logo
Raiders eye winning send-off for record-breaker Papalii

Raiders eye winning send-off for record-breaker Papalii

The Advertiser07-06-2025

Ahead of becoming Canberra's most-capped NRL player, Josh Papalii has been heralded as the key to a long-awaited title for his beloved Raiders.
Sia Soliola, Papalii's former Raiders teammate on the field and long-term friend off it, says the young Raiders squad have what it takes to win the club's first premiership in more than three decades.
And Big Papa's experience will be crucial.
"We always relied on him, and a lot was put on Paps' shoulders," Soliola told AAP.
"He has always stepped up in crucial times when we've needed someone. He's the guy that still produces the moments in a game where you need something special. That's where Paps' presence really comes to life, and I think that'll play a big part for the Raiders this year."
His second-half spell to help inspire the Raiders' comeback win against the Sydney Roosters was a case in point.
Papalii will be the first to admit his athleticism isn't where it once was, but even at 33 the copious Queenslander is still a vital cog for coach Ricky Stuart's side.
Sunday's clash against South Sydney will be another crucial one for the Green Machine, who could go top with a win, before a much-needed first bye of the season.
His comrades will be even more determined to get the two points to celebrate Papalii notching 319 games with the Raiders to surpass fellow one-club man Jason Croker as the most-capped player in Canberra's history.
But it's the "off-field stuff" the boy from Logan will look back on most fondly.
"The club's been so loyal to me. If you sort of think about what I've been through off-field, I probably should have been sacked 12 years ago, so the club's been such a loyal base for myself and my family," said Papalii, who has admitted this season will be his last for the Raiders.
"I hope I've repaid that with love and sacrifice and in the way I've gone about my craft."
Despite the inexperienced roster, Stuart has his squad firing on all cylinders, and there is a sense among the Raiders faithful - with GIO Stadium set for another sold-out crowd - that this season could be a special one.
It would be a fairytale ending at the club for Papalii after missing out on a title in an agonising grand-final loss to the Roosters in 2019.
"You see all these really great players that never really get to lift it, but the Raiders have got a really good opportunity this year," Soliola said.
"If they keep going the way they're going they're definitely going to give themselves a shot at the business end. I think everyone in rugby league would want that to happen for someone like Paps."
The Raiders would also dearly love to send off Jamal Fogarty on a high note.
A part of club folklore even before he joined - Papalii's 2020 Dally M tackle of the year-winning ankle tap on the then-Titans halfback was immortalised on commemorative Budgy Smugglers - Fogarty has become a fan favourite since, but is bound for Manly next season.
The playmaker has been one of the league's outstanding halves this season and is a welcome boost to the Raiders' starting line-up after a one-week lay-off with a groin injury.
Fellow Queenslander Corey Horsburgh will also hit a milestone on Sunday, playing his 100th NRL game.
It's the last audition for "Big Red'' ahead of selection for State of Origin II, with the hulking prop's red-hot form making him a favourite for inclusion in Billy Slater's Maroons squad.
Ahead of becoming Canberra's most-capped NRL player, Josh Papalii has been heralded as the key to a long-awaited title for his beloved Raiders.
Sia Soliola, Papalii's former Raiders teammate on the field and long-term friend off it, says the young Raiders squad have what it takes to win the club's first premiership in more than three decades.
And Big Papa's experience will be crucial.
"We always relied on him, and a lot was put on Paps' shoulders," Soliola told AAP.
"He has always stepped up in crucial times when we've needed someone. He's the guy that still produces the moments in a game where you need something special. That's where Paps' presence really comes to life, and I think that'll play a big part for the Raiders this year."
His second-half spell to help inspire the Raiders' comeback win against the Sydney Roosters was a case in point.
Papalii will be the first to admit his athleticism isn't where it once was, but even at 33 the copious Queenslander is still a vital cog for coach Ricky Stuart's side.
Sunday's clash against South Sydney will be another crucial one for the Green Machine, who could go top with a win, before a much-needed first bye of the season.
His comrades will be even more determined to get the two points to celebrate Papalii notching 319 games with the Raiders to surpass fellow one-club man Jason Croker as the most-capped player in Canberra's history.
But it's the "off-field stuff" the boy from Logan will look back on most fondly.
"The club's been so loyal to me. If you sort of think about what I've been through off-field, I probably should have been sacked 12 years ago, so the club's been such a loyal base for myself and my family," said Papalii, who has admitted this season will be his last for the Raiders.
