logo
Brawling NRL agents to cop six-month bans

Brawling NRL agents to cop six-month bans

The Australian4 days ago
NRL player agents Chris Orr and Nash Dawson are facing six-month bans over an altercation outside a hotel in Port Macquarie.
The pair will be issued with code of conduct breach notices following revelations in this column last year the two had fought on the pavement outside a pub during a schoolboy carnival.
They had earlier exchanged angry words inside the pub before stepping outside.
My information is the integrity unit studied CCTV footage before deciding to take action against the managers.
The two agents manage some of the biggest names in rugby league.
Dawson has Reece Walsh, Ezra Mam and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, while Orr has Val Holmes, Jahrome Hughes, Dylan Brown and Selwyn Cobbo.
The NRL is to be congratulated on taking action against Orr in particular, who was also involved in another incident in Las Vegas last year that was not acted on.
SAINT
Tim Tszyu may have lost his world title fight in Las Vegas last weekend, but he handled it with so much class and dignity. No excuses. No complaints. Beaten fair and square by a better fighter on the occasion. His reaction and great sportsmanship afterwards was a wonderful example to be setting all young Aussie athletes at all levels of sport.
SINNER
Brad Fittler seems to have a problem with Polynesian rugby league players wanting to honour their heritage and play for Samoa or Tonga in representative football. This is actually a great thing for the international game. These guys are entitled to play State of Origin — and for the Pacific nations — as long as they were either born in Australia or played their first junior footy here. That the Kangaroos are now facing a real challenge to remain the number one country, is a good thing.
SHOOSH
Which board member from a Queensland-based NRL club got blind drunk and made a complete goose of himself in front of hundreds of guests at a recent charity function. It didn't help that he'd been to a long lunch for six hours beforehand.
SPOTTED
Maroons and St George Illawarra Dragons star Val Holmes recovering in hospital after season-ending surgery with his kids Billy and Ardie.
SPOTTED
She would have been just another face in the crowd at Shute Shield rugby at North Sydney Oval 10 days ago, but Mark Latham's former partner Nathalie Matthews was the subject of much attention at Northern Suburbs v Eastwood last weekend.
SPOTTED
He may have bolted in to win the federal election earlier this year, but our prime minister Anthony Albanese is having an absolute shocker in our NRL tipping competition and looking a most likely wooden spooner. In fairness, the PM is a Rabbitohs tragic and has to tip them each week despite their shocking run with injuries.
SPOTTED
Dessie Hasler maintains a close friendship with the Fainu family from his days at the Manly Sea Eagles, when the boys were emerging in pathways. Dessie caught up with Sione, Samuela and Latu at Leichhardt Oval last week after the Wests Tigers v Titans game.
SPOTTED
Two sporting heavyweights sitting side-by-side on a Brisbane to Sydney flight on Thursday — former Olympic boss John Coates and golf legend Greg Norman.
WOMEN'S GAME NOT SO SUPER
Women's rugby league is struggling big time in England, nowhere near as strong as our NRLW competition.
You'll remember the English side was beaten 90-4 by the Jillaroos in Las Vegas in March.
Now the Warrington Wolves have had to forfeit a Super League fixture against St Helens this weekend due to a lack of players.
DCE PUTS ENERGY INTO DRINK
Daly Cherry-Evans is already planning for life after the Sydney Roosters.
The Manly Sea Eagles skipper and ex-Wallabies star Quade Cooper have recently invested into a sports energy drink business.
They are on board with one of Australia's fastest growing companies Hyro; the hydration drink company taking on global heavyweights like Gatorade and Powerade.
The company in Australia is fronted by entrepreneurial couple Steve Chapman and Taylor Bird.
Cherry-Evans and Cooper was seen last week shooting a Hyro commercial in Sydney.
Both have invested their own money into the company.
Cherry-Evans, 36, is quitting Manly at the end of the season for a stint at the Roosters... and Friday night's loss to Melbourne Storm showed why he's needed.
The Roosters led 30-28 after 66 minutes but couldn't close down the game.
KEVVIE'S TOUGHEST DECISION
