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Jack Bird

Jeremy Dragon

Juniors
Messages
1,220
St George Illawarra centre Jack Bird has been suspended for one-game due to a grade two contrary conduct charge following the Dragons' 38-12 win over the Sea Eagles on Friday night.

Bird was charged for his role in a clash against opposite centre Moses Suli midway through the first half.


With the Dragons' early guilty plea, Bird's one-game suspension has also seen him accrue 50 demerit

https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2021/03/27/bird-cited-for-suli-clash/
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
‘There’s no regrets’: The heartbreaking rise and fall of Jack Bird
By Michael Chammas

May 8, 2021
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Jack Bird is back in St George Illawarra colours.Credit:Nine

Paul Gallen can remember it well. “I thought, ‘There’s no hope this bloke is going to keep playing’,” Gallen recalls.

Jack Bird had just dislocated his elbow, 18 minutes into the 2016 grand final. Gallen, then the Sharks’ skipper, had suffered the same injury some 13 years earlier.

The pain, which Gallen describes as the worst he experienced in his 20-year career, reduced him to tears and forced him from the field.

Yet Gallen still berated his centre, who at the time was clutching at his arm in agony after friendly fire from his captain in a tackle on Melbourne’s Will Chambers.

“Toughen up you soft cock,” Gallen yelled, albeit convinced he wouldn’t last another minute on the field.

Bird lasted another 62. And then lifted the NRL trophy with his arm strapped like a mummy for good measure.

Little wonder former Sharks coach Shane Flanagan also points to that unforgettable night at Stadium Australia five years ago when asked to share a story that best speaks to the character of the man he lured from the Dragons as a teenager.

"In normal games he’d be off and missing five to six weeks," Flanagan said. "It was a horrendous injury. It looked awful. But no way in the world was he coming off. He was unbelievable. That’s typical Bird, shakes it off and says 'I’m going to be the best player on the field'."

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Jack Bird celebrates winning the 2016 premiership with Cronulla.Credit:Getty

That type of toughness has been ingrained in Bird since he was a teenager. Since doctors told him that he would never play rugby league again after being diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis just weeks after suffering an ACL injury playing OzTag as a 16-year-old.

“From there, I just saw him deteriorate to nothing, mate,” Bird’s father, Mick, told the Herald in 2017. ”He couldn’t open the car door. He couldn’t even open a can of Coke. He could hardly walk, that poor kid.”

Bird had to draw on his reserves of toughness after a shoulder injury, a sternum injury and two ACL knee reconstructions limited him to just 17 games in three years after moving to Brisbane on a multi-million dollar contract.

“When I was going through tough times, people would look at me and say, ‘He’s never going to make it’,” Bird told the Herald in a candid interview at WIN Stadium last week, which will be aired on Channel Nine before Sunday’s Dragons-Bulldogs game.

“They’d say, ‘He’s done an ACL at 16, he’s got rheumatoid arthritis’, which is a condition you have for the rest of your life … But I was never going to give it up. I was always going to fight until I literally couldn’t do it any more.”

Jack Bird speaks about his struggles and his decision to keep playing NRL.

"I’m not going to lie, there were times there I thought about giving up. I just knew it wasn’t the right decision. There’s always thoughts going through your mind whether this is the right thing to do or not and whether to keep putting your body through the drama."

The toll on Bird was more than just physical. The abuse he copped from irate Broncos fans was relentless.

“People calling me a bust or whatever they want to say, it cut me deep,” Bird said as he prepares to return to Brisbane for Magic Round next weekend.

“It killed me that it didn’t work out for me up there. I wish it did because I loved the place, I loved living there and I loved the club. They put faith in me. They signed me on good coin and put faith in me to try and make semi finals, make grand finals.

“If I could turn back time … it’s not my fault I got injured. If I was healthy up at Brisbane I don’t think they would have wanted to shop me around.”

