
Smith gets key backing as Australia's next coach
Australia will embark on a Kangaroo Tour at the end of the year and a new mentor is set to be appointed to replace recently appointed Perth Bears coach Mal Meninga.
With Brad Fittler withdrawing his candidacy Smith now heads the list of potential coaches, with Kevin Walters also in the frame.
Smith has seen it all, done it all and his 42 State of Origin games for Queensland, 56 Tests for Australia and 430 matches for Melbourne stand as testament to his understanding of the game and its players at every level.
"His credentials and resume is probably the best that the game's ever seen, Maroon captain Cameron Munster said.
"When he talks, you listen. If you don't know Cameron Smith, you will eventually when he talks to you. He's got that aura about him. He's a bit like Mal.
"I know he's a Queenslander, but he'll pick the best possible squad for the Aussies that he thinks is going to get the job done.
"There's no better person than Smithy to get the job."
Storm captain Harry Grant made the point that Smith would also make the performances of leading players even better.
"He's seen how different people operate over the years but I think what he will do is bring so much knowledge," Grant said.
"There is also that element of education and learning for some of the best players in the game that want to keep developing. You think of guys like Tino Fa'asuamaleaui, Payne Haas, Nathan Cleary … I'm sure they are going to look at Cam Smith and want to play under him and learn from him."
While Smith appeared to play the game like a grand chess master multiple steps ahead of his opponents, Munster said he had a simplicity to his methods that have been the hallmarks of the great coaches like Wayne Bennett and Craig Bellamy.
"He just keeps it simple for players. It sounds stupid because everyone probably dissects rugby league and makes it this big geometry lesson or some mathematical equation," Munster said.
"Realistically it's just simple ... run hard and tackle hard. I know that sounds silly at times, but that's what Smithy's done.
"If it was a bigger game, the simpler the game plan. That's all you need to focus on. The big things will happen eventually."
Not every player has athletic supremacy. Smith was not the biggest, quickest or strongest, but his knowledge of how to be an elite performer make him stand out.
That quality, as a coach, would assist any player find their best performance, including Munster.
"He's got a body like an accountant. I don't know how he got through so many games. He's just so durable," Munster said.
"He was dominated by most forwards in our defensive sessions at training. He's just a smart man and it's just crazy.
"I've been able to play with him in one game in Origin, which I was very thankful for, but I played a fair few Storm games with him.
"Sometimes you take it for granted with the way he played and his game management. I'm still trying to learn that. The first couple of years when he left, I probably took it for granted and didn't realise how much I needed to understand the game management side of the game."
Cameron Smith has put his hand up to be the next Australia coach and two of the best players in the game insist his credentials are unmatched for the role.
Australia will embark on a Kangaroo Tour at the end of the year and a new mentor is set to be appointed to replace recently appointed Perth Bears coach Mal Meninga.
With Brad Fittler withdrawing his candidacy Smith now heads the list of potential coaches, with Kevin Walters also in the frame.
Smith has seen it all, done it all and his 42 State of Origin games for Queensland, 56 Tests for Australia and 430 matches for Melbourne stand as testament to his understanding of the game and its players at every level.
"His credentials and resume is probably the best that the game's ever seen, Maroon captain Cameron Munster said.
"When he talks, you listen. If you don't know Cameron Smith, you will eventually when he talks to you. He's got that aura about him. He's a bit like Mal.
"I know he's a Queenslander, but he'll pick the best possible squad for the Aussies that he thinks is going to get the job done.
"There's no better person than Smithy to get the job."
Storm captain Harry Grant made the point that Smith would also make the performances of leading players even better.
"He's seen how different people operate over the years but I think what he will do is bring so much knowledge," Grant said.
"There is also that element of education and learning for some of the best players in the game that want to keep developing. You think of guys like Tino Fa'asuamaleaui, Payne Haas, Nathan Cleary … I'm sure they are going to look at Cam Smith and want to play under him and learn from him."
While Smith appeared to play the game like a grand chess master multiple steps ahead of his opponents, Munster said he had a simplicity to his methods that have been the hallmarks of the great coaches like Wayne Bennett and Craig Bellamy.
"He just keeps it simple for players. It sounds stupid because everyone probably dissects rugby league and makes it this big geometry lesson or some mathematical equation," Munster said.
"Realistically it's just simple ... run hard and tackle hard. I know that sounds silly at times, but that's what Smithy's done.
"If it was a bigger game, the simpler the game plan. That's all you need to focus on. The big things will happen eventually."
Not every player has athletic supremacy. Smith was not the biggest, quickest or strongest, but his knowledge of how to be an elite performer make him stand out.
That quality, as a coach, would assist any player find their best performance, including Munster.
