Quote ="lefty goldblatt"Using St Helens as a barometer, from a similar era, compare and contrast the Wire names I've mentioned, to their 96 CCW side
Prescott
Arnold
Hammond
Pickavance
Booth
Northey
Leatham
Now, in my opinion, only Penny and Prescott are comparable in ability. The Wire lads were much better, pound for pound. Just a pity that the core of our good/great players were gone/going (Davies, Shelford, Ellis, Phillips, Bateman, Mackey), but the Saints lad's learnt alongside Perrillini, Goulding, Gibbs, Newlove, Sullivan, Cunningham.
Timing in sport means a great deal.'"
I'd put Cunningham in the top list as he was a Saints home grown 20 year old in 1996, and you could take Hammond out as he was signed from Widnes.
But I agree that if you had a choice of our group of players coming through: Sculthorpe, Harris, Hilton, Wainwright, Roper, Penny, Knott, Stevens or theirs even with Cunningham, you would take ours.
Actually I don't think that those other Saints players really developed by learning from the big guns that Saints had. Apart from Prescott and Cunningham, those Saints lads largely disappeared. Penny, Hilton, Wainwright and Knott had better SL careers than Arnold, Pickavance, Booth, Northey and Leatham. Those Saints lads didn't learn how to be great players from the quality senior players around them, it was more like them being carried by the big guns for a season or two then getting moved on for not being up to standard. It was later on that Saints started to produce more real quality, with Wellens, Graham, Roby and Eastmond.
Karle Hammond was an odd case. I thought he looked like a real talent in his early years. He was both a playmaker and a grafter who worked hard. He got pushed out by Saints signing Sculthorpe, but he was still a good player at London Broncos. I remember us being linked with him for 2001 and thinking he'd be a good signing. But he went back to Widnes, got injured, and then disillusioned with the game.