Broncos players warned not to flush title hopes away
Joel Gould, AAP • September 3rd, 2025 3:38 pm

Reece Walsh has been amusing himself off the field, but the Broncos didn't find him funny | Photo: Dave Hunt/AAP
Brisbane players must decide whether they want to be title contenders or the subject of club "statements" about their off-field shenanigans.
Coach Michael Maguire wants it to be the former, of course, but star players Gehamat Shibasaki and Reece Walsh are testing his patience.
Queensland centre Shibasaki was dropped for the vital home clash with Melbourne on Thursday night after turning up to training on Monday still under the weather after a night on the grog.
The Tuesday statement that followed called it "a breach of Broncos team standards".
Talismanic fullback Walsh, as only he can, posted a video to Snapchat where he was slurping from an unused toilet bowl he had recently installed. The "little drink", as he called it, allegedly was also "a new form of recovery, to recover the muscles".
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The Broncos put out a statement on Monday about "a poor attempt at humour" and recommended nobody should try it at home.
When it comes to the litany of past rugby league atrocities, Walsh and Shibasaki are at the minor end of the scale.
We are not dealing with the infamous "pooh in a shoe" or "bubbler" sagas here.
Back in the bad old Broncos days of the 2020 wooden spoon, the club was putting out more statements than the White House. There was a joke getting around that if they had won as many games as they put out statements about player antics, the Broncos would have won the minor premiership.
Ahead of the clash with the Storm, which will decide whether they stay fourth, Maguire is after focus on the task at hand, not distractions from what will be a tough assignment.

Gehamat Shibasaki (left) and Reece Walsh (right) have been in the headlines for the wrong reasons | Photo: Dave Hunt/AAP
"It's obviously disappointing ... and he's made a mistake," Maguire said of Shibasaki's actions.
"He understands that and he's paid the price."
The coach said the players were well aware of "the culture and expectations" he was building, and had been from the moment he arrived.
"Culture is everything, you've got to live by what you're building," Maguire added.
The coach, old school to the core, said the Walsh scenario was "a different one" and "unusual", but insisted that his No.1 "needs to adjust" to the expectations that come with playing for the Broncos. He has let Walsh know that.
"Adjusting to society in this day and age is probably a bit different to what I've grown up in ... but players of his calibre know how great an influence they can be, and sometimes it can reflect the wrong thing," Maguire said.
Walsh, 23, is a unique character with his own brand of humour.
In May he was asked to front morning television before dawn to apologise for a TikTok post of him punching his best mate in the head. He made the point it was a joke, but the Broncos did not see it that way.
Walsh has kept his sense of humour. On Wednesday he had changed his Instagram head shot to an image of himself dressed up as a plumber.
All Maguire wants him to do is unveil all his attacking wares and ensure there are no leaks in defence against the Storm.

Michael Maguire wants to be bowled over by the Broncos' onfield brilliance, not off-field antics | Photo: Darren England/AAP
As for Shibasaki, he was training with the side on Wednesday.
"And getting flogged," Maguire said with a sinister grin.
The coach just wants maximum focus and effort with no more distractions that threaten to flush the side's title hopes away.
"Rugby league's big up here, but we haven't done anything yet. It's about tomorrow night," Maguire said.