![]() These players can be the most frustrating to own, because you never know if they’ll deliver in any given week and you’ll often be caught out naming them over another player who scores when they don’t. ![]() * An 80-minute workhorse is a forward who will make you count every involvement at the end of the game, willing them towards the 40-involvement mark. The Champion Data gods have been kind to him on a few weeks, giving him 40 involvements on the dot, but in all other weeks, he has proven that he is no 80-minute workhorse* One that only St George fans would have seen coming, Blake Lawrie (6 x WH) is another who is yet to go a week without a workhorse try. The young forward has a DWH in him, notching up 66 involvements in Round 5, falling just 12 metres short of the DWH mark. Averaging 57 minutes under Michael Maguire, he has shown what he’s capable of. Should he continue to run like he did on the weekend, we could see another DWH to the 21 year old.Īlex Twal (6 x WH) has always shown potential with limited minutes. This week, we got a glimpse of what he can do when he runs the ball. With no hooker on the bench, he should be able to continue his 100% strike rate. ![]() Reed Mahoney (6 x WH) has shown what he’s capable of when given the full 80 minutes. His fellow countryman, Ryan Sutton (4 x WH) has really made the most of Joe Tapine’s injury, scoring a workhorse in every week since Round 3. New can also include overseas import, with none bigger in 2019 than John Bateman (6 x WH).
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