Judiciary hands down Walsh verdict over ref abuse - and it's not good news for Broncos and Maroons

By The Roar / Editor

Broncos star Reece Walsh will miss Origin III after he was found guilty of contrary conduct following his foul-mouthed spray in the loss to Gold Coast at the NRL judiciary.

In a lengthy judiciary hearing on Tuesday night which lasted more than three hours, the 20-year-old fullback claimed he was not abusing Chris Butler when he was penalised in the final minutes of the 18-12 defeat after allegedly firing expletives at the referee.

He was found guilty and told to serve three matches on the sidelines. The Broncos have the bye after this Saturday’s clash with the Dolphins so he will be rubbed out of Origin III as well as Brisbane’s Round 20 clash with Canterbury.

The NRL’s submission to the hearing was that he should receive a four-match suspension while his defence lawyer, Nick Ghabar, argued unsuccessfully for one game as sufficient punishment.

The suspension of the in-form Walsh is a blow to the Maroons’ hopes of sealing a rare series whitewash in Sydney on July 12 and pits Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow and AJ Brimson against one another in a battle for the coveted fullback jersey.

Reece Walsh. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Walsh’s predecessor Kalyn Ponga has already ruled himself out of the Origin series to focus on club duties with Newcastle.

After a hearing that lasted two hours and forty minutes, the two-man judiciary panel of Penrith great Tony Puletua and Sean Hampstead deliberated for an hour but could not reach a unanimous verdict.

Judiciary chair Geoff Bellew SC cast a deciding vote, satisfied that on the balance of probability, Walsh had yelled “what the f*** do you mean, c***?” at Butler after he blew a penalty, not at teammate Patrick Carrigan as the defence claimed.

“I’m disappointed in the outcome but I accept the decision of the panel,” Walsh said.

“Obviously I know that I’m a role model to young kids and the community. I’m going to continue to work hard on being better in those areas that I need to get better in.”

Vision of the incident appeared to show Walsh facing towards Butler as he unloaded with all the Titans players behind his back while teammate Patrick Carrigan tried to calm him down.

“(Carrigan) came over and was saying to me slow your f—ing brain,” Walsh said during the hearing. “I just felt like at the time I was trying to help a teammate and help out and he (Carrigan) was coming at me telling me to be smart. We have that relationship where we can pull each other up on the field and speak to each other the way we do.

“I was agitated. I said ‘what the f–k do you mean, c—‘ to Patrick. When the penalty was given Patrick came at me I snapped at him. Afterwards, I was just letting the referee know I wasn’t talking to him. I said that to him because he blew another penalty. I said I was talking to Patty.

“We’re honest with each other and we can have tough conversations,” explained Walsh.

The NRL’s counsel, Patrick Knowles SC, lashed parts of Walsh’s evidence as “demonstrably untrue” and “frankly incredulous”, especially the suggestion he had not been complaining about the obstruction penalty when he first approached Butler.

“Even if the words aren’t said to the referee, they were directed at his on-field ruling,” he added.

Titans forward David Fifita, who just happens to be Walsh’s Maroons teammate, phoned into the hearing to give evidence to say he “tried to get under his skin” with sledging just before the incident.

Knowles said Fifita and Walsh had engaged in conversations prior to the hearing in a bid to get him off the charge: “They got their story straight.”

As part of Butler’s evidence, he told Broncos captain Adam Reynolds on the walk off at half-time that Walsh was repeatedly questioning his decisions and warned him that he faced harsher penalties.

Highlights of their testimony included Carrigan holding his phone camera up to his forehead as he struggled to hear the feed’s audio and Fifita twice referring to Walsh as “Reecy Boy”.

Fifita initially said Walsh had directed his comment to the referee before backtracking when probed by Bellew. “I just get real nervous when I speak to youse,” he said. “I just get intimidated by speaking to you because I think I’m in the wrong.”

The charge was Walsh’s fourth this year, after he incurred two in Queensland’s victory in Origin II, following a citing in round 11 for a shoulder charge.

Because the hearing went so long, the Broncos’ attendees missed their flight back to Brisbane.

The incident comes in the wake of a similar one in the UK, where Hull FC centre Josh Griffin was given a seven-game ban for calling a referee a “f—ing cheating” and referring to him as “f—ing shit”.

Griffin was binned at half-time of Hull’s Challenge Cup tie with St Helens two weeks ago, and then sent off immediately afterwards for continuing his diatribe against referee Chris Kendall.

Prior to the hearing, Broncos legend Gorden Tallis, who was famously sent off in Origin for abusing referee Bill Harrigan, said on Fox League that Walsh deserved a ban only if the referee is adamant the abuse was directed at him.

“I have a bit of history with this, calling referees names. I reckon he was frustrated and I don’t know whether it was at Carrigan just because of his eyeline (in the footage) or the referee. You can only go on the referee’s word,” he said.

“If the referee actually says he directed it at me, we go on the referee’s word because that is final. He’s the closest one to the scene.”

Reynolds backed Walsh’s claims before he was charged on Monday.

