“I remember sitting in the pub watching the finals and thinking to myself, ‘I wish I was playing’,” Brooks told this masthead.
“Watching [good friends] ‘Teddy’ [James Tedesco] and Mitch [Moses] go on to play finals football definitely motivated me more to try and do the same thing.
“The day we lost to Cronulla in the final round in 2019, we had to win to make the finals, I was in the sheds and thinking to myself after full-time, ‘Will this ever happen?’ Being so close and not being able to get through, it was such a bad feeling.
“But this is why I came to Manly. Look at this side. It’s a quality team with strike all over the park.”
Brooks spent 11 seasons at the Tigers before deciding to quit and join the Sea Eagles. He was given a $1000 barbecue as a parting gift. He had borne the brunt of fans’ frustrations, mainly because of his pay packet and lack of consistency, which was perceived as a main reason the Tigers had failed end their September drought.
Bulldogs football manager Phil Gould revealed this year he was one person who convinced Brooks to try his luck elsewhere. Gould will hope he does not regret convincing Brooks to head to the northern beaches come 6pm on Sunday.
“I applauded his decision to change clubs; I actually had a conversation with him during that period and I said, ’Look, you need to look after yourself now, you’ve done your best for the Tigers, you’ve stayed loyal when others haven’t,” Gould said on his Six Tackles with Gus podcast.
“It was probably time for him to look after himself and I think the Manly opportunity is a really good one for him. I’m certainly cheering for Luke Brooks … I want him to do well.”
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Mick Potter – now an assistant coach at the Bulldogs – was the man who handed Brooks his Tigers debut, and is proud of the playmaker’s perseverance. Potter won two premierships with the Bulldogs, lost two with the Dragons, and knows those big September games are the ones that stay in a player’s memories long after retirement.
“I couldn’t be happier for Brooksy, and he is one of the nicest young men I’ve met – he’s humble, competitive, he’s done well for Manly, but I hope he doesn’t perform well on Sunday,” Potter said.
“He has that left-foot step, and he’s a dangerous player. I know we’ll be on our toes because of the danger he presents to us.
“There won’t be too many nerves for him. He’s played well over 200 games. This will be another game for him.”
Brooks has performed well under pressure and in front of big crowds, including his 200th match at a heaving Leichhardt Oval last year, a 79th-minute field-goal winner against South Sydney in 2022, and the night he kick-started Magic Round in style with an excellent running display against the Knights in 2021.
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