that has come highly recommended by a couple of my old teammates Blake Green and Michael Dobson at the Newcastle Knights. "He is a hard-working middle that can also play edge. "His effort levels both sides of the ball are second to none and I can't wait to start working with Brock in pre-season." Greacen added: "I'm really excited to be joining the club. I've heard some really good things about the fans, and the atmosphere over there. I can't wait to get over there." The Knights were happy to let Greacen depart to play at a higher level more regularly. The forward, who only featured for 16 minutes in his NRL debut, has been named to come off the bench for Newcastle's NSW Cup side against North Sydney on Sunday. The NRL team has a bye. A rookie Knights forward is set to depart the club, locking in his future with a Super League club. Brock Greacen, who made his NRL debut in June, has signed with English side Castleford Tigers for the next two years. The 23-year-old will depart his home-town NRL team at season's end, and potentially after just one first-grade appearance, unless he wins a call-up in Newcastle's remaining five games. A Denman Devils junior, Greacen has been on a third-tier deal at the Knights and balanced university studies with football in recent years. He has played 34 NSW Cup games since 2022. "I'm over the moon to have been able to bring Brock to the Tigers," Castleford's director of rugby Chris Chester said. "Brock is a young, hungry middle that has come highly recommended by a couple of my old teammates Blake Green and Michael Dobson at the Newcastle Knights. "He is a hard-working middle that can also play edge. "His effort levels both sides of the ball are second to none and I can't wait to start working with Brock in pre-season." Greacen added: "I'm really excited to be joining the club. I've heard some really good things about the fans, and the atmosphere over there. I can't wait to get over there." The Knights were happy to let Greacen depart to play at a higher level more regularly. The forward, who only featured for 16 minutes in his NRL debut, has been named to come off the bench for Newcastle's NSW Cup side against North Sydney on Sunday. The NRL team has a bye.

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
Trainer Mark Minervini hopes for grey day at Rosehill with new stable addition Hanau
Newcastle trainer Mark Minervini is looking for a quick return from his stable's newest edition at Rosehill Gardens on Saturday. Minervini and DF Bloodstock Pty Ltd purchased Hanau when the gelding was recently sold as part of the latest Godolphin dispersal on the Inglis Digital online sale platform last month. Godolphin, which officially moved to a public training model from Friday after James Cummings' decision to take up a training contract in Hong Kong, raised close to $2.2 million in the sale on July 16 where the stock were sold from prices ranging from $1250 to $380,000 for Group 1 SA Derby placegetter Lavalier. 'We paid $100,000 for Hanau and we thought he was quite cheap,' Minervini said. 'We patted ourselves on the back after the sale. 'We had a bit left, we thought he might bring $150,000 to $200,000. 'I suppose there was about 25 of them sold so there was a bit to choose from and that might have worked in our favour but we're not complaining.' Formerly trained by James Cummings, Hanau is one of the best-bred gallopers in training being by Snitzel out of Snow White, the sister to former champion juvenile and successful stallion Pierro. 'He arrived in mint condition,' Minervini said. 'He's a very nice horse that's been easy to handle. 'I've only given him one strong gallop, that was on Tuesday morning he worked well and he pulled up well. 'I've just had to keep him ticking over since he got off the float. 'He looked pretty good to my eye when he arrived. He was pretty forward.' Hanau heads into Saturday's Congratulations Chris Waller Benchmark 78 Handicap (1100m) off a last-start Canterbury win on a heavy (8) rated surface where he defeated Wednesday's Warwick Farm winner The Replicant. Hanau shifts into gear and powers home to win at Canterbury! ðŸ'¥ @godolphin — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) July 9, 2025 • Freedmans target fast start at Rosehill 'Saturday's a step up in grade but there's a bit of merit to the form,' Minervini said. 'He won on the heavy last time too and he is a grey by Snitzel, so he's got a few things in his favour if the rain keeps falling. 'If he can hold his form out of his last start, I'd expect him to be pretty competitive.' Former Godolphin apprentice Zac Lloyd takes the reins aboard Hanau on Saturday having previously won aboard the galloper on two occasions.


