- Cameron Munster has spilled 6 kilograms in low season
- He was at his best during the opening of the storm season
According to the reports, the recent weight loss of Cameron Munster for the start of the NRL season was helped by a sled of his wife, according to Storm coach Craig Bellamy.
A Munster cut shone in Melbourne's 56-18 victory over the eels on Sunday in Aami Park.
After the game, veteran five eighths revealed that he had thrown a whopping six kilograms in the low season.
“It's amazing, a heat of 33 degrees in Melbourne, can't improve,” Munster told Nine's Ruan Sims Post.
“Help when you lose six kilos … obviously had a very good preseason, that will not always happen.”
Bellamy revealed at the press conference that it was Munster's wife, Bianca, who stimulated him to throw the weight.

According to the reports, Cameron Munster's weight loss for the start of the NRL season was helped by a sled of his wife.

According to the reports, Bianca (in the photo) told Muster that he would never lose weight, so he showed that he was wrong
“We had a little conversation about a couple of things, but I certainly didn't say” you need to lose some weight, “Bellamy told the media after Sunday's victory.
“His partner Bianca could have thrown something there (too) … I'm not sure if this is correct, but I think Bianca could have said …” You will never do it, “so he turned his back and did it.
'I think he has really helped. It is much more in shape and can be involved and the more it is involved, the better we will be.
'It has been completely invested in the preseason, it is a bit lighter. I do not think that it has lost any force and certainly there is no speed, it does not have much to lose anyway.
“He simply took the game in a complete pile today and I think it's when he's playing his best football and losing a couple of kilos has really helped him.”
The storm ran in eight attempts in an impressive first half to extend Bellamy's record to 22 successive victories of First Round and guarantee a forgettable beginning for the training career of Jason Ryles in the Eels.

Munster looked in good shape during Melbourne's 56-18 victory
In a unilateral opening of 40 minutes that finished 46-6, the storm players barely sweated despite the fact that the temperature was 33 degrees at the beginning.
It was the second most important points that a team had scored in a first half in NRL's history, after Newcastle 48 against North Queensland in 2003.
The Eels had to wait until the 37th minute to reach the scoreboard, with the end Jake Tago planting the ball after wearing a Dylan Brown bomb at the entrance.