Proud Queenslander Kevvie Walters is facing his first test of state loyalty with the selection of his Australian captain for the Kangaroos tour to England in October.
The leading contenders are NSW Blues skipper Isaah Yeo — the incumbent Australian skipper, and Cameron Munster, who led Queensland so magnificently in this year's State of Origin series.
Yeo did a great job with the Australian side under Mal Meninga last year; taking over from James Tedesco to lead the Aussies to victory in the Pacific Championships.
Yet he failed to inspire the Blues against the Maroons in Origin this year in his first crack as a NSW captain after replacing Jake Trbojevic.
Not that you can blame the champion NSW lock for the Blues' series defeat.
On the other hand, Munster did so well as Queensland captain — even dealing with the tragic death of his father in the build-up to the series decider in Sydney.
Thrown into the job to replace Daly Cherry Evans, Munster — despite not being a club captain — won man-of-the-match in Origin II in Perth.
It turned out a masterstroke by coach Billy Slater to put the Storm five-eighth in as skipper.
There's also the likes of Harry Grant and Nathan Cleary as possibilities.
So we tracked down Walters on Friday to get his views.
'We've got some great options,' Walters said. 'And that excites me.
'In most of my time playing for the Kangaroos we had Mal (Meninga).
'Regardless of who's the captain, we'll have so many great leaders from the clubs and Origin teams.
'Obviously, it's not my decision alone and we'll be consulting the right people. The commission will sign off on it.
'Someone will run out first, but we need all the senior guys to contribute as leaders.'
DRAGONS AND DOGS UNITE
Long time rivals Canterbury and St George Illawarra have joined forces in a unique NRL partnership.
Bulldogs CEO Aaron Warburton and his Dragons counterpart Tim Watsford have reached a profit-sharing agreement for the Las Vegas season-opener next year and for all future games between the clubs.
'We're going to work together off the field to strengthen what is one of league's most formidable rivalries to deliver what two of the NRL's most passionate supporter bases deserve,' Warburton said.
'We fiercely compete for 80 minutes in two games each season, but we're partners in growing the game for the other 363 days.
'It's about giving fans the best possible experience on game day.'
Last weekend was a perfect example of the special rivalry that exists between these two clubs.
A thrilling game that went down to the wire with a stack of controversy and blow ups afterwards.
It's such great theatre.
'The profit share arrangement ensures both clubs are invested in the game's success from revenue and fan experience perspectives,' Warburton said. 'As the game continues to generate momentum, club-to-club collaboration is important.
'We are building for success both on and off the field and rivalries of this nature are paramount to the success of not only the club, but the game more broadly.'
More NRL clubs should be working together in this manner. Imagine the crowds that the Bulldogs and Dragons will attract if Saints can get their act together and both clubs work together on the promotion of the game.
WHEN YOU SWYSH UPON A STAR
He might be nearing the end of his career but Broncos old skipper Adam Reynolds remains one of rugby league's most loved characters.
The veteran halfback gets more requests than any other NRL player on the popular video messaging platform Swysh.
More than 1500 athletes have signed up with Swysh to record messages for fans on special occasions with ten per cent of the fee going to charity.
Reynolds is soon to release his life story in a book that will be available for Father's Day.
There will be much revealed in regards to his messy departure from the South Sydney Rabbitohs three years ago.
THE SWYSH TOP TEN
1. Adam Reynolds
2. Brian To'o
3. Stephen Crichton
4. James Tedesco
5. Jordan Riki
6. Ryan Papenhuyzen
7. Matt Burton
8. Tom Trbojevic
9. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow
10. Hudson Young
SEN'S RATINGS STRUGGLE
Sports network SEN has had a disastrous result in Sydney's latest radio ratings.
All shifts from Andrew Voss and Greg Alexander (1.2%) at breakfast through to Joel Caine and Bryan Fletcher (1.2%) on drive fell substantially.
The Big Sports Breakfast on Sky Sports Radio also suffered a ratings fall that could be put down to the absence of Laurie Daley, who was off air while coaching the Blues State of Origin team.
