MELBOURNE captain Cameron Smith has been found guilty of a grapple tackle and suspended for the rest of the season.

Smith was handed a two-game suspension for the grade one contrary conduct charge for unnecessary head or neck contact on Brisbane's Sam Thaiday at the NRL judiciary and will miss Melbourne's preliminary final with Cronulla this Friday.



The judiciary panel of Royce Ayliffe, Darrell Williams and Darren Britt took just 20 minutes to decide upon the guilty verdict.



It is a huge blow to the Storm's title defence as the skipper is not only the competition's best hooker but the club's main goalkicker.



It also caps a horror day for the club as Test forward Ryan Hoffman was tonight also ruled out for the year after undergoing ankle surgery that puts him out of the World Cup as well.



Smith was found guilty of forceful contact to Thaiday in the 59th minute of last Saturday's semi-final win.



Smith argued that his contact with Thaiday's chin was unintentional and that by the time he realised the dangerous position he "immediately released" his grip.



"The whole tackle took three seconds. Contact with his face was one second at most, if not less," Smith told the panel.



"It is hard to rectify faster than that, I think."



But prosecutor Peter Kite claimed Smith made two efforts to "yank" Thaiday's head before he eventually released his dangerous grip.



"There is conduct here that should have been avoided that was not avoided,'' said Kite.



Smith is only the third player since 2005 to be found guilty of a grapple tackle by a judiciary panel.



Teammate Hoffman (2005) and St George Illawarra prop Jason Ryles (2007) were also banned two weeks after being found guilty by the panel.



Six players in four years have successfully argued against grapple charges at the judiciary.



Smith is the highest-profile and his penalty of potentially missing a grand final is indeed the harshest.



Smith joins fellow internationals Jeremy Smith (suspension) and Hoffman (ankle injury) on the sidelines for the crucial clash with the Sharks.



Jeremy Smith will at least be available should the Storm reach the grand final as he had earlier accepted a one-game ban for his chicken wing offence in the same tackle on Thaiday.



Originally published as Smith found guilty, out for season