After 15 seasons, over 300 games, and a legacy cemented in maroon and white, Daly Cherry-Evans — the heart and soul of the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles — has made the shocking decision to walk away from the club he once called home.
Fans were stunned when DCE announced he would be leaving Manly at the end of the 2025 season. Some saw it coming. Others were blindsided. But everyone asked the same question: Why?
What could push a club captain, a premiership winner, and one of the most loyal figures in recent NRL history to say goodbye?
The answer, insiders say, is a complicated cocktail of disillusionment, fractured relationships, and a club culture that lost its soul.
A Captain Without a Connection
For years, Cherry-Evans was Manly’s ironman — showing up through injury, adversity, and roster overhauls. He carried the team through turbulent times, defended the jersey with passion, and acted as a steadying voice through countless coaching changes.
But sources close to the star halfback say something shifted after 2022. A quiet rift began growing between DCE and key figures in the club’s front office — not explosive, not public, but enough to plant a seed of doubt.
“He started to feel like the decisions were being made above him, around him, but never with him,” one source close to the team said.
“He was the captain, but not always treated like a leader behind closed doors.”
The Contract That Changed Everything
Cherry-Evans famously turned down a move to the Titans in 2015, instead signing a lifetime deal with Manly. At the time, it was the talk of the league — a commitment that seemed to guarantee he’d retire a Sea Eagle.
But that loyalty was tested as the club faced salary cap pressure, resulting in the departures of close teammates and a revolving door of head coaches.
When conversations began in late 2024 about possibly restructuring his final years to make room for younger talent, DCE was reportedly hurt — but not surprised.
“He didn’t want to be pushed out the back door,” the source continued.
“If he was going to leave, it was going to be on his own terms.”
The Turbo Factor
While Cherry-Evans remained the team’s vocal leader, Tom Trbojevic increasingly became the emotional face of the club. As the next generation rose, there was an undeniable shift in the balance of influence.
DCE supported Turbo’s rise. But it’s said that internal dynamics — between the coaching staff, younger stars, and the club’s vision for the future — left Cherry-Evans feeling like a respected veteran, but not a central figure anymore.
“He wasn’t angry. He just felt… done,” another former teammate revealed.
“Manly wasn’t the same Manly anymore.”
A New Beginning, a Quiet Goodbye
Cherry-Evans didn’t demand a farewell tour. He didn’t trash the club. Instead, he quietly informed management of his decision and left it to the fans to draw their own conclusions.
In his public statement, he said:
“This club gave me everything, and I’ll never forget it. But I feel it’s time to step aside and let the next generation lead. I’m proud of what we built.”
But those who know him best say this isn’t just a passing of the torch. It’s a man walking away from a place that no longer felt like home.
So, What Happens Now?
Cherry-Evans is expected to continue playing — potentially overseas or with a rival NRL club looking for veteran leadership. But wherever he lands, the impact of his departure will be felt for years at 4 Pines Park.
The Sea Eagles now face a leadership vacuum, a passionate fanbase desperate for stability, and the harsh truth that they may have let one of their greatest ever players slip away with unresolved tension still in the air.
Final Thoughts
Daly Cherry-Evans didn’t leave Manly for money. He didn’t leave out of spite. He left because the bond was broken — slowly, quietly, and perhaps inevitably.
In the end, it wasn’t just about footy. It was about respect, belonging, and legacy. And for Cherry-Evans, it seems those things no longer lived in the northern beaches.
As one heartbroken fan posted online:
“DCE didn’t change — the club did. And that’s the saddest part.”