And it continues
Opinion: Wests Tigers’ offensive gesture outrage shows culture is broken
A small group of Wests Tigers players’ disgraceful display of an offensive Middle Eastern hand gesture towards Bulldogs fans reinforces the culture is utterly broken at this once-proud club, writes Eliza Barr.
Eliza Barr
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2 min read
August 4, 2025 - 12:28PM
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/n...ory/bb60b6e7208e241ba378994692d8039a#comments
The latest despicable display from the Wests Tigers just further demonstrates how absolutely rotten and broken this once-proud club’s culture truly is.
I was at Cronulla RSL watching the Bulldogs take on the Tigers on Sunday afternoon when my sister and I clocked an odd gesture from multiple Wests Tigers players, including Samuela Fainu and Brent Naden.
By Monday morning I am reading
the NRL is aware they were using a highly offensive Middle Eastern hand signal to Bulldogs fans – famously a base with significant Lebanese Australian support – after scoring a try.
Frequent in defeat, and utterly ungracious in victory – this is a club with a putrid, broken culture that should inspire nothing but shame and disgust in the rugby league community.
The Tigers were the better team yesterday in slippery, difficult conditions and they could have held their heads high with a performance their fans could have been proud of for a change – until a small group of players destroyed it all with this foul behaviour.
Samuela Fainu of the Wests Tigers (R) celebrates scoring a try. (Photo by Mark Evans/Getty Images)
The worst bit is I am not even surprised.
I was hit with a deluge of abuse after I reported my experience when the Tigers took on my beloved Sharks at Leichhardt Oval last year, which was the most confronting and unedifying NRL game I have ever attended.
Samuela Fainu of the Wests Tigers (R) celebrates scoring a try. (Photo by Mark Evans/Getty Images)
Among other things, drunk Tigers supporters on the hill were yelling at the Sharks’ Pasifika players in Fijian.
I called it out at the time and the Wests Tigers spokesman said the club was “appalled by the behaviour” before blaming it on squeezing too many people into a derelict football ground.
“Adequate policing of the Hill is one of many challenges at this venue in its current state,” the spokesman said.
Give me a break.
As it happens, you can’t blame Leichhardt Oval being a bit decrepit this time – this latest incident happened at a state-of-the-art stadium and it proves these problems are following the Wests Tigers everywhere they go.
By comparison, I’ve been to two Bulldogs games in the past couple of years – one in which they defeated the Sharks, and their 2025 Good Friday blockbuster in which they were victorious over the Rabbitohs.
Not once did I feel unsafe, uncomfortable, or in any way concerned by the conduct of the fans or the players on the field – even when I was wearing my team’s colours and we had just lost.
The even more appalling part of those players extending such a rude, offensive gesture to the exact people they knew it would likely offend the most is their clear ignorance of their own fanbase.
2021 Census data reveals Arabic is the second-most common language spoken other than English in Campbelltown – the spiritual home of the Wests bit of this venture.
I reckon the 7300-odd Arabic speakers in Tigers country would have found what these players did pretty offensive too.
Spencer Leniu spent eight weeks on the sidelines for a racist remark towards Ezra Mam in Vegas last year.
The NRL would do well to consider the message it sends in responding to yet another revolting display from this club.