"He's got a body like an accountant. I don't know how he got through so many games. He's just so durable," Munster said.
"He was dominated by most forwards in our defensive sessions at training. He's just a smart man and it's just crazy.
"I've been able to play with him in one game in Origin, which I was very thankful for, but I played a fair few Storm games with him.
"Sometimes you take it for granted with the way he played and his game management. I'm still trying to learn that. The first couple of years when he left, I probably took it for granted and didn't realise how much I needed to understand the game management side of the game."
Cameron Smith has put his hand up to be the next Australia coach and two of the best players in the game insist his credentials are unmatched for the role.
Australia will embark on a Kangaroo Tour at the end of the year and a new mentor is set to be appointed to replace recently appointed Perth Bears coach Mal Meninga.
With Brad Fittler withdrawing his candidacy Smith now heads the list of potential coaches, with Kevin Walters also in the frame.
Smith has seen it all, done it all and his 42 State of Origin games for Queensland, 56 Tests for Australia and 430 matches for Melbourne stand as testament to his understanding of the game and its players at every level.
"His credentials and resume is probably the best that the game's ever seen, Maroon captain Cameron Munster said.
"When he talks, you listen. If you don't know Cameron Smith, you will eventually when he talks to you. He's got that aura about him. He's a bit like Mal.
"I know he's a Queenslander, but he'll pick the best possible squad for the Aussies that he thinks is going to get the job done.
"There's no better person than Smithy to get the job."
Storm captain Harry Grant made the point that Smith would also make the performances of leading players even better.
"He's seen how different people operate over the years but I think what he will do is bring so much knowledge," Grant said.
"There is also that element of education and learning for some of the best players in the game that want to keep developing. You think of guys like Tino Fa'asuamaleaui, Payne Haas, Nathan Cleary … I'm sure they are going to look at Cam Smith and want to play under him and learn from him."
While Smith appeared to play the game like a grand chess master multiple steps ahead of his opponents, Munster said he had a simplicity to his methods that have been the hallmarks of the great coaches like Wayne Bennett and Craig Bellamy.
"He just keeps it simple for players. It sounds stupid because everyone probably dissects rugby league and makes it this big geometry lesson or some mathematical equation," Munster said.
"Realistically it's just simple ... run hard and tackle hard. I know that sounds silly at times, but that's what Smithy's done.
"If it was a bigger game, the simpler the game plan. That's all you need to focus on. The big things will happen eventually."
Not every player has athletic supremacy. Smith was not the biggest, quickest or strongest, but his knowledge of how to be an elite performer make him stand out.
That quality, as a coach, would assist any player find their best performance, including Munster.
"He's got a body like an accountant. I don't know how he got through so many games. He's just so durable," Munster said.
"He was dominated by most forwards in our defensive sessions at training. He's just a smart man and it's just crazy.
"I've been able to play with him in one game in Origin, which I was very thankful for, but I played a fair few Storm games with him.
"Sometimes you take it for granted with the way he played and his game management. I'm still trying to learn that. The first couple of years when he left, I probably took it for granted and didn't realise how much I needed to understand the game management side of the game."

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Perth Now
3 hours ago
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India take control despite Brook and Smith's heroics
England have had big centuries from Harry Brook and Jamie Smith but little else to celebrate as India stayed in control of the second test on a turbulent third day at the Edgbaston Test. Resuming on 77 in reply to India's mammoth first-innings 587 all out, England lost Joe Root and Ben Stokes to successive balls from Mohammed Siraj in the second over but recovered brilliantly thanks to a 303-run stand by Brook (158) and Smith (a career-best 184 not out). After taking the second new ball, India claimed England's last five wickets for 20 runs in just 44 balls to dismiss the home team for 407 - Brook and Smith accounting for 342 of those runs - and take a lead of 180 into the second innings. England had a remarkable six ducks in total and Siraj returned figures of 6-70. Batting under cloud cover, the Indians reached stumps on 1-64, with only the loss of Yashasvi Jaiswal (28), and will resume 244 runs ahead with a series-levelling victory in their sights. Lokesh Rahul was unbeaten on 28 alongside Karun Nair, on 7. England were in a big hole when Root and Stokes departed to leave their side on 5-84 and still trailing by more than 500 runs. Siraj dismissed England's best batter - Root for 22 - by enticing a nick down the leg side, with wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant taking a diving catch, and then their captain for a golden duck. Stokes trudged back to the dressing room after a steeply rising and seaming delivery came off the shoulder of his bat and flashed to Pant. England were rocking, but Smith and Brook played as if there was no pressure with a counterattacking riposte. Smith came in to face a hat-trick ball, struck that for four, and went on to make the biggest score by an England wicketkeeper, surpassing Alec Stewart. He raced to his second test hundred before lunch in just 80 balls - the third fastest by an Englishman - and including an over when he pulled and smashed Prasidh Krishna for a six and four fours. Brook compiled his ninth Test hundred in 27 matches, getting to three figures after being dismissed for 99 in the first Test won by England at Headingley last week. Brook, a star for England in all formats, reined in some slight frustration at India changing tactics and bowling wide outside off-stump to a lopsided field and looked good after going down with cramp. Soon afterward, he was bowled by Akash Deep (4-88) and was serenaded as he walked off gingerly. That precipitated England's late-order collapse that saw Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue and Shaoib Bashir all being removed for ducks, joining Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope and Stokes. Tongue responded by trapping Jaiswal lbw but India finished the day in the driving seat.


