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Newton fears lengthy ban at tribunal

northey

First Grade
Messages
7,380
Newton fears lengthy ban at tribunal
By Brad Walter
August 24, 2004

SMH

Newcastle forward Clint Newton is bracing for the worst and will throw himself on the mercy of the judiciary after being ordered to front the tribunal tomorrow night on an ungraded striking charge.

Newton, who will be represented by solicitor and former player Grant Butterfield, said he would accept whatever ban was imposed for his elbowing of St George-Illawarra prop Ashton Sims.

The 23-year-old son of former golfing great Jack Newton apologised to Sims in the dressing room shortly after his seventh-minute dismissal in Newcastle last Friday night and again contacted him over the weekend to check on his condition.

His contrition and remorse, the fact Sims suffered nothing worse than a few loose teeth and returned to the game, and Newton's previously unblemished record are certain to be taken into consideration by the judiciary and will ensure he does not receive a suspension as heavy as the 18-match ban handed out last month to Melbourne's Danny Williams.

But with Wests Tigers prop Bryce Gibbs facing a four- to six-match suspension on a grade two reckless high tackle charge, Newton said he would not be surprised to have the book thrown at him but is more concerned about being branded a "mug or a thug" for the remainder of his career.

"I'm sure I'll get a fair hearing. Some people ... have said low numbers and some have said, 'hit him with everything you've got', so I'll go in expecting the worst," Newton told The Newcastle Herald.

"I've watched the replay and, as I've said all along, I'm not going to go into anything too technical or ridiculous in my defence. I'll cop that it was careless and a misjudgment on my behalf but the main thing is what happened was not intentional, and I hope the judiciary sees it that way.

"But whatever verdict is handed down or whatever suspension comes out of it, I hope people judge me by the person that I am and not just the incident itself. I don't want to be perceived as a mug or a thug with this sort of thing in my game."

Butterfield, the brother of former Knights captain and current Rugby League Professionals Association president Tony Butterfield, is expected to tell the hearing that Newton was attempting a shoulder charge on Sims but the tackle went wrong when the rookie prop Sims stepped back inside and was met by Newcastle teammate Ben Kennedy. Fearing a head clash, Newton turned away and was not looking at Sims at the time of impact.

It is expected NRL prosecutor Peter Kite will compare the incident to Greg Bird's kneeing of Shane Marteene this season, but unlike the Cronulla five-eighth, who received a 10-match ban, Newton does not carry any loading from prior offences.

He will also be entitled to a 25 per cent discount for pleading guilty, as was Williams, whose suspension included a 70 per cent loading.

"I have no problems accepting the fact I made an error but now it just depends on how much of an error that is in their [the judiciary's] eyes." Newton said.

"You don't expect these sort of things to ever happen in your career but now that it has, I'm just trying to deal with it the best way I can."

Sims, 19, will wear a double mouthguard on Sunday when he plays against Manly at Oki Jubilee Stadium after having his teeth braced with wiring. He had offered to testify on Newton's behalf but the Dragons yesterday ruled that out.

Meanwhile, Tigers chief executive Steve Noyce yesterday called for a ban on officials commenting about judiciary matters following Brisbane coach Wayne Bennett's suggestion that a hard line needed to be taken on high tackles after the Gibbs incident last Saturday night.


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Kaz

junior
Messages
6,376
He has pleaded guilty, but will say it was a shoulder charge gone wrong.
 

Stranger

Coach
Messages
18,682
Kaz said:
He has pleaded guilty, but will say it was a shoulder charge gone wrong.

It looked like he was going for a shoulder charge and BK got in the way.

But he did it and has to cop the punishment.
 

northey

First Grade
Messages
7,380
Newton struck out for 12 weeks
By Brad Walter
August 26, 2004

SMH

'Dad, it was a shoulder charge gone wrong. I didn't mean to hit him in the jaw' ... Clint Newton, left, at last night's judiciary hearing with famous father Jack. Photo: Jon Reid


Clint Newton has vowed to refrain from attempting shoulder charges after evidence from his father, golfing great Jack Newton, and NRL referees' boss Robert Finch failed to save the Newcastle forward from a 12-match suspension.

The judiciary panel of Mark Coyne, Mal Cochrane and Darrell Williams suspended Newton last night for three more matches than the nine-game ban NRL prosecutor Peter Kite had sought for the Knight's elbowing of St George Illawarra prop Ashton Sims last Friday night.

Newton, who said he was "very disappointed by the outcome", told the 2-hour hearing the tackle that meant he became only the third player this season referred directly to the judiciary on an ungraded charge, had been "a shoulder charge gone wrong".

