The man who runs Sydney’s entire attacking system has been handed the most lucrative halfback contract in Queensland history. The Roosters have until Friday to respond. The clock is ticking.
There is a number sitting in Luke Keary’s inbox right now that is making very uncomfortable reading at Roosters headquarters. It arrived via his management group late last Wednesday evening — formatted as a formal contract proposal, bearing the letterhead of a Queensland-based NRL club — and it carries a per-season figure that would make Keary the highest-paid halfback operating north of the border.
That number is $1.2 million per season.
Three years. A full no-trade clause. A captain’s armband from day one. And a recruitment pitch so detailed, so personally tailored to everything Keary has said publicly and privately about how he wants the final chapter of his career to look, that sources close to his management describe it as “the most professional approach any club has made to any player I’ve seen in fifteen years of player management.”
Luke Keary has not said no. And the longer that silence holds, the louder it becomes inside Eastern Suburbs.

Why Keary matters more than any Rooster not named Tedesco
To understand the full weight of what is at stake, you need to understand what Luke Keary actually does for the Sydney Roosters — not the version that shows up in a stat line, but the invisible architecture of what makes this team function as an attacking unit.
Keary is the brain. He reads a defensive line three seconds before everyone else does. He is the player whose decoy runs create the space other players score in, whose kicking game pins opponents inside their own ten, whose on-field communication with the hooker and the forwards sets the rhythm and tempo of every single set. Strip him out and you are not merely losing a halfback. You are removing the operating system the entire machine runs on.
“People talk about Tedesco like he’s irreplaceable — and he is. But if Keary leaves, it breaks something in this team that cannot be fixed by simply signing another halfback. It breaks the way they think.” — Former NRL coach, speaking anonymously
The offer — and who made it
This publication can confirm the offer came from the Gold Coast Titans — a club that, under new football director Craig Bellamy, has been rebuilding with an ambition that would have seemed fanciful eighteen months ago. Bellamy spent two decades turning Melbourne into a dynasty. He has not come to the Gold Coast to make up the numbers.
The package on the table:
| Per season | $1,200,000 |
| Contract length | 3 years |
| Total value | $3,600,000 |
| Extras | Captain’s armband + full no-trade clause |
The $1.2 million figure is not an opening position. Sources say it is Bellamy’s genuine, final offer — assembled after a forensic review of Keary’s contract history and the salary cap space Gold Coast has been quietly banking for eighteen months specifically for a signing of this magnitude. They built the war chest. They identified the target. Now they are waiting.
The Roosters’ spine — a fault line forming
Sydney Roosters spine — current status:
| # | Player | Position | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | James Tedesco | Fullback | ⚠️ Situation unresolved |
| 6 | Luke Keary | Five-eighth | 🔴 Decision pending |
| 7 | Sam Walker | Halfback | ✅ Contracted |
| 9 | Brandon Smith | Hooker | ⚠️ Off-contract 2027 |
| 13 | Victor Radley | Lock / Captain | ✅ Re-signed 2025 |
A spine with two of its five positions in active crisis is not a spine. It is a structural fault line. And the Roosters — who pride themselves on continuity — are staring at a situation that, if Keary departs alongside the growing Tedesco uncertainty, would represent the most significant dismantling of their attacking structure since the departures of Cooper Cronk and Latrell Mitchell reshaped the club at the turn of the decade.
What Keary actually wants
Sources close to Keary paint a picture of a man not primarily driven by money — but who has, at 33, arrived at a point where legacy, respect, and finishing on his own terms matter as much as any figure on a contract page.
He wants a captaincy before he retires. With Radley as skipper and Tedesco as the permanent heartbeat of the leadership group, the Roosters cannot offer that in any meaningful sense. He wants a deal long enough to take him to the end of his playing days — not a series of one-year rollovers. And he wants to be the central figure in something being built. Not a supporting actor in something already built around other men.
