The Dolphins: NRL Signings & Analysis

signings and analysis

The Dolphins are putting together their squad for the 2023 NRL season and Jason Oliver is breaking down all of the moves along the way.

Keep up to date with the latest news and signings coming out of Redcliffe and our analysis on it all at The Dolphins Hub.


The Dolphins Top 30 Squad

  • Felise Kaufusi
  • Ray Stone
  • Jesse Bromwich
  • Kenny Bromwich
  • Tom Gilbert
  • JJ Collins
  • Robert Jennings
  • Euan Aitken
  • Jarrod Wallace
  • Sean O’Sullivan
  • Kodi Nikorima
  • Herman Ese’ese
  • Poasa Faamausili
  • Valynce Te Whare
  • Jamayne Isaako
  • Mark Nicholls
  • Isaiya Katoa
  • Jack Bostock (2024)
  • Connelly Lemuelu
  • Edrick Lee
  • Jeremy Marshall-King
  • Brenko Lee
  • Mason Teague
  • Anthony Milford
  • Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow

Feelings So Far

The Dolphins weren’t given much time and perhaps it was all of the rumours of big names being considered early that set expectations too high to start. They’re starting to build the foundations of a decent squad, though. They lack superstar power but with hard-working veterans and some promising young talent, they’re doing well to plan for 2023 while also having an eye on future seasons.

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Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow

If there is one thing that the Dolphins squad is said to have lacked, it’s genuine game-breaking ability. A young firecracker in the backline that can create something out of nothing. While Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow isn’t quite there consistently at NRL level, he arrives at the club with stacks of potential.

His speed is well-known. To turn and beat Josh Addo-Carr to the ball from this spot is incredible.

Offload into space in the middle or send him around the defensive line on the outside and he’s gone. You can see here how quickly he can hit a gap when one presents itself.

It also provides a small hint into the area of Tabuai-Fidow’s game that he will be looking to improve in the coming years: ball playing. A quick tip on would have more than likely seen this action end in points, but he couldn’t quite get himself into a position to release the pass quickly enough.

He’s an exciting prospect. In a backline that will kick off the 2023 NRL season unheralded, Tabuai-Fidow has the potential to cause problems for the defence whether he plays fullback, centre, or on the wing.

Poasa Faamausili

The 26-year-old prop is a relative unknown heading into the 2023 NRL season. He has played 39 first-grade games for the Roosters, Warriors and Dragons, but didn’t feature in first grade in 2022. Instead, he played 19 games for the Dragons NSW Cup side averaging 6.9 hitups and 85 running metres per game.

Failing to crack a Dragons 17 that was hardly bursting at the seams with high-quality middle forwards is somewhat concerning but he is entering the prime years of his career and is the low-risk high-reward player the Dolphins have been pursuing to fill out the roster.

Anthony Milford

We all knew this one was coming…

Like Herman Ese’ese below, the last time Anthony Milford played consistently productive football came under Wayne Bennett at the Broncos and the Dolphins are hoping the supercoach can pull the right strings again.

Milford has struggled for consistency. We’ve seen the odd glimpse of ‘the old Milford’ at times when he has taken the line on or chipped over the top for himself. Perhaps more importantly for a Dolphins side looking for some leadership and organisation in a key playmaking position, Milford did kick well this season and it has long been an underrated part of his game after a rather ineffective start to his NRL halves career with the boot.

One of the keys to assessing Milford’s value to the Dolphins is the expectations we set for him now.

He’s not going to dazzle with his feet like he used to. The left-foot step is still there, but the acceleration isn’t what it was in his prime. Still, if tasked with making the right pass and adding the finishing touches to a shift, Milford can be an effective NRL halfback.

The competition for spots will help. I’d expect Milford to be given the first crack in the halves alongside Sean O’Sullivan. But with Kodi Nikorima waiting in the wings and Isaiya Katoa looking likely to make his NRL debut sooner rather than later, Milford will be under pressure to perform from day one.

Herman Ese’ese

Herman Ese’ese is another low-risk, high-reward signing for the Dolphins. He hasn’t played a lot of first-grade footy since leaving the Knights in 2021 – just 16 NRL games.

