
Melbourne Storm looking for new players amid injury crisis with Will Warbrick unable to train due to linger concussion issues
Melbourne Storm coach Craig Bellamy says the club is actively 'looking' to bring in some new players from other clubs amid a 'testing' time with injuries which includes troubling ongoing concussion issues for star winger Will Warbrick.
While Storm powerhouse Nelson Asofa-Solomona will be 'playing somewhere' in his return from injury this weekend and centre Nick Meaney comes back for the Anzac Day clash with South Sydney, Bellamy said getting 17 fit players was becoming difficult.
Captain Harry Grant remains sidelined with a hamstring injury, Jack Howarth is also out after dislocating his shoulder and Warbrick hasn't even started training as he deals with 'complicated' concussion issues.
Melbourne has money in the salary cap to bring in some more players after the pre-season retirement of former captain Christian Welch.
But Bellamy said getting deals done was becoming problematic in the current climate with other clubs also feeling the injury pinch.
'It has been testing but there's other clubs in the same boat. we're just struggling to put a 17 out there at the moment,' he said.
'We've already been looking at (bringing in players) since Christian retired. I'm not quite sure why we haven't got someone in. There's not too many clubs willing to release players.
'We need to make sure we get the best out of what we've got.'
Bellamy said Kiwi international Warbrick, who has only played two games this season, was still feeling the delayed effects of a concussion suffered in the All Stars game in February and didn't know when he'd be back.
'To be quite honest I don't really understand it, it's fairly complicated with the head knock,' he said.
'He got the head knock in the Indigenous and Maori All-Stars game and he played a week or two after that and then he had delayed symptoms.
'I'm not 100 per cent sure what is happening. He hasn't even started training yet. It hasn't been great for us or Will.'
Melbourne gave up 40-straight points in a first-ever loss to the Dolphins last week and Bellamy knows the main area they need to address against Souths, as he looks to continue a nine-year winning streak against coaching rival Wayne Bennett.
'Our completion rate has been a bit of a problem brushed under the carpet a little bit because we've been winning games,' he said.
'But our completion rate has been really poor to be quite honest so that's something that's come into view this week.'
'We need, as a team, to defend better and as individuals to defend better.'
South Sydney have never beaten the Storm in Melbourne in 19 attempts since they joined the NRL in 1998.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
'Utterly committed': why Schmidt rates Jake Gordon
Joe Schmidt has detailed why Jake Gordon is Wallabies captaincy material, while conceding individual form will trump team performances when selectors sit down to pick a squad to topple the touring British and Irish Lions. Gordon's emergence as a frontrunner to lead the Wallabies in the showpiece three-Test series against the Lions this winter has raised eyebrows after the NSW skipper missed several games injured during his Waratahs' failure to make the Super Rugby Pacific finals for a second straight season. But coach Schmidt was glowing in his praise when asked about the halfback's captaincy credentials during a visit to the Western Force's training hub in Perth. "Jake, he's one of the leaders in the group," Schmidt told reporters. "So is Nic White, so there's a few halfbacks ... and Tate McDermott has been a former (Wallabies) captain, so of the nines we had last year, they're all leaders within the group. "Jake is a really good skill-set, mature player, (has a) very nice kicking game, one of the sharper passers around, and he is utterly committed when he's on the grass. "His ability to cover corners and make tackles, be involved in the physical stuff, he's a multi-purpose sort of player. "But the sharp edge of his game is really his pass-kick, which were very helpful to us last year." Schmidt will name a squad of up to 40 players before the Wallabies' first Test of the year against Fiji in Newcastle on July 6. But the Kiwi mentor said his squad wouldn't necessarily be dominated by the ACT Brumbies, Australia's last team standing in the Super Rugby Pacific competition. Schmidt promised he was looking at a raft of players from all four Australian franchises. "Results are fickle," he said of the topsy-turvy Super Rugby season. "The Wallabies will be judged on them, but there's a lot of work that goes on behind the scenes, and there's a lot of moments in games that decide results. "An individual can stack up plenty of good moments in a game where they've performed really well, and sometimes the team doesn't get the results. "So we're probably anchored to results. We're anchored more around performance and individual performance in a team context, definitely. "You know that you've got to be connected with your teammates because that's one of the beauties of the game. It's so interdependent. "You're reliant on the guys up front doing the job so you can get the space out the back. A guy like Mac Grealy or Harry Potter or Dylan Pietsch, they can't do a lot in space if the boys up front aren't doing their job." The Force will be the first Australian side to tackle the Lions, hosting the best of Britain and Ireland at Optus Stadium on June 28.

