With 10 days remaining until the 2019 series kicks off in Brisbane,we're recounting the biggest moments of the past decade,starting with Jarryd Hayne's virtuoso performance in 2009.
Lawyers for a woman accusing former rugby league star Jarryd Hayne wants to examine possible patterns of behaviour in an unusual legal move.
Dressed in a dark navy suit and striped and tie,Hayne sat in the front row of the Newcastle courtroom for a brief mention of the new charge.
The former NRL superstar became the subject of a scandal in December 2017,when he was served a civil lawsuit alleging he sexually assaulted a young woman in California.
The Prime Minister has weighed in after a flurry of off-field NRL incidents.
If the NRL thought its summer from hell was about to end,think again. The two men facing the most serious allegations will be in the news cycle this week.
I’ve been asked one question more than any other in recent weeks:Is this the worst time rugby league has gone through?
It’s time for the NRL to ask serious questions of its players as several stars – including Jarryd Hayne – front courts over incidents involving women.
There was standing room only in the packed Sydney court room where Hayne appeared accompanied by his mother and manager.
People are asking why it took so long for the woman to come forward. If the alleged events happened,then maybe she was traumatised,scared and fragile?
It is a cataclysmic end to his rise and fall;from the $1.2 million man courting one of the biggest contracts in league history to one with no contract and only a future court date on his books.