He wasn’t able to cement himself in the Gold Coast Titans side. Still, entering what would typically be the prime years of a props career and having played the second half of the NRL season off the bench, Ese’ese can be a productive player. His best years came under Wayne Bennett at the Brisbane Broncos and Dolphins chief executive Terry Reader is backing him to do it again:

“We are excited about what he could do again under our coach Wayne Bennett and are confident he can replicate that form for the Dolphins to become an important part of our pack.”

Kodi Nikorima

Kodi Nikorima has struggled to lock down a consistent role throughout his 160-game NRL career.

Playing predominantly in the halves, he doesn’t have the control of a side you would want in a halfback and his small stature limits his ability to impact a game at five-eighth. Still, he’s a dangerous attacking player and can provide the Dolphins with a spark – something the roster somewhat lacks at the time of writing.

Rugby League Project

Nikorima is a dangerous runner of the football. He used his footwork here to go close to scoring in Round 17. While he didn’t score himself, his scheming run scrambled the line and created the space out wide for Cody Walker to kick into.

The Kiwi international is quick off the mark which has proven to be particularly threatening in his stints at dummy half. With Sean O’Sullivan and Anthony Milford expected to be given the first crack in the halves and Isaiya Katoa an incredible prospect that wouldn’t look out of place making his NRL debut also in the mix, Nikorima appears most likely to fill a utility role off the bench.

Sean O’Sullivan

The most predictable signing of them all has finally been confirmed. Dolphins recruitment boss Peter O’Sullivan is bringing his son, Sean, to the club for 2023.

There is a little bit to dissect here. Right now, O’Sullivan is a bottom-tier halfback in the NRL. He has played 28 career games at the time of writing throughout spells with the Roosters, Broncos, Warriors and Panthers. The 23-year-old has suffered numerous injuries stalling his development which hasn’t help him land a consistent first-grade spot.

However, he made a wise decision by joining the Panthers in 2022. He was always going to struggle to land a first-grade spot but guaranteed himself the five or six games Nathan Cleary will miss due to State of Origin, injury, and as it turns out, suspension at the end of the season. O’Sullivan has spent the year learning from the best halfback in the game and one that possesses the skillset he’s most likely to adopt moving forward.

O’Sullivan is a traditional #7. He’s not a great runner of the ball – again, injuries hurt him here. Breaking the line isn’t his strength. However, he is a halfback that can organise the pack, kick well and act on a game plan. Expect to see a lot of this: Dophins work up the field to just beyond halfway, O’Sullivan hangs one up and lands it 10 metres from the line to give his kick-chase a chance to get there while also forcing the opposition to travel 90 metres to score:

He has orchestrated impressive wins in an under-strength Panthers side this season by executing his simple role within a consistent game plan.

O’Sullivan might lack star power and game-breaking ability, but in a side that is set to struggle in 2023 and one that Wayne Bennett is sure to take a simple approach with, he’s a good fit for what the Dolphins need in the early years.

Jarrod Wallace

Jarrod Wallace has struggled for consistency throughout the 2022 NRL season.

He puts his hand up for the hard carries in yardage and has become a growing threat in attack close to the line at his best, but isn’t the most reliable of prop forwards.

Wallace can move the ball through the middle of the field. Faking a kick return carry before flinging the ball wide became a somewhat regular feature of the Titans attack in 2021. There aren’t too many at the position that can pull it off so often. However, like the Titans overall, Wallace has struggled at times in 2022.

He has displayed enough good moments this year for the Dolphins faithful to be hopeful. His good games are genuinely good and worthy of a starting spot in the front row for 2023. Wallace produces some head-scratchers, though. The Dolphins will be looking for hard work, effort and consistency next season. Wallace doesn’t really fit the profile with what we’ve seen over the last two or three seasons. Still, Bennett has done some incredible things with similar players in the past.

Jeremy Marshall-King

It’s taken a few years to get there. It looked more like a stop-gap option than one for the future at various points over the last few years. However, Jeremy Marshall-King has developed into a fine NRL hooker.

He’s playing career-best football for the Bulldogs at the moment. When the team struggled for points throughout the opening ten rounds of the season, Marshall-King often looked like their only avenue in attack.

Marshall-King recorded four line breaks in 23 games in 2019, four in 20 games in 2020 and one in nine games in 2021. Just 15 games into the 2022 season, the 26-year-old has already recorded a career-high six linebreaks. His four tries this season is also a career-high.

