Queenslander
19-05-06, 10:09 AM
Titans boost Maroons
Amy Harris
The Courier Mail
May 19, 2006
THE Gold Coast Titans expect to be a major source of State of Origin stock for Queensland ? but don't expect too much too soon.
Football manager and former Origin player Scott Sattler has earmarked a group that he believes will lead a future Maroon contingent but says we might have to wait for three years before the new club becomes a legitimate force at Origin level.
"It won't happen straight away. We have guys like Scott Prince and Luke Bailey who will obviously be in the frame when it comes to Origin selection straight away but the homegrown Queenslanders will be a few years coming," Sattler said.
Tipped for representative honours, teenagers Will Matthews, Bodene Thompson, Matt Smith-Host, Shannon Walker and Chris Sandow are all still at high school on the Gold Coast.
All five took their first big step towards the Maroon jersey this week when they were picked in the Queensland Open Schoolboys side for the ASSRL National Exchange at Port Macquarie in July.
"Obviously it's fairly early to start making these sorts of predictions but their futures are pretty well mapped out for them," Sattler said.
"We think they're going to be standouts down the track and good potential Maroons."
Sattler said the Titans would begin to rely more on local players and less on the Sydney-based imports as the side found its feet in the NRL.
It's a plan that has worked to perfection for the North Queensland Cowboys who built their earlier foundations on key local products.
Now they famously boast the competition's best-known discovery, Matt Bowen.
"It's worked really well for the Cowboys. They have managed to establish a pathway in North Queensland and that's what we want," Sattler said.
In the meantime, the Gold Coast is understood to be closing in on negotiations with Penrith's Luke Swain, though the 24-year-old lock said he had yet to see a formal offer from the Titans camp.
A Panther since he made his NRL debut in 2003, Swain played under Titans coach John Cartwright in the Penrith reserve grade and played alongside Sattler in the 2003 premiership season.
He is also a good friend of star Coast signings Scott Prince, Preston Campbell and Frank Puletua and said he would probably accept a contract if an offer materialised.
"Definitely, it would be a move I would consider but I have yet to see anything," said Swain, who was given permission by Penrith at the weekend to talk to other clubs.
"There are a few other clubs in the mix but I have told my manager I don't really want to know about them until there is an actual offer there.
"Everyone is talking about the Gold Coast and if it's a possibility then I'd be interested."
Amy Harris
The Courier Mail
May 19, 2006
THE Gold Coast Titans expect to be a major source of State of Origin stock for Queensland ? but don't expect too much too soon.
Football manager and former Origin player Scott Sattler has earmarked a group that he believes will lead a future Maroon contingent but says we might have to wait for three years before the new club becomes a legitimate force at Origin level.
"It won't happen straight away. We have guys like Scott Prince and Luke Bailey who will obviously be in the frame when it comes to Origin selection straight away but the homegrown Queenslanders will be a few years coming," Sattler said.
Tipped for representative honours, teenagers Will Matthews, Bodene Thompson, Matt Smith-Host, Shannon Walker and Chris Sandow are all still at high school on the Gold Coast.
All five took their first big step towards the Maroon jersey this week when they were picked in the Queensland Open Schoolboys side for the ASSRL National Exchange at Port Macquarie in July.
"Obviously it's fairly early to start making these sorts of predictions but their futures are pretty well mapped out for them," Sattler said.
"We think they're going to be standouts down the track and good potential Maroons."
Sattler said the Titans would begin to rely more on local players and less on the Sydney-based imports as the side found its feet in the NRL.
It's a plan that has worked to perfection for the North Queensland Cowboys who built their earlier foundations on key local products.
Now they famously boast the competition's best-known discovery, Matt Bowen.
"It's worked really well for the Cowboys. They have managed to establish a pathway in North Queensland and that's what we want," Sattler said.
In the meantime, the Gold Coast is understood to be closing in on negotiations with Penrith's Luke Swain, though the 24-year-old lock said he had yet to see a formal offer from the Titans camp.
A Panther since he made his NRL debut in 2003, Swain played under Titans coach John Cartwright in the Penrith reserve grade and played alongside Sattler in the 2003 premiership season.
He is also a good friend of star Coast signings Scott Prince, Preston Campbell and Frank Puletua and said he would probably accept a contract if an offer materialised.
"Definitely, it would be a move I would consider but I have yet to see anything," said Swain, who was given permission by Penrith at the weekend to talk to other clubs.
"There are a few other clubs in the mix but I have told my manager I don't really want to know about them until there is an actual offer there.
"Everyone is talking about the Gold Coast and if it's a possibility then I'd be interested."