Like most of the players, McGregor was convinced de Belin would have his ban overturned by the court and intended to fly the NSW Origin lock to the central-west town for the match. De Belin insisted he was innocent of the charges and his attitude carried the group. The perceived injustice of the ban by his ultimate employer, the NRL, ratified by the Federal Court that day, put the St George Illawarra players in a very rebellious mood. “They can’t do this,” was the prevailing view. Dragons chief executive Brian Johnston admitted he was phoned by football manager Ben Haran, who passed on the players’ intention to boycott the match, but said it was a brief, emotional reaction. He said the only vote taken was to boycott the media, the usual target when players are upset by officialdom. However, those in the Mudgee motel, such as McGregor and Craig Young - the former St George captain and international prop recently inducted into the ARL Commission’s Hall of Fame - believe the players were serious. Young is president of the St George half of the joint venture and, being a former detective, assists the club on integrity matters, including the de Belin issue.

Loading McGregor told Young the players had approached the football staff and indicated they intended to boycott the match. “Albert”, as he is known, was typically forthright, telling McGregor a strike was anathema to the club’s traditions and best interests of the game. Johnston’s immediate focus was de Belin, who would be unable to play football for at least a year. Over the next 48 hours, the players accepted Young’s view they must play, if only because a boycott would punish fans. Dragons fans were still disappointed because it was a dispirited performance against the Knights. By half-time, the Dragons were behind 28-0. They lost 45-12.

Until then, it had been a mixed season for the Dragons, winning four games and losing five, but no club had scored seven tries against them. St George Illawarra finished second last on the ladder, prompting two reports – one by the Dragons' football department and another by former premiership coach Phil Gould. McGregor, who played under Gould in successful NSW Origin teams, asked him to perform the review. While it is normal for the Dragons to keep contentious matters in-house, Johnston knew the fans wanted answers. Furthermore, Gould has significant credibility in the football community and his intervention would placate fickle supporters the club had lost. The Dragons finished second bottom of the ladder after a dismal campaign. Credit:AAP Image/Darren England Gould interviewed nine players and concluded, according to media reports, the club did not have a defining DNA.

While the joint venture with the Illawarra Steelers 20 years ago may have blurred the Dragons’ identity, there is no doubt among most past players and coaches it has an identity. An obligation exists to honour the club’s image, which admittedly is a fairly nebulous concept and perhaps not understood by any player who joined the Dragons simply because they offered the most money; or even a generation focused on immediate self-gratification. But if you have been at the club for six years, as I was, and followed it closely since, it is apparent the good name of the Dragons is far loftier than the interests of any player or official. Its DNA is reflected in the final line of the club song: “Now, aren’t we a wonderful credit to our locality.” The problem arises when the club's DNA collides with player rights, as evidenced in the de Belin case, when players were forced to choose between not trashing the club brand through a boycott and supporting a mate whose individual rights, they believed, had been trammelled.

Loading Wayne Bennett, who coached the Dragons for three years and won a long-awaited premiership, predicted this. NRL chief executive Todd Greenberg gathered a few influential rugby league people - such as Australian coach Mal Meninga, Bennett and Gould - for a dinner to hear their views before introducing his automatic ban on any player charged with an offence that carries a sentence of 11 years or more in jail. Bennett told him: “If you do this, St George Illawarra will come last.” “Long neck”, as he is known, may have stuck it out with his prediction but the Dragons' second-last position on the ladder meant he was wrong by only one rung. When de Belin’s court case to hear five sexual assault charges against him was set down for two weeks from March 2 next year, the Dragons feared the end of one dismal season would merge ignominiously into the next.

However, the intervention of Wollongong District Court acting judge Paul Conlon has brought the case forward to February 3, the start of the 2020 legal year. Johnston is working on a strategy involving de Belin, accommodating both a guilty and not guilty verdict. In his report, Gould did not conclude the de Belin matter was a significant factor in the club’s poor season. But it is important to realise he was only reacting to what he was told by the players he interviewed. Players are notorious for giving answers they believe authority figures want to hear, using phrases such as, "that’s a cop out". After all, tough guys are not supposed to admit they missed their most lethal forward. In any case, the report by the Dragons' football department indicated dissatisfaction by players’ wives at de Belin’s actions and it can be suggested this affected their husbands. De Belin trained strongly with the team all season, and perhaps his presence on the practice field highlighted his absence from the playing field.

Johnston conceded the club's DNA had, perhaps, not been articulated to players. “But our DNA is solid, it is ingrained; it is understood by most past players,” he said. He argued it was summed up in the motto: “Once a Dragon, always a Dragon” which implies a life-long commitment to club values and to never harm its image. Even the legendary Frank Facer, secretary of the club during 11 years of consecutive premiership success, understood the club was bigger than any individual. “Fearless” was once barred from going on an end-of-season trip because of misbehaviour on an outing the previous year. He still arrived at Central Station, carrying his bag, expecting to join his mates in a dogbox compartment, only for a committee man to produce the relevant minute of the meeting barring him. Facer picked up his case, headed home and the train steamed north to Cairns.