‘Godfather’ offer Broncos diehard could not refuse

Joel Gould |

Brisbane hooker Cory Paix had no hesitation in accepting a ‘Godfather’ offer to re-sign.
Brisbane hooker Cory Paix had no hesitation in accepting a ‘Godfather’ offer to re-sign.

Loyal as the day is long, hooker Cory Paix received the contract offer from Brisbane he craved and accepted it within hours.

In reality it was ‘The Godfather’ offer Paix couldn’t refuse, but with a twist. It’s not as though the Broncos tabled him $1 million to re-sign for 2026. It was more about his own desire to stay at a club he never wanted to leave.                                                                                                                                                      

“That’s true,” his manager Paul Hogan chuckled, in response to the movie reference.

How Paix got the deal is a story in itself. The surprise exit of forward Kobe Hetherington to Manly next year on a four-year deal opened up cap space, but coach Michael Maguire had said all year he wanted to keep Paix, who has been with the club for 12 years.

It was just a matter of finding a way.

Hogan sat down for lunch with Brisbane recruitment boss Simon Scanlan last Wednesday.

Scanlan had recruited Toowoomba terrier Paix into the Broncos academy when he watched him play in a schoolboy carnival in Pittsworth when just 13. The meeting with Hogan was a “take it or leave it” affair.

“We agreed to it pretty well straight away,” Hogan told AAP.

“Simon emailed me the contract late Wednesday. I spoke to Cory, we accepted verbally and we signed it lunch time Thursday.

“It is a fair deal for one year and we will see what eventuates after that.

“Cory was in the Broncos academy at age 13 and signed his official contract when he was 15.

“Now that Madge (Maguire) is there and everything is going well, he wants to stay there.”

The contract lunch was hastily organised. Hogan was in the Broncos Leagues Club restaurant last week when Scanlan called and gave him three options. They could meet in the club, at a nearby coffee shop or the Newmarket Hotel.

Hogan chose the latter option, away from prying eyes.

The deal was done over an entree of Oysters Kilpatrick, on-special lamb chops for the main course and an Italian-style tiramisu for desert. A Tasmanian bottle of pinot noir topped it off and ensured the deal was done in style.

Cory Paix.
Cory Paix, all smiles at a Broncos media day, has been rewarded for his loyalty and defensive clout. (Darren England/AAP PHOTOS)

The 2025 season has reinvented Paix. He did not play NRL last year and there were offers to leave the club before his contract had expired.

This year he started the season at hooker, was moved to the bench, then dropped only to return as starting No.9. The Broncos have won each of the last nine games when Paix has started.

“We could have gone to three or four clubs in Sydney that were chasing him. Super League clubs were chasing him,” Hogan said.

“It was obvious that he never wanted to leave. He wanted to dig in and now the Broncos are one win away from a grand final.”

Hogan, a former stylish playmaker with Swifts in the Ipswich Rugby League and first grade rugby gun with Easts in Brisbane, has been a vocal and staunch advocate for workaholic Paix.

“He played 91 minutes against Canberra, made 48 tackles and missed one. That’s the official NRL stats. You can’t underestimate that,” Hogan said.

“You don’t always have to be scoring tries and setting them up. He has a role in the team and plays it to a tee.”

AAP