• Roosters star has been called out over his past comments
  • May was told last week to find a new club for 2025 season

Terrell May’s words have come back to bite him, with the Sydney Roosters last week  informing the footy star that he is free to leave the club due to his attitude towards the game.

Last Thursday, May was told to find a new club for 2025 in a surprising move given the 25-year-old only signed a two-year contract extension in April worth the best part of $1million.

It is understood that an interview that the rising star did with media in September played a big part in the move.

The Roosters forward told the Sydney Morning Herald that sometimes he just ‘doesn’t want to play’.

‘I gave it away twice, when I was 18 and then when I was 20,’ May said of footy.

‘Both times I just didn’t want to play any more. I get like that throughout the year as well.

‘Sometimes I just get “I don’t wanna be there and don’t wanna play”.

‘It’s a weird feeling. I don’t think many people experience it where one week they love the game and go on the TV screens and the next week they don’t want to be there at all.

The Roosters told Terrell May he was free to leave the club immediately

The Roosters told Terrell May he was free to leave the club immediately

It’s understood the Roosters had concerns over May’s attitude towards the game

‘Sometimes I just feel I could quit, like in a day. It sounds a bit weird, but I get those thoughts sometimes where I’m just like ‘Is this really for me? I’m very grateful to be where I am and play with the Roosters, but rugby league isn’t the whole of me.’

The Roosters’ decision to tell May he was free to find a new home was also a shock given veteran prop Jared Waerea-Hargreaves has finished up with the club to take up a one-year deal with Hull KR in the Super League.

May enjoyed a career-best season in 2024 and outperformed Waerea-Hargreaves and fellow Roosters props Lindsay Collins and Spencer Leniu in nearly every statistical category.

The prop was informed of the club’s desire to offload him in a call with Roosters coach Trent Robinson earlier this week while he is on international duty with Samoa on their two-Test tour of England.

The initial reporting of May’s impending exit centred around whether the prop was a good fit for the club, but that suggestion was rubbished by the Samoan forward.

‘(It has) nothing to do with off-field stuff,’ May wrote on his Instagram.

The Roosters’ sudden decision to part ways with the forward has only increased speculation the club is eyeing a big fish in the NRL’s open market.

In an interview in September, May admitted that he sometimes doesn’t want to play footy

Former St George Illawarra captain Ben Hunt is a free agent, while Melbourne fullback Ryan Papenhuyzen was free to talk to rival clubs as of Friday.

Joey Manu has only signed a one-year deal with a Japanese rugby union side and could be lured back to the Roosters midway through the 2025 NRL season.

May, meanwhile, will have no shortage of offers on the table after his stellar 2024 campaign.

Canterbury have free salary-cap space following the club’s decision to sack Josh Addo-Carr on Thursday.

The Bulldogs were previously in the hunt for May’s signature before he extended his contract at the Roosters earlier this year.

Other likely landing spots are St George Illawarra and Wests Tigers, who are still searching for a replacement for the Melbourne-bound Stefano Utoikamanu.

The Tigers remain open to offloading English Test back-rower John Bateman, who has attracted interest from Manly.

The Sea Eagles are set to examine a move for Bateman over the coming weeks and won’t enter the race for May’s signature.

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