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'It feels a bit weird': Jahrome Hughes digests rare losing streak for Storm

(Photo by Mark Nolan/Getty Images)

Despite losing a third successive game for the first time in his Melbourne career, halfback Jahrome Hughes says the Storm remain resolute that their NRL premiership ambitions are on track.

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Hughes will play his 100th NRL game when they face South Sydney, who have won their last three, on Saturday night at Accor Stadium.

The 27-year-old played one game with Gold Coast in 2013 and one with North Queensland in 2016, but since making his Storm debut a year later he has emerged as one of the game’s best No.7s.

Despite chalking up three successive losses for the first time in seven years, falling to Canberra 20-16 last round, Hughes felt their form was moving in the right direction.

“It feels a bit weird – I don’t think I’ve lost three in a row before and it’s not a good feeling,” Hughes said on Wednesday.

“Hopefully we can turn it around, not just for my 100 games, but we need a win.

“But the boys have been good, we’re still very confident in ourselves and very confident and how we’re looking to go into the finals.

“It was a pretty rough patch, the Origin period, on top of our own injuries but now that it’s all over … we didn’t get the win but we showed on the weekend, we can play good footy.”

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With a season-ending knee injury to superstar fullback Ryan Papenhuyzen coming on top of the run of results which has seen the side drop to fourth, the doomsayers are writing off Melbourne’s title chances.

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Hughes said coach Craig Bellamy would use the talk as motivation.

“People have been writing us off every year – when Coops (Cooper Cronk) left and then Smithy (Cameron Smith) and Bill (Slater) – but I think we just feed off it,” said the 27-year-old Kiwi international.

“We don’t mind flying under the radar so it’s probably not a bad thing at the moment.

“I think Craig will get little snippets from that and use it as motivation for us.”

The return from injury of Latrell Mitchell has been key to the seventh-placed Rabbitohs’ resurgence with the fullback in beast-mode in their win over Canterbury.

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Hughes said the Storm would need to shut him down.

“Every time we play, that’s got him in there we need to watch out for him,” he said of Mitchell, who missed 10 games with a hamstring injury.

“They’ve got Cody Walker as well so they’re a great attacking team, so we need to be on.

“I thought our defence was a lot better on the weekend compared to the weeks before so but I think we’re going need to step it up again because their attack is very lethal.”

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J
JW 3 hours ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

I had a look at the wiki article again, it's all terribly old data (not that I'd see reason for much change in the case of SA).

Number Of Clubs:

1526

Registered+Unregistered Players:

651146

Number of Referees:

3460

Pre-teen Male Players:

320842

Pre-teen Female Player:

4522

Teen Male Player:

199213

Teen Female Player:

4906

Senior Male Player:

113174

Senior Female Player:

8489

Total Male Player:

633229

Total Female Player:

17917


So looking for something new as were more concerned with adults specifically, so I had a look at their EOY Financial Review.

The total number of clubs remains consistent, with a marginal increase of 1% from 1,161 to 1,167. 8.1.

A comparative analysis of verified data for 2022 and 2023 highlights a marginal decline of 1% in the number of female players, declining from 6,801 to 6,723. Additionally, the total number of players demonstrates an 8% decrease, dropping from 96,172 to 88,828.

So 80k+ adult males (down from 113k), but I'm not really sure when youth are involved with SAn clubs, or if that data is for some reason not being referenced/included. 300k male students however (200k in old wiki data).


https://resources.world.rugby/worldrugby/document/2020/07/28/212ed9cf-cd61-4fa3-b9d4-9f0d5fb61116/P56-57-Participation-Map_v3.pdf has France at 250k registered but https://presse-europe1-fr.translate.goog/exclu-europe-1-le-top-10-des-sports-les-plus-pratiques-en-france-en-2022/?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=wapp has them back up at 300k registered.


The French number likely Students + Club, but everyone collects data different I reckon. In that WR pdf for instance a lot of the major nations have a heavily registered setup, were as a nation like England can penetrate into a lot more schools to run camps and include them in the reach of rugby. For instance the SARU release says only 29% of schools are reached by proper rugby programs, where as the 2million English number would be through a much much higer penetration I'd imagine. Which is thanks to schools having the ability to involve themselves in programs more than anything.


In any case, I don't think you need to be concerned with the numbers, whether they are 300 or 88k, there is obviously a big enough following for their pro scenes already to have enough quality players for a 10/12 team competition. They appear ibgger than France but I don't really by the lower English numbers going around.

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