"I hope I've repaid that with love and sacrifice and in the way I've gone about my craft."
Despite the inexperienced roster, Stuart has his squad firing on all cylinders, and there is a sense among the Raiders faithful - with GIO Stadium set for another sold-out crowd - that this season could be a special one.
It would be a fairytale ending at the club for Papalii after missing out on a title in an agonising grand-final loss to the Roosters in 2019.
"You see all these really great players that never really get to lift it, but the Raiders have got a really good opportunity this year," Soliola said.
"If they keep going the way they're going they're definitely going to give themselves a shot at the business end. I think everyone in rugby league would want that to happen for someone like Paps."
The Raiders would also dearly love to send off Jamal Fogarty on a high note.
A part of club folklore even before he joined - Papalii's 2020 Dally M tackle of the year-winning ankle tap on the then-Titans halfback was immortalised on commemorative Budgy Smugglers - Fogarty has become a fan favourite since, but is bound for Manly next season.
The playmaker has been one of the league's outstanding halves this season and is a welcome boost to the Raiders' starting line-up after a one-week lay-off with a groin injury.
Fellow Queenslander Corey Horsburgh will also hit a milestone on Sunday, playing his 100th NRL game.
It's the last audition for "Big Red'' ahead of selection for State of Origin II, with the hulking prop's red-hot form making him a favourite for inclusion in Billy Slater's Maroons squad.
Ahead of becoming Canberra's most-capped NRL player, Josh Papalii has been heralded as the key to a long-awaited title for his beloved Raiders.
Sia Soliola, Papalii's former Raiders teammate on the field and long-term friend off it, says the young Raiders squad have what it takes to win the club's first premiership in more than three decades.
And Big Papa's experience will be crucial.
"We always relied on him, and a lot was put on Paps' shoulders," Soliola told AAP.
"He has always stepped up in crucial times when we've needed someone. He's the guy that still produces the moments in a game where you need something special. That's where Paps' presence really comes to life, and I think that'll play a big part for the Raiders this year."
His second-half spell to help inspire the Raiders' comeback win against the Sydney Roosters was a case in point.
Papalii will be the first to admit his athleticism isn't where it once was, but even at 33 the copious Queenslander is still a vital cog for coach Ricky Stuart's side.
Sunday's clash against South Sydney will be another crucial one for the Green Machine, who could go top with a win, before a much-needed first bye of the season.
His comrades will be even more determined to get the two points to celebrate Papalii notching 319 games with the Raiders to surpass fellow one-club man Jason Croker as the most-capped player in Canberra's history.
But it's the "off-field stuff" the boy from Logan will look back on most fondly.
"The club's been so loyal to me. If you sort of think about what I've been through off-field, I probably should have been sacked 12 years ago, so the club's been such a loyal base for myself and my family," said Papalii, who has admitted this season will be his last for the Raiders.
"I hope I've repaid that with love and sacrifice and in the way I've gone about my craft."
Despite the inexperienced roster, Stuart has his squad firing on all cylinders, and there is a sense among the Raiders faithful - with GIO Stadium set for another sold-out crowd - that this season could be a special one.
It would be a fairytale ending at the club for Papalii after missing out on a title in an agonising grand-final loss to the Roosters in 2019.
"You see all these really great players that never really get to lift it, but the Raiders have got a really good opportunity this year," Soliola said.
"If they keep going the way they're going they're definitely going to give themselves a shot at the business end. I think everyone in rugby league would want that to happen for someone like Paps."
The Raiders would also dearly love to send off Jamal Fogarty on a high note.
A part of club folklore even before he joined - Papalii's 2020 Dally M tackle of the year-winning ankle tap on the then-Titans halfback was immortalised on commemorative Budgy Smugglers - Fogarty has become a fan favourite since, but is bound for Manly next season.
The playmaker has been one of the league's outstanding halves this season and is a welcome boost to the Raiders' starting line-up after a one-week lay-off with a groin injury.
Fellow Queenslander Corey Horsburgh will also hit a milestone on Sunday, playing his 100th NRL game.
It's the last audition for "Big Red'' ahead of selection for State of Origin II, with the hulking prop's red-hot form making him a favourite for inclusion in Billy Slater's Maroons squad.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Latrell Mitchell robbed of special moment in Golden Point chaos
Latrell Mitchell robbed of special moment in Golden Point chaos

