Keiron Cunningham is now faced with the biggest test of his coaching career.
For how much longer can he continue to hope Walsh will return to form before he is forced to pull him out of the game?Recently I supported his decision to criticise Walsh's teammates for not
"protecting him enough". That was the
smart call. But right now there are guys wearing the Red Vee who are busting their gut in heroic fashion (Walmsley, Roby, Savelio and Percy I thought were magnificent tonight) whilst Luke Walsh is costing
three tries per game. These guys might be closer than most in the everyday workplace. But it won't take long watching opposition players race through huge gaps for scores before
"workplace shirkers" become as disliked at Saints as they are in all other forms of employment.
No side can afford to give the opponent 12-14 points in a Grand Final. I have enormous sympathy for Walsh because he suffered a terrible injury. But if Cunningham thought he could simply "run it off" in three or four games he's badly wrong. It could be that he may NEVER fully recover.
Further exacerbating the situation is the fact that Travis Burns, who must be one of the fiercest I'll-die-before-I-quit competitors I've seen in a Saints shirt in four decades, no longer possesses the acceleration he had circa five years ago.
The crazy thing is if anyone had said at the start of the season that Saints' most effective halfback would be JON WILKIN they'd likely be laughed at. But it's only too true. Is Walsh a better player when fully fit? I don't think anyone would disagree. But he's not. Moreover he won't be for some time. If at all.
Which means Cunningham is now between a rock and a hard place. And that was before losing two of the most dangerous back row forwards in the league to what seem like long-term injuries (after both just
came back from long-term injuries). Never rains but it pours...