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Scott Bailey

Tamou gets reprieve at NRL judiciary

Wests Tigers captain James Tamou (l) has got his contrary conduct charge downgraded at the tribunal. (Brett Hemmings/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

A relieved James Tamou will be granted a possible Leichhardt Oval farewell after successfully downgrading his contrary conduct charge at the NRL judiciary.

Off contract and fighting to keep his career alive, the 33-year-old Wests Tigers captain will now cop a one-game ban only and is free to play against Canberra in round 25.

But it only came after he was forced to sit through 55 minutes of deliberation, awaiting his fate for telling referee Ben Cummins he was "f***ing incompetent" in the Tigers' 72-6 loss to the Sydney Roosters.

Supported by his wife Brittney and Tigers CEO Justin Pascoe, Tamou admitted on Tuesday night he was "embarrassed and appalled" as he was shown footage of his outburst for the first time in an 80-minute.

He also claimed he had never spoken to a referee like that before and had immediate regret upon leaving the field and hanging his head in his hands in the change rooms.

"In 300 games I have played I have never sworn at a referee," Tamou said.

"I know their job is hard enough as it is. To let players walk up to them makes it twice as hard.

"I was very remorseful after the game. I wanted to apologise to Ben after the game because I wanted him to know that's not what I think of him.

"It was completely out of character for me with things that were going on around me, the scoreline."

But in evidence tendered to the panel of Bob Lindner and Michael Hagan, the NRL's counsel Lachlan Gyles claimed the former NSW and Australian Test prop had twice been warned by Cummins before initially being sin-binned.

Gyles also accused Tamou of throwing the toys out of the cot just a minute before the incident, before letting loose at Cummins when he was binned before being marched.

"There is a special responsibility of the captain to treat the referee with respect, and set an example to young players," Gyles said.

"When we see people like you ... acting in the way you did, it's a bit hard to expect a carpenter in ground nine or a kid in Townsville or Penrith to treat the referee with respect."

Gyles also pleaded with the panel to issue a strong deterrent to all players and argued Tamou's character and prior history was irrelevant.

Tamou's lawyer Nick Ghabar also pointed to a round-11 incident involving Sydney Roosters prop Jared Waerea-Hargreaves as proof the grade-three charge against Tamou was too harsh.

In that matter, Waerea-Hargreaves twice swore at referee Gerard Sutton and claimed the official had made a point of penalising him every time he had refereed him.

The Kiwi international was only handed a grade-one charge and accepted a fine.

"That is not on a par with what Tamou did," Ghabar said.

"It's actually worse. There was a long period Waerea-Hargreaves stood over the referee.

"Waerea-Hargreaves' (claims an) alleged bias of a referee against him for a long period of time."

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