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As it happened: Storm steamroll Eels to extend remarkable round-one record

Phil Mitchell
Updated ,first published
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Pinned post from 10.29pm on Mar 5, 2026
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Clinical Storm steamroll Eels to extend remarkable round-one record

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Match report: Storm 52, Eels 4

Melbourne have sent an early message that they remain an NRL premiership force, thrashing Parramatta to stretch their round-one win record under coach Craig Bellamy to a 23rd year.

There were question marks on the Storm, missing some key men due to retirement, injury and suspension, but the home side barely skipped a beat as they romped to a 52-4 victory in their Thursday night season-opener.

Two-try fullback Sua Fa’alogo celebrates as the Storm pile on the points on Thursday night.Getty Images

Although they were down on troops, Melbourne’s superstar trio Cameron Munster, Jahrome Hughes and Harry Grant stood up, while prop Stefano Utoikamanu was almost unstoppable, clocking more than 200 run metres.

The Eels looked good for the opening 10 minutes and were first on the scoreboard, with new halves combination Mitchell Moses and Jonah Pezet combining to put Sean Russell across the try line in the fourth minute.

They did that while down a man with J’maine Hopgood sent to the sin bin in the opening minute after his shoulder connected with the head of Alex MacDonald in the fourth tackle of the match, ending the Storm lock’s night.

But with the undermanned Melbourne forward pack making easy ground up the middle, the rest of the match was one-way traffic.

The nine-try romp by the home side inflicted the biggest loss of Eels coach Jason Ryles’s career, usurping the 56-18 margin also by the Storm last year.

Returning after off-season shoulder surgery, halfback Hughes had three try assists while hooker Grant scored two tries darting out of dummy half through sloppy Parramatta defence.

Grant went down midway through the second half and as he limped off the field there were fears of a hamstring injury but the Storm believed it was only a cramp.

Melbourne led 18-4 at half-time but they upped the ante in the second half scoring another six tries.

Electric fullback Sualauvi Fa’alogo, who has taken the place of the retired Ryan Papenhuyzen, bagged two among the haul with his second bringing up the half-century mark.

AAP

Pinned post from 7.39pm on Mar 5, 2026
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Pinned post from 10.29pm on Mar 5, 2026

Clinical Storm steamroll Eels to extend remarkable round-one record

By

Match report: Storm 52, Eels 4

Melbourne have sent an early message that they remain an NRL premiership force, thrashing Parramatta to stretch their round-one win record under coach Craig Bellamy to a 23rd year.

There were question marks on the Storm, missing some key men due to retirement, injury and suspension, but the home side barely skipped a beat as they romped to a 52-4 victory in their Thursday night season-opener.

Two-try fullback Sua Fa’alogo celebrates as the Storm pile on the points on Thursday night.Getty Images

Although they were down on troops, Melbourne’s superstar trio Cameron Munster, Jahrome Hughes and Harry Grant stood up, while prop Stefano Utoikamanu was almost unstoppable, clocking more than 200 run metres.

The Eels looked good for the opening 10 minutes and were first on the scoreboard, with new halves combination Mitchell Moses and Jonah Pezet combining to put Sean Russell across the try line in the fourth minute.

They did that while down a man with J’maine Hopgood sent to the sin bin in the opening minute after his shoulder connected with the head of Alex MacDonald in the fourth tackle of the match, ending the Storm lock’s night.

But with the undermanned Melbourne forward pack making easy ground up the middle, the rest of the match was one-way traffic.

The nine-try romp by the home side inflicted the biggest loss of Eels coach Jason Ryles’s career, usurping the 56-18 margin also by the Storm last year.

Returning after off-season shoulder surgery, halfback Hughes had three try assists while hooker Grant scored two tries darting out of dummy half through sloppy Parramatta defence.

Grant went down midway through the second half and as he limped off the field there were fears of a hamstring injury but the Storm believed it was only a cramp.

Melbourne led 18-4 at half-time but they upped the ante in the second half scoring another six tries.

Electric fullback Sualauvi Fa’alogo, who has taken the place of the retired Ryan Papenhuyzen, bagged two among the haul with his second bringing up the half-century mark.

AAP

Interesting stat

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Melbourne missed 31 tackles (the Eels missed 46) yet conceded only one try, early in the first half. Speaks volumes for how well they scrambled in defence.

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Full-time: Storm 52, Eels 4

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The Storm score 34 unanswered second-half points, after leading 18-4 at half-time, to win 52-4. Who’d have thought Melbourne would win by an even bigger margin than their 56-18 crushing of the Eels in the corresponding match last season. I certainly didn’t!

Storm bring up the half-century

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77 min: Fa’alogo, who Billy Slater says has never looked fitter, scores his second, after a break from fill-in dummy-half Wishart, and the Storm have 50! Meaney converts. Storm 52-4

Magic hands Munster

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67 min: Munster holds on to a terrible pass from dummy-half on the last tackle and puts through a kick that sits up beautifully for Lisati to score. Meaney misses his first kick of the night. Storm 46-4. Meanwhile, it appears Grant’s injury as nothing too serious, but the reigning Golden Boot winner will be rested from the remainder of the match.

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Storm in again

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64 min: Wonderfully instinctive play from fullback Fa’alogo, who chips and regathers to score and get his name on the scoreboard. Meaney converts. Storm 42-4

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Concern for the Storm

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60 min: Harry Grant has left the field with what appears to be a lower leg injury. Unsure of the severity at this stage.

Leo the lion roars

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56 min: Storm centre Moses Leo, a 28-year-old rugby convert from the Shaky Isles, races over for his first NRL try. Meaney nails the difficult kick. Storm 36-4

Moses Leo scores his first NRL try as the Storm pile on the point in the second half.Getty Images
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Harry has a double

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51 min: Grant burrows over from dummy-half to score his second try. Meaney converts. Storm 30-4

Harry Grant scores his second.Getty Images
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