With just a week to go until the start of the Super League season there's been a late surprise in Saints' squad planning for 2026 and beyond.
Mark Percival - a Saints academy product who has been a fixture of the first team for almost 13 years - could be heading for the exit. A Love Rugby League 'exclusive' suggests that a two-year contract offered to him by the club has been withdrawn. The report also states that he has been 'made available to other clubs immediately'.
It's not totally clear whether the contract offer was an extension of his current deal which expires at the end of this season, or whether it would have started in 2027 and kept him at the club until the end of 2028 when he will be 34. The club has yet to comment at the time of writing, further muddying the waters.
So let's take it at face value and assume that Percival will depart. As popular as he has been over the years the question of whether to move on from him or not is still a divisive one among the fan base. This is a player who has made 274 appearances in the red vee and has been a part of five Super League Grand Final winning squads. Twenty-five of those 274 appearances were starts in 2025. This calls into question the time honoured grumble that you'll never get a full season out of him.
And yet for all that I can see the logic in letting him go. He might have been on the field a lot last season - and in 2024 when he made 21 appearances - but that isn't the same as being effective. Peak Percival - using his pace and strength to lay waste to opposition defences - has been an idea and not a reality for some time now.
His body has been pummelled by the constant requirement to run the ball in at a set defensive line early in the tackle count. He might as well have been playing second row as opposed to centre, so scarce were his opportunities to find space to run into. A lot of that is tactical as successive coaches have all but abandoned the concept of expansive rugby.
Wherever you want to lay the blame he just isn't the same player. With the arrival of Nene McDonald to add to existing centre options Deon Cross and Harry Robertson it just might make sense to free up Percival's cap space for greater need. Like hooker, where cover is thin. Soon to be 33-year-old Daryl Clark is Saints' only reliable option. A club which had two of the all-time greats at 9 spanning a 30-year period now finds itself short in that department.
Social media is in overdrive in reaction to online suggestions that a two-year contract had been offered to Percival and then withdrawn. Love Rugby League's piece states only that discussions had been held about a new deal which would have taken the former England international past the end of his current agreement. It then hedges its bets rather by suggesting that it is 'believed' that such a deal is no longer an option. Wherever the truth sits, failure to come to an agreement in discussions is not the same as offering a contract and then withdrawing it. But when did social media users ever wait for clarity?
From the club's point of view the decision to let Percival go - if it transpires - is strategic and not personal. The timing is off just a week before the season opener at Warrington on February 13 but it should be remembered that Saints have a new head coach who may still be formulating his long term plans. Perhaps Paul Rowley has seen something in pre season training that has swayed his thinking.
Despite most fans calling for him to do so, it doesn't look as though Rowley will opt to move Robertson to six any time soon. This might surprise anyone who saw him weave through the Leeds Rhinos defence in the build up to Shane Wight's 'shite to Wright' playoff miracle at Headingley in September. Or any number of occasions on which Robertson's ball skills and elusiveness have been apparent.
As it is it leaves the youngster to continue his outstanding development at centre. In turn that could have left Percival surplus to requirements with McDonald and Cross also vying for game time. Owen Dagnall is another centre option even if his breakout games so far have been as a winger. His future could be at centre with 31-year-old McDonald currently something of a stop gap. If Percival isn't needed then sentiment should not insist on him.
If there is a chase on for Percival's services then online rumour has it that Leigh and Warrington are leading it. There's a good argument against strengthening a potential playoff rival. Yet ultimately there's a better argument for making the right choice for your own needs. You can't always control where players end up if you decide to cut them loose.
If one of those or any other Super League club snaps Percival up they will be getting a hugely experienced, highly decorated performer who might be more of a threat in a team with a more expansive gameplan. He's also still a pretty good defender. Just don't ask him to consider the wishes of his winger if he does find himself in open space. It would be a wrench for him to leave Saints I'm sure but it could also be the reset that the latter part of his career needs.
What are your thoughts on the situation? Do you think a move will happen? If it does, will it prove to be a bold but correct decision by Rowley or an absolute disaster? Or somewhere in between. Only a Sith deals in absolutes, after all. Tee off in the comments.