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George Clarke

NRL absence no barrier for banned Cleary

Penrith expect Nathan Cleary to hit the ground running when he returns from a five-match NRL ban. (Brendon Thorne/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

History shows why Penrith coach Ivan Cleary can be confident about son Nathan returning for the NRL finals in top gear despite being suspended until the end of the regular season.

Cleary was hit with a five-game ban for a spear tackle on Parramatta's Dylan Brown and will be sidelined until week one of the finals.

It means that the halfback will have only played one full game - a July 23 win over Cronulla - between State of Origin III and the Panthers' first finals appearance.

But his father claimed on Monday that he would hit the ground running when he returns from his lengthy suspension.

"There has been enough experience for Nathan out of the last few years, probably starting in 2018," Cleary said.

"He missed eight weeks, came back and had a couple of good games and he made his Origin debut.

"He has always come back from time out pretty much firing, so I think he will be fine."

Halves partner Jarome Luai remains sidelined with a knee injury for a similar timeframe but Cleary was confident the duo would pick up where they left off.

"They've played together for six years so that's a help and they'll be training together once Romie (Luai) is up and about.

"I feel like that training should get us in a good enough position for those guys to click back together."

Despite the lengthy ban, the halfback will join the rest of the squad on a mid-season camp to Kiama on the NSW South Coast before Saturday's trip to Canberra.

Cleary said the Panthers had considered fighting the severity of his son's grade-three charge but chose not to, given what was at stake.

If the NRL judiciary had upheld the grading, Cleary would have missed the first week of the finals campaign as well as the Panthers' remaining five regular season games.

"I definitely thought we had a case there but in the end the risk was too high for him to lose another week," said Cleary, whose side finish the season with games against Canberra, Melbourne, South Sydney, the Warriors and North Queensland.

The challenge for the Panthers is now to wrap up a minor premiership with a relatively inexperienced halves pairing.

Sean O'Sullivan will be partnered by either utility Jaeman Salmon or two-game rookie Kurt Falls, although Cleary would not be drawn on who would get the nod to play the Raiders.

Cleary was unable to confirm if centre Stephen Crichton would be back after suffering a laceration to his ear in the win over the Sharks.

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