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9 hours ago
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Papenhuyzen scratching adds to Storm's backline issues
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The Storm had already been forced to name Joe Chan in the centres for the first time in his NRL career. Elsewhere, Penrith junior Ativalu Lisati has been named for only his third game, while journeyman winger Kane Bradley comes in for his second game of the year. "You don't expect miracles from them," Bellamy said of the reinforcements. "But they've been training with us all year, we haven't got anyone in over the last few weeks. "It (the Origin period) is always tough but it's tough for a lot of teams." But there is a silver lining in the NRL comeback of Pezet, who had been earmarked as Melbourne's next halfback before enduring more than a year of knee injury hell. The playmaker was last seen in the NRL in round three last year, rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament playing reserve grade a month later. Some 336 days on in March, Gosford-born Pezet returned to the field for feeder side North Sydney, only to injure the same knee and book in for more surgery. But Pezet has since made it through two games of NSW Cup and, while he was listed on the bench, will now start on Saturday night. "There's some guys that are going to get a chance tomorrow, a chance to impress and a chance to play a bit of first grade," Bellamy said. "Hopefully they'll grab that with both hands." The Cowboys will need to forge on without Murray Taulagi, who has failed to pull up from a minor knee injury suffered in last week's win over Gold Coast. Braidon Burns will replace Taulagi on the wing but the club expects to have the former Maroons utility back on deck for next week's clash with Canterbury. "We named him this week in the thought he might improve but he tried to get some running done on Thursday and was no good," said North Queensland coach Todd Payten. Ryan Papenhuyzen will miss Melbourne's clash with North Queensland in the latest blow to the Storm's crisis-hit backline. Papenhuyzen was on Friday night ruled out of the Townsville match with calf tightness, making him the seventh Melbourne back unavailable for the game. His absence means Tyran Wishart will move to fullback, with Jonah Pezet now starting in the halves. The Storm are already without Will Warbrick (concussion), Moses Leo (shoulder), Sua Fa'alogo (hamstring), Jack Howarth (appendicitis), Xavier Coates (Origin) and Dean Ieremia (achilles) in their backline alone. Coach Craig Bellamy said he was not expecting miracles from an understrength side, but luckless Pezet could be forgiven for thinking his NRL comeback is one. Melbourne and North Queensland will be without a combined total of nine State of Origin representatives for Saturday's clash, the most for any game this weekend. The Storm had already been forced to name Joe Chan in the centres for the first time in his NRL career. Elsewhere, Penrith junior Ativalu Lisati has been named for only his third game, while journeyman winger Kane Bradley comes in for his second game of the year. "You don't expect miracles from them," Bellamy said of the reinforcements. "But they've been training with us all year, we haven't got anyone in over the last few weeks. "It (the Origin period) is always tough but it's tough for a lot of teams." But there is a silver lining in the NRL comeback of Pezet, who had been earmarked as Melbourne's next halfback before enduring more than a year of knee injury hell. The playmaker was last seen in the NRL in round three last year, rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament playing reserve grade a month later. Some 336 days on in March, Gosford-born Pezet returned to the field for feeder side North Sydney, only to injure the same knee and book in for more surgery. But Pezet has since made it through two games of NSW Cup and, while he was listed on the bench, will now start on Saturday night. "There's some guys that are going to get a chance tomorrow, a chance to impress and a chance to play a bit of first grade," Bellamy said. "Hopefully they'll grab that with both hands." The Cowboys will need to forge on without Murray Taulagi, who has failed to pull up from a minor knee injury suffered in last week's win over Gold Coast. Braidon Burns will replace Taulagi on the wing but the club expects to have the former Maroons utility back on deck for next week's clash with Canterbury. "We named him this week in the thought he might improve but he tried to get some running done on Thursday and was no good," said North Queensland coach Todd Payten. Ryan Papenhuyzen will miss Melbourne's clash with North Queensland in the latest blow to the Storm's crisis-hit backline. Papenhuyzen was on Friday night ruled out of the Townsville match with calf tightness, making him the seventh Melbourne back unavailable for the game. His absence means Tyran Wishart will move to fullback, with Jonah Pezet now starting in the halves. The Storm are already without Will Warbrick (concussion), Moses Leo (shoulder), Sua Fa'alogo (hamstring), Jack Howarth (appendicitis), Xavier Coates (Origin) and