What's new
The Front Row Forums

Register a free account today to become a member of the world's largest Rugby League discussion forum! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Jarryd Hayne - Make him an Eel for Life

Messages
42,876
Where is "profusely" coming from? ... cant say ive bothered reading all the reports

But does it matter if it was "profuse" or not? .... any amount of unwanted damage done that way is not good
It was in one or more of those articles. It's not the most important thing but it lends weight to the suggestion that any injury was the result of reckless behaviour at best and deliberate at worst. So I think it does matter.
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
Maybe that's the next tabloid we will read about early next week?

I cant get my head around why as reported she waited to go to the doctor the next day, surely after 1 hour of bleeding profusley you kinda need to call an ambulance or get your mom to drive you to emergency pronto.

Reports she has taken photos of the injury, how long before they are...leaked o_O
she might use an egg beater as a dildo for all we know
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/po...l-over-jarryd-hayne-case-20181123-p50hzs.html

Police could question a third Eel over Jarryd Hayne case


  • 2 hours ago
Police may require a third Parramatta player to be interviewed in their case against Jarryd Hayne after it emerged former teammate Kane Evans had contact with him in the hours preceding the alleged sexual assault.

The Herald can reveal Hayne spent time in the company of Evans on the Central Coast on the night of the NRL grand final. It’s understood Evans and other members of a party moved on to another establishment, but Hayne chose not to join them.

Evans is one of three Parramatta players who had contact with Hayne during the course of the evening. As revealed by Fairfax Media, police captured CCTV footage of Hayne drinking with former Eels teammates Brad Takairangi and Kaysa Pritchard at the Merrylands Bowling Club at about 3am.

All of the Parramatta players were on annual leave and there is no suggestion whatsoever that the trio were involved in, or had any knowledge of, the alleged incident. A Parramatta spokesman declined to comment on the latest revelations.
“The club and the players will not be making any public comment,” he said.

Police are yet to speak to any of the players but, given they are pursuing a number of lines of enquiry, may choose to do so.

The latest details provide a clearer picture of Hayne’s movements during the night in question.

Hayne has been charged with aggravated sexual assault over the incident in the Hunter region, with police alleging he was intoxicated when arriving at a house north of Newcastle to meet a 26-year-old woman.

After arriving at the house via taxi, it’s alleged Hayne told the driver to wait for him for about 20 minutes. It’s alleged he bit her on the genitalia, the injuries requiring the women to seek medical attention the following day. The alleged victim reportedly has photographic evidence to support the claims.

In a recent interview, Hayne said he felt he was capable of playing at the top level for up to four more years. However, it appears his professional career is over at the age of 30.

The two-time Dally M medalist had been hoping to sign with either Parramatta or St George Illawarra. However, both clubs have ceased contract negotiations after he was charged. The Eels continue to offer Hayne welfare support despite the fact he is no longer on their books.

With Hayne officially out of the running for the contentious fullback spot, Eels coach Brad Arthur recently conceded he was unsure who would wear the No.1 jersey next season. Options include Bevan French, Clint Gutherson, Corey Norman, Will Smith and Josh Hoffman. However, Arthur will wait until after Christmas to make a definitive call.
 

Kornstar

Coach
Messages
15,578
Yeah but being f**king dumb isn't a crime. It brings up the issue of double standards for me.
You've probably heard people getting upset when a woman chooses to walk home alone through a dangerous area, gets assaulted or worse, and someone suggests she was foolish to put herself in such a position. And they might actually be right. Whether it's necessary or tactful to point that out is another question.
But if it's not OK to say that about a woman who is a victim, why is it seemingly OK to say it about a man?

Where is "profusely" coming from? ... cant say ive bothered reading all the reports

But does it matter if it was "profuse" or not? .... any amount of unwanted damage done that way is not good

It was in one or more of those articles. It's not the most important thing but it lends weight to the suggestion that any injury was the result of reckless behaviour at best and deliberate at worst. So I think it does matter.

Please don’t mistake me for laying blame, it is purely an observation and not about consent or non-consent.

I hear the word profusely and i think a lot of blood and we i think a lot of picture blood soaked sheets, blood on a person and blood on clothes.

I also think needing to seek urgent medical attention and further to that and in the area it is that a medical professional would want the police involved.

Either it is poor reporting or poor leaking of information but to me the whole thing is just weird and gets weirder by the newly reported article.......
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/i...s/news-story/283d9a313cb7be5402a42b0b21d10303

Is Jarryd Hayne’s career over after sex assault allegations?


If nothing else, Jarryd Hayne has learnt the value of perseverance.

He will need it more than ever as he faces up to 20 years in jail over an alleged sexual assault.

Once the best rugby league player in the world, 30-year-old Hayne soared to incredible sporting heights — but has now flown too close to the sun and risks going up in smoke.

The Hayne plane has crashed.

