The Sydney Roosters enter the 2026 NRL season in familiar territory — burdened by expectation, driven by ambition, and measured only by premiership contention. For a club that has built its identity on sustained excellence, simply making the finals is never enough. After an eighth-place finish in 2025 that exceeded some predictions but fell short of internal standards, the Roosters now find themselves at a crossroads: talented, deep, and dangerous — yet still incomplete.

The departure of veteran experience at the end of 2024 was expected to leave a dent. Instead, 2025 became a year of surprising resilience. Young forwards such as Naufahu Whyte grew into their roles, while Robert Toia’s emergence added spark and stability out wide. The forward pack proved deeper than anticipated, capable of matching it with the league’s most physical sides.
At the same time, the resurgence of James Tedesco stunned critics. After sliding out of representative favour in recent seasons, the Roosters captain reinvented his game, finding efficiency and balance. His efforts were rewarded with the Dally M Medal, confirming that elite class still runs through Bondi Junction.
Now, the club has added one of the biggest signings of the modern era. Daly Cherry-Evans arrives for what shapes as the final chapter of a decorated 16-season career. His kicking game, composure, and leadership instantly elevate the Roosters’ premiership credentials. With betting markets already placing them among the top contenders, 2026 is shaping as a make-or-break year.
Yet talent alone does not win titles. For the Roosters to transform promise into silverware, five key players must take critical steps forward.
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1. Sam Walker – From Prodigy to Controller

Few young halves in the game possess the natural flair of Sam Walker. Instinctive, creative, and fearless, Walker has the rare ability to see opportunities before they materialize. His pedigree — son of Ben Walker and part of the famous Walker rugby league family — has long earmarked him as a franchise cornerstone.
But 2026 demands evolution.
Walker’s brilliance is unquestioned. The challenge is balance. At times in high-pressure matches, his desire to create can drift into overplaying his hand. Elite halfbacks know when to accelerate a game and when to tighten it. With Cherry-Evans alongside him, Walker has the perfect mentor — but he cannot defer entirely. The Roosters need him to grow into a genuine match controller.
Durability is another factor. Injury interruptions in previous seasons stalled momentum. A full, uninterrupted campaign would allow him to build rhythm, sharpen his long kicking game, and refine his defensive resilience — particularly as opposition sides target him.
If Walker matures into a composed yet still creative leader, the Roosters’ attack could become the most dynamic in the competition.
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2. Brandon Smith – Consistency Over Chaos
Brandon Smith has long been one of the NRL’s most explosive hookers. His energy can swing momentum within minutes. But 2026 must be about control and consistency.
Too often in 2025, Smith’s performances oscillated between match-winning bursts and frustrating lapses in discipline. In a roster stacked with talent, the Roosters cannot afford volatility at dummy-half. They need Smith to sharpen his service, reduce errors, and channel his aggression constructively.

With a forward pack capable of dominating the middle, Smith’s ability to identify when to run and when to distribute will be pivotal. If he stabilizes his output across 80 minutes, the Roosters’ ruck speed could become suffocating.
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3. Naufahu Whyte – Owning the Middle
Emerging as one of 2025’s quiet success stories, Naufahu Whyte demonstrated maturity beyond his years. Yet stepping up is different from sustaining dominance.
The Roosters’ forward depth is immense, but premierships are built on middle control. Whyte must elevate from promising contributor to tone-setting enforcer.
That means stronger post-contact metres, relentless defensive consistency, and the stamina to maintain intensity in finals football.
Against elite packs, middle momentum dictates everything. If Whyte cements himself as a weekly difference-maker, it frees the Roosters’ strike players to flourish.
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4. Joseph Suaalii – Converting Potential into Production
Few players possess the physical gifts of Joseph Suaalii. Size, athleticism, and aerial prowess make him a nightmare for opposition backs.
But 2026 must be the year potential consistently becomes production.
At times in 2025, Suaalii drifted in and out of matches. The Roosters need him imposing himself every week — demanding early ball, contesting high kicks relentlessly, and tightening defensive reads on the edge. With Cherry-Evans’ kicking precision and Walker’s creativity, opportunities will come. Conversion is key.
A fully realized Suaalii adds a dimension few teams can match.
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5. Lindsay Collins – Leading the Pack
Injuries have occasionally disrupted Lindsay Collins’ impact, but when fit, he is among the competition’s premier props.
For the Roosters to surge into premiership territory, Collins must anchor the forward rotation with authority. That means durability, leadership, and imposing physicality against elite opposition. Finals football is brutally attritional. Collins’ ability to dominate early exchanges can define matches.
With Tedesco leading from the back and Cherry-Evans steering the halves, Collins’ voice and presence in the middle complete the spine of leadership.
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The Bigger Picture
The Roosters are not rebuilding. They are reloading. A roster blending youth and experience, flair and structure, gives them as balanced a profile as any contender. But finishing eighth in 2025 exposed inconsistency — lapses in concentration, injury setbacks, and moments of over-eagerness.
Cherry-Evans’ arrival brings calm authority reminiscent of Cooper Cronk’s influence during the club’s previous premiership era. Yet no signing guarantees silverware. Improvement must come from within.
If Walker matures, Smith stabilizes, Whyte dominates, Suaalii produces weekly, and Collins leads with durability, the Roosters will not merely contend — they will intimidate.
Bondi has never settled for mediocrity. In 2026, the standard is clear: anything short of a genuine premiership run will be viewed as underachievement. The pieces are in place. Now, five key players must ensure the promise becomes reality.