The numbers are nice, but the subtleties to his game a nicer. The genuine hooker-like actions that weren’t there two years ago have been evident throughout 2022. His play here is a prime example.

Marshall-King sees Luciao Leilua get pushed out of the tackle. He’s behind the ball-carrier during the play-the-ball leaving only one at marker. That is always a sign for a hooker to look up and run. With a step to the right before targeting the A defender on the left side, Marshall-King engages the line and tips Matt Burton into half a gap.

It ends with an error but more than the tries, this is the sort of action that suggests Marshall-King is still improving. He’s 26 years old and entering the prime years of his career in a position that develops with experience. This is a great signing for the Dolphins.

Euan Aitken

Once talked about as a possible State of Origin centre option, Euan Aitken has spent the 2022 NRL season playing in the backrow for the Warriors.

The versatility is a positive for Wayne Bennett and the Dolphins who are likely to spend the first few months of the campaign putting pieces together in various ways.

It remains to be seen where on the field he runs out for the Dolphins but Aitken is a solid option in either position. His strengths translate well regardless. He is a stong carrier of the ball with good leg-drive. He pushes through contact and can be a valuable contributor in yardage if he plays in the centres. His new experience on the edge could improve his centre play, too.

Teams are targeting the inside shoulder of the two-in defender more and more. His line-running as a centre provides him with some much-needed variation in attack. While good with the ball in hand, it doesn’t often leave his hands…

At 27-years old and with 148 NRL matches to his name, you know what you’re getting with Aitken. He’s not flashy nor will he single-handedly win games. However, he’s a reliable option for Bennett in year one that can cover multiple positions. That seems to be a trait the Dolphins are looking for at the moment.

Robert Jennings

The Dolphins are looking for reliable performers who have been there and done it all before. He’s not a flashy player who is going to lead the NRL in tries scored any time soon, but Robert Jennings is versatile and provides Wayne Bennett with an option at centre or wing.

At 26 years old and with 65 games of first-grade experience, Jennings is what he is as a player. He’s competent in yardage and can finish well enough in the corner. Jennings made his name while scoring 19 tries for the Rabbitohs in 2018 but has struggled to feature consistently in first grade since then playing 23 games for the Wests Tigers across 2019 and 2020 and only three games for the Panthers in 2021.

Having spent the majority of his time in the Panthers reserve grade side throughout 2022, Jennings has bagged six tries in his ten games at the time of writing while averaging 102 running metres per game. Notably, he has been named in the centres for all ten games.

Experienced, eager for regular first-grade football and a proven performer when put in the right spots out wide, Jennings is a handy pick-up for the Dolphins in 2023.

Edrick Lee

Similar to Jennings, Edrick Lee has shown glimpses throughout his 123-game career but hasn’t been able to break into the first-grade side consistently since scoring a career-high 12 tries in 2018.

Injury has been a curse for the 29-year-old. He has played 15+ games only once since 2016 and missed the entire 2021 NRL season to injury. He has made an admirable return to the first-grade Knights side in 2022 but isn’t the player he once was before the spate of injuries.

Similar to Jennings again, Lee is experienced and eager for regular first-grade football. The Dolphins are in a position to provide these players with an opportunity in the hope one or two of them kick on and perform above expectation. While many will be looking at his try tally when assessing his potential impact on the side in 2023, it’s the yardage numbers that are most appealing. Lee has averaged over 120 metres in his last five NRL seasons. Given the grit and grind style of play Bennett is likely to employ throughout the first season, Lee’s biggest impact is likely to be in yardage, returning kicks, and getting the set off to a strong start.

Lee has looked particularly comfortable under the high ball throughout the year. Given where the Dolphins are likely to start their sets and the pressure the back three will be under, Lee is a strong option here.

It’s a low-risk signing and at the very least provides the Dolphins with depth at the wing position.

Connelly Lemuelu

There have been a few signings that have felt inevitable for a little while and this is one of them.

Connelly Lemuele has played 20 NRL matches throughout his career – 19 at centre and one on the wing. However, he is making the transition into the backrow. It’s not a position he’s likely to crack at the North Queensland Cowboys any time soon so making the move to Redcliffe makes sense.

His yardage numbers at Queensland Cup level aren’t particularly inspiring. He averages only 62 metres per game. However, he has scored two tries and handed out two try assists through five games at the time of writing.