He was one of Australia’s greatest sporting stories, leaving a million-dollar-a-season National Rugby League contract behind to try to break into the American NFL.

Against all the odds, he made it, winning a contract with the San Francisco 49ers.

“The things I went through and came through are more significant than anything I’ve achieved,” Hayne said at the time of his contract signing.

“Getting through the tough days has been more important than having the days where I can celebrate … When it’s become tough and it’s become difficult, I’ve learned to persevere.”

League legend Phil Gould made a harsh but prescient call about Hayne earlier this month as the star confronted an uncertain NRL future, well before news of the sex assault investigation leaked out.

Asked where he thought Hayne would end up as he attempted to squeeze more money out of the Parramatta Eels — or a rival club — Gould was emphatic. “Probably unhappy. Unsettled. Unfulfilled,” he wrote on Twitter.

“At his best, he’s a talent,” Gould added. “Can definitely win you games. 2009 was a long time ago though.”

The year Hayne emerged as the best player in rugby league feels like a lifetime ago given everything that’s happened since.

That was the year of his magical run that helped Parramatta win the Grand Final. He went on to win two Dally M medals — the sport’s highest national honour, play 11 Tests for Australia and 23 State of Origins for NSW, and scored 121 tries in 214 NRL games.

It wasn’t as though his life had been incident-free during that breakout year of 2009 — he was shot at by a gunman in Kings Cross the year before — but you could fill several books with the ups and downs of his time since then.

The most recent lowpoint — this week’s arrest over the alleged assault of a 26-year-old Newcastle woman — could be the final nail in the coffin of the code-hopper’s career.

He was talented, ambitious and moral, born to a single mum at a southwest Sydney housing commission flat. Jodie would sleep by the door to ensure her children would be safe from home invaders.

His father is former rugby league star Manoa Thompson, who was absent when Hayne was growing up but reunited with his son later in life.

After showing his prodigious football talent at Westfields Sports High School, he signed with the Parramatta Eels and immediately became one of the game’s top performers.

He narrowly avoided being shot by a bikie gang member during a night out in 2008 — a moment Hayne later said changed his life.

He turned to religion after playing for the Fijian rugby league team at the World Cup in what was a tumultuous year for the young footballer.

“For the next year after that, there were sleepless nights … I knew I was a marked man. I was told I was. That was pretty much the pinnacle of where my life was going,” he told Light FM Christian radio.

“I sat down and told myself, ‘Man, I’m a rugby league player. I’m not a bikie. I’m not a gangster.’ But the way that whole year developed, it became such a God-glorifying year. It was something that changed my life and made me who I am today.”

HAYNE later became a poster boy for Hillsong, a contemporary Pentecostal church.

At the 49ers signing, he was quoting Christian verses and humming the tune to a Hillsong number called Oceans during a video hook-up with journalists in Australia, trumpeting the message that anything is possible if you believe — in yourself and God.

“In God we’ve trusted. This whole journey has never been about making a roster or being in a team. It’s been about giving myself an opportunity,” Hayne said. “Taking a risk and putting myself out there. This whole journey, I’ve never felt so alive. To be able to walk in faith … sometimes you have to take yourself places and hope God shows up. I’ve leant on him more than ever.”

It was his ill-fated entrance into the notoriously hard-drinking, troubled San Francisco 49ers that marked the start of a decline in luck for one of Australia’s most beloved athletes.

Hayne was signed as an undrafted free agent in the position of running back, on a three-year contract with a base salary of $US1,575,000.

It was the fulfilment of a long-held ambition of Hayne’s, who had attempted to quit rugby league at the age of 23 in 2011.

A host of Bay Area news outlets — including KBR, the East Bay Times and The Mercury News — carried the story of Hayne’s arrest by Sex Crime Squad detectives on Monday.

It’s the second time he’s created headlines in San Francisco since leaving the 49ers in 2016 after a woman in her mid-20s accused him of raping her at his apartment in December 2015.

Hayne has unequivocally denied the allegations, which were investigated by San Jose Police, but did not result in charges because of a reported lack of evidence.

The woman is now pursuing damages in a civil court, with a trial set for 2020.

Current and former 49ers players’ brushes with the law have provided regular fodder this decade in what’s been a tumultuous era for one of the NFL’s most storeyed franchises.

Thirteen team members were arrested in a six-year period on charges including drink driving, illegal possession of a weapon, hit and run, disorderly conduct, sexual battery, driving under the influence and vandalism.

Defensive tackle Ray McDonald was arrested on suspicion of domestic abuse after police said his pregnant fiancee showed “visible injuries” of sexual abuse.

Charges were dropped in April 2017, when the alleged victim exercised her legal right not to press charges.

A group of Niners all lived in the affluent San Jose neighbourhood of Silver Creek, 15 minutes’ drive from where Hayne lived during his time with the team.

