The ASADA saga continues: Sharks facing legal action from former players

By News / Wire

Cronulla’s fairytale NRL season is set to be overshadowed by legal action facing the club from ten former players.

News Corp Australia reports Nathan Gardner, Stewart Mills and Stuart Flanagan have followed the lead of Ben Pomeroy, Albert Kelly, Dean Collis, Broderick Wright, Josh Cordoba, Isaac Gordon and Paul Aiton in engaging lawyers to take action in relation to the controversial supplements program during the 2011 season.

The players are suing for negligence, breach of contract and intentional tort.

The matter is listed for directions in the Sydney district court on August 22.

Gardner was one of 10 players to accept an ASADA deal of a backdated 12-month ban in 2014 alongside Kelly.

Cronulla skipper Paul Gallen and current Sharks player Wade Graham, plus Luke Douglas, Kade Snowden, Jeremy Smith, Matt Wright, Anthony Tupou and John Morris also accepted backdated bans in 2014.

The players accepted that they were unknowingly and unwittingly injected with banned substances.

Current coach Shane Flanagan was stood down by the NRL for a full season in 2014 for failing to safeguard the health and well being of Cronulla players.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-10T06:41:17+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


Cronulla need to sue them for impersonating first grade footballers

2016-08-10T03:20:20+00:00

up up cronulla

Guest


Second rate players looking for a pay day, some of them wernt even i asadas report!!

2016-08-10T00:00:41+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


Beats digging holes... And none of these guys will get a gig spruiking odds for a corporate bookie or dropping their dacks on the Matt Johns show...

2016-08-09T23:43:52+00:00

jamesb

Guest


Pretty much.

2016-08-09T23:32:01+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


Real title of article Former Sharks players decide it's easier to sue club than get real jobs after rugby league career ends

2016-08-09T23:25:00+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


So they should. Will be interesting to follow. I'd guess that if they have a solid case then the Club's insurers will step in and settle it before it sees much court time. I do wonder if we'll ever know whether the rumour of the player who allegedly continued accessing the substances himself post the club shutdown was factual or not.

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