Official Thomas Hazelton

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I love Tommy. I think he is brilliant. Love what he brings to the team and the energy he has.

I think he can do better though. Of course this will come with experience but I think he has the potential to break the line on more occasions and I'd like to see him run onto the pill more often with a full head of steam.

He's scored a few tries close to the line and I think if he does give himself more of a run up, he'll score even more.
I agree. Fantastic potential, but definitely still has plenty to learn.

The line break and try-scoring thing was discussed a few pages back. I'd say most of these are from good line running and a nice pass from Cam rather than from busting tackles. I think he goes much better when McInnes is on the field than not, and I reckon there is an effort from Fitz to get them out there together as often as he practically can.
 

Sparkles

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I agree. Fantastic potential, but definitely still has plenty to learn.

The line break and try-scoring thing was discussed a few pages back. I'd say most of these are from good line running and a nice pass from Cam rather than from busting tackles. I think he goes much better when McInnes is on the field than not, and I reckon there is an effort from Fitz to get them out there together as often as he practically can.
Tommy's line running and footwork were an interesting feature right from his first top grade game. Piqued the interest early.

I'm more impressed now with how he's seemingly going from strength to strength. Looks for all money a seasoned first grader with no signs of the higher level taking a toll
 
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With Dale back next year where does Tommy stand in getting a top 17 spot

Locked in, and assuming healthy which given our history this year is no sure thing
  • Toby and Uele as starting props you'd assume
  • Cam at lock / Dale on the bench -or vice versa but hopefully not
  • Williams who's been our best forward
  • That leaves 2 spots on the bench with Hunt, Kaufusi, Hazelton and JC. I will add I'd be interested to see Dykes get the 14 jersey but maybe he'll play for the Jets and develop his skills at 5/8th or fullback ?
I think Fitz has Hunt ahead of Hazelton, and maybe Kaufusi too ?
 

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With Dale back next year where does Tommy stand in getting a top 17 spot

Locked in, and assuming healthy which given our history this year is no sure thing
  • Toby and Uele as starting props you'd assume
  • Cam at lock / Dale on the bench -or vice versa but hopefully not
  • Williams who's been our best forward
  • That leaves 2 spots on the bench with Hunt, Kaufusi, Hazelton and JC. I will add I'd be interested to see Dykes get the 14 jersey but maybe he'll play for the Jets and develop his skills at 5/8th or fullback ?
I think Fitz has Hunt ahead of Hazelton, and maybe Kaufusi too ?
Yeah hard to keep Hunt out if he keeps up his recent form. Consistency has always been his issue though so who knows.
 

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Hunt and Nut if I had the choice. Both big bodies that can provide X factor and Nut has shown he can get thru the work. He has the potential to be a real difference maker.
 
D

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With Dale back next year where does Tommy stand in getting a top 17 spot

Locked in, and assuming healthy which given our history this year is no sure thing
  • Toby and Uele as starting props you'd assume
  • Cam at lock / Dale on the bench -or vice versa but hopefully not
  • Williams who's been our best forward
  • That leaves 2 spots on the bench with Hunt, Kaufusi, Hazelton and JC. I will add I'd be interested to see Dykes get the 14 jersey but maybe he'll play for the Jets and develop his skills at 5/8th or fullback ?
I think Fitz has Hunt ahead of Hazelton, and maybe Kaufusi too ?
Those five are blokes in the team no questions asked.

Imo Fitz picks a healthy Kaufusi ahead of both Hunt and Hazelton, but you could pick between those other two depending on role. Imo Royce is a perfect guy to have on a 4 forward bench because you are going to get maximum intensity in very short bursts.

Minutes is always the #1 stat for me. The coach has access to mountains to analytics, video and full time staff member to interpret it all... and the amount of minutes a guy plays under normal circumstances is the best indicator of what role the coach sees that player filling.
 

HaroldBishop

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Those five are blokes in the team no questions asked.

Imo Fitz picks a healthy Kaufusi ahead of both Hunt and Hazelton, but you could pick between those other two depending on role. Imo Royce is a perfect guy to have on a 4 forward bench because you are going to get maximum intensity in very short bursts.

Minutes is always the #1 stat for me. The coach has access to mountains to analytics, video and full time staff member to interpret it all... and the amount of minutes a guy plays under normal circumstances is the best indicator of what role the coach sees that player filling.
I think one of Hunt/Tommy has to be on the bench regardless of if we have a four forward bench, or not.
 
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I think one of Hunt/Tommy has to be on the bench regardless of if we have a four forward bench, or not.
I agree. It adds a point of difference and intensity that you don't get from the others. If your bench is Cam, Williams and Kaufusi as forwards you've got three guys who are better as workers.

If history has anything to do with it, the conversation is moot as how often do we have our full pack available? If you did, then form is going to play the biggest role in who makes up those final spots.
 
