NRL 2024; Cronulla star Nicho Hynes returns amid Origin scrutiny – MASHAHER

ISLAM GAMAL12 June 2024Last Update :
NRL 2024; Cronulla star Nicho Hynes returns amid Origin scrutiny – MASHAHER


Cronulla coach Craig Fitzgibbon wants star playmaker Nicho Hynes to just “be Nicho” in the face of scrutiny over his performance for NSW in the opening State of Origin match when he makes his return for the Sharks on Thursday night.

Amid speculation the halfback could lose his number seven jersey to Parramatta’s Mitchell Moses for game two against Queensland at the MCG, Fitzgibbon said the pressures to perform were “part of Origin” and Hynes had shown no signs of the outside noise getting to him.

Hynes hasn’t played since the opening match loss, skipping his team’s win over the Broncos last week but has “fully trained” and Fitzgibbon said he was over the calf complaint which limited his training going in to game one of the Origin series.

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But with the spotlight now on Hynes to continue to impress Blues coach Michael Maguire before he names his squad for game two, Fitzgibbon said the message to his star was a simple on.

“I want to see him perform for the Sharks, get back to the footy he was playing,” Fitzgibbon said ahead of his team’s clash with the Dolphins at Shark Park.

“Not over do things, keep it simple, control the game and be Nicho, be Nicho for the Sharks and not worry about anything else.

“That’s the challenge for those Origin players, you do have to block out what’s going on in the background and still perform for your team, so that’s the challenge that faces him at the moment.”

Fitzgibbon played 11 Origin games for the Blues himself, albeit before the age of social media, and conceded the scrutiny on players involved had intensified.

But he said none of those players involved shied away from the extra criticism that can follow a loss, and focus on selection, adamant it was good for them to experience.

“I just think it’s part of Origin. If it’s not that it would be something else. There’s always a narrative, but it’s intense for the whole period,” he said.

“The narrative will swing and move in relation to who wins and who doesn’t win and whose under the pressure and it’s always selection pressure, always. It’s so public, it’s so opinionated, everyone wants to see certain players.

“If you want to walk and play in those environments it’s all part of it. It’s good for them I think. To go through it, it’s only going to make you stronger. I think Nicho has done a good job of it so far.”

A win would lift Cronulla to the top of the NRL ladder, before current leaders Melbourne Storm play on Saturday.


Source Agencies

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