While it’s not a signing that generates a lot of buzz, it’s a good roll of the dice for the Dolphins. Lemuelu is only 23-years old, is definitely versatile, and displayed enough at NRL level to have hope for improvement under Bennett. It’s going to be interesting to see how he develops and whether or not he remains in the forwards or moves back out wide.

JJ Collins

Rugby League Writers provides previews and reviews of all Tweed Seagulls matches so I’ve seen every minute JJ Collins has played in the Hostplus Cup this season. In JJ Collins the Dolphins have signed a powerful ball carrier with an excellent work rate.

The 26-year-old is averaging 133 running metres per game for the Seagulls but what simple yardage numbers don’t show you are the carries to get his side out of trouble. A Collins carry is often the catalyst for a Seagulls shift, too. Whoever the Dolphins name at #9 will have their eyes peeled to dart in behind a strong Collins carry.

Animated GIF

It’s important for the Dolphins to find value and sign top players from Queensland Cup level and they’ve signed one of the best props in the competition here.

Collins has featured 16 times at NRL level but his last game in first grade came in 2019. He returns a better more mature player and is likely to be one of the leaders of the pack in 2023.

Tom Gilbert

The Dolphins have added a first-grade caliber and high upside youngster to their squad for 2022 with the signing of Tom Gilbert.

He has spent the majority of his NRL career on the edge but it won’t be a surprise if Bennett looks to play him in the middle for 2023. The 21-year-old is a powerful and efficient carrier of the ball. Despite averaging only 62 minutes per game on the edge this season, Gilbert is finding 114 running metres – 45 of those metres coming post-contact.

The Cowboys are looking to hit the edges hard with big bodies this year. However, Gilbert looks better suited to prop in most sides. His footwork and ball-playing is limited when you put him up against the likes of Kenny Bromwich, but he is quick enough that he can cause some real damage in the centre-third. Gilbert played four games starting at prop throughout 2021 averaging 100.3 running metres in only 54 minutes per game.

“He’s got an engine that just don’t quit and he’s mobile enough to play on an edge or through the middle. He gives me big Paul Gallen / Liam Martin vibes and I can’t wait to see what Wayne Bennett does with him next year.” Heads In! – Round 8 NRL Preview

Whether it be on the edge or in the middle, Gilbert fits the bill as a hard-working forward which is exactly what Bennett appears to be after in the early years.

Isaiya Katoa

The Dolphins have bucked the trend and signed youngster Isaiya Katoa from the Penrith Panthers.

Penrith isn’t happy about it. CEO Brian Fletcher kicked off about other clubs poaching their juniors as though they’ve not just won a premiership on the back of… yes, their juniors. But from a Dolphins perspective, the fact he is so annoyed may speak volumes about Katoa’s quality.

There isn’t a lot to go on at the moment. He has scored two tries in two games at halfback for the Panthers SG Ball side so far this season and NSWRL have put together a little highlights package.

But that’s just it…a highlights package. We can only glean so much about his positives and negatives from a video displaying only positives. The big positive for me though is his willingness and ability to engage the line. He’s a big body in the U-19’s competition and uses it here to drag in two defenders by taking three steps forward before putting a teammate through a gap.

Animated GIF

The simplicity and calculation is really good to see.

It’s not going to translate into the NRL anytime soon but the signs are encouraging. Assuming he will begin his Dolphins career as a backup half in 2023, this is a good, low-risk, high-reward signing for the club.

Kenny Bromwich

Sticking with the over 30 years old former Melbourne Storm player theme, Kenny Bromwich is following his brother Jesse to the Dolphins for the 2023 NRL season. It’s a signing that has been expected for a few weeks now.

Bromwich is another solid player for Wayne Bennett to work with. Like his brother, Felise Kaufusi and Mark Nicholls, Kenny isn’t particularly flashy. Skillful, but he’s not going to offer too much creativity on his own. Unlike the more destructive backrowers in the competition, Bromwich needs the work to be done inside him before being his most effective. However, if the Dolphins can do that work, they have a versatile edge player to run the left edge attack through.

Kenny knows how to time his run, hit a hole, has the skills to release the ball, and knows when to hold it himself.