While not as severe as the 18-match ban given to Melbourne's Danny Williams earlier this month, Newton's suspension equals John Hopoate's 2001 ban for contrary conduct as the second longest in NRL history.

The 23-year-old Knights forward pleaded guilty to striking but said he had not realised he had made contact with Sims until referee Tim Mander sent him off in the seventh minute of the EnergyAustralia Stadium match.

Newton, who had never been sin-binned or placed on report during his previous 55 NRL matches for the Knights, estimated he averaged more than 30 tackles a game and said shoulder charges were a regular part of his defence approach.

But he said he would not shoulder charge opponents when he returned to the playing field next season - possibly as late as round 11 unless Newcastle make this year's finals.

"Obviously I won't be attempting shoulder charges anymore, that's for sure," Newton said. "The results, while unintentional, can be what you saw."

Represented by solicitor Grant Butterfield, - the brother of mentor and former Newcastle captain and Rugby League Professionals Association president Tony Butterfield - Newton submitted character references from Finch and Knights chairman Michael Hill.

Newton's defence relied heavily on the testimony of his father, former professional golfer Jack, who said he had never seen Clint engage in foul play since his son had started playing league as a 12-year-old.

Describing himself as a "crusty old bugger" and a "hard marker", Newton said defence had been the strong point of his son's game.

"I've seen him make thousands of tackles and I've never seen him tackle head high or make what you would call a dirty tackle," Newton snr said.

"When he started out he was a 69-kilogram skinny runt of a kid and shoulder charges on bigger blokes are something I've seen him perform many times, and I've never seen one go wrong.

"Something Clint has worked very hard on is his technique. It's something he has been conscious of all of his career ... to the point where I think he's now one of the best defenders at the Knights."

Newton said he had taught his son to be honest and had no doubt the contrition Clint showed when he visited Sims in the dressing rooms to check on his condition shortly after the incident was genuine.

Watching from the grandstand, Newton snr said he could see that Clint was bracing himself for a shoulder charge but initially thought [Ben] Kennedy had made the tackle.

"When I saw what had happened it was a big shock to me," he said. "I went down and saw Clint about 15 minutes later and he was pretty devastated. If there's one thing I'd say about my son is that he's honest. He said, 'Dad, it was a shoulder charge gone wrong. I didn't mean to hit him in the jaw'. Clint told me that he didn't even know he had hit him. I don't believe there was any intent at all."

Clint Newton said the incident had occurred after Sims caught the ball from a goal-line drop out and ran towards him and Kennedy at full pace.

He said the presence of Kennedy had "cramped" him and to avoid hitting his teammate he had decided to shoulder charge, but Sims changed direction just before impact.

"At that stage I looked away slightly and shut my eyes," Newton said. "When I opened my eyes up the result was Ashton on his back. I had no idea what had happened until I saw the replay on the big screen. I didn't feel any contact with my arm or shoulder."

Asked what had prompted him to visit Sims and then apologise to him after the game, Newton said: "It was the right thing to do, I'd made a mistake. I didn't want to hide behind anyone, at no stage did I ever not take full responsibility for my actions. I never intended for this to happen."

Comparing the tackle to a grade-four striking charge on Dragons centre David Howell, Butterfield asked for the same three-match penalty but prosecutor Kite sought nine games.

However, Kite accepted that Newton's actions weren't deliberate and said there was no comparison with the hit that earned Storm's Williams a record 18-match ban.

"We accept that it wasn't an intentional act but rather an election to make a form of tackle that went horribly wrong and became highly reckless," Kite said. "It wasn't as serious [as Williams]. There was no revenge or taking the administration of justice into one's own hands."

Wests Tigers forward Bryce Gibbs successfully had his reckless high-tackle charge downgraded from a grade two to a grade one offence.

It still means Gibbs will serve a season-ending, five-match suspension for his late hit on Brisbane halfback Casey McGuire last Saturday night.

In off-field news, South Sydney president Nick Pappas said he would not be standing down at the end of the season, despite indicating earlier in the year he might do so if the Rabbitohs finished last.

Pappas said last night his comments were qualified.

"This year, with the events that happened around the middle of the year, while we're wooden-spooners on the table, we're far from wooden-spooners in some of the achievements at Souths during the course of the year," he said.


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misty

Juniors
Messages
1,970
On the news tonight they said the knights were going to fight the 12week ban, does it really matter now?
 

misty

Juniors
Messages
1,970
On the news tonight they said the knights were going to fight the 12week ban, does it really matter now?
 

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