‘Disgusting': NRL world up in arms over ugly Jarome Luai ‘eye gouge'
NSW star Jarome Luai has come under fire for a suspected eye gouge on Queensland enforcer Reuben Cotter in State of Origin Game 2 on Wednesday night.
Midway through the first half, Luai put his hands all over the face of the Maroons back-rower, with his fingers appearing to rake across his eyes.
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The act landed the Blues playmaker on report but no further action was taken.
The Channel 9 commentary team also breezed past it. But those watching on at home were up in arms, questioning how Luai wasn't at least sin-binned as they called out the nasty act.
'Disgusting eye gouge from Jarome Luai. No place in the game for that. Commentators should be calling that out instead of going silent,' one fan commented on X.
'So none of the commentators are gonna mention the blatant eye gouge by Luai?' asked another.
You can watch the suspected Jarome Luai eye gouge in the player above.
'Well, Luai won't be playing for the Wests Tigers for a few weeks. That's our season done,' a Tigers fan wrote, hinting at the likely long ban the half could receive if it was found to be an eye gouge.
While a fourth added: 'I'm absolutely shocked that Luai didn't get 10 for the blatant eye gouge. Gobsmacked.'
The 28-year-old's act wasn't the only incident to be called out by Maroons fans either, with Blues winger Zac Lomax placed on report shortly after Luai for lashing out with his elbow after a tackle from Trent Loiero.
'On report. You lashed out and hit him in the head,' referee Ashley Klein was heard saying.
Safe to say the Blues' extra aggression drew the ire of fans, particularly those wearing Maroon.
'Can someone explain why Lomax doesn't go to the bin for elbowing Loiero in the face?' one fan wrote.
'That is terrible. Luai eye gouge and then that from Lomax. I thought Queensland was the team meant to be feeling the pressure,' another added.
'Absolutely shocking from Lomax,' a third said.
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In the second half the maestro found an extra leg and started to find the magic with his passes and long kicks. The Blues comeback had a heavy involvement from the "Penrith gang" past and present, along with centre Latrell Mitchell who put Brian To'o over for two of his three tries. Cleary, Jarome Luai and Dylan Edwards combined like old times to put Stephen Crichton over out wide. Cleary and Luai got together again and it was the Wests Tigers five-eighth's kick for Angus Crichton that got them within two points of the Maroons. NSW's greatest-ever coach Phil Gould said the Blues played "unintelligent" footy in the first half. They scored the first try to the irrepressible To'o, who notched a hat-trick, but then clocked off as the Maroons found their momentum. "NSW didn't see it coming," Gould said of the Maroons' fightback in game two. 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Cleary was wearing a compression bandage on his upper right leg and did not kick for goal. Zac Lomax took on that responsibility but not hit them well at all. Cleary did not kick long in the first half and had a bizarre shank of a short kick. In the second half the maestro found an extra leg and started to find the magic with his passes and long kicks. The Blues comeback had a heavy involvement from the "Penrith gang" past and present, along with centre Latrell Mitchell who put Brian To'o over for two of his three tries. Cleary, Jarome Luai and Dylan Edwards combined like old times to put Stephen Crichton over out wide. Cleary and Luai got together again and it was the Wests Tigers five-eighth's kick for Angus Crichton that got them within two points of the Maroons. NSW's greatest-ever coach Phil Gould said the Blues played "unintelligent" footy in the first half. 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