Melbourne Storm try NRL 2021

The above try is a good example of how Bromwich isn’t a reason for this try being scored, but he’s in the right position and makes the correct decision to ensure that Melbourne claim the four points.

Nicho Hynes drifting out to engage Daly Cherry Evans is the start but Justin Olam’s gravity is what opens things up for Bromwich. As one of the most destructive ball-carriers in the game close to the line, Olam makes a line for Cherry-Evans’ outside shoulder. That forces Morgan Harper to hold his slide for just long enough, and with Bromwich running a nice line to engage Jason Saab, Melbourne have a two-v-one opportunity out wide. Saab waits too long for Harper to catch up to the play and Bromwich slides over.

Kenny Bromwich Melbourne Storm

Bromwich is a very smart footy player. He’s a decent defender and knows how to weigh up and attacking situation out wide to find points. But, again, the positions he is put into by his pack and spine is paramount to him being effective.

He’s a good addition right now. Age is again a slight concern but adding a premiership winner and Kiwi international who still has a lot of good footy to play can’t ever be called a bad signing. Just how good will depend on the key playmakers the Dolphins add and how well they perform in 2023.

Mark Nicholls

This is undoubtedly a ‘one of Wayne’s guys’ signing.

Wayne Bennett got more out of Mark Nicholls in 2021 than anybody ever expected and will back himself to do the same in Redcliffe. As with every Dolphins signing at the moment, most of the questions surround his age. He will kick off the 2023 NRL season as a 33-year-old.

Nicholls fits the general theme of the forward pack at the moment: Consistent, hard-working, no-frills and a little bit on the older side.

“Mark is a hard-working, no-nonsense type of forward that will fit straight into the Dolphins squad.”

Dolphins’ CEO Terry Reader

He’s a lot more mobile than most expect when looking at his 194cm and 104kg frame. Getting up and down and into position isn’t a problem for the big man. But Nicholls isn’t going to move the ball across the field and present as a ball-playing option. He threw just two offloads in 27 games last season. However, he can be relied on early in the set to have averaged 113 running metres per game in 2021.

He’s active, too. Spencer Leniu was the only player in the competition with a higher run rate than Nicholls’ 15.71% according to Rugby League Eye Test. While he won’t set the world on fire, Nicholls will rip in whenever he is on the field and provide the carries the key playmakers need to manufacture points.

As with the Bromwich addition, it appears as though the Dolphins are looking to lay the foundations in their first year or two while developing young forwards or pouncing on free agents when they become available.

Jesse Bromwich

Now this is a signing to get excited about.

Jesse Bromwich is one of the most consistent props in the NRL. He’s fantastic in defence, his inside pressure is still up there with the most active in the competition, and he has still managed to run for over 100 metres per game in each of his last nine seasons.

It’s worth noting that Bromwich will be 34-years-old roughly halfway through the 2023 NRL season. However, it’s also worth noting that the Kiwi international has played 19+ games every year since 2011 and 24+ games in seven of those seasons.

He’s reliable both in his production and availability. Should he play a similar role to what 33-year-old Jared Waerea-Hargreaves is playing at the Sydney Roosters right now, the Dolphins will have their leader in the middle of the field and an old head to help bring through the next generation.

His yardage has declined in recent seasons which isn’t unexpected for a player now into his 30’s. Although, so have his minutes. While the reduction in minutes could also be down to his age, the fact Melbourne has played with the best middle rotation in the NRL may also have something to do with it.

SeasonMinutes per GameRunning Metres per GameRunning Metres per Minute
201355.23126.52.29
201454.67152.72.79
201562.69158.22.52
201659.26147.82.49
201750.741262.48
201847.11202.55
201949.261262.56
202048.41122.31
2021471002.13

It looks as though the Dolphins are trying to pad their roster with reliable veterans to lay the foundations early on. Few expect them to compete on the field across the first season or two, but the likes of Bromwich can ensure they make great strides off the field in those times. Talk of “culture” and all of those other buzz words are often overstated. It’s no surprise that the best performing teams in the competition have the best culture. Winning creates that culture. However, it is part of every club and the decision-makers in Redcliffe are clearly considering it when putting pen to paper.

Jamayne Isaako

It’s one of the more predictable signings so far but Jamayne Isaako is locked in for 2023.

