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Simply The Best: Second-rower poll down to final four

Every rugby league team needs hard-working second-rowers but which two players have been the best of the past 30 years?

NRL.com recently launched the search for the Simply The Best players from 1990 to now to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the iconic Tina Turner promotional campaign, which was again featured in this year's advertisement for the Telstra Premiership, and is calling on the fans to have their say.

You can no longer vote via the poll in this article – we have trimmed the 10 candidates down to the four frontrunners with two head-to-head polls on the official NRL Instagram and Facebook accounts deciding once and for all which two second-rowers are Simply The Best.

It's down to Gorden Tallis v Sonny Bill Williams and Steven Menzies v Nathan Hindmarsh. Get voting.

The NRL.com newsroom initially narrowed the race to be the best second-rower to a shortlist of 10.

There have been so many talented performers in the back row during the past three decades that we could not squeeze them all into the shortlist, including dual international Brad Thorn, Raiders legend David Furner, Queensland trio Matt Gillett, Gavin Cooper and Gary Larson, Souths stalwart John Sutton and former internationals Adam Muir, Simon Mannering and Tony Puletua, as well as Broncos skipper Alex Glenn.

Simply The Best second-rower nominees

(in alphabetical order)

Keary puts Cordner into a hole

Boyd Cordner

After overcoming serious knee injuries as a teenager, Cordner established himself at the Roosters, playing in the 2013 grand final win over Manly. He rose into the representative ranks with NSW and Australia, becoming captain of both sides in 2018 and enjoying success at both levels as well as on the club scene, leading the Roosters to back-to-back premierships.

Craig Fitzgibbon scores for the Blues in 2005.
Craig Fitzgibbon scores for the Blues in 2005. ©NRL Photos

Craig Fitzgibbon

The goal-kicking forward made his debut for the Steelers in 1998 and was St George Illawarra's best player in the grand final loss to Melbourne the following year. He switched to the Roosters in 2000 and ended up playing five grand finals in the space of five years, including the 2002 victory which earned him the Clive Churchill Medal. He retired in 2009 after scoring 1604 points in 263 NRL games, as well as playing 11 Origins for NSW and 18 Tests for Australia.

Hindmarsh and Widders lay it on

Nathan Hindmarsh

A wholehearted performer who, in his prime, was the NRL's leading tackler as well as a potent attacking player for Parramatta, NSW and Australia. Hindmarsh was part of the Eels' teams which were runners-up in 2001 and '09 and tallied 330 games for the club as well as 17 Origins and 23 Tests before signing off at the end of 2012.

Lewis' final four-pointer

Luke Lewis

Initially a winger, he was on the flank in Penrith's 2003 grand final upset of the Roosters and gradually gravitated towards the forwards, finding a permanent home in the second row. He left the Panthers after the 2012 campaign to link with Cronulla and won the Clive Churchill Medal in their 2016 premiership win before retiring two years later with 324 games, 17 Origins and 16 Tests on his impressive resume.

GF glory: Menzies makes the perfect swansong

Steven Menzies

The greatest try-scoring forward (third player overall) in premiership history, Menzies retired in 2008 after racking up 180 four-pointers over a 15-year career with Manly, including the three seasons of the Northern Eagles joint venture. A member of the 1994 Kangaroo Tour in his rookie year, the Hall of Famer wore the green and gold on 13 occasions as well as representing NSW 20 times.

Roosters forward Adrian Morley on the rampage in 2005.
Roosters forward Adrian Morley on the rampage in 2005. ©NRL Photos

Adrian Morley

A feared enforcer with an imposing tackling technique which occasionally got him into trouble at the judiciary, the English forward kicked off his NRL career at the Roosters in 2001 and was a key member of their grand final win over the Warriors the following year. He played the best part of two decades in his career in both hemispheres, including his six seasons in Sydney, and registered 47 Tests along the way.

Sironen scores a Tigers classic

Paul Sironen

The prototype for the modern second-rower, Sironen burst onto the scene with Balmain in the mid 1980s and after playing in the Tigers' back-to-back grand final losses at the end of the decade, he consolidated his career throughout the 1990s at Origin and Test level. "Siro" retired at the end of 1998 with 247 games for his beloved Tigers as well as 14 for NSW and 23 representing Australia.

Flashback Friday: Gorden Tallis

Gorden Tallis

"The Raging Bull" was a nickname befitting the aggression and dominance Tallis displayed from his first few seasons at St George then his lengthy tenure with Brisbane, Queensland and Australia. A member of the Broncos' premiership-winning sides of 1997, '98 and 2000, he called it a day in 2004 after 214 NRL appearances, 20 for the Maroons and 16 with the Kangaroos and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2018.

Ruben Wiki - Hall of Fame

Ruben Wiki

Originally a centre, he formed an imposing partnership alongside Mal Meninga in Canberra's 1994 premiership win before eventually moving into the pack. Wiki was a muscular presence for the Raiders over several seasons before returning to New Zealand in 2005 to play for the Warriors where he added plenty of mettle to their forwards before calling time on his career three years later with 311 NRL games and 55 Tests for the Kiwis on his Hall of Fame highlight reel.

The best of SBW

Sonny Bill Williams

With a combination of size, speed and power, SBW was a revelation from the moment he broke into the NRL ranks with Canterbury in 2004 and was a key member of the team which beat the Roosters in that year's grand final. He controversially left the club mid-season in 2008 to play rugby for the All Blacks but returned to the NRL in 2013 where he helped the Roosters to a premiership in the first season of a two-year stint before again switching to rugby.

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National Rugby League respects and honours the Traditional Custodians of the land and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. We acknowledge the stories, traditions and living cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on the lands we meet, gather and play on.

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