Gold Coast Titans 2015 Preview

So much has been written this off-season about the Titans' new approach and a re-grouping of the club's luminaries who have vowed to focus on getting everything right. Well take it from me, there are many out there in Titansland who are just a little skeptical about what the new vision will look like. A similar playing roster, a similar management team and a familiar coach, albeit one that has been promoted to become le grande fromage, all bode for a similar outcome. Is this what we can expect from 2015?

After four fruitless years of orchestrating awfully unattractive rugby league, John Cartwright was finally put out of his misery and the axe also fell on The Axe et al. Surprisingly for some, one of the chief architects of the club's woes, majority shareholder Michael Searle, was not discarded but rather swept under the rug from where he is expected to jump out singing Kumbaya as soon as the club shows any hint of a positive form reversal.

In fairness though, the 2014 season did begin well with ex-Coach Cartwright having the team leading the competition for an amazing eight rounds. Even while holding such a lofty position on the league table, every rugby league fan who had witnessed the stumbling, bumbling performances of the team predicted that it would come crumbling, tumbling down. And that it did, to finish in the now-familiar bottom quarter of the ladder.

True fans point towards the last round win against the ‘Dogs as evidence that there is life in the old girl yet and they may be right. However, the aging sheila that finished the season has been replaced by a spritelier bit of fluff for 2015. Gone are nearly 1,000 games of NRL experience and in their places have come some youth and vigor but will it be enough? Probably not for 2015 if the Auckland 9's are any indication but there is increasing evidence that this may just be the platform from which the phoenix can rise.

Things haven't been made any easier with the club, at the time of writing, not having found a naming rights sponsor. That task hasn't been helped by the performances of key personalities within the club. A co-captain getting caught demonstrating his version of 'Wee of the Never Never' and other various alcohol-related misdemeanors have kept the players in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons.

The 2015 forward pack looks more balanced with the aging motors of Luke Bailey and Ash Harrison being replaced by fresher legs. Club stalwart Mark ‘Hands' Minichiello has taken off for the rainier pastures of Hull as has the fragile talent of Albert Kelly, human turnstile Steve Michaels and the underwhelming Maurice Blair. Many were disappointed to farewell Brad Takairangi but the silence was deafening when it was announced that the next big thing Paul Carter was done for DUI, the second time in six months, and de-registered.

The club has staged a mini fight-back of sorts that began with the mid-season heisting of troubled centre James Roberts in 2014. Roberts provided a glimmer of hope in an otherwise dark period for the club. Perhaps that was the turning of the corner for the Titans and it does appear that Coach Henry has backed himself with the snaring of fullback Josh Hoffman, journeyman Eddy Pettybourne, late-bloomer Davin Crampton, live-wire rake Kierran Moseley, young gun backrower Lachlan Burr and the well-credentialed Matt Robinson.

Apart from the acquisition of Hoffman, there has been much fanfare about the development of halfback Kane Elgey and with him are a likely bunch of tyros led by Christian Hazard and Jamal Fogarty.

There can be no doubt that the key to a more successful 2015 will be the efforts of the senior players Nate Myles, Greg Bird and Dave Taylor with the hope that they will each provide a better effort than what they produced in 2014.

WHY THEY CAN WIN IT
In previous seasons the Titans have relied on a siege mentality to keep them on track, yet as 2015 nears it has become clear that Coach Henry is not going down that pathway. Gone are the clichés from the coach as the new master pulls no punches in his assessment of the team's progress.

Since its inception the club has suffered from not having a stable and competitive spine. Titans fans are hoping to see Hoffman, an injury-free Aiden Sezer partnered with Elgey in the halves behind a dynamic Moseley, all leading the charge towards a brighter future but don't hold your breath. Certainly, the forward pack boasting Myles, Bird, Taylor, Luke Douglas, Pettybourne and young guns Ryan James, Robinson and Burr should be enough to pave their way.

WHY THEY WON'T
The antithesis of the young vigorous spine listed above is the stable but predictable ‘old firm' of William Zillman, Daniel Mortimer and Beau Falloon. They could not be accused of turning it up but none would make the starting 13 at any other club. Sezer could be added to that list but has youth on his side and deserves another chance. Coach Henry has his work cut out to either inspire the incumbents to change their ways or to herald-in a new era.

History has a bad habit of repeating itself on the glitter strip. Although the media and the NRL have been very kind in their assessment of the club's front office, there is little doubt that local fans have voted with their feet and where there's smoke there's fire.

Although 2015 will ultimately be judged on the performance of the players, it is unlikely that the club could take another big hit to its credibility as a viable NRL franchise. Already operating from borrowed offices at the local council, renting training facilities from a private school and working from a poorly air-conditioned container is hardly confidence-building in the fickle eyes of the corporate world.

PLAYER TO WATCH... well, COACH
Neil Henry
With a changing roster featuring star players all in non-pivotal positions who don't lead the team around, the 'most influential' vote goes to Neil Henry, the coach. For too long the Titans have been criticized for playing boring, one-dimensional rugby league as compared to the ultra-quick play-the-balls and razzle-dazzle passing that were their trademark. If Henry can rekindle the passion in his team and the Gold Coast community in general then CBus Super Stadium could return to being the fortress that it was.

ROOKIES TO WATCH
Kierran Moseley
All eyes are on Cloncurry dynamo Moseley. His first task is to depose club 2014 player of the year Falloon and then to show that his one top-grade game for Penrith in 2014 wasn't a flash in the pan. Also of particular interest is former Australian Schoolboys' star and 2014 NYC player of the year Elgey. The development of these two players in particular holds the key to the Titans for many years to come.

THE BIG PLAYS
In this article last season, it was predicted that the club's inaugural coach would be ousted. This year the crystal ball suggests that the club worrying the finals in September is as unlikely as Scott Prince publically publishing his tax return … but then again stranger things have happened.

PLAYER MOVEMENTS
Gains - Josh Hoffman (Brisbane), David Hala (Brisbane), Eddy Pettybourne (Wigan), Matt Robsinson (Penrith), Kieran Moseley (Penrith), Ryan Simpkins (Penrith), Lachlan Burr (Canterbury), Davin Crampton (Cairns)
Losses - Luke Bailey (retired), Ashley Harrison (retired), Mark Minichiello (Hull), Albert Kelly (Hull KR), Maurice Blair (Hull KR), Steve Michaels (Hull), Brad Takairangi (Parramatta), Cody Nelson (Parramatta), Luke Page (Canberra), Sam Irwin (Featherstone), Jahrome Hughes (Townsville), Beau Henry (St. George), Tom Kingston (joined army), Paul Carter (de-registered)

Injuries: all players available for Round 1 (at the time of writing)

PREDICTED ROUND 1 LINEUP
1. Josh HOFFMAN
2. David MEAD
3. James ROBERTS
4. Davin CRAMPTON
5. Anthony DON
6. Aiden SEZER
7. Daniel MORTIMER
8. Luke DOUGLAS
9. Beau FALLOON
10. Nate MYLES (c)
11. David TAYLOR
12. Matt ROBINSON
13. Greg BIRD
Interchange: 14. Matt WHITE, 15. Ryan JAMES, 16. Eddy PETTYBOURNE, 17. William ZILLMAN