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Walsh stars, Hughes hurt as Broncos book spot in top four

Paul Zalunardo
Updated ,first published
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Pinned post from 10.25pm on Sep 4, 2025
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Broncos 30, Storm 14

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Melbourne halfback Jahrome Hughes suffered a suspected broken wrist as Brisbane ace Reece Walsh starred to secure a 30-14 win for his side. The win booked the Broncos a top-four position heading into the finals.

The Broncos will now play Canberra away in the first week of the finals and get a crucial second chance in the semis thanks to a 22-point haul from Walsh, which included two tries and seven goals.

The mercurial Broncos No.1 put the drama of the week’s “toilet water” saga behind him to have a blinder.

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It was just the Broncos’ second win in their past 19 games against the Storm, but the ninth victory this season from the last 11 matches.

Hughes had just returned to action after missing five weeks with a shoulder injury.

In front of a sold-out crowd at Suncorp Stadium, he went to tackle Broncos forward Brendan Piakura and immediately clutched at his left wrist.

Hughes, last year’s Dally M Medal winner, went up the tunnel in the 25th minute, and his side’s finals hopes possibly went with him.

To make matters worse, prop Nelson Asofa-Solomona was put on report and sin-binned for a high shot on Ben Talty.

The Storm will face a nervous wait for the match review committee charge sheet as the giant forward has two prior offences on his record.

A grade-two high tackle or dangerous tackle charge would lead to a three-game ban. If second-placed Melbourne win in the first week of the finals, such a charge would keep him out for the season.

Injured Storm star Jahrome Hughes.Getty Images

Early in the second half, Walsh landed a 40/20 kick and celebrated his second try with a slurping gesture.

It was a reference to the drink he had during the week from an unused toilet bowl installed in his home, which he posted to social media.

The Broncos called it, in a statement, a “poor attempt at humour”, but there was nothing poor about his display on this night. It was all class.

Storm players celebrate a try.Getty Images

The Broncos were all over an ill-disciplined Melbourne early to take a 2-0 lead. The home side’s defence, with No.6 Billy Walters notable, was strong.

Walsh opened the scoring after putting Payne Haas in a gap and supporting.

Storm second-rower Eliesa Katoa scored off a Cameron Munster bomb, but Walsh found back-rower Brendan Piakura on the short side to extend the Broncos’ lead on the cusp of halftime.

Both teams were down to 12 men in the first half with Broncos winger Deine Mariner binned for repeated ruck infringements.

Walsh extended the lead to 18-4 after the break. The Storm hit back with tries to winger Will Warbrick and centre Nick Meaney, but it was too late. Broncos winger Josiah Karapani sealed it with the last play of the night.

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Pinned post from 10.25pm on Sep 4, 2025

Broncos 30, Storm 14

By

Melbourne halfback Jahrome Hughes suffered a suspected broken wrist as Brisbane ace Reece Walsh starred to secure a 30-14 win for his side. The win booked the Broncos a top-four position heading into the finals.

The Broncos will now play Canberra away in the first week of the finals and get a crucial second chance in the semis thanks to a 22-point haul from Walsh, which included two tries and seven goals.

The mercurial Broncos No.1 put the drama of the week’s “toilet water” saga behind him to have a blinder.

Loading

It was just the Broncos’ second win in their past 19 games against the Storm, but the ninth victory this season from the last 11 matches.

Hughes had just returned to action after missing five weeks with a shoulder injury.

In front of a sold-out crowd at Suncorp Stadium, he went to tackle Broncos forward Brendan Piakura and immediately clutched at his left wrist.

Hughes, last year’s Dally M Medal winner, went up the tunnel in the 25th minute, and his side’s finals hopes possibly went with him.

To make matters worse, prop Nelson Asofa-Solomona was put on report and sin-binned for a high shot on Ben Talty.

The Storm will face a nervous wait for the match review committee charge sheet as the giant forward has two prior offences on his record.

A grade-two high tackle or dangerous tackle charge would lead to a three-game ban. If second-placed Melbourne win in the first week of the finals, such a charge would keep him out for the season.

Injured Storm star Jahrome Hughes.Getty Images

Early in the second half, Walsh landed a 40/20 kick and celebrated his second try with a slurping gesture.

It was a reference to the drink he had during the week from an unused toilet bowl installed in his home, which he posted to social media.

The Broncos called it, in a statement, a “poor attempt at humour”, but there was nothing poor about his display on this night. It was all class.

Storm players celebrate a try.Getty Images

The Broncos were all over an ill-disciplined Melbourne early to take a 2-0 lead. The home side’s defence, with No.6 Billy Walters notable, was strong.

Walsh opened the scoring after putting Payne Haas in a gap and supporting.

Storm second-rower Eliesa Katoa scored off a Cameron Munster bomb, but Walsh found back-rower Brendan Piakura on the short side to extend the Broncos’ lead on the cusp of halftime.

Both teams were down to 12 men in the first half with Broncos winger Deine Mariner binned for repeated ruck infringements.

Walsh extended the lead to 18-4 after the break. The Storm hit back with tries to winger Will Warbrick and centre Nick Meaney, but it was too late. Broncos winger Josiah Karapani sealed it with the last play of the night.

AAP

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Can Brisbane win it all?

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If Adam Reynolds return and is back to his best, and the rest of the side perform like they did tonight - then yes. That’s easier said than done, but Brisbane have the strike power to bother every side in the top eight.

Canberra coach Ricky Stuart will have a few things to worry about this week.

Payne Haas is a key man for Brisbane.Getty Images

Game over - Broncos secure top four spot

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Brisbane run out deserved 30-14 winners. They best-handled a wild first half and then controlled the second term in a fine fashion. They now have a trip to Canberra for a qualifying final against the Raiders. After what we’ve seen tonight, they’re a real chance of winning that.

As for the Storm, they look in a right state. They have a week to get back on track ahead of Canterbury’s visit next weekend. Bring on the finals.

Reece Walsh is wrapped up by the Storm.Getty Images

Storm are done

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Ryan Papenhuyzen just tried a trick, but he ended up fooling only himself. His run-up to a short kick-off had a bit of Neymar jnr about it, but any such comparison ended at the point of contact.

Pappy looked amused and Craig Bellamy could only grin. It’s been a horror week for the Storm. They now need to get ready for a visit from the Bulldogs.

Jahrome Hughes after his wrist injury.Getty Images
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Storm hit back but time running out

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The margin is back to eight points after that Nick Meaney try, but only eight minutes remain. There is still enough time for two tries, but everything we’ve seen tonight suggests that is unlikely. Broncos lead 22-14 after 72 minutes

Kobe Hetherington charges into the Storm defence.Getty Images

Oh, Storm. What’s come of you

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That might have been the most un-Storm thing of all-time. They have just failed to take a like drop-out in the permitted time period. That gifted another two points to Brisbane. I can’t remember a Craig Bellamy side ever doing that before. Storm players were arguing they didn’t have a ball to use. Referee Grant Atkins was having none of it. Broncos lead 22-8 after 70 minutes

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WATCH: Asofa-Solomona binned

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