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‘Happier, carefree’ Hynes chases holy grail with Sharks

May 5, 2026
By DARREN WALTON

An at-peace Nicho Hynes, playing his 100th game for Cronulla, hopes his more settled off-field life can help take the Sharks to an NRL grand final in 2026.

After years of enduring extraordinary levels of scrutiny, Cronulla’s Indigenous playmaker believes he has finally struck the right work-life balance as he strives to steer the Sharks to a second title – a decade after their landmark first.

Hynes won the Dally M Medal as the game’s best player and took Cronulla to the top two in his first season with the club in 2022.

The ensuing years have not been so kind, with the playmaker unfairly made the scapegoat for NSW’s game-one State of Origin defeat in 2024 and seemingly maligned after each and every Sharks loss.

Settled personal life

But the 29-year-old says he has finally learnt to live with the pressures and often unfair spotlight on his performances.

“That just comes with the job and being in an NRL No.7 and being a high-profile player at a club,” Hynes said when asked if he felt like a more relaxed player ahead of his milestone 100th match for Cronulla on Saturday.

“I’ve done a lot of work on myself and a lot of work on my performances, but also just off the field of living a happier, carefree life.

“It just comes with the nature of the beast, right? And I watch a lot of NFL and a lot of documentaries and all their best players over there cop it just as much, or probably worse.”

Now engaged, Hynes believes his more settled personal life can only be beneficial for the Sharks.

“I’ve heard so many good quotes that stuck with me over the last couple of years that it resonates hard with me and I’ve just learned a lot about life and there’s more important things than a game of rugby league.

Nicho Hynes says he’s learnt to cope with the scrutiny that comes his way. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

“I feel like I’m a good human first and for the athlete. Obviously I want to win and I want to compete hard every single day to make sure we win, but I don’t take that those divots home anymore.

“I want to be a good human first and not let 80 minutes define who I am as a person.”

With four big wins and four shockers, the Sharks have been hot and cold in 2026.

Craig Fitzgibbon’s eighth-placed side take on South Sydney this weekend and Hynes is more than happy to let the focus be on in-form Rabbitohs superstar Latrell Mitchell than him.

Consistency the key

“It’s a huge game. They’ve been playing some really good footy and obviously Latrell’s on fire at the moment and they’re sitting pretty in the top four,” Hynes said.

“But, look, no matter the team we’re coming up against, it’s about putting out back-to-back performances and playing some consistent footy and us leaders really driving that.

“We have been inconsistent and it’s just about finding that.

“But I feel like what we’re doing at the moment in (making) back-to-back prelims, hopefully we can kick-start our year now and chase a grand final.”

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Peter Rowe

Peter Rowe leads First Nations News as Editor, with over three decades of experience across international newsrooms, digital platforms and media strategy roles. For the past 20 years, he’s worked in Australia – reporting, editing and advising on stories that shape public debate.

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