The Gold Coast Bulletin

Mitchell: Bunnies are not milking it

- FATIMA KDOUH AND MARTIN GABOR

“YOU can call me Trell Milk now.”

That was South Sydney superstar Latrell Mitchell’s response to the suggestion that he and other players stayed down to milk penalties in Sunday’s brutal encounter with the Sydney Roosters.

Referee Ashley Klein dished out a record seven sinbins but other incidents of players appearing to stay down to draw a penalty raised eyebrows in the spiteful clash.

At one point, Mitchell, who is known as Trell Mitt by the Rabbitohs faithful, was slow to his feet after a heavy hit.

But the fullback insisted the tackle warranted a closer look.

“You can call me Trell Milk now,” Latrell said. “I play the game hard and tough. Honestly, I have never felt the forces they brought. I think they were head hunting a little bit.

“But at the end of the day, that’s the game of rugby league… if the bunker doesn’t see it, the ref doesn’t see it… that’s the game.

“I didn’t do anything, I didn’t lay down. I got up on my knee and looked at the ref thinking pretty much ‘what’s going on’.”

Mitchell did concede the bunker’s constant interventi­on allowed for the practice to happen but rejected the notion that his teammates were laying down in the eliminatio­n final.

“Well, the bunker has taken over the game… but that’s the game of rugby league at the moment,” Mitchell said. “You can call it as it is but we don’t lay down for penalties, we don’t look for it. It is what it is.”

Five-eighth Cody Walker said it was easy to confuse staying down for a player just simply feeling the after effects of a heavy collision or contact.

“I don’t know if many people have been hit with an arm like Jared’s (Waerea-Hargreaves) or any of those sort of guys. With the protocols and that, if you get up stumbling then you’ve got to go off. To try and gather yourself before you play the ball is quite important,” Walker said.

On Monday, the NRL’s head of football, Graham Annesley, admitted the trend of staying down was a concern.

Mitchell, however, said it could be eradicated if officials showed more consistenc­y on the ruling of foul play.

“It’s semi-final footy, the refs like to put away the whistle a little bit and that’s how it should be but I guess you have to be consistent in a way where it works for both sides,” he said.

Forward Tom Burgess is facing a two-match ban with an early plea for a high shot on James Tedesco, which left the Roosters skipper unable to return to the field.

Mitchell said South Sydney officials should investigat­e the possibilit­y of having the suspension deferred.

“Can he serve it next year, I’ll pay his fine,” he joked.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia