Mick Potter is not ready to make his mind up about the Bulls’ best team quite yet.

With less than two weeks left until the start of the new season, the Bradford boss is faced with a whole host of selection dilemmas.

Sunday’s 40-16 win against Wakefield only clouded the issue further, meaning Potter will spend much of his spare time before opening day sat in front of the TV.

“I had an idea of what team I was going to select (before Wakefield),” he said.

“There’s been a couple of little changes now but I’d like to watch the video again – and probably again and again – before I make my final decision.

“We’ve got a few more hurdles to climb yet before we worry about the Leeds game.

“There will probably be some better quality opposition, as you can appreciate. I don’t want to take anything away from Wakefield but we’ll see how we go against the likes of Leeds and Wigan.”

Considering the sheer scale of off-season change at Odsal, Potter knows his team will not be the finished article come February 13, when the season gets underway against Leeds Rhinos at Millennium Magic.

But the Australian saw positive signs of a cohesive unit throughout the victory against Wakefield, even though new scrum half Marc Herbert left the field as a precautionary measure at the end of the first quarter.

All 11 winter signings were given significant game-time in the Bulls’ final friendly, Patrick Ah Van, Matt Diskin and Ian Sibbit in particular catching the eye.

Potter said: “That was the happiest I’ve been with the players as far as their cohesion’s concerned. I thought they really played well together and I’m not just talking in attack.

“Defensively they also worked really well together, came up with some good tight tackles with each other and forced a couple of errors out of the other team.

“We did probably push a couple of passes we didn’t need to throw and given there wasn’t anything riding on this game, we didn’t wait for the next play and just tried to score the try off that play. There was a bit of that given it was a trial game.”

Potter is keeping his fingers crossed for a full bill of health ahead of the clash with their arch-rivals, barring long-term casualty Dave Halley.

Aside from Herbert, who tweaked his hamstring, Jamie Langley suffered a slight groin strain and Kyle Briggs took a bang to the knee against Wakefield.

“We had a couple of bumps, a couple of hamstring strains, a bump to a knee and a groin strain but nothing that I don’t think will keep anyone out for the fitness,” added Potter.