The Dolphins will be hoping this version of the Kiwi international turns up to Redcliffe in 12 months time:

Jamayne Isaako

The 201 match-winner perfectly captures the best version of Isaako in one play: The kicking option, the acceleration through two defenders, the step to leave a defender flailing and the speed to finish it all off and score.

The problem is, however, those individual moments of brilliance have been few and far between over the last two seasons. Admittedly, he has played in some poor Brisbane Broncos teams over that period, but it needs to be said that he contributed to some of those bad performances.

What is encouraging is Isaako has played his best football under Wayne Bennett. While it’s no guarantee that being in the same room as Bennett turns Isaako back into the point-scoring machine he was back in 2018 while scoring 25 tries and kicking 97 goals across 25 matches, it’s an encouraging start.

The Dolphins are looking for value, youth and experience. If Isaako plays out most of the 2022 NRL season with the Broncos, he will turn up to Redcliffe at 26-years-old with close to 100 games of first-grade experience. His recent dip in form, the lure of remaining in Brisbane and security of a three-year deal through to the end of 2025 more than likely played a part in The Dolphins securing a relatively cap-friendly deal too.

Again, it’s not the A+ signing the Dolphins need to make a splash but it’s another solid addition to a team that will consider a solid 2023 NRL season a significant achievement.

Valynce Te Whare

In what is likely to be a signing that came from Peter O’Sullivan’s notebook when he joined The Dolphins from the New Zealand Warriors, Valynce Te Whare is a name few will have heard of before now. There isn’t a lot to go on and vision available online is limited.

A big unit at 183cm and 104kg, the 21-year-old won’t look out of place on the wing in an NRL team. It’s difficult to get a feel for his willingness to carry the ball into contact but it’s clear in the minimal vision we have of him playing rugby union for Waikato that he has speed to burn.

He wasn’t asked to do much to score this one but you can see his acceleration into open space.

Valynce Te Whare Dolphins

It will be interesting to see how he is integrated into the code. Perhaps he spends the 2022 season playing in Queensland Cup with Wayne Bennett in his ear offering some advice?

He looks the part physically and must have caught the eye of somebody at The Dolphins to be given this opportunity relatively untested.

Update: Valynce Te Whare has continued a meteoric rise in rugby league after being named the best centre in the Hostplus Cup today.

Ray Stone

The Dolphins have signed “one of the hardest hitters in the NRL” in Ray Stone.

He’s not the sort of big-name signing the club will have hoped to announce second but he’s the sort of player they should be targeting. At 24-years-old Stone will enter the prime years of his career when he hits Redcliffe. He has experience at hooker and lock which will provide coach Wayne Bennett with some much-needed utility value.

Stone is yet to carve out a consistent role in first grade. He was provided with an opportunity to start at hooker throughout Week 1 and 2 of the 2021 NRL Finals series, and while he played well enough in patches, he really struggled towards the back end of games with his execution from dummy half suffering.

The 2023 season is likely to be one of experimentation and plugging holes and Stone fits the bill. An ideal #14 or serviceable lock forward given his defensive strength and ball-playing ability, expect to see him feature heavily in 2023.

Felise Kaufusi

Of all the names floating around as potential marquee signings for The Dolphins, Felise Kaufusi isn’t the one that will have inspired a wave of season memberships for the 2023 NRL season. However, he’s an experienced head playing under a coach he has had previous success and is very much a does-what-it-says-on-the-tin addition.

Kaufusi has his flaws. He isn’t a game-breaker that will put the team on his back throughout difficult periods of a match. If anything, he goes missing but it isn’t a trait often mentioned given the players he is surrounded by at the Melbourne Storm. Kaufusi doesn’t need to do much more than is asked of him which is typically to hold up his side of the field defensively and provide his halves with an option at the line in attack.

It looks simple – it is, really – but Kaufusi will time his run to push and pull the defensive line around all day, just as he did in this Storm try back in Round 24:

Felise Kaufusi Dolphins

While the 29-year-old isn’t going to feature in many highlights across the opening season, he’s a player Bennett clearly trusts. The super coach inspires otherworldly performances out of the unlikeliest of players and Kaufusi is the sort that will complete the role – however limited and bland it might be from the outside – Bennett prescribes him.

It’s not a sexy signing. I’m not sure it’s particularly good. But it’s one that can exceed expectations if Bennett works his magic.

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