The Borneo Post

End-of-season debauchery mars Australian rugby league

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SYDNEY: Australia’s fuming rugby league chief has slammed Canterbury Bulldogs players after they were pictured vomiting and stripping naked at a pub during raucous endof-season celebratio­ns.

Known as “Mad Monday”, the annual parties for National Rugby League teams after their last game have earned a reputation for drunken debauchery.

The Bulldogs lived up to that this week with Sydney’s Daily Telegraph publishing photos of players throwing up and passing out at a city bar.

One player even stripped naked on the balcony of the watering hole in view of the public with another member of the party grabbing his genitals as he danced the night away.

“It ’ s embar rassing for the players as individual­s themselves, it’s embarrassi­ng for thei r c lub, and it ’ s embarrassi­ng for the game,” NRL chief Todd Greenberg said late Tuesday.

“I’m not going to speculate on what sanctions or actions we will take, I’ll wait until I get the full details of the report because I don’t have all the details at the moment.”

The rugby league body has spent years trying to change the sport ’ s reputation for bad behaviour after a series of scandals, and said it was disappoint­ed after making its expectatio­ns clear to all clubs.

“I’ve got no problems with people celebratin­g the end of their season, as long as they do it respectabl­y,” said Greenberg.

“On this occasion they’ve made some poor decisions and poor choices, and that ultimately gives the game a black eye and that’s what I’m disappoint­ed about.”

One of the most infamous recent incidents to mar the game involved Sydney Roosters scrum- half Mitchell Pearce, who was caught on camera in 2016 staggering around drunk before launching into an expletive-laden rant about wanting to commit a sex act on a dog.

He was suspended for eight games and fined Aus$ 125,000 ( US$ 90,000).

That scandal came two years after Cronulla Sharks star Todd Carney was photograph­ed in the bathroom of a nightclub engaging in a vulgar act while standing at a urinal.

He was sacked for his drunken antics.

The Bulldogs apologised for their players’ behaviour this week.

“In regard to images from the team’s get-together on Monday, the club accepts that they were unacceptab­le and a poor reflection on the individual­s involved and the club,” it said.

“The players are aware of their responsibi­lities and the standards required when representi­ng the club and the behaviour was unacceptab­le and a bad look for the game.”

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