Gallen’s relationship with Bird goes back well before anyone in the NRL had ever heard of him. At the request of agent David Riolo, Gallen attended a fundraiser in Wollongong back in 2012 after Bird had been diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis.

”I remember I bought this Usain Bolt-signed spike,” Gallen said.

“It was probably a fake, but anyway I bought it for two grand. There’s a fair chance it’s not even real.”

Gallen still remembers the day he thought he had convinced Bird to knock back offers from Brisbane and Newcastle to remain at the club with whom he had just won a premiership.

“I had one last coffee with him and he gave me a figure that he would stay at Cronulla for,” Gallen admits. “I drove back to the club. There were cameras waiting out the front so I dropped him at the other side of the Leagues Club. I told him, ‘Birdy, I’m going to give this figure to Flanno right now. You f---ing walk into his office and you tell him and get it done today’.

“I went home and rang Flanno half an hour later and said, ‘did you speak to Birdy?’ He said, ‘He walked past my office but never walked in’. Between me dropping him off and that call to Flanno, he obviously spoke to someone and never went into Flanno’s office. The deal was announced with Brisbane that afternoon. The rest is history. He left.”

Sitting there listening to Bird relive the pain of what he endured during his three seasons at the Broncos, you can’t help but wonder whether leaving Cronulla was the biggest mistake of his career. Plenty told him it was at the time.

He was the best young player in the game, whose world unravelled from the moment he set foot in Queensland. Does anything change if he stays? Was the money even worth it?

“I don’t regret it,” Bird fires back. “I actually had more money on the table at other clubs. I just wanted to test myself, get out of my comfort zone and try something different. There’s definitely no regrets. I got coached by Wayne [Bennett]. Got a nice house up there. Got mates up there. I loved living there.

“I kind of wanted to give Brisbane one more shot at playing up there ... but I don’t think the club wanted me. I actually don’t even know the truth behind it all. My manager was telling me this, the club was telling me that. You just don’t know.”

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Jack Bird suffers an ACL injury during Magic Round in 2019. He will return to the scene of the crime for next week’s Magic Round celebrations in Brisbane for the Dragons’ clash with Melbourne.Credit:NRL Photos

“By the end of it I said, ‘Listen, if you guys don’t want me, I’m happy to go - so let’s just sort out a deal and get it over and done with’. I probably needed to come back home and find myself again and be around family and friends and enjoy footy again.”

Darius Boyd’s mental health battle over the years has been well documented. The former Broncos captain could see the emotional toll the injuries were having on Bird and regularly made time to have a coffee, or even just watch a game of NFL together.

“He wears his heart on his sleeve and he wants to be the best and doesn’t want to let people down,” Boyd said.

“That’s a great attribute to have, but on the flip side it can really eat away at you. Unfortunately with social media these days, everyone likes to stick the boot in and kick people when they’re down. Most of the time it’s pretty unwarranted and pretty disgusting what’s said from people who have opinions that don’t mean a lot.“

Despite the support, Bird’s mental state was slowly deteriorating. He distanced himself from those who tried to help him, shutting down as the reality of his predicament began to wear him out.

He tried to bottle up the pain until, one night, it all spilt out. Bird broke down in tears after returning home following more abuse from members of the public.

“I’m the type of person who doesn’t really speak out about tough times and stuff,” Bird said. “I don’t really seek help. My partner would always get me to try and speak up, but I’d never do it.

“I’m a person that bottles things up, so it was kind of hard to get through it … I show a brave face on the outside, but deep down it was hurting not to play footy. The first year I was injured I put on a lot of weight, I got a little bit depressed. I pushed some people away that meant a lot to me.”

During that year, Gallen visited Bird in Brisbane while preparing for a boxing match. His friend was no longer the person he once was.

“In 2016, you would have thought he was an arrogant little prick if you didn’t know him,” Gallen said.

“He was just so confident. Playing State of Origin and winning a competition. He was awesome. He had this swagger about him. But when I went up and saw him, he wasn’t the same. He wasn’t happy.