Daily Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Telegraph

Latrell Mitchell robbed of special moment in Golden Point chaos

Don't miss out on the headlines from NRL. Followed categories will be added to My News. The record that was never supposed to be broken now looks set to fall this season after try-scoring machine Alex Johnston scored four tries to move within six tries of Ken Irvine's legendary haul, but it wasn't enough as Ryan Papenhuyzen nailed a golden point field goal to sink South Sydney. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer > A week after they were forced off by lightning and heavy rain, the Rabbitohs held their own against a very different Storm side but fell short of a famous win as Papenhuyzen drilled a shot from 15 metres out to seal a thrilling 25-24 win. But the story is Johnston who is now up to 206 tries and needs just seven more tries to go past Irvine after he scored once in the first half and twice in the space of two minutes after the break as he tormented Melbourne's right edge defence. His 16th hat-trick – and 56th multi-try game – continued his astounding record, with Johnston's first three tries all coming off Latrell Mitchell passes. The Storm hit back to take the lead through Grant Anderson, but it lasted less than a minute as the veteran winger picked off a Jahrome Hughes pass to become the first player ever to score four tries against the Storm in a game. Given his incredible strike rate, there's every chance Johnston will break the long-standing record in the coming weeks which will trigger incredible scenes wherever it takes place. GOLDEN MOMENT The Storm had their hearts broken in golden point at Magic Round, but they flipped the script on Saturday with Papenhuyzen nailing the moment after his first shot was charged down 30 seconds earlier. Melbourne's fullback has been ice cool in the past and was at his clinical best after he saw rival Latrell Mitchell miss his 46-metre attempt in the final seconds of regulation time. It sealed a crucial win for the Storm who move into third spot without any byes to come for the rest of the season. SUA SIZZLES Souths looked certain to steamroll the Storm in the final 20 minutes until a moment of magic from livewire winger Sua Fa'alogo saved the visitors. Melbourne got off to a flying start when skipper Harry Grant waltzed through some flimsy marker defence to open the scoring, and they doubled their advantage from the next set when Grant Anderson put in a banana kick for Jahrome Hughes. But then they fell into their old ways that have plagued them for much of the season as they produced eight first-half errors to invite Souths back into the contest. Their attack fell flat until Fa'alogo sparked them into life when he caught a towering bomb on his own 20 and broke through to set up Tyran Wishart to put Melbourne back in front. Another error from the kick-off summed up their night, with Papenhuyzen producing a magical play from a 20-metre restart to find touch, only for the full-time siren to beat them before they could pack the scrum. SOUTHS FIGHT ON The Rabbitohs could drop to second last on the ladder at the end of the round, but they lost no admirers after this one. It's been a tough run for the Bunnies against the top four teams, but they are showing plenty of fight even though Wayne Bennett suffered his 15th loss in a row against Craig Bellamy. Mitchell is the man who can save their season after he set up four tries, including a stunning grubber for Tyrone Munro to score with four minutes remaining, only for his conversion attempt to sail wide. Originally published as Latrell Mitchell robbed of special moment in Golden Point chaos

‘It will be very special': Try-scoring record starting to feel real for Alex Johnston after grabbing four more against the Storm
‘It will be very special': Try-scoring record starting to feel real for Alex Johnston after grabbing four more against the Storm

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘It will be very special': Try-scoring record starting to feel real for Alex Johnston after grabbing four more against the Storm

Alex Johnston has never liked talking about the try-scoring record in case he jinxed it, but the reality of breaking Ken Irvine's long-standing mark is starting to hit home for the Souths legend who narrowed the gap on Saturday with four tries against the Storm. The South Sydney winger is now up to 206 tries and is just six behind Irvine's record which many people thought would never be broken. But Johnston, 30, looks set to do it after grabbing a second-half hat-trick in the golden point loss to Melbourne, taking his tally to nine tries in his past four matches against teams that are all in the top four. He's already scored 11 tries in just seven matches this season and could very well break the record as early as next month. 4 TRIES FOR JOHNSTON! He may break the all-time try scoring record tonight! ðŸ'° Watch #NRLSouthsStorm on ch.502 or stream on Kayo: âœ�ï¸� BLOG ðŸ'¢ MATCH CENTRE — Fox League (@FOXNRL) June 21, 2025 'If you told me a few weeks ago, I would have told you I was still a fair bit away,' he replied when asked about possibly becoming the greatest try-scorer in history. 'But I've scored a few tries in the past few games and I'm getting close now. I'll try my best to get it this year. 'It will be very special. 'Hopefully it's a payday, and a third party comes my way and wants to be a part of it.' Johnston was on the receiving end of three glorious assists from Latrell Mitchell, with the winger paying tribute to Cody Walker and Greg Inglis for setting him up for the bulk of his tries. 'Trell was pretty much feeding me those tries, so it was pretty good,' he said. 'They are two special fullbacks that I've played with. Then you've got guys like Cody who probably has even more try assists to me. 'The centres I've had over the years as well, I've been lucky to be on the end of a pretty special backline. 'I'm getting closer to that record, but it's bittersweet losing the way we did. We should have won the game.' The only question now is what the game will do to celebrate Johnston's impending achievement, with fans likely to storm the field as we see in other sports like AFL when someone reaches the 1000-goal mark. Johnston said he didn't have the flair to do anything too crazy, with the winger just content to be back on the field after a serious Achilles injury last year had people wondering if his career – and the record chase – were over. 'I don't want to harp on it too much, but I said when I scored 200 tries a few weeks ago how I wasn't in the best place for a good while [last year], and it was special to go out there and get a standing ovation when I scored 200 tries,' he said. 'It's now 206. I'll keep ticking them over. Things are looking up. 'I was lucky because I've got a pretty good rock at home, and my family are always there for me. 'I'm still probably getting there to be honest. Once I finish this season, without getting injured, touch wood, signing a new contract will be nice, getting that record will be nice, and then I don't know. Another four more years would be nice.' The 2014 premiership winner is off contract at the end of the season but is hopeful that a deal will be struck soon. 'We're still chatting,' he said. 'I don't know if it's locked in yet. I know my manager and Souths were in talks this week. We'll see what happens. I think it's very close.'