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I think one of Hunt/Tommy has to be on the bench regardless of if we have a four forward bench, or not.
Yeah - that's what I said. One of those guys is #16, and the other might might miss out depending on the preference for that spot. Hasn't been an issue this year really, since they've always had at least 2 missing since about round 4.
 

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Yeah - that's what I said. One of those guys is #16, and the other might might miss out depending on the preference for that spot. Hasn't been an issue this year really, since they've always had at least 2 missing since about round 4.
You said if a four forward bench?
 
D

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You said if a four forward bench?
(I think) what I said was... I reckon Hunt is an ideal 4th forward, but if they play games with 3 forwards and a back/utility, pick between Royce and Tom as the 3rd guy.

If everyone is available (which almost never happens), I guess that means Kaufusi is the 3rd forward and one of those blokes is the 4th forward.

... though I also said in the Talakai thread that if they decided to give up on him as a centre, he'd make a great #17 too.
 
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Everyone loves The Nut


“Get on and play halfback, bring Nicho off”.

That’s what life’s like for Cronulla’s cult hero Tom Hazelton.

Last year a curly-haired, surfer, Dally M-winner called Nicho Hynes was the face of the Shire. This year, it's looking a big, bald prop from Goulburn.

Sharks enforcer Hazelton should be somewhat of an unknown rookie ahead of Saturday's elimination final against the Roosters – having played just 18 NRL games – but when the 24-year-old runs onto Shark Park, Cronulla fans will be screaming his name from the stands.
“I don’t really know where it's [the cult following] come from, it’s got to be the bald head and the tape more than anything,” Hazelton laughed with NRL.com.

“But I love playing here and if me coming on gives the crowd a bit of energy and gives the team a bit of a lift, I'm all for it.

“When I come sit on the bench, the crowd does start going off a bit but all I can think about then is getting onto the field and making an impact when I get out there.
“That side of it is quite funny.”

Just five years ago Hazelton was running around for the Goulburn Bulldogs and looking to start a building apprenticeship.

But after local rugby league legend Gavin Miller convinced Hazelton to trial for the Sharks' Jersey Flegg team, the no-fuss forward began to dream of life as an NRL player.

“Gavin rang up Grant Jones, the recruitment guy here at the time, and they got me a trial. I signed a pre-Christmas contract after that,” Hazelton said.

“I was playing first-grade back home and I got the call up after the trial and I was a bit taken back by it at the start. I always loved playing footy but I never thought of it as something I could do as a career.”

While the fans go crazy for him, Hazelton’s country ways have also rubbed off on his teammates with fellow prop Toby Rudolf enjoying watching the rookie's development this season.
While Rudolf revealed the real secret behind the iconic bald head, he said Hazelton is not only a favourite for the fans but amongst his teammates too.
“He is one of my favourites here at the Sharks, whenever I see him in the morning it’s always an energetic handshake,” Rudolf said.

“I love him because he’s a country boy with a heart of gold.

"But I think the fact that he’s six foot seven, he’s got bald hair and he tapes his head is why everyone gets around him. The fans gravitate towards something different and Tom’s just a whole lot of different.

“He tried to go the hair tablet route and then he looked in the mirror one day and just said ‘this is not me’, so he shaved it off and Fitzy has (Fitzgibbon) loved it ever since.

“He’s put together a very strong first season in the NRL and I don’t think finals will be any different for him.”
Hazelton will take his career full circle when he lines up against Trent Robinson’s Tricolours, the same side he debuted against in Round 12 last year.

Almost 12 months later, the impact prop returned to Cronulla's first-grade side, stringing together 17 games this season and cementing a spot in the team each week.
“After your first game all you want to do is keep playing NRL but we have a really quality forward pack and when you're in a position like I was it’s about opportunity and you never want to see anyone get injured but that's where my opportunities came from,” Hazelton said.

“It didn't happen for me last year but I played the first few rounds in NSW Cup this year and got my opportunity and it's been really good just to string a few games together.

“So I've just got to keep showing up and nine times out of 10 it's just a normal hit up and nothing happens, but I just want to make sure I'm in the right spots at the right time to be there if something does open up.
“His brain, footy wise, is something like I've never seen and the way that he can manipulate a defensive line to create space for me obviously helps a lot as well.

“Nicho will be the real face of the Shire for a long time.”

“I’m lucky we have guys in the forward pack that are really good at either short passing or creating space and then off the back of that you have Nicho.
 

apezza

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I don't really get that first line... is that the fans, at training... a voice in Tommy's head?
"But I always have a laugh when I come off and hear people telling me to get on and bring Nicho off and play halfback."
 

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No wonder he's good
Skilful sportsman

Tom Hazelton’s eyes begin to glisten.

The towering Cronulla prop is looking out over Shark Park, where on Saturday night, the six-foot-six cult-figure will charge into a pack of menacing Roosters.

The Cronulla crowd-favourite, who was scouted by Sharks legend Gavin Miller, then peers towards the end of the ground where the old scoreboard was and points to a patch of grass.

“That’s where Mum and Dad stand every week,’’ Hazelton says.

“They drive two-and-half hours from Goulburn, so they prefer to stand as opposed to sit down for the game before turning around again to drive home.

“I get emotional when I look over, and Dad does too, knowing that he may never have been around to see all this.”

Adrian Hazelton was attached to machines and laying in a helicopter when his only son first laid eyes on him.

Before Cronulla fans knew to chant the name “Hazo” at every game he plays, Hazelton had been driving home from Sharks training in 2018 when he received a panicked phone call from his sister Ellie.

“Dad’s had a massive heart attack,’’ she said.

In his sweaty training gear, Hazelton kept driving from Cronulla to his family’s home town of Goulburn.

To this day, the drive remains a blur of nothingness, a swirl of emotional thoughts, prayers, hopes and dreams.

“I pulled straight into Goulburn hospital and both my sisters (Ellie and Nicola) were there and the helicopter was getting ready to take off for Concord Hospital,” Hazelton said.

“At that moment, it hit me.”

“His blood pressure was 42 over 40. How he was alive, we don’t know.’’

At the time, Hazelton had only just arrived at the Sharks on a training contract.

Yet with his mother, Julie, juggling work in between commuting back and forth from Goulburn to Sydney every day to spend time with Adrian in hospital, Hazelton thought about quitting football to be back around his family.

“I thought, do I just go home?,” Hazelton said.

“But I owed it to her (mum) to have a crack. Knowing what she’d done through that time to support Dad, it would’ve been an easy way out for me to pack it all in.’’

It’s a good thing he did.

It wasn’t only Julie that Hazelton wanted to repay. There was of course, Miller, the Cronulla Immortal.

“If not for Gavin Miller, I don’t know if I would be here,’’ Hazelton said.

“I’d probably still be playing in Goulburn.

“It’s a debt I’ll never be able to repay him.’’

The magnitude of Hazelton being found by Miller, who Matty Johns has praised as the best ball-player of the modern-era, is surpassed only by the fact that the Sharks prop was found at all.

It would be unfair to suggest Hazelton, 24, has come from nowhere to be a key member of the Sharks elimination final forward pack.

But it’s not far off.

Hazelton was a soccer player until he was 15. Incredibly, his first game of rugby league was only nine years ago.

A centre-back mainly for the South Coast Wolves representative soccer team, Hazelton lived and breathed the round-ball game.

Physically capable in the air and skillful with his feet, Hazelton also dabbled as a striker, where he scored three goals for NSW Country at the National Championships in 2012.

His dream was to join the players he would play with and against most weeks, including A-League players Daniel Arzani, Tate Russell and Jake Trew.

“There were a lot of guys I played against that have gone for the Socceroos,” Hazelton said.

“I always wanted to be a soccer player. I never really thought of footy as a career.”

Hazelton was wrangled into playing league by his schoolmates at 15. He began as a centre, before moving to the backrow and then the front-row.

Within three-years of playing his first game of footy, he was being asked to play first grade at the age of 18 for Goulburn, just like Miller.

“I remember I was back home in Goulburn and I watched him play in a junior game,” Miller recalled this week.

“A few friends of mine then said, this guy has been going good all year.

“I thought, god, this young boy might have a role to play at Cronulla.”

With a lump in his throat and pride beating from his chest, Miller presented Hazelton his NRL debut jersey in round 12, 2022, which was ironically against the Roosters.

“I’m so proud of him, I really am,’’ Miller told this masthead.

“He’s repaying me every time I see him on TV. He owes me nothing. I’m just so proud of him.’’

In an era of the game that is suited to chiselled power forwards with quick feet and barrelled chests, Hazelton is a throwback of-sorts with his huge frame delivering three tries and 18 tackle busts in as many games this season.

He is a genuine crowd-pleaser, particularly with his bald head which he straps with black electrical tape, similar to Miller, some 30-years ago.

“It (fan reaction) probably stems from the bald head and the tape,” Hazelton smiles.

“For whatever reason, it does excite people when I do play here at home, which I think gives the team a lift as well.

“But I haven’t done anything special yet. I’m still getting to where I eventually I want to be.

“I’ve found what works for me and I’m just trying to make sure that when I do get on the field, we don’t lose anything.

“I want the staff, the players to trust me enough not to let them down.”

Hazelton’s unorthodox journey to the big time continues in his first finals appearance against the Sydney Roosters on Saturday night.

Among the sold-out 13,000 crowd will be a proud father with tears in his eyes.

You know exactly where he’ll be standing.
 
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