As a new season begins with the Penrith Panthers chasing a fifth straight Grand Final appearance and a fourth straight premiership, Iโve been asked many times, do I think they can do it again in 2024?
Iโll answer that later.
โWe were told that we couldnโt even win one (premiership),โ Panthers coach Ivan Cleary told SEN 1170 Breakfast recently.
โWe were then told we couldnโt win two in a row or even three in a row.
โWe have the talent to (win a fourth), we certainly have the experience and we have created that belief with the way we play.โ
More wise words were said by Ivan prior to the Preliminary Final last year in the Sydney Morning Herald.
โThe only way we can fail is by not facing our fears and taking them head on,โ he said, โFace (your fears) head on โ you canโt fail if you do that.โ
Thatโs the mindset of a winner folks. Penrith go into every game believing they can win the contest.
Whether they do or not is another story, but that belief is indoctrinated into every playerโs mindset until it becomes part of their DNA.
For example, co-captain Nathan Cleary believed, even when the team was down 24-8 in last yearโs Grand Final, that if they stuck to their systems, their core beliefs and values, they would win.
And win they did.
While the Panthers will be minus three of their Grand Final stars from last season in Stephen Crichton, Spencer Leniu and Jack Cogger, the belief that they can win a fourth consecutive title without them, is still the main focus of the team.
Another strong motivating factor is that their five-eighth and long-time teammate Jarome Luai, is in his final season with the club.
โโRomeyโ has already begun labelling 2024 as the โThe Last Rideโ and heโs determined to leave the club as a four-time premiership winner.
Itโs safe to assume that if Penrith are to defy history and win a fourth title, Luai will be a key component.
So many other things also need to go right, you need to minimise injuries, get a fair rub of the green with refereeing decisions (cough cough), the list goes on.
Ok enough babbling. I know the coaching staff and players think they can win a fourth straight title andโฆ I do too. I think they do it.
Thereโs no doubt that Penrithโs dominance will end one day.
I mean nothing lasts forever.
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