The Scotsman

Scots ‘too drunk’ to board plane

● Captain one of three axed from squad

- By NICK FREESTONE

Scotland’s record-breaking captain Danny Brough has almost certainly played his last match for his country after being sent home in disgrace from the World Cup.

The 34-year-old Huddersfie­ld stand-off, who has led the Braveheart­s in three World Cups, was one of three players sent home from the tournament after being too drunk to board a plane from Christchur­ch to Brisbane.

Brough and team-mates Sam Brooks, who plays for Feathersto­ne Rovers, Johnny Walker, a former Castleford and Hull KR prop who now plays in Australia, were thought to have continued drinking well into Saturday night following Scotland’s 74-6 defeat by New Zealand in their second group game.

The airline refused to allow the players to board the flight, a decision that was supported by the Scotland management.

“We expect everyone involved in Scotland Rugby League to adhere to the highest standards of behaviour,” chairman Keith Hogg said.

“We fully support the code of conduct that is in place for everyone who is involved in the 2017 World Cup.

“We all understand our responsibi­lities to the game and we must respect the sport and everyone who is involved in it at all times.

“Unfortunat­ely, these three players have not adhered to those standards and those values and will be leaving early from a tournament that it is a privilege for us to be involved in.”

The three players remained in Christchur­ch yesterday as the rest of the squad departed for Cairns, where they will prepare for Saturday’s mustwin game against Samoa.

Coach Steve Mccormack must find a new captain and quickly lift his side after they conceded 124 points in their two opening matches.

Brough, who was Super League’s Man of Steel in 2013, became Scotland’s mostcapped player when he made his 24th appearance in their opening game of the tournament against Tonga.

Walker’s older brother Adam is a Scotland regular but was withdrawn from the squad after testing positive for cocaine use in August while playing for Wakefield.

The episode has shades of the incident during Great Britain’s Tri-nations Series Down Under in 2006 when Sean Long went on a drunken binge on a flight from Wellington to Sydney and shortly afterwards left the tour early.

It is also the latest in a series of incidents that have marred the 2017 World Cup. Italian team-mates James Tedesco and Shannon Wakeman were the subject of an investigat­ion after fighting with each other following their team’s opening defeat by Ireland in Cairns and yesterday it emerged that France hooker Eloi Pelissier had been sent home after breaking a team curfew.

France had earlier left behind Hull utility player Hakim Miloudi as a disciplina­ry measure after playing in their pre-tournament friendly against Jamaica.

Shaun Johnson became New Zealand’s most prolific scorer in history in the weekend win over Scotland.

Johnson scored one of his side’s 14 tries and kicked nine goals for a personal haul of 22 points that took him past Matthew Ridge’s record of 168, while winger Peta Hiku and stand-off Te Maire Martin both grabbed hat-tricks in the 74-6 rout.

Scotland’s abject performanc­e was perhaps best summed up on 58 minutes when Brough failed to find touch with a penalty and Peta Hiku took full advantage to score his second try.

 ??  ?? Danny Brough leads his Scotland team out ahead of Saturday’s 74-6 rout by New Zealand in Christchur­ch.
Danny Brough leads his Scotland team out ahead of Saturday’s 74-6 rout by New Zealand in Christchur­ch.

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