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The Dolphins arrived at Round 11 of the 2026 NRL Telstra Premiership with questions still hovering after an inconsistent opening stretch. They left Suncorp Stadium looking every bit like a side capable of doing genuine damage this season.
Kristian Woolf’s men overwhelmed South Sydney 32-10 in Friday night’s Magic Round clash, producing a performance built on control, brutality through the middle and the kind of calm attacking precision that is starting to make this side feel increasingly dangerous.
For long stretches, Wayne Bennett’s Rabbitohs barely got a look in.
The Dolphins were quicker, sharper, more disciplined and far more clinical, turning a high-stakes Brisbane showdown into an Origin audition tape for half a dozen players in red.
And while South Sydney found a pulse late, the result never truly felt in doubt.
Dolphins Turn Pressure Into Pain
This wasn’t a track meet from the outset.
The opening exchanges were frantic, both sides threatening without landing the knockout punch, but the Dolphins were already asking more questions.
Jamayne Isaako’s penalty goal in the 13th minute gave them first points, but more importantly reflected the territorial squeeze beginning to tighten.
Then the floodgates cracked.
Selwyn Cobbo finished a slick left-edge movement in the 17th minute after Isaiya Katoa’s sharp game management and Kodi Nikorima’s composure under pressure opened the Rabbitohs up.
It was the sort of sequence that had Cooper Cronk purring in commentary, and for good reason.
Katoa’s fingerprints were all over the build-up, reading the game a beat quicker than everyone else.
Then came the play that screamed Origin.
With attention fixed on the shape outside him, Max Plath simply straightened, pinned his ears back and charged through the middle in the 25th minute like a bloke who had somewhere urgent to be.
No trickery. No overcomplication. Just aggression.
That was South Sydney’s warning.
They didn’t heed it.
Five minutes later, Nikorima held the ball beautifully, froze the defence with a double pump and released Herbie Farnworth for another.
At 20-0 before halftime, this was getting ugly.
And honestly, it could have been worse.
Cobbo nearly created another right on the siren with a break and grubber that only just escaped Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow in greasy conditions.
The Real Story Was The Middle
The flashy moments will make the social clips.
The real damage happened in the grind.
Max Plath and the Dolphins’ middle unit gave South Sydney absolutely nothing clean.
The line speed was aggressive without being reckless. Contact was dominant. Kick pressure was relentless.
For Dolphins supporters, this may have been the most pleasing part.
This team has always looked capable of points.
The question has been whether they can control quality opposition when momentum swings.
Friday offered a compelling answer.
Souths Threaten, Dolphins Respond
The one genuine concern came early in the second half.
Kodi Nikorima, arguably the best player on the park to that point, limped off with a hamstring injury.
That mattered.
He’d already created chaos with his speed, decision-making and deception around the ruck.
Without him, the game shifted.
Not immediately.
Jack Bostock powered over in the 56th minute, brushing through defensive traffic with the kind of authority that won’t have gone unnoticed south of the Tweed.
At 26-0, done and dusted.
Except South Sydney finally woke up.
Bayleigh Bentley-Hape finished a slick movement in the 63rd minute after Cody Walker and Latrell Mitchell combined, before Euan Aitken crossed five minutes later after Ashton Ward sliced through.
Suddenly it was 26-10.
The crowd stirred.
The Rabbitohs had life.
This is where immature teams wobble.
The Dolphins didn’t.
They reset, tightened their defence, strangled field position again and waited for their moment.
Then Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow delivered the dagger.
The Hammer’s late solo try was equal parts electricity and inevitability.
Once he hit open grass, everybody knew the race was over.
Origin Talking Points Everywhere
This was basically a selection meeting in boots.
Plath was immense and looks every inch a Queensland utility forward.
Cobbo has dragged himself back into Maroons calculations.
Bostock keeps building a compelling case as a Blues bolter.
Tabuai-Fidow remains automatic.
Katoa again looked like a long-term representative-quality playmaker, controlling the early tempo with maturity beyond his years.
For South Sydney, the immediate talking point was Latrell Mitchell, who finished the night on the bench after appearing in discomfort late. Bennett later downplayed the concern.
Wayne Bennett downplayed it post-match, but Blues watchers will be paying close attention.
This Dolphins Side Feels Different
Three straight wins.
Just 22 points conceded across that stretch.
A side that once looked vulnerable suddenly resembles one capable of doing real damage.
The Dolphins are no longer just entertaining.
They’re becoming efficient.
And that’s a much scarier proposition for the rest of the competition.
Published 15-May-2026
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