Man forced to fight kangaroo to get dog back in odd encounter

While on a walk with his dogs near a river, Mick Moloney suddenly noticed one of his Akitas was missing. A kangaroo had it in a headlock.

While stretching near Australia’s Murray River on a walk with his dogs, Mick Moloney suddenly noticed one of his Akitas—Hatchi—was missing.

“I looked in [towards the river] and behind these reeds I could just see this massive kangaroo…standing there with his arms actually in the water just staring at me,” Moloney told ABC Radio Melbourne via Australian Broadcasting Corp.

“After about 15 seconds, Hatchi came up and he was in a headlock with this kangaroo. Water was just gushing out of his mouth and he yelped quite badly.”

Moloney made a loud noise trying to scare the kangaroo away, but the animal didn’t move. Nor did it let go of his dog.

“I thought, all right, I got to get in there,” Moloney told ABC Radio.

He took his phone out and started recording “because no one is going to believe this.”

(Warning for salty language in video.)

Moloney had “a bit of a tussle in the water” with the kangaroo, and dropped his phone in the process, retrieving it moments later.

Moloney told ABC Radio via News.com.au that he “basically, slapped him across the head, and he jumped me.

“The kangaroo basically looked like it was about to kick the legs out at me and I splashed some water in its face and tried to take off and it had another go at me as I was leaving.

“I got my dog back, that’s the main thing.”

Moloney admitted he had reservations about going at the kangaroo, considering its size.

“The muscles on this thing, I was like ‘this thing’s just got out of jail’ or something…It was jacked.”

Moloney, a mixed martial arts and Brazilian jujitsu teacher, posted the video on Facebook where one commenter wrote, “What are we doing now, roo-jitsu?”

Moloney indicated that was his last fight with a kangaroo “cause that thing was strong.” Then he added, “Let’s call it a draw.”

Watch: Pack of kangaroos swarms woman as she’s about to tee off

It’s not the first time Wendy Powick has posted a video or image of kangaroos on the course, but she was still caught off-guard by the events.

The nerves we feel on the tee box largely come from the internal pressure we put on ourselves.

But amateur golfer Wendy Powick had an external distraction as she went to tee off recently during a round at Arundel Hills Country Club, which sits near the Golf Coast in Queensland, Australia.

Powick was going through her pre-shot routine, lining up her drive when she witnessed a pack of kangaroos streaming down the fairway before stopping right on the edge of the tee box.

“They’ve come to watch me tee off,” Powick joked with a playing partner who was filming the incident.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CVcnfSuAFRP

It’s not the first time Powick has posted a video or image of kangaroos on the course, as seen below, but even she seemed caught off-guard by the way the group came toward her on this day.

After scurrying about, the kangaroos finally cleared so Powick could play through.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CVSFsqwAbbt/