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Swagger: Jack Bird in Origin camp in 2017.Credit:Getty
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
PART 2


“There were certainly things he told me, which I won’t go into, but he wasn’t a happy player. He wasn’t a happy person. I actually think he found his mojo again at the start of last year.”

That’s when disaster struck for a second time. On the eve of the 2020 season, while trying to step away from Tom Dearden at training, Bird crashed to the turf at Brisbane’s Red Hill training base in scenes that won’t be forgotten any time soon. His ACL ruptured for the second time in 10 months.

“That was devastating,” he said. “That was rock bottom. That was the point when I thought ‘is my body giving up on me?’. I can still feel it. It’s a yuck feeling.

“It was unbearable. I knew straight away what it was. When I went back to the locker I was pretty upset. I cried all afternoon. I’m a pretty emotional person.”

It’s only fitting that Bird is now back where it all started. Living in the same Berkeley house he grew up in, wearing the same jersey he donned as a teenager.

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Jack Bird playing for Berkeley in the Illawarra Junior Rugby League.

When he left the Dragons six years ago, he did so feeling that they didn’t think he would amount to much as a footballer. He returned this year with the Dragons the only club thinking he still could.

“They were the only team that were interested in me,” he said. “I don’t think too many clubs wanted me with what happened in my past. But this is my home.


‘Dad, I just want this pain to go’: Jack Bird’s heartbreaking battle with rheumatoid arthritis
“I never thought I’d get the chance to wear the red V again. I just love the place. I love Wollongong, I grew up here. I wanted to come back here and try and win them a comp again.

“I always knew I was going to beat the fight. I had a feeling I was going to play NRL. I wasn’t sure when I got sick, but here I am now.”

Not that his mum will see much of it.

“Mum can’t even watch footy now,” Bird said. “She gets nervous about me playing. You can just imagine what my parents have been through the last few years because of me.”


https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/th...se-and-fall-of-jack-bird-20210505-p57p9y.html

P.S Thankyou @hewi
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
EXCLUSIVE: Jack Bird 'right in contention' to play at right centre for NSW Blues, says Peter Sterling
By Zachary Gates

Former champion Blues halfback Peter Sterling believes Canberra Raiders weapon Jack Wighton should play at right centre for NSW, but he's tossed up the rejuvenated Jack Bird as a surprise alternative.

Sterling has backed suspended South Sydney Rabbitohs superstar Latrell Mitchell, who's due to play two games in the lead-up to the State of Origin opener, to slot into left centre.

And while he thinks Wighton should join Mitchell in the three-quarter line, despite the Raiders' nosedive and the lacklustre form of the reigning Dally M medallist, he says St George Illawarra Dragons dynamo Bird should be on coach Brad Fittler's radar.

"I'm going with Jack Wighton (for the Blues' right centre). I know that the Canberra Raiders aren't going well and Wighton probably isn't at his best, but you put him in that company ..." Sterling said on Wide World of Sports' Sterlo's Wrap.

"We know what he can do at this level, he's a big body, he can kick the football and he knows what Origin is all about."


Two ACL ruptures in just 10 months limited Bird to eight games with the Broncos in 2018 and nine matches with Brisbane in 2019, but the former Blues utility has thrived since arriving at the Dragons for season 2021.

The 26-year-old featured in all but one of St George Illawarra's first nine games and has troubled the opposition with his brilliant running and playmaking, as well as proving a handful in defence.


The indigenous star played five games for the Blues across the 2016 and 2017 series under then coach Laurie Daley, injecting himself in the contest off the bench.

Dragons teammate Zac Lomax was a hot chance to play at right centre for NSW until he broke his right thumb in Round Eight, but Sterling says Bird is at a stage in his comeback to be able to fire in the sky blue.

https%3A%2F%2Fprod.static9.net.au%2Ffs%2Ff27071a7-5165-49e6-abba-96b4d4b5af43

Star St George Illawarra Dragons centre Jack Bird. (Getty)
"He's the other player that's right in contention. He's had a great start to the season," Sterling said.

