Big Cat Empire: How Penrith went from giving away tickets to a Sydney superclub
By Andrew Webster
Young Panthers fans watch their idols at a grand final training session this week.Credit: Getty
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In 2013, Penrith recruitment manager Jim Jones stood in front of 80 teenage rugby league players at Carrington Park in Bathurst in the NSW Central Tablelands.
Two years earlier, the Panthers had decided to expand their already enormous junior nursery to take in Western Division, so they held a camp for players aged from 13 to 16.
When the camp concluded, the young players gathered for a photo in front of the scoreboard, which was sponsored by the Panthersâ leagues club in Bathurst.
âThanks for coming today,â Jones said, before adding: âNow, who follows Penrith?â
Only two players stood up.
âThen one sat down!â Jones roars as he retells the story. âWe had one kid!â
Standing alongside Jones that day was Matt Cameron, who joined the club in 2012 to oversee the Panthersâ pathways but is now chief executive of football.
When he returned to Penrith, he enlarged two team photos taken at the camp and asked to meet with the board.
A team photo from a Panthers junior camp in Bathurst in 2013 â only two were Penrith fans.
âWeâve got a club in the main street, but no one likes us out there,â he explained, pointing out that no player was wearing Penrith gear.
Fast-forward a decade and the change in Penrith is reflected in the change of colour in the talented kids who attend their camps in Bathurst.
âI was there last weekend,â Jones says. âEveryone is wearing Panthers gear. Their second team is Penrith.â As Cameron puts it: âThose 16-year-old kids see Penrith as the viable option to be a professional rugby league player.â
In the cranky cut and thrust of rugby league, people struggle to praise rival clubs, especially the successful ones. Panthers players have been branded arrogant and the club has endured constant speculation about how theyâve kept so many of their up-and-coming stars for so long.
âThe cap isnât a difficult thing to manage,â Cameron says. âIt is when you attach emotion to it. I donât coach the team â I worry about the numbers. If you understand you canât keep all the best players, and especially in a situation when we have good young kids coming through, itâs easy to manage.â
Even the Panthersâ most vocal detractors couldnât dismiss the incredible reawakening of their club since 2011 when they adopted their âBuilt from Withinâ blueprint.
Not that long ago, the Panthers Group â which manages a suite of licensed clubs and the football team â was $112 million in debt. âTen years ago, we were bleeding money and giving away tickets to watch the footy,â Panthers Group chief executive Brian Fletcher says.
An image taken from the corresponding Panthers camp taken earlier this year.
This season, BlueBet Stadium had an average home attendance of about 19,000 â in a 22,500-seat stadium. More than 10,000 attended a fan day earlier this week ahead of Sundayâs grand final against Brisbane.
It will be Penrithâs fourth consecutive appearance in the decider as they chase their third consecutive premiership. Winning is good for business. âWeâve made $26 million from football in the last four years,â Fletcher says. âThe previous decade, we lost $50 million out of running the football department. Weâll make a $7 million to $9 million profit this year in merchandise, membership, game-day sponsorshipâŠâ
The Panthers have gone from nearly closing the doors to becoming the most dominant team in Australian sport. You need to look at another code to find a worthy comparison: Richmond won three flags over four seasons between 2017 and 2020 while Hawthorn won three consecutive premierships from 2013 to 2015.
Penrithâs chokehold on the NRL doesnât come about by happenstance, but a clear strategy to make the most of the abundant talent at their fingertips: 24 junior clubs that produced a whopping 8589 players (7378 male, 1211 female) this year.
Some reckon the smartest thing former general manager of football Phil Gould did during his time at Penrith was appointing Cameron as high-performance manager in 2012.
Cameron would never look at it that way, but he quickly realised when he came to Penrith that the children really were their future.
Phil Gould and Anthony Griffin fell out spectacularly before the coach’s departure from Penrith.
âGus was bringing in journeyman players who could do what was needed to win first grade games,â Cameron explains. âBut Jimmy and I were trying to build a team underneath it. The plan was for those two lines to eventually meet. It came together quicker than we thought it would.â
Cameron performed chiropractic work on the pathways, and it had more to do with coaching than players. He met with coach Ivan Cleary and asked, âIf we have a player at 18, what do you want him to look like at 21?â
Instead of fixating on winning junior representative grand finals in the Jersey Flegg (under-21s), SG Ball (under-19s) and Harold Matthews (under-17s) competitions, they became more concerned about using those matches to identify talent.
âWe want to give Ivan ready-made first grade players,â Cameron says. âWe tell junior coaches we want them to coach the team, but this is a multimillion-dollar business. Our level of coaching for the average 17-year-old player is aligned with whatâs going to happen next. We are deeply involved in every aspect in training, selection, recruitment. I feel like we needed to have ownership in the background to produce those players in our system. Weâve got total control.â
Jones has a simpler way of putting it. âLook at our Jersey Flegg team,â he says. âNone of them are overweight.â
The veteran recruiter has been unearthing talent for Penrith for more than three decades.
