‘Game has certainly changed’: Storm make key adjustments for battling Bulldogs

As two National Rugby League sides prepare for a rare Sydney-based faceoff this Friday night, a Melbourne Storm prop has highlighted striking parallels between his club’s catastrophic early-season losing run and the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs’ current five-game losing skid.

For five consecutive seasons, this fixture has been hosted at Melbourne’s AAMI Park, but this week will mark the first time since 2021 that the two teams will take the field at Sydney’s Accor Stadium. Both squads will be missing key core players, who are sidelined for State of Origin representative duty, creating an unpredictable edge to the matchup.

The Bulldogs have plummeted down the ladder in recent weeks, dropping every match since their standout upset win over the league-leading Penrith Panthers in Round 6. For Melbourne, by contrast, a pair of back-to-back wins over the Wests Tigers and Parramatta Eels have pulled the club out of a historic seven-game losing streak that left many long-time Storm fans stunned.

With the season fast approaching its halfway mark, the loser of this Friday’s contest will slip into the competition’s bottom four. For Canterbury, the pressure is particularly intense: the side has failed to break the 20-point barrier in four straight outings, even with Melbourne set to be without star spine players Cameron Munster and Harry Grant for the clash.

Speaking to reporters ahead of the game, Storm prop Josh King, a key part of Melbourne’s recent turnaround, drew clear comparisons between the two sides’ current and past form slumps. “I haven’t watched too much of them this year, but it looks a lot like us,” King explained. “I’m still really confident – and I have been really confident – in our team, but we’ve struggled in a few areas in the game. I assume they’ve been working on different things and trying to figure it out, so I’m expecting nothing less than a really competitive game and for them to come out firing because they’re quite a physical team.”

After their unprecedented seven-game losing run, Craig Bellamy’s Melbourne side has begun showing glimpses of the form that carried the club to back-to-back NRL grand finals over the past two seasons. Though they currently sit in 13th place on the ladder, the Storm have yet to take their scheduled bye this season, and are still adapting to sweeping changes to referee rule interpretations that have reshaped the look of top-flight rugby league in 2024.

King noted that the back-to-back wins have done more than just lift the club up the ladder – they have injected much-needed confidence into Melbourne’s younger playing group, many of whom had not experienced consistent winning results at the top level before this run.

“It’s nice getting back in the winners’ circle,” King said. “In the overall season, we’re still not going too great with the start of the year that we had, but two wins on the trot gives some belief to the younger guys who probably haven’t experienced much winning in the past with the team.”

The Storm veteran added that subtle tactical and focus adjustments over the past fortnight have been the driving force behind the club’s recent improvement, after the side struggled to adapt to the new-look game under updated referee guidelines. “We’ve changed a few things in the last couple of weeks and shifted our focus to a few different areas, and I think that’s really worked for us and been really helpful,” he said. “There has been a growing period and understanding that the rules aren’t too different, but the game has certainly changed. In the last 12 months you can definitely feel it on the field and the influence that the referees have on the game. Adjusting to a few of those things and getting back to our old ways has helped.”

King also pointed out that integrating new playing personnel and building new combinations forced the club to reset and rebuild their core on-field foundations, a process that is finally starting to deliver results after a rocky start to the campaign. “We probably didn’t realise that getting a few new players and a few different combinations meant we needed to get back to our foundations and strengthen those up a little bit. I think we’ve had a bit of success with that in the past few weeks,” he added.