Dean Ieremia (achilles) in their backline alone. Coach Craig Bellamy said he was not expecting miracles from an understrength side, but luckless Pezet could be forgiven for thinking his NRL comeback is one. Melbourne and North Queensland will be without a combined total of nine State of Origin representatives for Saturday's clash, the most for any game this weekend. The Storm had already been forced to name Joe Chan in the centres for the first time in his NRL career. Elsewhere, Penrith junior Ativalu Lisati has been named for only his third game, while journeyman winger Kane Bradley comes in for his second game of the year. "You don't expect miracles from them," Bellamy said of the reinforcements. "But they've been training with us all year, we haven't got anyone in over the last few weeks. "It (the Origin period) is always tough but it's tough for a lot of teams." But there is a silver lining in the NRL comeback of Pezet, who had been earmarked as Melbourne's next halfback before enduring more than a year of knee injury hell. The playmaker was last seen in the NRL in round three last year, rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament playing reserve grade a month later. Some 336 days on in March, Gosford-born Pezet returned to the field for feeder side North Sydney, only to injure the same knee and book in for more surgery. 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News.com.au
14 hours ago
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Wyong preview: Trainer Matthew Smith has the firepower and is quietly confident of success
Warwick Farm trainer Matthew Smith is a strong chance to bookend the meeting with dual representatives in both races. Kicking off the day is Dubai Warrior and Super Sugoi in the Central Coast Coolrooms Class 1 Handicap (1600m). Smith gave Dubai Warrior a freshen up after finishing third behind Newyork Missile at Wagga on May 1 and the gelding had a nice trial at Randwick at the end of May when a nose second to Unspoken. 'I was a bit disappointed at Wagga but we leaned a bit about him,' said Smith. 'He's doesn't have the ability to stop and start. He's a big striding horse and if he gets held up, he's not quick off the mark; he needs to be in clear running. There's another boilover at Wagga! ðŸ'° Newyork Missile wins at $101 on @tabcomau fixed odds! 🚀 â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) May 1, 2025 The Form: Complete NSW Racing thoroughbred form, including video replays and all you need to know about every horse, jockey and trainer. Find a winner here! 'This looks a nice race for him to do something. 'He's going pretty well actually and this looks a nice race for him. He might be able to control it from the front. 'From a good draw, he should land up there comfortably on the bit.' Super Sugoi has had two runs back from a spell over unsuitably short distances when fourth over 1250m at Newcastle and an eighth over 1350m here in a run that was better than it looks on paper. The four-year-old will appreciate stepping up to the mile. 'He has needed those couple of shorter runs. The 1600 metres is definitely the key for him. 'It was a good run the other day. He was back and wide but his sectionals were quite good,' Smith said. 'He is ready for the mile now and you will see him attack this line.' In the last race of the day, the Wyong Leagues Club Group Cup Day – 5 September Handicap (1200m), Smith saddles up Cool Lad and his half-sister Flying Rani. Cool Lad is closing in on a win after placing in three of his four runs this preparation with seconds at his last two at Newcastle and Gosford. 'He is knocking on the door but he is hard to catch to be fair because he is his own worst enemy,' said Smith. 'He goes hard and does things wrong but he has got the ability to knock off a race like this. Cool Lad lifts over the concluding stages to take out the last at @goulburnraces for @mcsmithracing! ðŸ'° â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) June 16, 2023 'I've put Olivia (Dalton) on with her three kilo claim. She rides a bit of trackwork for us so we'll see how they go.' Flying Rani is at her peak now after two runs back from a spell and a mid-preparation trial at Canterbury in which she lead all-the-way to score by over four lengths. 'She was very good in her trial the other day,' Smith said. 'She doesn't like it really wet but she will be okay on a soft track. 'If she was able to get across and control it in front. She might be able to get away with it.' Smith has two other runners for the day in The Way Ahead in the Maiden Handicap (1000m) and Noble One in the Benchmark 64 Handicap (1350m). In her first campaign, The Way Ahead has placed in three of her five starts with her latest a second to Celerity at Hawkesbury on June 17. 'She has been a horse who has been doing things upside down in her early races. She is starting to put it altogether now,' he said. 'She has slowly been improving and her last start was much better. Hopefully she can keep going in the right direction. 'Noble One wants better ground but he is going to have to start because he missed a run the other day. 'He will also get better as he gets up over a mile but his work has been good.'