Write them off at your own risk.
Missing 13 regulars and facing a Bulldogs side with momentum, the Brisbane Broncos didn’t just respond—they took control early and never let go, powering to a commanding 32–12 win at Suncorp Stadium, dominating Round 8 of the 2026 Telstra Premiership.
The Pre-Anzac Day battle was setup beautifully with the poignant Anzac pre match ceremony.

From the outset, Brisbane were clear in approach. Composed, direct, and defensively tight, they absorbed early pressure as Canterbury probed the edges—twice shaping for an overlap on the right but failing to pull the trigger.
That hesitation proved costly.
In the 16th minute, Ezra Mam turned pressure into points. A low grubber skidded through the line, Marcelo Montoya misjudged it, and Gehamat Shibasaki pounced. Reynolds converted. 6–0.
Moments later, Brisbane struck again—this time with precision. Mam squared up the line and delivered a clean ball to Josiah Karapani, who cruised through untouched. Two visits, two tries. 10–0.
Territory without reward
The Bulldogs weren’t without chances. They spent extended sets inside Brisbane’s 20, but the final play kept breaking down—passes held, options missed, timing just off. Brisbane’s line speed did the rest, closing space before it could open.
Then came the swing.
At the 28th minute, Harry Hayes was sent to the bin for a trip, and the Broncos immediately capitalised. Reynolds pointed to the posts and stretched the lead to 12–0. It wasn’t just the points—it was the shift. The Bulldogs’ energy dipped, Brisbane’s lifted.
The pressure rolled on.
Deine Mariner produced one of the finishes of the night in the corner—tight space, full control—before turning provider minutes later. Bursting down the right edge, he drew the defence and found Cory Paix backing up inside. 20–0.
By halftime, the gap felt wider than the scoreboard. Brisbane had missed just five tackles despite the reshuffle, and Canterbury—despite their territory—had nothing to show for it.
Mam lights it up
Any hope of a Bulldogs reset after the break lasted barely five minutes.
A broken play turned into brilliance. The ball was batted loose, Mam reacted quickest, scooped it up and launched himself toward the corner—somehow grounding it while staying in play. It was instinct, balance, and confidence in one movement. Reynolds converted. 26–0.
At that point, it was no longer about who would win—but how the game would finish.
A flicker, but no shift
To their credit, the Bulldogs kept turning up.
Matt Burton finally broke through after a midfield surge, and later Lachlan Galvin sliced through off a well-timed lead run to narrow the margin. For a brief stretch, momentum tilted—but never fully turned.
Brisbane absorbed it again.
Even with disruption—Preston Riki sent to the bin and Brendan Piakura forced off—their defensive shape held. Reynolds slowed the game when needed, kicked long, and reset field position. The urgency from Canterbury never quite translated into sustained pressure.
Depth delivers
The final say belonged to Brisbane’s pack.
With Payne Haas absent, Xavier Willison stepped up across the night—and finished it late. Charging onto the ball near the line, he powered through to seal it. It was direct, physical, and symbolic of the performance.
Reynolds added the extras. 32–12.
This wasn’t about possession or territory. It was about execution—and Brisbane nailed the moments that mattered.
The Bulldogs had their chances and left them out there.
The Broncos didn’t.
Short-handed, under pressure, and still in control from start to finish—this wasn’t just a win.
It was a reminder. Count them out at your own risk.
Published 24-April-2026