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
Thoroughbred trainer John Hawkes has a Queensland Derby harness racing contender in Seathestars
Horses are both big business and a hobby for Hall of Fame thoroughbred trainer John Hawkes. The business side is the powerhouse stable Hawkes runs with sons Michael and Wayne with about 60 horses in work across Sydney and Melbourne, headed by The Everest contender Briasa. The hobby is harness racing. 'I grew up in Adelaide around lots of harness trainers, some real legends, and have great memories of going to the old Wayville track when I was about 15,' Hawkes. 'I've always loved the pacers and I must have raced about 20 of them with different mates over the years, mostly with Geoff Webster (trainer). Jenny (Hawkes' wife) and I love watching the trots of a Saturday night.' This Saturday they'll be watching one of their own when emerging three-year-old Seathestars – named after the former champion Irish thoroughbred – struts his stuff at Melton as a possible pointer to a Queensland Derby raid next month. 'I think he's a cog below the top ones at this stage, but he's getting there. He'll need to go really well from a bad draw (gate 11) this week to show he's worthy of a trip to Brisbane, but I'll leave that to Geoff (Webster),' Hawkes said. Seathestars has raced just 14 times for three wins and eight placings, including a third in the Group 2 Gold Chalice final at Bathurst in March. He narrowly won his last start at Melton on May 31. Jordan Leedham-driven Seathestars powers to an impressive victory in the final race of the night, the Nutrien Equine Pace at Melton, for trainer Geoff Webster. — The Trots (@TheTrotsComAu) March 8, 2025 'He led and I don't think he's as good in front, he's more of a chaser at this stage,' Hawkes said. Hawkes' harness team grew when made a surprise appearance at the Nutrien Sydney Yearling Sales earlier this year and spent $260,000 on two yearlings. 'I had some friends who were keen to go in a horse or two with me and they are Sydney-based, so I bought a couple for Luke McCarthy to train,' Hawkes said. Those friends include star jockeys Tommy Berry, Tyler Schiller and Zac Lloyd. The marquee buy was a Captaintreacherous colt out of Island Banner, a daughter of former NZ Cup-winning mare Mainland Banner, who sold for $200,000. Hawkes said he and Jenny were huge fans of McCarthy's three-time Miracle Mile winner King Of Swing, whose first crop sold through the sale. 'Jenny really wanted a King Of Swing (yearling), too, so we picked up a nice one,' he said. It is a colt out of the well-related Kiwi mare Northern Velocity. 'Now we've just got to hope they'll turn out okay,' Hawkes said. 'The guys were keen to see them race up here so that's why we've gone with Luke, who is as good as it gets.' Back to the business side of horses and Hawkes can't wait to see Briasa back after a spell. 'He'll come back even better, you watch. What he's done so far has largely been on raw ability. He's very good, but he'll need to be aiming at a race like the Everest,' he said. 'We've had a really good season for a relatively small stable compared to the biggest and there's a few two-year-olds we're excited about seeing back next season.'

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
Rarely-seen footy superstars, partners shine
A host of big names turned out for the AFL's Hall of Fame event on Tuesday night, including some rarely-seen superstars. Nick Riewoldt, Hall of Fame Inductee looks on with family after being inducted. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images) Former player and coach Debbi Lee and partner Lauren Senserrick. (Photo by) The class of 2025: Erin Phillips, Nick Riewoldt, Garry Lyon, Luke Hodge and Daisy Pearce. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)