The Advertiser
21 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Knights announce two new signings for 2026 NRL season
Newcastle recruitment manager Peter O'Sullivan has hailed the 'exceptional utility value' of former Wests Tigers player Asu Kepaoa, one of two signings the Knights announced on Thursday. Kepaoa, who has played 42 NRL games since debuting at the Tigers in 2020, will join Newcastle for the next two seasons after a near two-year stint at Penrith. The 25-year-old outside back, who could also offer depth in the forwards, is yet to play NRL at the Panthers but has made 27 appearances for their NSW Cup side, scoring 28 tries. This season alone, he has netted 18 tries in 14 games and is the reserve-grade competition's joint leading try-scorer. The Auckland product, nicknamed 'AJ', weighs 100 kilograms and stands 185-centimetres tall. Knights fans might remember him for the tackle he was involved in that knocked skipper Kalyn Ponga out in a clash with the Tigers early in the 2023 season. Ponga, then attempting to switch from fullback to five-eighth, went to tackle Kepaoa little more than a minute into the round-two match at Leichhardt Oval but was knocked unconscious following a heavy collision. The hit ruled him out for several weeks, and ultimately forced him into making a trip to Canada to seek medical advice following a spate of head knocks. "AJ has always been a player with great promise and ability," O'Sullivan said. "He gives us exceptional utility value with the ability to play wing, centre and back row at NRL level. "AJ is a big body with a strong play-two carry that will help get your sets rolling. Combined with a proven track record of try-scoring, we believe he has a lot of upsides. "We are excited to see what AJ can do here at the Knights." Kepaoa will be added to Newcastle's top-30 roster, joining the likes of James Schiller, Fletcher Hunt and uncapped Taj Annan in vying for a first-grade spot behind preferred starting wingers Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and centres Bradman Best and Dane Gagai. The Knights also confirmed the signing of Eels playmaker Matthew Hunter, who will join the club for the next three seasons. Originally from Townsville, Hunter has played nine NSW Cup games for Parramatta this year, scoring five tries, setting up five more and making just as many line-breaks. The 20-year-old, whose nine reserve-grade games have been at five-eighth, will be on a development contract in 2026 before rising to the top-30 roster for the following two years. "Matt is a talented half or five-eighth, who I believe could also play fullback," O'Sullivan said. "He has jumped out of the ground in NSW Cup this year, playing in red hot form, scoring tries and creating try assists on a frequent basis. "With a great feel and instinct for the game, and given time to develop his body, we strongly believe he will be an NRL player of the future. "Matt is a great young man, from a very supportive family and we look forward to watching him prosper here at the Newcastle Knights." The signing announcements come after the Knights confirmed the retention of veteran centre Gagai, and the return of Raiders prop Pasami Saulo, this week. Newcastle's roster is going through an overhaul under O'Sullivan. He signed Eels half Dylan Brown earlier this year, has let go of Jayden Brailey and Kai Pearce-Paul, and is set to move on the likes of Jackson Hastings, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington at season's end. Tyson Frizell's future remains up in the air. Newcastle recruitment manager Peter O'Sullivan has hailed the 'exceptional utility value' of former Wests Tigers player Asu Kepaoa, one of two signings the Knights announced on Thursday. Kepaoa, who has played 42 NRL games since debuting at the Tigers in 2020, will join Newcastle for the next two seasons after a near two-year stint at Penrith. The 25-year-old outside back, who could also offer depth in the forwards, is yet to play NRL at the Panthers but has made 27 appearances for their NSW Cup side, scoring 28 tries. This season alone, he has netted 18 tries in 14 games and is the reserve-grade competition's joint leading try-scorer. The Auckland product, nicknamed 'AJ', weighs 100 kilograms and stands 185-centimetres tall. Knights fans might remember him for the tackle he was involved in that knocked skipper Kalyn Ponga out in a clash with the Tigers early in the 2023 season. Ponga, then attempting to switch from fullback to five-eighth, went to tackle Kepaoa little more than a minute into the round-two match at Leichhardt Oval but was knocked