The New Zealand Herald

Complete picture remains to emerge

Transparen­cy is needed from the NZRL on what happened the night of the Anzac test

- David Skipwith

Big questions continue to hang over the Kiwis team culture and the circumstan­ces around suspended Kiwis captain Jesse Bromwich and teammate Kevin Proctor’s big night out in Canberra.

The Melbourne Storm and Gold Coast Titans NRL stars were caught on CCTV footage snorting what is believed to be cocaine, off another man’s phone, outside a Canberra nightclub in the early hours of the morning following the Kiwis’ Anzac test loss to Australia on May 5.

The has learned there were worrying signs about the Kiwis team culture from as early as last year, with one high-profile player involved in two unreported alcohol-related incidents following the end-of-year test against the Kangaroos in Perth and on the subsequent Four Nations campaign in the United Kingdom.

In an interview yesterday with Melbourne’s Bromwich admitted he can barely recall what happened after embarking on a seven-hour bender following the test at GIO Stadium, but the player and Kiwis management have provided conflictin­g accounts of how the drinking session started.

According to the newspaper, Bromwich enjoyed a couple of beers following the Kiwis’ 30-12 defeat and consumed more alcohol back at the hotel before heading out on the town around 1am.

That version of events differs from the official line provided by Kiwis management — that the team returned to their hotel after the game for a dry dinner with friends and family, before a small group of players and team staff were granted permission to head out for a quiet drink.

The group is said to have returned to the hotel but three things remain unclear: Whether Bromwich and Proctor stayed out alone, or whether they left the hotel a second time, and whether any other players were with them. A report in the Sydney Morning

last week also asserted that Bromwich was on pain medication following the match, with the team doctor issuing him clear instructio­ns to stay off the drink.

The NZRL embarked on a wider review of the night’s events, although details of their findings are yet to be made public.

The contacted New Zealand Rugby League boss Alex Hayton and Kiwis coach David Kidwell about the incidents and claims but both declined to comment.

When asked about Bromwich’s comments and the assertion of the

that he began drinking much earlier in the night, Hayton said: “We have worked through a process, we’ve made a decision and imposed a sanction and we’re moving on, and as far as we’re concerned, that’s the end of it.”

Following the incident, Bromwich stood himself down from the Kiwis captaincy before the NZRL banned him and Proctor from representi­ng New Zealand at the World Cup in October. The players were also hit with two and four-match bans respective­ly and Bromwich donated his $20,000 match payment to charity, while Proctor was fined the same amount by the Titans.

Bromwich’s remorse over the scandal is clear but Kiwis fans deserve a complete and honest explanatio­n from NZRL hierarchy about exactly what transpired three weeks ago.

With New Zealand and Australia co-hosting the upcoming World Cup and seven matches being played between Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington and Christchur­ch, honesty and transparen­cy is needed from the national game’s governing body.

They may have swept up the immediate mess by banning Bromwich and Proctor from playing in the end-of-season tournament, but a foul smell still lingers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand