Chat won`t bother Cronk: Smith

Chat won`t bother Cronk: Smith

30.09.2008
SUSPENDED skipper Cameron Smith warned Manly to target Melbourne half-back Cooper Cronk at their own peril in Sunday`s NRL grand final.

The Sea Eagles are reportedly planning to verbally attack Cronk, who has replaced Smith in the captaincy role, in the hope of unsettling the No.7.

With Smith`s replacement, Russell Aitken, very inexperienced at hooker, the Sea Eagles see Cronk as the Storm`s main playmaker and hope to put him under extra pressure.

They believed the game plan had some success in the teams` last meeting, in round 22, which Melbourne won 16-10.

But Smith remembers the game differently and believes Cronk will remain as focused as ever.

“Manly have come out and said they put him off his game last time we played them, but I find that a little bit strange,” Smith said.

“I thought he was probably one of the best players on the paddock last time.

“He scored a try himself and set one up for us and I thought he was close to man of the match.”

Cronk appeared to relish the extra responsibility of captaining the Storm and steered the side around the park with aplomb.

Smith said the half-back, who has played two Tests for Australia, was a leader with or without the captaincy.

“He`s a leader on the field every time he goes out there without having a `c` next to his name.

“I didn`t think he did too much different to what he does every other week. Obviously he tossed the coin and led the boys out but Coops is a natural leader.”

He said Cronk reminded him of himself a few years ago, with his ability to fire up on the field, but Smith had become more of a “calming effect” on his team.

“He`s probably a lot more angrier than I am,” Smith said when asked about their captaincy styles.

“Craig (Bellamy) asked me to change my ways a little bit a few years ago and that`s what I had to fix but Coops has sort of taken over that role now where he`s the angry man on the field and I`m sort of the calming effect on the team.

“When we`re both out there it balances out but he has to juggle that now, being out there by himself.”

There were question marks about how the Storm would perform without their leader, who has a massive impact each game in both attack and defence.


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But Smith said he was always confident the team would succeed in his absence, and that Aitken could handle the role.

Aitken, a former Australian schoolboy star, gave good service at dummy-half and replicated Smith`s usual tackle tally, making 37 which was only topped in the side by tackling machine Dallas Johnson.

“I was always confident they were going to have a strong game,” Smith said.

“Obviously people were asking me whether Russell Aitken was up to the job.

“I always believed Russ was good enough. I`ve had big wraps on him ever since he come to our club.”

AAP

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  • Katie Milligan opens up in first in-depth interview
  • People should "accept her decision" to stand by Bird
  • Considers herself an intelligent person

KATIE Milligan, the girlfriend of NRL star Greg Bird, has opened up about their relationship and the alleged glassing attack that left her with prominent scarring to one eye.

In her first in-depth interview since the incident on August 24, Ms Milligan has told The Daily Telegraph that people "may never know" exactly what happened and they will have to accept her decision to stand by the Sharks five eighth.

"I can say with complete certainty that I consider myself an intelligent person. I wouldn`t stand by and support somebody who would ever have intentionally hurt me or in the future have the potential to hurt me," she said.

"And if that`s not enough for people, I know that`s enough for me in my heart."

In the extensive interview, to be published in tomorrow`s Daily Telegraph, Ms Milligan reveals more details about what happened on the night Bird allegedly glassed her.

Bird, 24, is charged with maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm on Ms Milligan, also 24, during an argument in his beachfront Cronulla apartment.

He has pleaded not guilty but an apprehended violence order was put in place by police for Ms Milligan`s protection, ordering him not to approach or contact her.

For legal reasons, Ms Milligan cannot talk about the incident, but she has revealed that contrary to reports, neither she or Bird were intoxicated.

"People think it was the result of an all-night bender but that`s not what happened at all," she said.

In her interview, Ms Milligan also explains how she came to the decision to leave her family behind in New York to study law in Sydney and pursue her romance with Bird.

"We had an instant connection," she said.

"When Greg initially mentioned the possibility of me moving I thought I couldn`t because I had planned to move to California to go to law school.

"But when I went home (after visiting him in Sydney) I just felt like I wasn`t the same.

"I`m still not the same when I`m not with him. It seriously was like a part of me was missing and I`ve never felt that way before about anybody before."

Ms Milligan said the AVO conditions have been especially tough, given that she moved to Australia to be with Bird.

"It`s hard because...I took a huge leap of faith coming over here and the decision to do that was hard enough on its own. To now have people questioning my reasons for staying here, that`s definitely been a challenge," she said.

"I just have to do what I think is right and that`s standing by Greg because he`s already been tried in the court of public opinion and I don`t think that`s fair."

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