‘I felt sorry for him’: Cleary defends ‘great kid’ teammate found guilty of assault

‘I felt sorry for him’: Cleary defends ‘great kid’ teammate found guilty of assault

Panthers superstar Nathan Cleary says he “felt sorry” for teammate and “great kid” Taylan May who was handed a controversial ban this week following an assault charge.

May is allowed to play in the finals despite receiving a two-game suspension from the NRL after being found guilty of assault occasioning bodily harm in a Queensland court last Wednesday.

The 21-year-old was involved in an incident at a pub on the Sunshine Coast last October following Penrith’s grand final triumph.

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CCTV footage played in court showed May walk up behind a man – who was talking to his brother Tyrone May and Cleary – then grab him by the collar and pull him to the ground.

The man struck his head on the floor during the altercation and suffered a sprained neck. May pleaded not guilty to the charge of assault occasioning bodily harm.

May’s behaviour was sprayed by the magistrate “reprehensible” and “cowardly” and ordered him to pay $1000 in compensation to the victim and a $1000 fine.

The NRL handed down its punishment on Tuesday, handing May a two-game ban to be served next season and a $7500 fine that was 50 per cent suspended.

The decision to delay his suspension was widely ridiculed but Cleary went into bat for his teammate on Wednesday.

“It’s great (that he’s playing), you want your best players on the park and he’s been massive for us this year,” Cleary said.

“For sure (he’s learned a lesson) and everyone can take lessons out of it, even people that weren’t a part of it. It’s the spotlight we live in these days, rugby league is a 24-7 job, it’s not just when we’re coming here or training or on the field. It’s when we’re with the outside world and everywhere.

Taylan May of the Panthers. Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

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“I felt sorry for him going through it all, you obviously feel for your mate that has to go through stuff like that and the scrutiny around it, as we kind of touched on there’s lessons to be learned and I’ll always respect Taylan.”

Cleary also defended the character of May and said people were quick to make assumptions about others.

“He’s a great kid and if you know him personally you’ll know that too,” Cleary said.

“One thing a lot of people like to do is judge people just from what they see without actually knowing people, but I think the people close to him know what he’s really like and we’ll always stick by him because we know what he’s like as a person.

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“(The penalty) was the NRL’s decision and they’ve shown in the past they can make decisions at will.”

Panthers star Jarome Luai echoed the sentiment and was pumped to have May playing for their qualifying final against the Eels on Friday night.

“I’m really happy to play alongside him. Everyone has (learned a lesson), we have to watch what we do out there in the public,” he said.

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