Road to redemption will be long so can Ben Barba return to the NRL?
A 12-WEEK suspension for his second positive drugs test has ended his resurgent year with Cronulla on the lowest note imaginable and a return to the NRL seems a long way away.
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A 12-WEEK suspension for his second positive drugs test has ended his resurgent year with Cronulla on the lowest note imaginable and a return to the NRL seems a long way away.
Barely a month after helping Cronulla to their first title, Barba has left the club that took a chance on him after he washed out at the Broncos in 2014.
“Consistent with our club’s major focus on the welfare of its players, the club is fully supportive of this decision and will assist in any way possible to allow Ben the time needed to address his life away from the pressure environment of professional sport,” said the Sharks in a statement on this morning.
“Although Ben has had a very successful season on the field culminating in being a major part of a winning Grand Final team, it is his life away from the field which he now seeks assistance with.
“Both the club, Ben and his team mates hope that at some stage in the future he will be able to return to the game he loves but that is not the priority at the moment.”
While a return to the field may not be a priority right now, the time will come when it will be.
Despite his recent good form, the options for an NRL return seem thin for Barba.
The only team with a clear and immediate vacancy at fullback are the battling Newcastle Knights and why would they take a chance on Barba?
Coach Nathan Brown has long stressed that he’s trying to rebuild the culture of the Knights and signing a player with Barba’s chequered history would seemingly go against everything he’s trying to build.
Perhaps the desperate Dragons, who want to move Josh Dugan to centre but aren’t comfortable with any of his possible replacements at fullback, would take a gamble on Barba but even that seems a long shot.
Despite his undoubted talents, even signing Barba as a back up would be an unlikely prospect given the off-field baggage he brings with him.
With an immediate NRL return seemingly on the backburner, Barba has two choices if he wants to continue his rugby league career.
The first is to follow in the footsteps of Todd Carney, Joel Monaghan, Greg Bird and a host of other former NRL players who were punted and link with a Super League club.
A player of Barba’s talents and pedigree would easily command a reasonable deal with a Super League side that needed a bit of spark, or failing that one of the ambitious Championship sides (the division below Super League) such as newly relegated Hull KR or former powerhouse Bradford.
The second option is that Barba signs with a NSW or Queensland Cup side in an attempt to work his way back to the NRL.
The Ipswich Jets in the Queensland Cup could be one possible destination given Barba’s brother Marmin plays there.
Both scenarios would require Barba to miss close to half of next season but if he could get his act together and play something close to his best it appears to be his best chance of an NRL return.
It might seem as though this is the end of Ben Barba’s NRL career, but history tells us that may not be the case.
After all, players have made their way back to the NRL from far worse circumstances. Convictions and jail time for offences such as domestic violence, assault and drug trafficking have not prevented other players from returning to first grade, so the door should not be closed on Barba’s NRL career just yet.
Timeline: How Barba’s career unfolded
THE MORNING’S HEADLINES
Originally published as Road to redemption will be long so can Ben Barba return to the NRL?