“Show the full clip. Was talking to a player on the other team,” Reynolds commented on a Fox League social media post that referred to the incident.

Walsh posted on Instagram on Monday that he had “reached out to Chris Butler to apologise if he thought I was speaking to him”.

“Whilst I am not proud of this … I also want to let the public, and in particular young kids playing the game know that I would never swear at a referee and neither should anybody else,” he wrote in the post.

The Broncos have been working with him since he was a teenager to deal with the emotions that surface on the field. Reynolds has spoken with him previously about cooling his heels when things don’t go his way.

The Crowd Says:

2023-06-29T00:30:10+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


That’s rubbish about Ilias, I’m the kids biggest critic, Reynolds wobbled at the Bunnies many many times from he started there in 2012, he was never ever 100%, what I’m saying is this, that Reynolds is not a good role model as a captain and especially the Broncos officials allowing Walsh to carry on like he is, as he has the biggest chip on his shoulders that I’ve even witnessed in the NRL and if they don’t do something about him, then he will lose allot of games for the Broncos in the future and in SOO.

2023-06-28T18:42:18+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


No need to be insulting mate - have a bex and a lie down

2023-06-28T12:44:32+00:00

langparker

Roar Rookie


Wouldn’t have said that when he was at the rabbitohs, you’re only snakey because that kid your lot dumped Reynolds for is starting to wobble. Learned his skills, good and bad, at souths.

2023-06-28T12:05:23+00:00

Brendon Waldron

Roar Pro


Might be harsh, but I think you’re being a bit harsh on a member of the judiciary for not sharing your opinion, even though he was in a room you weren’t in, for a procedure you weren’t a part of being presented with all the evidence you didn’t get see or hear. He can be guilty in your opinion, enough members of the panel agree with you, just take the win, but to demand a unanimous verdict and for them to all agree with how you see it based on second hand accounts of what happened is beyond arrogant. In my opinion, of course…

2023-06-28T10:47:39+00:00

dodge72

Roar Rookie


He is a spoiled brat

2023-06-28T10:38:25+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


A bit harsh mate - this is a discussion and opinion site

2023-06-28T09:52:28+00:00

Snoopy

Roar Rookie


It was a split decision by the panel, so there must have been doubt as to who he was swearing at. Where is the consistency, he said he was talking to Carrigan but not believed. Someone else pushes a linesman, could be seen as poor behaviour, says he didn't mean it and gets a fine.

2023-06-28T08:07:23+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


Munster could go to FB and Dearden to 5/8. That’s an option. Probably not ideal but the upside is a bit of future-proofing. Dearden gets more Origin experience at no risk to Qld losing the series.

2023-06-28T07:45:03+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Probably when we aren't mates :laughing:

2023-06-28T07:24:34+00:00

Brendon Waldron

Roar Pro


Well, damn, why have any kind of legal proceeding at all when we can just ask you what you think the verdict should be and go with that?

2023-06-28T07:13:42+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


An origin swansong for gags would be a beautiful thing. Bit more tinkering involved in the backline but qld has the series in the bag so why not!

2023-06-28T07:09:23+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Probably a straight swap for Brimson I'd assume, he was 18th man

2023-06-28T06:52:45+00:00

Mike88

Roar Rookie


You're probably right. Even if he was innocent as I say he's done enough to look 100% guilty. I do think he should've been reigned in prior. Its been building. A week away previous to this mightve helped clear his head now he misses 3 games. I doubt anyone didn't see something big coming. Both guys should have been given time for the headbutt. I'm all for origin and getting away with a bit. But headbutts are too far. Really bad look. Adds to this whole mix. Sent off Wednesday, plays that weekend.

2023-06-28T05:52:44+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


So nothing at all to do with Walsh's poor behaviour

2023-06-28T04:57:57+00:00

Snoopy

Roar Rookie


It means if you play for a certain club you don't get half the media coverage or backlash, I.e breaking coved rules, kinghitting someone, making videos. Guess he wears the wrong colours

2023-06-28T03:56:51+00:00

Robbo

Roar Rookie


It shouldn't and doesn't - I was simply saying this ruling 'should' have been unanimous

2023-06-28T02:42:22+00:00

Kurt S

Roar Pro


Would it be a straight swap of AJ Brimson for Walsh? Would you push Hammer to fullback and bring in Gagai or keep him in place and say risk Cobbo at fullback? Hammer has been excellent in attack and defense so far this season. Do you want to disrupt that? Who else could play full back? Who else is eligible for Qld? Ponga has ruled himself out and Slater didn't pick him due to health and safety concerns. I'd image that health and safety concern is still in coach's mind.

2023-06-28T02:35:53+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


What's that got to do with it?

2023-06-28T02:26:14+00:00

Snoopy

Roar Rookie


Like Cleary admitting he had broken the covid lock down rules. Manned up there didn't he.

2023-06-28T02:18:38+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


If anything "mate" is a far more insultingly condescending term than the c word in Australia nowadays. In Australia, if you start a sentence off with "mate", you just know the rest of the sentence is likely to be astonishingly condescending, disrespectful and dismissive of the other person.

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