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George Burgess finally returns to footy two years after making a shock retirement from the NRL

2 months ago 29
  •  Former Souths front-rower George Burgess returns to footy
  •  Burgess ran out for the South Eastern Seagulls last weekend
  •  Was cleared of allegations he groped a woman in 2022

By James Cooney For Daily Mail Australia

Published: 03:49 BST, 15 July 2024 | Updated: 03:49 BST, 15 July 2024

Former NRL prop and grand final winner George Burgess has finally made his footy comeback with Sydney A-Grade team the South Eastern Seagulls.

The 32-year-old played 149 games for South Sydney and won a premiership with the Rabbitohs in 2014 alongside his brothers Sam and Tom, as well as earning 15 caps for England.

He stepped away from the game in 2022 while playing for St George Illawarra amid a combination of a serious hip injury and personal issues, which included a charge of sexual touching without consent and a stint in rehab to deal with gambling and depression issues.


In 2023, he made a return with the Cairns Brothers team in far north Queensland and was earlier this year given approval by the South Sydney Junior Rugby League board to play the rest of the remaining games of the 2024 season with the South Eastern Seagulls, who are based in Malabar in Sydney's south-east.

Last weekend, Burgess took to the field on his debut against the Coogee Dolphins at Kensington Oval - eventually helping his side claim an impressive 16-6 victory.

The English footy front-rower was cheered on by his brother Tom Burgess and former Souths prop Roy Asotasi.

The ex-Rabbitohs star was charged in March 2022 after a woman claimed Burgess 'touched her bottom' without her consent.

In May this year he was cleared of the allegations with a magistrate finding that Burgess went to the woman's house with the intention of being intimate with her while dropping off a jersey for a charity event, but did not grope her.

Former NRL prop George Burgess has made his footy comeback with Sydney A-Grade team the South Eastern Seagulls with his identical twin Tom watching on (pictured)

Burgess is pictured charging into the defence as he helped the Seagulls beat the Coogee Dolphins at Kensington Oval

Burgess pleaded not guilty to a single charge of sexually touching another person without consent while at the woman's Mascot home.

The former footy star admitted to going to the home of the woman, whom he had known for about a decade, after agreeing to provide a signed jersey for charity.

As Burgess dialled into court via audiovisual link, magistrate Emma Manea told the court that the former NRL player had attended the woman's house for just 11 minutes from 10.24am to 10.35am.

The magistrate told the court that she believed Mr Burgess's evidence and acquitted the former football player.

Earlier this year, Burgess told the court that he was only being 'cheeky and friendly' with the woman but it was 'nothing more than that'.

He was married at the time but told the court that he had intentions to be intimate with the woman and admitted to being 'flirty', asking her to 'stay and be naughty' with him.

During the first day of the hearing in October 2023, the woman told the court that she felt 'violated' when Mr Burgess attempted to kiss her moments after handing over the jersey.

She offered him a cup of tea to 'try to defuse the situation'.

'I opened the cupboard and he's turned around (and) grabbed me on the bottom,' the woman told police in body-worn vision played in court.

'I froze on the inside and was just looking at the tea. He put a hand either side of my body and pressed right up against me. ... I told him, 'this is not going to happen'.'

The court was told Mr Burgess was asked if he was still married and he responded: 'Yes, but you know how it is.'

Burgess (pictured playing for Souths in 2013) was acquitted of groping a woman known to him earlier this year

Mr Burgess continued: 'Come on, just five minutes, stay and be naughty with me.'

He denied kissing the woman or grabbing her bottom but said he had put his hand on her back while she was making him a cup of tea 'to be friendly'.

'She went over to the kitchen bench and I sort of came behind her to see what tea she was using because I like Yorkshire tea,' Mr Burgess told the court in March.

The court was told the woman said: 'I'm not that kind of girl, I wouldn't do this to another woman.'

While sitting on the lounge, Mr Burgess admitted to telling her: 'We've known each other 10 years, nothing has ever happened between us but something should.'

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