SEN also performed poorly on weekends, dropping to just 0.3 for Sunday NRL.
In Sunday league ratings, the 2GB Continuous Call team fell from 9.9% to 7.5%.
The big improver was Triple M which jumped from 5% to 6.2%, more than double the audience of the ABC.
Sunday NRL Sydney
2GB 7.5% down from 9.9%
Triple M 6.2% up from 5%
ABC 3% up from 2.7%
SEN 0.3% down from 1.5%
Brisbane NRL Sunday
Triple M 12.1% up from 11%
4BC 4.2% down from 4.6%
ABC 3.4% down from 7.8%
SEN 0.6% up from 0.4% THE BETTER HALF with Kristi Wilkinson - partner of Tom Trbojevic
Okay we did Jurbo a couple of weeks ago, now Turbo. What's he really like away from the footy spotlight?
If you know Tom, you know he does not enjoy the spotlight! Tom is a very down to earth, family-oriented man, some may say shy at first, but once he brings out his sarcasm, you know he feels comfortable. Away from footy, Tom enjoys cooking, golf, walking our dog CJ and travel.
Where did you two meet? Did you know he was a famous footy player?
We met was at Macquarie Uni back in 2020, where we both studied business degrees. He needed me to help him pass his final exam and in exchange he took me for a drink.
Now you guys are getting married in December, how did he propose?
Tom had just finished playing for Australia back in November last year, and we had planned a trip to Europe. Before heading overseas, we started our time off down in Bowral at Osborn House. Unbeknown to me, Tom had planned for the hotel staff to set up our room with rose petals, champagne and candles while we were at dinner on the first night. When I got back, I got the shock of my life. I loved how much of a surprise it was, it was really special.
How is he around the house with chores, cooking, stacking the dishwasher, cleaning, gardening, feeding the dog etc?
Tom is extremely helpful around the house, I will give him that! When it comes to the outdoors … not so much. Tom despises gardening and mowing the lawn, the only outdoor job he enjoys is cooking a steak on the barbeque!
I guess all footy professionals are healthy eaters but surely he breaks out every now and then with some fast food?
Our house is full of healthy food so the majority of the time, we eat a very clean diet. The day after a game though … I could find Tom anywhere from the local KFC, to getting a Maccas McFlurry, to enjoying enough pizza to feed a family!
Tell us about his relationship with Jake, Ben and Luke? How tight are they?
Well they spend most days at training together and then choose to spend their days off together, so they're pretty tight! They have a group chat with the four of them and their mum, Mel, called 'My Boys' and it's constantly going off.
I asked this same question to Alix: The NRL is a roller coaster of highs and lows. Tom's had some tough times with injuries. How do you cope when he's having a rough trot?
It is definitely a roller coaster! Tom cares so much about his teammates and ensuring he is doing his job for Manly that when uncontrollable situations occur, it can be really challenging. We definitely lean on each other during the more difficult times to try and lift the mood, stay positive and move forward.
He's had some great moments; won a Dally M; played for NSW and Australia. I bet you're proud.
Tom has achieved an inspiring amount playing football, but nothing comes close to his achievement of dating me! (haha). In all seriousness, what makes me most proud is how he shows up every day ... as a person and a partner. Phil Rothfield Sports Editor-at-Large
Phil Buzz Rothfield is a 43-year veteran of sports journalism. He covered his first rugby league grand final in 1978 - the Manly Sea Eagles - Cronulla Sharks replay. Buzz has been involved in the coverage of every State of Origin game since its inception in 1980 and has covered sport in major countries including England, Russia, the United States and Brazil. NRL
Cam Munster, Billy Slater and Cam Smith have a special piece in their career which Reece Walsh missed out on - an apprenticeship away from the forensic gaze of the NRL. NRL
Jake Clifford has won the battle for scrumbase contracts at the Cowboys - and it is set to deliver a former Australian schoolboys playmaker to the Broncos.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Work demands a blow for sporting clubs in Queensland's once booming mining towns
Work demands a blow for sporting clubs in Queensland's once booming mining towns

