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Home»Latest»No Lomax, no worries? Eels look good, but Henson Park steals the show in pre-season spree
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No Lomax, no worries? Eels look good, but Henson Park steals the show in pre-season spree

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auFebruary 15, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
No Lomax, no worries? Eels look good, but Henson Park steals the show in pre-season spree
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Reed Mahoney still doesn’t know why the Bulldogs cut him loose, but the nuggety hooker gave “If you find out, tell me” new meaning with a statement debut for new club North Queensland. If there was a point to prove, Mahoney did so via two try assists, two line-break assists and 18 tackles during an active first half against Penrith’s reserves that suggested the shoes of Reece Robson have already been filled and compliments a new-look spine with Tom Dearden and Scott Drinkwater.

Manly life after DCE ain’t so bad

Daly Cherry-Evans might have left for a latte in the east but Joey Walsh, 19, and Onitoni Large, 18, took control to orchestrate a 33-18 win for Manly over the Warriors in Napier. Turns out DCE’s exit might not be the apocalyptic event some have predicted. The young halves, playing their first senior game together, looked like old hands among a clutch of other teenagers and part-timers (and could yet benefit from the expanded interchange bench behind Luke Brooks and freshly signed Jamal Fogarty). That said, they made a more experienced Warriors collective appear spiritless in comparison. Yes, they were missing seven to Sunday’s Maori-Indigenous All Stars match but coach Andrew Webster would still be underwhelmed with that first outing, and Morgan Gannon did not exactly set the field alight.

It was a bright moment for the Sea Eagles on the same weekend it emerged the family of Keith Titmuss has commenced legal action against the club after the former player died of exertional heatstroke during a training session deemed “more likely than not inappropriate”.

Latrell not centre of attention

There was plenty happening in the centres during South Sydney’s Charity Shield upset over the Dragons – and Mitchell wasn’t even on the field. The revamped left centre watched from the WIN Stadium Stands (alongside most other senior Rabbitohs) as Talanoa Penitani and Latrell Siegwalt did their thing and even scored a try apiece in the 28-24 result marred by Jonah Glover’s third-minute jaw fracture. Jack Wighton, David Fifita, Cameron Murray and Cody Walker also sat out the pre-season tune-up turned kick up the arse of a St George-Illawarra side facing an uphill battle to beat the Bulldogs in Vegas.

Souths centre Latrell Siegwalt with namesake Latrell Mitchell on Saturday night.

Souths centre Latrell Siegwalt with namesake Latrell Mitchell on Saturday night.Credit: NRL Photos

Aside from Souths maybe actually being a bit better in 2026, the other conspicuous thread is a lack of headlines following Mitchell into a new NRL season. A calf niggle ruled him out of Indigenous All Stars representation for a second straight year while Payne Haas’ shock recruitment from Brisbane has stolen the limelight, and who knows what that might do for a talent sometimes handicapped by intense public scrutiny.

Let Vegas teams play Vegas teams

If the Vegas experiment is to continue, it seems logical and prudent for the four teams involved to play each other in pre-season trials. North Queensland’s 66-24 walk in the park against a pack of Panthers kids was anything but a reliable barometer for where each team is at heading into round one, and does not provide the Cowboys with quality preparation for a high-profile game abroad with premiership points on the line. The risk of a lopsided clash like this is prospective injuries to players who do not stand a chance. The Knights played the Bulldogs, which is great (not for the Knights, who completed only 27 of 43 sets en route to a 28-0 rout without Kalyn Ponga), so why did the Dragons not have their hit-out against the Cowboys?

Indigenous All Star Nicho Hynes and Maori All Star James Fisher-Harris after Sunday’s 16-16 draw at FMG Stadium Waikato.

Indigenous All Star Nicho Hynes and Maori All Star James Fisher-Harris after Sunday’s 16-16 draw at FMG Stadium Waikato.Credit: Getty Images

Maori side retain All Stars title

The Indigenous All Stars came mighty close to a match-winning try that would have made for a memorable moment when Jayden Campbell – the son of All Stars creator Preston Campbell – somehow reeled in an unlikely Braydon Trindall chip and scored, only for it to be overturned for a knock-on. The score was 16-16 with six minutes to go and finished that way, in a game where referee Adam Gee was forced off with an injury, leaving Belinda Sharpe to officiate the closing stages of Sunday afternoon’s thriller in Hamilton. Meanwhile, the Indigenous women’s side fought back from three tries down after 23 minutes to ambush their Maori counterparts and win a third consecutive All Stars clash.

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