Josh Reynolds isn’t sure whether he’ll break into Canterbury’s top squad and feature in the NRL in 2023, but for the time being he’s feeling like a Bulldog again after his return to Belmore.
Once a fan-favourite in blue and white, Reynolds is going about his business in a quiet, yet effective manner after returning to Australia following two seasons in the Super League.
The Bulldogs have three spots left in their top 30 roster and while there are no guarantees, the 33-year-old is hopeful to return to where it all started in the NRL next season.
The original departure
A crowd pleaser, an entertainer and a passionate clubman who would always get under the skin of rivals.
Reynolds was a Bulldog through and through with his departure at the end of 2017 sending shockwaves through the NRL.
Reynolds was flocked by fans and carried off the Belmore turf in his final game at the venue after he confirmed earlier in the season he’d signed a lucrative four-year deal with the Wests Tigers.
It was a move largely motivated by money - the joint venture offering up the type of coin that any player would be silly to knock back - and Reynolds was given a blessing to take up the deal.
Canterbury didn't make the finals that year, and they haven't since either with Reynolds watching on from afar.
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Josh Reynolds' original departure from the Bulldogs in 2017 was an emotional time for the club.[/caption]
"I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t watching them from afar when I left," Reynolds told NRL.com.
"I still had mates here that I’d played with. Players like Jacko (Josh Jackson) and Ray [Faitala-Mariner].
"Those guys, you’ve got to take your hat off them to stick around in those tough times.
"You don’t want to see anyone go through a rough patch – not just them personally but the club itself.
"My time at the Tigers wasn’t how I wanted it to pan out or how I envisioned it would all go down when I left.
"I almost came back to the Bulldogs after that contract but ended up over in the UK."
Why the Super League
Reynolds had a year left on his contract with Hull FC but with an option in his favour he called it quits mutually with the club to return to Australia in June.
While his time in the UK didn't work out entirely as planned, Reynolds came back in a much better mind frame than when he originally left.
His departure from the NRL in 2020 came after 12 months of turmoil that included a domestic violence case - in which he was later cleared - in an event that was played out so publicly.
Two years on and Reynolds now has a new fiancé and has put his time at the Wests Tigers behind him.
"It’s quite true that when your off-field life is in check then your on-field life tends to go well too," he said.
"Life’s good. It’s the happiest I’ve ever been off the field with my new fiancé, and just being back home with my mates. "It’s so much easier when you haven’t got the outside pressures weighing you down. "That’s one thing I do speak up to with the boys, to make sure the off-field life is in check because it does flow into training and on the field. "You can’t let it affect the way you train and play."