ABC News

time11 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Work demands a blow for sporting clubs in Queensland's once booming mining towns

It's Saturday afternoon in the small, rural mining town of Tieri in central Queensland and the local footy field at Langerak Park should be packed. The Peak Downs Pirates Rugby League Club is the social fabric of this 700-person town, and fans would normally be hustling to get a prime spot next to the bar, where they could flip open their camp chairs and cheer. But today, there is no game. "I've cried and I'm looking at grown men with tears in their eyes," said long-serving Pirates committee member Samantha Reinke, as she looks over an empty field from the clubhouse and grassed hill. The combination of two mines closing, seven-day rosters and a dwindling population have led to the club folding. "Everybody looked forward to a home game and a lot of people also followed us to the other towns as well, which can be up to two and a half hour's drive," Ms Reinke said. "That's all gone now and there's nothing else to do, so it's very demoralising for the community to lose something like this." The town of Tieri, about 900 kilometres north-west of Brisbane, was established in 1983 as a service centre for the three local coal mines open at the time. Now there's just one. The Glencore-owned Oaky Creek North Coal Mine in Tieri employs about 800 workers and is one of the most productive underground coal operations in the Bowen Basin. But with each new census, Tieri's population declines due to the impacts of fly-in fly-out (FIFO) work. Half of the mine's workforce is FIFO and as the town shrinks, its sporting clubs are rapidly disappearing. Once a hive of sporting activity, touch football, hockey, soccer, gymnastics, indoor cricket, tennis and lawn bowls are all things of the past. The Pirates are the latest casualty. The disappointment and heartbreak are echoed by club president Mitch Reinke and coach Ben Liddell. "We had over 50 people registered to play this season, which was promising, but with injuries and shift work it was very challenging," Mr Reinke said. Before the agonising decision to fold, the Pirates could only field five players for their last match. Mr Liddell was devastated. Pirates diehards hope at some stage in the future the club can be resurrected and return to its glory days. Queensland's Central Highlands are the cattle and coal capital of Australia, and in the neighbouring town of Capella, it is a similar story. The race club and bowls club no longer exist while the tennis club is barely surviving. "Tennis started in about the 1930s here with two ant-bed courts," said Capella Tennis Club's Cathy Murray. "In 1981, we started night fixtures and it was every night of the week and we had 100 people playing but it slowed down during COVID and we couldn't get any tennis players back to play." The introduction of pickleball this year has the kept the gates to the now six courts open. Andrew Jansen is a karate instructor on the Central Highlands and teaches classes in Capella and in nearby Emerald. He said roster cycles and cost-of-living were the main impacts behind a decline in numbers. "The bigger hours people are working, quite often we'll get a phone call to say, 'We can't make it, I'm at work still.'" According to researchers, country clubs and competitions are coming under increased pressure from not only the fluctuating presence of workers and financial strain, but also population drift and impacts on rural life. Dean Miller, a senior lecturer in psychology at CQUniversity, said social sport and sporting clubs were the hub of small, close-knit communities. "The engagement in community and getting more people into sports out there can really help the morale and engagement with social circles … and sport is a really great avenue to do that," Dr Miller said. Participation in sports-related activities offered significant mental and health benefits for FIFO workers, he said. "It can be quite difficult to follow through on those commitments as players or as officials and that will fluctuate depending on their availability and how their workload is at that certain period of time. "We know in terms of mental health and health in general, engaging in physical exercise and activity with social sporting groups or competitive sporting clubs, it's really important." As small communities across the country feel the pain of dwindling numbers and seek solutions to the effects of swing shifts, people such as Samantha Reinke are determined to keep theirs alive. "My goal is to create awareness and perhaps get the NRL [National Rugby League] involved more in helping out the smaller communities," she said. "It would be good to have some sort of incentive for players to come out here and play because it would just boost the town's morale."

Rugby League 26 video game developer hits back at criticism from players who 'should know better'
Rugby League 26 video game developer hits back at criticism from players who 'should know better'

ABC News

time11 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Rugby League 26 video game developer hits back at criticism from players who 'should know better'