"We asked (Dragons coach) Anthony Griffin about Jack Bird before the game against Canterbury (on Sunday) and he was saying that he was becoming very confident in his body.

"He looks great and he's the kind of guy that, if you didn't have a Ryan Papenhuyzen and you couldn't put him in the backline, you could put him on the bench very comfortably. He can play centre, he plays five-eighth, he plays back row.

"He's roared right back, especially on the back of no Zac Lomax."

https://wwos.nine.com.au/nrl/news-2...sterling/453e241d-e94e-4e05-9b26-e69d5e005b0b
 

possm

Coach
Messages
15,591
At the Dragons we already have a good right centre in Lomax so, in my opinion Bird is the missing link to our forward pack. At right edge he is more than a like for like replacement for Frizell and would add strong defence and a good attacking game to what used to be our most vonerable side in defence.

On the left, we could have Sims and the Feagai brothers. Yes the twins would lack experience but make up for that with good defence, speed and the ability to take the high ball. This would give Griffin the opportunity to test Ramsey at fullback and Duffty on the bench.

Our forward pack could do with the addition of one more top line prop to partner Vaughan in the run-on side, leaving Molo and Lawrie as our bench props and Kerr or Fui as our bench backrower. So for 2022:

1. Ramsey
2. Matt Feagai
3. Max Feagai
4. Lomax
5. Ravalawa
6. Sullivan
7. Hunt
8. New Prop
9. B Smith
10. Vaughan
11. Sims
12. Bird
13. De Belin

14. Dufty
15. Lawrie
16. Molo
17. Kerr or Fui

If Ramsey goes well at fullback we only have a new prop and B Smith to recruit for season 2022. If Ramsey does not go well at fullback we can still go to Sloan, Schiller or Stuart. I haven't heard of any other Club rushing to sign Dufty.
 

LINESPEED

Juniors
Messages
1,551
At the Dragons we already have a good right centre in Lomax so, in my opinion Bird is the missing link to our forward pack. At right edge he is more than a like for like replacement for Frizell and would add strong defence and a good attacking game to what used to be our most vonerable side in defence.

On the left, we could have Sims and the Feagai brothers. Yes the twins would lack experience but make up for that with good defence, speed and the ability to take the high ball. This would give Griffin the opportunity to test Ramsey at fullback and Duffty on the bench.

Our forward pack could do with the addition of one more top line prop to partner Vaughan in the run-on side, leaving Molo and Lawrie as our bench props and Kerr or Fui as our bench backrower. So for 2022:

1. Ramsey
2. Matt Feagai
3. Max Feagai
4. Lomax
5. Ravalawa
6. Sullivan
7. Hunt
8. New Prop
9. B Smith
10. Vaughan
11. Sims
12. Bird
13. De Belin

14. Dufty
15. Lawrie
16. Molo
17. Kerr or Fui

If Ramsey goes well at fullback we only have a new prop and B Smith to recruit for season 2022. If Ramsey does not go well at fullback we can still go to Sloan, Schiller or Stuart. I haven't heard of any other Club rushing to sign Dufty.

So Possm, crystalballing into the future
... in a fantasy attempt to keep a few of our juniors, we might see Schiller at 3, Zac 4, Duff 6, Sullivan 7,
Bird & Amone 11 & 12, JDB 13, Cody 1, Feagais 2 & 5, Rav & Fui super subs.

Sorry Possm, but I have to agree with your missus that Duff has to be somewhere on the park for 80mins!!

Can’t keep ‘em all - and some won’t realise the hype

I used to get into terrible trouble at Penshurst Primary doing just this in lesson time.

Pencilling teams on a scrap of paper
FMD will we ever learn?
 