unconscious following a heavy collision. The hit ruled him out for several weeks, and ultimately forced him into making a trip to Canada to seek medical advice following a spate of head knocks. "AJ has always been a player with great promise and ability," O'Sullivan said. "He gives us exceptional utility value with the ability to play wing, centre and back row at NRL level. "AJ is a big body with a strong play-two carry that will help get your sets rolling. Combined with a proven track record of try-scoring, we believe he has a lot of upsides. "We are excited to see what AJ can do here at the Knights." Kepaoa will be added to Newcastle's top-30 roster, joining the likes of James Schiller, Fletcher Hunt and uncapped Taj Annan in vying for a first-grade spot behind preferred starting wingers Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and centres Bradman Best and Dane Gagai. The Knights also confirmed the signing of Eels playmaker Matthew Hunter, who will join the club for the next three seasons. Originally from Townsville, Hunter has played nine NSW Cup games for Parramatta this year, scoring five tries, setting up five more and making just as many line-breaks. The 20-year-old, whose nine reserve-grade games have been at five-eighth, will be on a development contract in 2026 before rising to the top-30 roster for the following two years. "Matt is a talented half or five-eighth, who I believe could also play fullback," O'Sullivan said. "He has jumped out of the ground in NSW Cup this year, playing in red hot form, scoring tries and creating try assists on a frequent basis. "With a great feel and instinct for the game, and given time to develop his body, we strongly believe he will be an NRL player of the future. "Matt is a great young man, from a very supportive family and we look forward to watching him prosper here at the Newcastle Knights." The signing announcements come after the Knights confirmed the retention of veteran centre Gagai, and the return of Raiders prop Pasami Saulo, this week. Newcastle's roster is going through an overhaul under O'Sullivan. He signed Eels half Dylan Brown earlier this year, has let go of Jayden Brailey and Kai Pearce-Paul, and is set to move on the likes of Jackson Hastings, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington at season's end. Tyson Frizell's future remains up in the air. Newcastle recruitment manager Peter O'Sullivan has hailed the 'exceptional utility value' of former Wests Tigers player Asu Kepaoa, one of two signings the Knights announced on Thursday. Kepaoa, who has played 42 NRL games since debuting at the Tigers in 2020, will join Newcastle for the next two seasons after a near two-year stint at Penrith. The 25-year-old outside back, who could also offer depth in the forwards, is yet to play NRL at the Panthers but has made 27 appearances for their NSW Cup side, scoring 28 tries. This season alone, he has netted 18 tries in 14 games and is the reserve-grade competition's joint leading try-scorer. The Auckland product, nicknamed 'AJ', weighs 100 kilograms and stands 185-centimetres tall. Knights fans might remember him for the tackle he was involved in that knocked skipper Kalyn Ponga out in a clash with the Tigers early in the 2023 season. Ponga, then attempting to switch from fullback to five-eighth, went to tackle Kepaoa little more than a minute into the round-two match at Leichhardt Oval but was knocked unconscious following a heavy collision. The hit ruled him out for several weeks, and ultimately forced him into making a trip to Canada to seek medical advice following a spate of head knocks. "AJ has always been a player with great promise and ability," O'Sullivan said. "He gives us exceptional utility value with the ability to play wing, centre and back row at NRL level. "AJ is a big body with a strong play-two carry that will help get your sets rolling. Combined with a proven track record of try-scoring, we believe he has a lot of upsides. "We are excited to see what AJ can do here at the Knights." Kepaoa will be added to Newcastle's top-30 roster, joining the likes of James Schiller, Fletcher Hunt and uncapped Taj Annan in vying for a first-grade spot behind preferred starting wingers Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and centres Bradman Best and Dane Gagai. The Knights also confirmed the signing of Eels playmaker Matthew Hunter, who will join the club for the next three seasons. Originally from Townsville, Hunter has played nine NSW Cup games for Parramatta this year, scoring five tries, setting up five more and making just as many line-breaks. The 