The boss of video game developer Big Ant Studios has hit back at criticism of the newly launched Rugby League 26 game, following high-profile players slamming the release. Some players, including Sydney Roosters prop Millie Elliott and State of Origin star Kennedy Cherrington, have criticised their likeness in the game, while issues with the gameplay and the inability to use players in their real-world positions have also caused backlash. Issues ranged from retired players being highly rated, to stadiums being in the wrong cities, while gameplay was also highlighted on social media. Ross Symons, chief executive of Big Ant Studios, hit back at the criticism of likenesses in Rugby League 26. "The ones that are talking should know better because, frankly, they've made statements that really are reasonably outrageous, because we have gone around the world, even to the north of England, just to scan women in game," he told the ABC. "Eighty per cent of our sponsorship money goes to women's sport. We take it extraordinarily seriously. "We actually travelled to capture NRLW players specifically in captures up to Townsville and everywhere. "They were told, 'Please, please be at the shoot because if you're not at the shoot, you won't look like you'. We were very clear. Symons said Big Ant Studios would be attending the NRLW Magic Round to conduct more facial scans to add to the game. "We have offered to capture as many players who would like to sit in the chair. And sitting in the chair takes 45 seconds," he said. Rugby League 26 was highly anticipated, as it came eight years after the last iteration, Rugby League Live 4. Cherrington described the game as "half-finished", while social media was flooded with gamers reporting glitches and errors. Symons said some of the issues stemmed from a compressed rollout timeline, which required the developers to submit the game for disc printing two months before the launch date. He also said that despite calls from the public, delaying was "not an option we were given" and that online multiplayer feature issues were temporary. "Then the product we want people to have is ready with a day one patch, because things change," he said "Even in sport itself, just the nature of sport where things change, where rosters change, injuries occur, ratings change." Big Ant was also criticised for its inability to manage demand on its servers, which locked players out for hours. Symons said the demand for the game was six times higher than expected, and said it had outsold video game franchise members Assassin's Creed: Shadows, Death Stranding 2: On The Beach and Donkey Kong Bananza. "It is number one by a margin and our servers also had that problem." Despite the backlash about Rugby League 26 from users, the fact there is a game for a code played predominantly in just three countries is noteworthy. A large part of that, and the reason for an eight-year hiatus, was the commercial viability of making a game for a relatively small market. Big Ant Studios was the recipient of the Digital Games Tax Offset (DGTO), introduced in 2023 to encourage local game development studio investment in Australia, which allows companies to claim back 30 per cent of qualified Australian expenditure. This funding model is similar to other schemes designed to encourage local filmmaking, and Symons says this program "allows us to take risks that we otherwise couldn't take". "The world would call the AFL, the same with NRL and to some extent cricket, a niche sport. It's our lifeblood and we love it, but no one else wants to make these sports games. "That's where the DGTO really, really does help, it enables to tell Australian stories and in particular, Australian sport because I don't think Australian sport gets a title if it's not for things like the DGTO because it just becomes not commercially viable." Big Ant Studios also made the AFL and cricket video games, as well as a tennis game based around the Australian Open. The Sydney Roosters were approached for comment but did not respond before publication.

Man sentenced for lighting own unit on fire out of frustration at noisy neighbours
Man sentenced for lighting own unit on fire out of frustration at noisy neighbours

ABC News

time11 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Man sentenced for lighting own unit on fire out of frustration at noisy neighbours

A Canberra man who tried to claim he was acting in self-defence when he set his own unit on fire, because he was frustrated after years of loud music from his neighbour, has been sentenced for arson in the ACT Supreme Court. Steven Kazmar-Hall, 39, was found guilty of arson after he set the fire in April last year. The court heard he had run up the street afterwards to escape the fire. The court rejected his self-defence argument that he had set the fire out of frustration because of mental health effects from noise he had endured for three years. Acting Justice Rebecca Christensen said in her judgement, the fire left the home uninhabitable, although it did not spread beyond his unit. The evidence presented in the trial included photographs of the "sizeable sound system" that was used by the neighbour in his unit. Acting Justice Christensen said it was a serious offence that put other vulnerable residents at risk. "Not only was their safety, and their lives, put at risk, but a number of tenants seemingly experienced significant distress from the fire," Acting Justice Christensen said. "The offender himself at the trial described that there were people 'screaming' after his conduct." But Acting Justice Christensen said Kazmar-Hall's culpability was reduced. "This would lead to significant distress and frustration for anyone, let alone a person suffering the mental health challenges of the offender." But Acting Justice Christensen said it was still serious offending. Kazmar-Hall has been in custody since the fire. He was sentenced to eight months in jail, but was freed after the sentencing because he had already served his time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store