“Luke has given this club everything. And what he’s asking for in return is not unreasonable. He wants to be seen. To be the man. The Titans are offering him that. The Roosters keep offering him a role.” — Person close to Keary’s management, speaking anonymously
The clubs circling
Gold Coast Titans 🌊 — Formal $1.2M offer lodged. Friday deadline set. Craig Bellamy personally drove the recruitment. Status: Offer made.
Dolphins 🐬 — Wayne Bennett monitoring closely. No formal offer yet but internal discussions active. Would move within 24 hours if Keary signals availability. Status: Watching closely.
Dragons 🐉 — Rebuilding under new coach. Keary’s leadership seen as perfect fit. Preliminary enquiry lodged. Status: Interested.
Sydney Roosters 🐓 — Yet to table a formal counter-offer. Cap disagreement has stalled response. Clock running dangerously low. Status: Silent.
The Friday deadline
This is not an open-ended situation. Bellamy gave Keary’s management a response deadline of this Friday — not as a power play, but because, as one source said: “Craig doesn’t play games. He made a fair offer. He wants an answer. If it’s no, he moves to the next name on his list within the hour.”
That deadline has been communicated to the Roosters. They know the clock is running. And yet as of Tuesday evening, no formal counter-offer had been lodged. Sources point to a stand-off between the football department — which understands Keary’s value viscerally — and the administration, which is staring at a salary cap already stretched tight by the Tedesco situation.
The timeline
March 2026 — Bellamy identifies Keary as Gold Coast’s primary target. Cap space confirmed. Pitch developed over four weeks.
April 2 — Formal $1.2M offer lodged. Three years, captain’s role, no-trade clause. Friday deadline set.
April 4 — Roosters informed. Football department urges immediate response. Administration begins cap review — and stalls.
April 7 — Still no counter from Roosters. Keary’s camp frustrated. Dolphins make contact. Robinson calls Politis personally.
April 11 (Friday) — Deadline. If no Roosters counter by close of business — sources say Keary will seriously consider saying yes.
Robinson’s worst nightmare
Trent Robinson has built his entire offensive philosophy around the Keary-Walker combination — two halves with contrasting but perfectly complementary skill sets that no defensive structure in the competition has fully solved. Lose Keary, and Walker — just 22 — is left as the sole creative architect of an attack that relies on the tension between them as its central engine.
Robinson has reportedly been on the phone to chairman Nick Politis multiple times this week. The message, sources say, is unambiguous:
“Find the money. Now. Because if we lose Luke on top of everything else happening at this club, we are not a premiership team this year. We are not even close.”
Reactions:
Trent Robinson (head coach): “Luke Keary is one of the best halfbacks in this competition. His value to this football club is not something I’m going to debate publicly.” — Wednesday presser
Craig Bellamy (Titans football director): “We don’t discuss player movements. What I will say is that we are building something serious up here.” — Tuesday media
Sam Walker (Roosters halfback): “Kears has taught me everything since I came into this team. I just want him to stay. Simple as that.” — Instagram story, Thursday
What happens if he goes
The Roosters without Keary is no longer an abstract thought experiment. It is a real and approaching possibility that the club apparently did not adequately prepare for — because, as one source said bluntly: “Nobody thought it would actually get to this point.”
If Keary accepts the Titans’ offer, Sydney will be left with Walker as their sole genuine playmaker, a Tedesco situation unresolved, and a salary cap so tight that replacing Keary mid-season would border on impossible.
The season would not be over. But the dream — the quiet, carefully built belief inside Eastern Suburbs that 2026 was the year the Roosters reclaimed what was theirs — would take a blow from which recovery, in this window, would be brutal.
Luke Keary has until Friday. He has $1.2 million per season in his inbox. He has a captain’s armband on the table. And he has a club that has yet to tell him — formally, financially, unambiguously — that they want him to stay.
The Roosters have 72 hours to fix what should never have been broken.
In rugby league, 72 hours is both an eternity and nothing at all.
Bottom line: The Roosters are facing twin crises simultaneously — Keary and Tedesco, the spine and the soul. Lose one and you recover. Lose both and you are rebuilding from scratch. The board needs to act before Friday becomes the worst day at this club in a decade.







