Ivan Cleary has won four straight premierships, built one of the greatest dynasties in rugby league history and developed a production line of NRL stars. But his greatest achievement might be something even more impressive—convincing every player in the Panthers system that they’re capable of becoming the next superstar.
After Penrith’s emphatic victory over South Sydney, the spotlight wasn’t solely on the result. Instead, attention turned to the remarkable way Cleary continues to regenerate a roster that has lost representative players almost every season yet somehow remains the benchmark of the NRL.
For years, rival clubs have waited for the Panthers to fall.
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Api Koroisau left.
Stephen Crichton departed.
Jarome Luai moved on.
James Fisher-Harris exited.
Each time, critics predicted the dynasty was nearing its end.
Each time, Penrith simply produced another player ready to step into the spotlight.
Tom Jenkins is the latest example.
After beginning the season as a relatively unheralded outside back, Jenkins has become one of the NRL’s most prolific try-scorers, putting himself on track to challenge records that have stood for decades. Rather than relying on expensive recruitment, Penrith has once again developed its next strike weapon from within.
That’s not luck.
That’s coaching.
Cleary has created a culture where players don’t arrive trying to become stars.
They arrive understanding their role.
Whether it’s a rookie making his debut or an experienced representative returning from Origin, everyone plays the same system.
Everyone understands the standards.
Everyone is expected to improve.
It’s why Penrith continues to win despite constant roster turnover.
While most clubs spend years searching for marquee signings, the Panthers spend their time developing the next one.
Cleary’s greatest strength has never been tactics alone.
It’s trust.
Young players are given genuine opportunities, experienced players are empowered to lead, and everyone is held accountable regardless of reputation.
That consistency has become the foundation of Penrith’s success.
Even during the rare periods when results have dipped this season, Cleary has refused to panic.
Following consecutive losses earlier this year, he remained calm, backing both his senior players and emerging talent to respond rather than overreacting with sweeping changes. The Panthers have since returned to the form expected of a premiership heavyweight.
The next challenge may be his toughest.
With Moses Leota exploring his market value and several more stars approaching free agency, Penrith is once again facing difficult salary cap decisions. History suggests the club will lose quality players again.
History also suggests it won’t matter as much as people think.
Because Ivan Cleary has built something bigger than a premiership-winning team.
He’s built a system.
A system that develops talent, embraces change and refuses to rely on individuals.
That’s why Penrith keeps winning.
And that’s why, even after four premierships, Ivan Cleary may still be producing the finest coaching performances of his career.
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