Experts urgent warning on Australian kids' sports: ‘we need to rethink mid-week training'
Experts urgent warning on Australian kids' sports: ‘we need to rethink mid-week training'

7NEWS

time3 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Experts urgent warning on Australian kids' sports: ‘we need to rethink mid-week training'

A leading neurologist is sounding the alarm on the risks of repeated head knocks in junior contact sports, sparking a fierce debate between parents, coaches and fans. Dr Rowena Mobbs warns that the long-term brain damage caused by repeated impacts is preventable, but only if training methods change drastically. 'Ultimately CTE is preventable and minimisable… If kids especially learn to tackle later or are exposed to repeated head injury later… we'll be on a winner,' said Dr Mobbs, referring to Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, a devastating degenerative brain disease linked to repeated head trauma. Her stark warning is fuelling conversations across communities where parents want their kids to be safe, but fans and coaches worry about the impact of reducing contact on player readiness and the culture of the game. Dan Hadchiti, a suburban NRL coach from the Bankstown Bulls who mentors a local junior team, believes contact training is essential, but agreed it needs to be smarter and safer. 'The first 20 minutes of every session is contact and safe contact… making tackles effectively but also safely,' he explained. He worries that cutting back too much on contact training could backfire. 'Repetition is the best way of learning… if you're going to lessen the amount of tackling happening out at training in a controlled environment, what are you going to do when you're out on the field?' Loading Instagram Post Dr Mobbs isn't calling for the end of contact sports, but said governing bodies must urgently revise training guidelines, especially for younger kids. 'It may be as young as age 12… or age 14… to limit that early exposure when the brain is developing,' she said. She believes simply halving midweek collision training could dramatically reduce the risk of brain injury, especially in higher-risk positions. 'If we halve contact collision training, we may halve CTE, particularly for the higher risk positions,' she said. Her call comes as the AFL continues to confront its growing concussion crisis. This week, West Coast Eagles defender Jeremy McGovern announced his retirement after being advised to step away from the game by the AFL's concussion panel. McGovern, who played 197 games for the Eagles since debuting in 2014, was a key figure in the club's 2018 premiership win over Collingwood. While he admitted he was 'gutted' not to play again, he said he accepted the panel's decision and prioritised his long-term health. For many parents, this warning is an alarm sounding, sparking a search for more information. But for some fans and families, it feels like an attack on sporting traditions they love. The clash between safety concerns and love of the game has sparked tough conversations in club rooms and living rooms across the country. Dan Hadchiti believes there is a middle ground. 'We should be welcoming contact at training in a safe environment. It doesn't need to be 100 per cent, but just enough where the boys can understand what they're doing, why they're doing it,' he said. The Bankstown Bulls have a proud history of developing tough, talented players — including NFL star Jordan Mailata — who began his sporting life with the Bulls before launching his professional career in the United States. But as concerns around brain injuries grow, even clubs with deep traditions are beginning to question how much risk is too much. At 6PM tonight, 7NEWS will explore the science behind CTE (Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy) and speak with veteran NRL star Trevor Crow's wife, Sandra, who speaks passionately about the toll the game has taken on their family. The full story airs tonight, 6PM.

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