Isaah Yeo was spotted as a 14-year-old and is a prime example of the Panthers system unearthing hidden gems.Credit: Rhett Wyman
While quality players like Nathan Cleary, Jarome Luai and Stephen Crichton will always stand out from an early age playing for their school or club, the true art of recruitment is unearthing the hidden gems.
He spotted lock Isaah Yeo playing at a Catholic Colleges schoolboys tournament in Parkes. While other officials didnât see much in him when picking teams for selections trials, Jones insisted âthe big No.14â take the field. Yeoâs now the gameâs premier lock-forward.
Jones also brought Dylan Edwards down from Dorrigo, a speck of a town on the NSW Northern Tablelands. He saw the speed and strength in winger Brian Toâo when every other club â and player manager â wouldnât look beyond his lack of height.
Prop Moses Leota was almost discarded because he was turning up late to training. Then Jones found out the teenager was a full-time brickieâs labourer and found him a less exhausting job.
Of course, the club has made errors along the way. Gould moved on Cleary in 2015 to make way for Anthony Griffin, whom Gould re-signed before sacking him in 2018.
When then-chairman Dave OâNeill enticed Cleary back as coach at the end of that year, it set off an important chain reaction.
Jim Jones, legendary Penrith recruiter.Credit: Brook Mitchell
For starters, it ensured his superstar son, Nathan, would be staying at Penrith for far less money than what he could command on the open market.
Clearyâs return also torpedoed Gouldâs negotiations with Wayne Bennett, who might have landed a premiership at Penrith but then likely exited within three years as he did at St George Illawarra, Newcastle and South Sydney.
Penrith were looking for long-term, sustained success and Ivan Cleary was the man who could live and breathe the âbuilt from withinâ mantra.
âBennett couldnât have done a better job, put it that way,â Fletcher laughs, pointing to Clearyâs four grand finals. Cameron puts it this way: âIvanâs a collaboratorâ.
Which brings us to the salary cap, a system that supposedly greases the premiership pole by spreading talent evenly across 18 clubs.
Teams race to the top of the pole with haste, usually by buying the best players on the market. Some will reach the top but eventually shed talent and slide back down the pole. Stay near the top too long and fans will suspect youâre using a helicopter.
Penrith identified at the end of the 2019 season that things had change, both culturally and in terms of a cap imbalance in which players like Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Waqa Blake and Dallin Watene-Zelezniak were considered to be on too much money.
With success comes sacrifice. In 2021, Matt Burton and Kurt Capewell left the club. In 2022, it was hooker Api Koroisau and Viliame Kikau. In 2023, it will be Stephen Crichton and Spencer Leniu.
âIt wouldâve been very easy to keep âKiksâ and âApiâ and others, but then you have a ridiculous amount of money tied up in your top 13 players and a bunch of kids filling up the rest,â Cameron says. âThe reality is, with the kids coming through at the bottom end because of the development system we have, you canât keep them all. Weâll spend $3 million this year on development. Why spend that money if youâre not prepared to bring them through?â
There are several ways to consider the success of that system.
Panthers chief executive of rugby league, Matt CameronCredit: Sydney Morning Herald
Of the 18 players who have left the club in the last three years, 13 of them have signed bigger contracts at other clubs.
Some players leave, like Daine Laurie to the Wests Tigers, but come back as he has for significantly less money.
Some players arenât loved by another club, like Capewell at Cronulla, but he signed with Penrith, became an infinitely better player and then received a massive payday from the Broncos. He will line up against his former teammates in the grand final.
Some players get offered huge sums, like winger Sunia Turuva did to join the Dolphins, but would rather stay and win premierships on the wing.
And many players go the Bulldogs, like Crichton will next year, but talented outside backs like Jesse McLean are next on the production line, ready to step into the void.
But nothing indicates success like those premiership rings, baby, so consider this: 12 of Penrithâs starting 13 players on Sunday made their debuts at the club. The only one who didnât is back-rower Scott Sorensen.
âWithout sounding arrogant, itâs the patience of the board and administration that has made this work,â Cameron says. âI can see how, for some clubs, itâs about getting the next win, but if you look at our first grade team now itâs the result of planning and good development but also senior administrators being patient enough to see what we were trying to do. We have to hold our nerve here. Weâre lucky we have a consistent board and senior management thatâs supported everything weâve done.â
Cameron admits itâs getting harder to solve the riddle, though. Clubs arenât just after big-name players coming off contract but younger players down the line.
Nevertheless, the Panthers are still building their Big Cat Empire.
Nathan and Ivan Cleary are secured to the end 2027 while Yeo, Leota, Edwards, Liam Martin and James Fisher-Harris are all signed long-term. When he finds a new manager, five-eighth Jarome Luai is expected to extend.
After surviving tough days when Penrith looked like it might have to close the doors, Jones isnât ready to go to bed.
âA three-peat would be nice,â he smiles. âWe might even get a free beer.â
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