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Former NRL star Matt Utai has been shot in the chest and leg in a brazen drive-by shooting in Sydney’s south-west on Tuesday morning.

First responders were called to Macquarie Street, Greenacre about 6am after reports multiple gunshots were fired from occupants of an SUV, which sped away after Utai, 44, was shot.

Police and paramedics at the scene where former NRL player Matt Utai was shot on Tuesday. Kate Geraghty

Four ambulances were dispatched to Greenacre, where they discovered Utai conscious. He was treated for gunshot wounds.

He has been rushed to hospital in a serious condition.

Matt Utai after the 2004 NRL Grand Final.Getty Images

Police were then called to nearby Samuel Street in Wiley Park, where they found a burnt-out SUV suspected to be used in the shooting. The car was seized for forensic examination after the fire was extinguished by Fire and Rescue NSW.

Crime scenes have been established at both locations. Bankstown detectives are treating the incidents as linked.

Utai, born in Auckland in 1981, burst onto the rugby league scene for the Bulldogs in 2002, earning the Dally M Rookie of the Year award after a first-season return that included 13 tries and 15 line-breaks.

He was an integral member of the Bulldogs’ 2004 premiership-winning team, in which he scored two tries in the grand final to help his side topple the Roosters.

Utai represented New Zealand on the international stage, earning a call-up following his debut first grade season. He played for the Kiwis on four occasions, before representing Samoa at the 2008 World Cup, at which he scored two tries in three matches.

He left the Bulldogs in 2009 after several years marred by injury. A move to Super League side Celtic Crusaders was aborted in 2010 amid concerns about Utai’s injury. He signed for the West Tigers in 2011, and stayed until the end of his playing career in 2013.

He scored 85 tries across 167 games for the Canterbury Bulldogs and West Tigers.

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Daniel Lo Surdo is a breaking news reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald. He previously helmed the national news live blog for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.Connect via email.

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