Melbourne's Ryan Papenhuyzen was back to his best with the flying mullet terrorising Canterbury in a thumping 44-0 NRL victory.
"We had we had a lot of ball early in the first half and we needed to come away at some points there in that first 15 minutes," Barrett said. "He's taking a big hand in deciding where the ball goes and when it goes so he's playing with plenty of confidence." "He didn't have a great pre- season - he rolled his ankle and probably didn't run for eight weeks but he spent a fair time in the gym there and he's probably a little bit of weight on and it doesn't look like it's affected his pace or his agility.
Melbourne Storm ace Ryan Papenhuyzen scored four tries as his side thrashed the Canterbury Bulldogs, leadin...
"You think about the players over the... He averaged 230m over his first four appearances of last season and is averaging 144m to the same point this year. The megastar fullback registered seven tries over his first four games of last season and six four-pointers over his opening four matches of this year's campaign.
Papenhuyzen stuns in perfect Storm performance: Dogs' halves headache far from over: Big Hits.
But also when they got the ball and go up the other end he has a hand in everything that’s going on.” They hadd 42 tackles in Melbourne’s 20-metre zone and couldn’t come up with any points. Papenhuyzen scored 24 of the Storm’s 44 points with his four tries and six conversions. “Last year he was the arguably the best player in the competition before he got injured… but he has hit the ground running this season and he’s been lengths ahead of anyone else on the park.” It took just five minutes into the second half for the Storm to cross again. He’s an incredible player. Coates was on the outer at the Broncos when inked a deal with the Storm. His speed and aerial skills made him the perfect replacement for Addo-Carr — who only left the club to be closer to family in Sydney. The pair competed for a Jahrome Hughes bomb in the first half and while Addo-Carr got the catch, Michael Ennis could sense the youngster had rattled the previous owner of the Storm No.5 jersey. “He’s only made four tackles for the whole first half but it’s his presence in the defensive line which then when you’re a ball-player you look up and you count numbers — he’s there,” Parker said. Grant got his second try assist for the day and Papenhuyzen got his second four-pointer of the day as the two combined. “The Bulldogs were camped time and time again down on Melbourne’s line and he continued to organise the defensive line and at times put himself in the line and come forward to put players under pressure.
For those who despise stats, the Storm and Bulldogs gave you all the data you'll ever need in an AAMI Park blowout.
The Storm have piled on a huge score against Canterbury, with fullback Ryan Papenhuyzen nabbing four tries in a 44-0 avalanche on Sunday afternoon.
Papenhuyzen embarrassed the defence to claim his fourth with a fine solo effort to make it 44-0 with just over 10 to play in what proved to be the final score. The Storm have piled on a huge score against Canterbury, with fullback Ryan Papenhuyzen nabbing four tries in a 44-0 avalanche on Sunday afternoon.
Storm fullback Ryan Papenhuyzen raced in four tries as Melbourne, ruthless and efficient as ever, ran riot over Canterbury in a dominant second half, ...
Hughes took no chances, offloading to Papenhuyzen who had loomed in support, allowing him to dive over for his third try.Coates repeated the trick midway through the second half, intercepting the ball from a Canterbury attacking raid to gallop unchallenged some 90 metres to continue the rout before Felise Kaufusi got into the action.Papenhuyzen made it a night to remember with his fourth as the Storm showed no mercy to their demoralised opponents., register or subscribe to save articles for later.Michael Lynch is The Age's chief soccer reporter and also reports on motor sport and horseracing Flyin’ Ryan: Papenhuyzen on fire as Storm run riot to thrash Bulldogs, register or subscribe to save articles for later. When you want to build pressure against good teams you have to take your opportunities when they present themselves.“They [Melbourne] make you pay, and they certainly made us pay today.”It must have felt to Canberbury as though they were banging their collective heads against a purple brick wall in a first half in which they gave as good as they got for the most part only to find themselves scoreless at the interval while their rivals had accrued 16 points.Worse, however, was to come as Papenhuyzen, long locks flowing, orchestrated a second-half thrashing.It was reminiscent of the way a top boxer allows his overmatched opponent to come forward and throw early leather, taking his best shots before counter-attacking with ruthless precision.Former Storm star Josh Addo-Carr had a chance to break through for the Bulldogs, but in a trice the hosts were in front when Papenhuyzen linked well with Xavier Coates before finding the line and converting.The Dogs were undeterred and kept coming, Coates forced into an important interception and to fly high to cut out dangerous balls.However. 11 minutes later the visitors found themselves another six points in arrears when Josh King slid over and Papenhuyzen converted.The only downside for Craig Bellamy’s side in that opening period was the 25th-minute report of Cameron Munster.The Bulldogs’ job was made even harder shortly before the half-time hooter sounded when Papenhuyzen turned provider, setting up Kenny Bromwich to run through and ground the Storm’s third try.Melbourne center Justin Olam tries to get past Canterbury’s defence.The Dogs needed to score next give themselves momentum: unfortunately for them the Storm came out in the mood to put the game to bed early.When Harry Grant, back from a COVID-enforced absence last week, charged through and Papenhuyzen ran in support to power home.Moments later the lead had blown out even further when Jahrome Hughes intercepted a kick close to his own line and ran the length of the pitch, Bulldogs fullback Matt Dufty in hot pursuit. Storm fullback Ryan Papenhuyzen raced in four tries as Melbourne, ruthless and efficient as ever, ran riot over Canterbury in a dominant second half, surging to a 44-0 romp to return to winning ways after their narrow AAMI Park loss to Paramatta last weekend.His 28-point haul was the second-highest by a player in Storm history, a converted try shy of the 34 achieved by Matt Geyer in 1999 during a 62-6 rout over Wests.“He didn’t have a great pre-season, he rolled his ankle, he probably didn’t run for eight weeks.“He spent a bit of time in the gym [but] he is playing with plenty of confidence at the moment,” Storm coach Craig Bellamy said of Papenhuyzen.The Storm boss was delighted with the way his side kept a clean sheet.“I was most impressed with that. We’re working to restore it. We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable.