24 September 2025

Robbed Raiders highlight unjust NRL format that doesn’t reward consistency

| By Oliver Jacques
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Jed Stuart

Jed Stuart shows his disappointment after the loss to Cronulla. Photo: Jayzie Photography.

So, that’s it. A dodgy call by Ashley Klein goes against us, the players deflate and 31 years of pain continues for Canberra Raiders supporters.

But should an unlucky bounce of the ball in one finals match be able to negate 27 rounds of dominance?

It highlights the folly of a flawed NRL season structure that fails to reward week-in, week-out effort, instead handing its ultimate prize to the team that happens to hit form and remain injury-free for one month of the year.

Canberra has been the best side in the league by a country mile in 2025. We were the pacesetters since March and ended the season having won two more matches than second-placed Melbourne. Unlike our rivals, such as Canterbury-Bankstown, we weren’t aided by a favourable draw and had the best record against other top-eight sides.

That dominance continued for most of their first finals match against the Brisbane Broncos. But a series of contentious decisions in the closing moments led to perhaps the unluckiest defeat in modern memory.

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In the blink of an eye, the Raiders found themselves in the same sudden-death boat as Penrith, a side that finished a full 11 points behind it on the ladder and only limped into the top eight after coming last mid-season.

Exhausted and demoralised after a 94-minute marathon loss, Canberra were rocked by a freak illness to a star player and predictably ended their season against an in-form Cronulla side that had benefited from an extra day’s rest.

As veteran commentator Tim Gavel said, there were still a lot of positives to take out of a stellar season in which some experts predicted they’d win the wooden spoon. But who’s going to remember it?

Even a casual observer of the sport could tell you that Penrith Panthers have won the last four premierships and made the last five grand finals. Can you name the last five minor premiers? I didn’t think so.

The optimists say this young Raiders side will only get better. But the reality is – Penrith apart – a team doesn’t get many genuine shots at winning a premiership in any given era. Nobody can predict how injuries, form and the loss of key players will impact the side in the coming years.

This just underlines the injustice of it all – zero reward for our best overall performance since 1990.

Canberra Raiders

All those wins during the season have counted for little. Photo: Jaye Grieshaber.

The world’s most popular sporting competition, the English Premier League, doesn’t have a final series at all. The minor premiers are the premiers and get all the plaudits. This increases the value of every game during the regular season and properly rewards the side that consistently performs from game one.

In the NRL, a lot of the matches during the home and away rounds barely matter. Penrith could have stayed on holidays until May and still had a shot at being premiers. For the top sides, the only thing that counts is their form in September, and for the sixth year in a row, the Panthers are fortunate enough to go through the final series relatively unscathed by the injuries that have plagued other sides.

While our sport needs a finals series, the NRL should consider a better way to recognise the team that does the hard yards of finishing at the top of the ladder at the end of the season. I assure you, the game as a whole will benefit beyond appeasing the sour grapes of a sore loser.

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Bad reasoning all around.

One call didn’t cost the Raiders the season, they had plenty of chances to ice the game against the Broncos but could not do it and they simply were out played by an enthusiastic in form Sharks (a team not typically known for performing at this time of year).

The NRL is not the EPL, the competition has always involved a final series and crying about not getting the plaudits is just silly. It would be like the competition leader in the EPL three quarters of the way through the season saying “We were the better team for most of the season” after they got run down in the final few weeks.

The NRL is a two stage comp, it’s a simple as that. The more success in the first stage the better the chances are in the second. The Raiders just didn’t take the advantage that they’d earned through the regular season. Hopefully for them they learn the lesson.

Win or lose its a game, its dynamic anything can happen. However what stinks is that the same calls against one team aren’t applier against another team.

Professional fouls havent been called the last two weeks as they have been the rest of the year. Not just in the Raiders game.

Celebrating had never been a send off.

Were going to the bunker more so there is more time to show KFC at the sponsors request.

The reward for finishing top of the ladder is winning the minor premiership you spanner.

Gregg Heldon8:27 am 25 Sep 25

What a whinge.
They are nicknamed the Faiders for nothing. Whether it be in a game or in the finals.
You kept on mentioning Penrith and them being in the finals, but you didn’t actually delve into their investment into juniors and carefully selecting other clubs fringe first graders over the years.
On top of that, you conveniently forgot to mention that, over the last six years, that Penrith have let go more than 17 players with grand final experience that other clubs have snapped up. As well as coaching staff.
Nathan Cleary had two significant injury periods during this time too. With Dylan Edwards having a few periods off for smaller injuries as well. Two of Penriths attacking lynchpins.
I’m amazed that you were paid to write this drivel.

Caleb Wilson8:08 am 25 Sep 25

This just seems to be a lot of whining and sour grapes. The AFL/NRL final 8 system is one of the best playoff systems in the world, precisely because it gives advantages to teams who performed well in the regular season. The Raiders had everything in front of them and didn’t get it done. Yes, it was brutal and controversial to lose to the Broncos the way they did, and then to miss Strange for the eliminator was massively unlucky – but it’s sports – that stuff happens. How do you think the Doggies feel right now? The Raiders still managed to drop two consecutive games at home, where they’d only lost once all year. They just didn’t get it done.

It’s especially ironic to complain about the format when the Raiders’ 2019 Grand Final appearance happened after they finished fourth and upset Melbourne in a Qualifying Final and then beat Souths in Sydney – essentially the exact opposite of what happened this year under the exact same format.

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