Police were regularly called to their wild late-night parties, and tight end Aldon Smith drove into a tree at 7am one Thursday.

“It’s a risk-reward business,” former general manager and the man who signed Hayne, Trent Baalke, said. “There are other times when the character of an individual coming into the NFL was sterling.

“But they end up being guys who get in trouble.

“It’s not always the guys that come into the league with a chequered past that leave the league with a chequered past. It can be the opposite.”

HAYNE’S life has been a whirlwind since California. He played for Fiji’s Rugby Sevens side in an attempt to make it to the Rio Olympics, but missed selection in the gold medal-winning squad.

Soon after he met Australian Amellia Bonnici, reportedly on Instagram, and the pair started dating.

Hayne, then reviving his NRL career with the Gold Coast Titans, was shocked when the 25-year-old announced not long after they met that she was pregnant and expecting his child by the end of the year.

He moved her into his Gold Coast apartment and their daughter, Beliviah Ivy, was born in December 2016.

The following November, Hayne confirmed he would leave the Titans and return to Sydney on compassionate grounds, to be closer to his girlfriend and child, who were now living in Forster on the NSW Central Coast near family.

He reportedly took a hefty pay cut to return to his old club, Parramatta, hoping to get his head down and rebuild his reputation.

The Eels had been hopeful at least one other player could be picked up by another club to fit Hayne into next year’s salary cap.

“As this is a police matter the club will be making no public comment in relation to these reports,” a Parramatta spokeswoman said.

Hayne’s representative Wayne Beavis also opted not to comment.

NRL CEO Todd Greenberg wouldn’t be drawn on Hayne’s playing future, but said: “Jarryd has got issues to deal with and they have got nothing to do with rugby league at the moment.”

But pulling on the boots again seems almost impossible after Hayne was this week charged with aggravated sexual assault and inflicting actual bodily harm.

Police will allege he bit the woman’s genitals so hard that she required hospitalisation and that she contacted him afterwards to tell him he hurt her.

Hayne handed himself into Ryde Police Station on Monday afternoon.

He was released in the early hours of Tuesday morning after first reporting to the station about 4pm on Monday.
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
Part II

Police will allege the pair connected via social media before Hayne went to the house and entered the woman’s bedroom, where he took off her clothes.

Her mother is understood to have been home at the time and will be a key witness.

It is alleged Hayne had advised a taxi driver to wait for him outside after he was taken to the woman’s house.

Hayne was granted strict conditional bail to appear at Burwood Local Court on December 10, a police statement said, without naming Hayne.

“Police will allege in court that the man attended a home in the Hunter Region on Sunday, September 30, 2018, and sexually assaulted a
26-year-old woman,” the statement read.

The assault allegedly took place on the night of the NRL Grand Final. It was reported Hayne declined to be formally interviewed.

Bail conditions state he must live in the Sydney suburb of Norwest and report to The Hills Police Station three times a week. He was forced to surrender his passport and is banned from any international airports.

The code-hopping star also handed over $20,000 surety, and agreed to stay away from the complainant and the Newcastle local government area.

He must not stalk, harass or threaten his alleged sexual assault victim.

The charge carries a maximum 20-year jail term if Hayne is convicted.

It’s understood the alleged victim was interviewed by the NRL’s integrity unit before the matter was referred to police.
 
Messages
42,876
Please don’t mistake me for laying blame, it is purely an observation and not about consent or non-consent.

I hear the word profusely and i think a lot of blood and we i think a lot of picture blood soaked sheets, blood on a person and blood on clothes.

I also think needing to seek urgent medical attention and further to that and in the area it is that a medical professional would want the police involved.

Either it is poor reporting or poor leaking of information but to me the whole thing is just weird and gets weirder by the newly reported article.......
I wasn't thinking you were laying blame or anything, was more just thinking out loud. I hate mainstream news reporting because of its constant sensationalising. Everything is apparently black and white and peoples' reputations, and even the truth, are trivial considerations compared to ratings.
However I do think someone could injure another person severely without getting much blood on themself.
 

IFR33K

Coach
Messages
17,043
Hard to imagine she was assaulted in the house with the mother there, yet the mother either didn’t hear anything, failed to act during the alleged assault and didn’t advise her to go to police the following day. By all accounts, it was the sister who told her to go to the police.
 

eels_fan

First Grade
Messages
7,586
Maybe she didn’t tell her mum straight away, she may have been embarrassed or in shock. Maybe she didn’t realised how serious or how much it was bleeding until she woke up the following morning? I’m sure these questions will get answered in court.

The most hard to imagine thing is that Hayne hasn’t learnt from past experiences, regardless of the outcome of this charge, he is a complete moron for putting himself in the situation. Last time he hooked up with a chick he met on social media he ended up with a kid, then the whole thing in the US. His intelligence level is akin to a plank of wood
 

Latest posts

Top