Blood Shot Eyes

First Grade
Messages
6,029
As much as I admire Jacks tenacity and will to succeed after his horrendous run with injuries I'm not sure hes up to Origin standard at this stage...its not as though NSW are desperate for backs...as a matter of fact theres a smorgasbord of players that could fit the centre pairing ....atbh if fit Im not sure young Lomax would be required as well
 

TruSaint

Referee
Messages
20,260
Jack is fast becoming my fav player in the current squad.
The energy and passion he brings is infectious.

He has an error in him, but this kid can play.
Selfishly, I hope he doesn't play SOO and keeps fit for with Saints.

He's 26 and has ample opportunity to represent in the future.
 

Blood Shot Eyes

First Grade
Messages
6,029
Jack is fast becoming my fav player in the current squad.
The energy and passion he brings is infectious.

He has an error in him, but this kid can play.
Selfishly, I hope he doesn't play SOO and keeps fit for with Saints.

He's 26 and has ample opportunity to represent in the future.
I agree Bud....my comment re his Origin selection wasnt based on his inability to succeed again at that level but purely in regard to his welfare at this stage of his career....and as you rightly point out at 26 plenty of time yet...and that goes for young Zac as well.....think I mentoned a few months back that Birdy has instilled some respectability into in particular our backline and is dragging that respect out in his peers as well.....met him a few years back at The Blues Origin camp near Kingscliff...decent young man I found him to be...although I told him at the time he disappointed me as he was joining the Donkeys in Brisbane
 

TruSaint

Referee
Messages
20,260
I agree Bud....my comment re his Origin selection wasnt based on his inability to succeed again at that level but purely in regard to his welfare at this stage of his career....and as you rightly point out at 26 plenty of time yet...and that goes for young Zac as well.....think I mentoned a few months back that Birdy has instilled some respectability into in particular our backline and is dragging that respect out in his peers as well.....met him a few years back at The Blues Origin camp near Kingscliff...decent young man I found him to be...although I told him at the time he disappointed me as he was joining the Donkeys in Brisbane

Agree.

I know what point you were making. All good.

I see in Jack a guy that has moved from club to club, had injuries to boot, and now looks like a fierce winner.

Like trying to make up for time lost, he sometimes overplays his hand, but I love that. He seems to be enjoying life and footy.

The more he gets the ball, the better he is.
 

Blood Shot Eyes

First Grade
Messages
6,029
Agree.

I know what point you were making. All good.

I see in Jack a guy that has moved from club to club, had injuries to boot, and now looks like a fierce winner.

Like trying to make up for time lost, he sometimes overplays his hand, but I love that. He seems to be enjoying life and footy.

The more he gets the ball, the better he is.
Absolutely ...hes a competitor alright.....and the more games he gets under his belt the better he will become confidence wise.....as you say hes trying to make up for lost time...he seems to be caught in that split decision making zone where he wants to rip in and at the same time cautious because of his past.....but tell you something when hes back to full match fitness and awareness watch out hes going to be some player
 

TruSaint

Referee
Messages
20,260
Absolutely ...hes a competitor alright.....and the more games he gets under his belt the better he will become confidence wise.....as you say hes trying to make up for lost time...he seems to be caught in that split decision making zone where he wants to rip in and at the same time cautious because of his past.....but tell you something when hes back to full match fitness and awareness watch out hes going to be some player

ac2c94f785425c8798b98133b1352648.gif
 

FlameThrower

Bench
Messages
3,557
Absolutely ...hes a competitor alright.....and the more games he gets under his belt the better he will become confidence wise.....as you say hes trying to make up for lost time...he seems to be caught in that split decision making zone where he wants to rip in and at the same time cautious because of his past.....but tell you something when hes back to full match fitness and awareness watch out hes going to be some player
Seems to be making lots of errors at critical times though, perhaps trying too hard..basic stuff like loose carry / knock on or play the ball errors. But most of team has that at the moment.
 

possm

Coach
Messages
15,591
Well I hope that not one Saints player makes SOO selection. This season we need everyone on deck to help us make the top 4.

I still believe Bird will make a good right edge forward.
 
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