Nelson Asofa-Solomona will require a minor miracle to play in the NRL grand final, after the Melbourne enforcer was hit with a grade-three high tackle charge.
Asofa-Solomona received the worst possible news on Saturday morning when told he was facing a four-match ban even with an early guilty plea.
It means for Asofa-Solomona to play in next Sunday’s grand final, he will need to front the judiciary and get his charge downgraded to a grade-one and a fine.
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If he fights the case and is unsuccessful, the suspension will extend to five matches and go beyond New Zealand’s Pacific Championships campaign and into next season.
Asofa-Solomona was sent to the sin-bin after the first tackle of Melbourne’s 48-18 preliminary-final win over the Sydney Roosters, for a high shot that knocked out Lindsay Collins.
The news will come as a shock to Melbourne after coach Craig Bellamy claimed on Friday night he believed the tackle was only penalty sufficient, and Asofa-Solomona did not deserve to be sin-binned.
Roosters players also backed the call later, the Kiwi prop finding unlikely allies in his bid to face the winner of Penrith and Cronulla in next Sunday’s decider.
“I hope (he’s) not (banned), I truly do,” Jared Waerea-Hargreaves said.
“It’s why we play, it’s such a physical game. You play that thing in the middle, we’re just out there trying to do our best.
“They are small margins we talk about. I really hope it doesn’t cost Nelson a grand final.”
Built up as the two biggest combatants ahead of Friday night’s preliminary final, the Super League bound Waerea-Hargreaves and Asofa-Solomona were seen in a long embrace after the Storm’s 48-18 win.
“There was a lot of talk and speculation on both us guys, and who is going to dominate the middle,” Waerea-Hargreaves said.
“I thought he played really well.
“I could feel him going after the game. I truly hope he gets to play (in the grand final).
“I really hope he gets to go out there next weekend and do the same thing. He’s a Kiwi brother, and you just hope the best with him.”
Roosters five-eighth Luke Keary took a similar stance, but said defenders across the board needed to do more to protect ball carriers on kick off returns.
The issue remains a key talking point for the game, amid questions on whether kick offs will exist long into the future based on player safety.
“We said in there, we don’t want to see him miss a grand final,” Keary said.
“With those kick offs you’re running like that, the onus is on the defender to not hit this one guy running at full pace (in the head).
“We don’t want to see (the kick off) banned because it is this gladiatorial sport.
“There is one guy running, he’s not moving (sideways). You just cannot hit him in the head.
“They’re not ducking at the last second, this isn’t like a fullback stepping. We’ve seen it on our end too, we’ve had blokes hit people high. It’s got to be on the defender.”
Melbourne also have other minor concerns ahead of next Sunday’s grand final with Nick Meaney, Jahrome Hughes (calf) and Harry Grant (neck) nursing minor injuries.