20-year-old, whose nine reserve-grade games have been at five-eighth, will be on a development contract in 2026 before rising to the top-30 roster for the following two years. "Matt is a talented half or five-eighth, who I believe could also play fullback," O'Sullivan said. "He has jumped out of the ground in NSW Cup this year, playing in red hot form, scoring tries and creating try assists on a frequent basis. "With a great feel and instinct for the game, and given time to develop his body, we strongly believe he will be an NRL player of the future. "Matt is a great young man, from a very supportive family and we look forward to watching him prosper here at the Newcastle Knights." The signing announcements come after the Knights confirmed the retention of veteran centre Gagai, and the return of Raiders prop Pasami Saulo, this week. Newcastle's roster is going through an overhaul under O'Sullivan. He signed Eels half Dylan Brown earlier this year, has let go of Jayden Brailey and Kai Pearce-Paul, and is set to move on the likes of Jackson Hastings, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington at season's end. Tyson Frizell's future remains up in the air. Newcastle recruitment manager Peter O'Sullivan has hailed the 'exceptional utility value' of former Wests Tigers player Asu Kepaoa, one of two signings the Knights announced on Thursday. Kepaoa, who has played 42 NRL games since debuting at the Tigers in 2020, will join Newcastle for the next two seasons after a near two-year stint at Penrith. The 25-year-old outside back, who could also offer depth in the forwards, is yet to play NRL at the Panthers but has made 27 appearances for their NSW Cup side, scoring 28 tries. This season alone, he has netted 18 tries in 14 games and is the reserve-grade competition's joint leading try-scorer. The Auckland product, nicknamed 'AJ', weighs 100 kilograms and stands 185-centimetres tall. Knights fans might remember him for the tackle he was involved in that knocked skipper Kalyn Ponga out in a clash with the Tigers early in the 2023 season. Ponga, then attempting to switch from fullback to five-eighth, went to tackle Kepaoa little more than a minute into the round-two match at Leichhardt Oval but was knocked unconscious following a heavy collision. The hit ruled him out for several weeks, and ultimately forced him into making a trip to Canada to seek medical advice following a spate of head knocks. "AJ has always been a player with great promise and ability," O'Sullivan said. "He gives us exceptional utility value with the ability to play wing, centre and back row at NRL level. "AJ is a big body with a strong play-two carry that will help get your sets rolling. Combined with a proven track record of try-scoring, we believe he has a lot of upsides. "We are excited to see what AJ can do here at the Knights." Kepaoa will be added to Newcastle's top-30 roster, joining the likes of James Schiller, Fletcher Hunt and uncapped Taj Annan in vying for a first-grade spot behind preferred starting wingers Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and centres Bradman Best and Dane Gagai. The Knights also confirmed the signing of Eels playmaker Matthew Hunter, who will join the club for the next three seasons. Originally from Townsville, Hunter has played nine NSW Cup games for Parramatta this year, scoring five tries, setting up five more and making just as many line-breaks. The 20-year-old, whose nine reserve-grade games have been at five-eighth, will be on a development contract in 2026 before rising to the top-30 roster for the following two years. "Matt is a talented half or five-eighth, who I believe could also play fullback," O'Sullivan said. "He has jumped out of the ground in NSW Cup this year, playing in red hot form, scoring tries and creating try assists on a frequent basis. "With a great feel and instinct for the game, and given time to develop his body, we strongly believe he will be an NRL player of the future. "Matt is a great young man, from a very supportive family and we look forward to watching him prosper here at the Newcastle Knights." The signing announcements come after the Knights confirmed the retention of veteran centre Gagai, and the return of Raiders prop Pasami Saulo, this week. Newcastle's roster is going through an overhaul under O'Sullivan. He signed Eels half Dylan Brown earlier this year, has let go of Jayden Brailey and Kai Pearce-Paul, and is set to move on the likes of Jackson Hastings, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington at season's end. Tyson Frizell's future remains up in the air.