RUGBY LEAGUE
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Benji Marshall says the zip is back in his game and that St George Illawarra five-eighth Gareth Widdop is providing something he hasn't had in a decade - some support in the halves.
Marshall returned to rugby league midway through last season following a short-lived and unsuccessful stint with the Blues in Super Rugby and, at 96 kilograms, not in the shape Dragons coach Paul McGregor was expecting.
McGregor ran the former Wests Tiger through a brutal 12-week fitness program this pre-season, which Marshall credits with getting him back to his best playing weight since 2007.
"I haven't been 91kg since 2007, it makes a big difference," Marshall said.
"I feel young again to be honest.
"We had a tough pre-season that was pretty testing at times, but it was something we needed.
"It was definitely something I needed."
McGregor says the key is that Marshall is happy again, and the New Zealand international puts that down to two things - his brief dalliance in rugby waking him from a lackadaisical slumber, and Widdop.
"I probably lost that motivation and hunger at the Tigers from just being lazy and not caring as much," he added.
"Now I want to be the best player on the field again every week. I haven't felt like that for a long time."
While there were glimpses of a blossoming halves partnership at the Dragons, Marshall believes as a partnership they're now ready to take the next step.
Because in Widdop he has the sort of assistance he craved at the Tigers ever since the departure of Scott Prince for the Gold Coast at the end of the 2006 season.
"[At the Tigers] I had a lot of pressure on me to do a lot of stuff," he said.
"Whereas with Gareth, we try and have 50 per cent share of the ball. And just try and take the pressure off each other." - AAP