Oates to have surgery on broken jaw in Broncos blow

Brisbane's Corey Oates will miss six to eight weeks after a high shot by North Queensland's Scott Drinkwater who was hit with a grade-three shoulder charge.

COREY OATES of the Broncos is tackled during the NRL match between the Brisbane Broncos and the Melbourne Storm at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane, Australia.
COREY OATES of the Broncos is tackled during the NRL match between the Brisbane Broncos and the Melbourne Storm at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane, Australia. Picture: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

Brisbane winger Corey Oates will undergo surgery on a broken jaw in a huge blow for the 28-year-old and the Broncos.

Oates will have the operation on Saturday after being collected high by North Queensland fullback Scott Drinkwater immediately after half-time in the Broncos' 28-16 win at Suncorp Stadium on Friday night.

Broncos head of performance Dave Ballard said scans showed "a displaced fracture of the jaw".

"He will undergo surgery today and then faces a recovery period of six to eight weeks," Ballard said.

Drinkwater was put on report over the incident and charged by the match review committee on Saturday with a grade-three shoulder charge. He will miss three games if he takes the early guilty plea.

Cowboys centre Peta Hiku was also charged with a grade-two crusher tackle on Oates and will miss two games with an early plea.

Brisbane's outside back Jesse Arthars is expected to come into the starting line-up for Oates for the NRL round-three clash at Suncorp Stadium with St George Illawarra next Saturday.

Oates has been a key plank in the Broncos' renaissance under coach Kevin Walters.

He scored a career-best 20 tries last season and returned to Queensland's State of Origin side after a three-year absence to play a crucial role in the series decider.

Walters said Oates was "a big loss".

"He is just tough. He is an old pro Oatesy, from way back," he said.

"He is very reliable with his carries out of yardage, he's a good finisher and good under the high ball."

Arthars was outstanding against Penrith in the 13-12 win in round one and had a hand in a key try after half-time in the win over the Cowboys.

"He is a different body shape to what Oatesy brings but he certainly brings a different skillset. At times this year he has been really good," Walters said.

"He played last week against Penrith and caught every bomb and today he was instrumental with one of the tries with his speed and acceleration."

Walters said Drinkwater's tackle, as Oates was steaming towards the tryline, "wasn't a very good incident to have in our game".

When asked if he thought a sin-bin was sufficient, Walters said "probably not".

Broncos captain Adam Reynolds said he questioned the referee on the decision just to sin-bin Drinkwater but conceded with everything happening at such a high speed it was difficult for officials.

"When you look at the replay it doesn't look too good," he said.

"We lose a player for the game and for a number of weeks probably. Whether 10 minutes is justifiable, I don't think so."

Walters said he trusted the NRL to make the right call.

"We will get around Oatesy and support him with his recovery and back to playing," he said.

Cowboys coach Todd Payten said he was comfortable with the sin-binning of Drinkwater "so long as it is consistent all season long".

"Scott's tackle happened really quick. Corey changed direction really late. He was trying to stop the try," Payten said.

"He has one foot on the deck and no intent to make collision with where he got him. It was certainly an accident. The kid was just doing his best to stop a try really quickly."