John Hopoate is by far the NRL's most suspended player, outed for a total of 45 matches in a 13 year career, but Bird will force his way into fifth spot on that unwanted list if he does cop a six week ban.
Josh Reynolds' hopes of retaining his NSW jersey have also suffered a blow, with the Blues incumbent five-eighth facing a one-game ban for tripping.
City playmaker Reynolds was hit with the charge for his ugly effort on Country forward Tariq Sims at Wagga Wagga on Sunday.
Due to loading and carry over points, the offence carries a one-match ban if Reynolds takes the early guilty plea.
That will rule him out of Canterbury's visit to Townsville on Saturday to face North Queensland, leaving him just one more game to impress Blues coach Laurie Daley before he chooses his side on May 19 for game one.
If he fights the ban and loses, Reynolds will be outed for two games.
Kangaroos back-rower Sam Thaiday is also set for a week's holiday for his crusher tackle on Kiwis forward Martin Taupau.
The Brisbane star was handed a grade one dangerous contact head/neck charge and will earn a week's ban with the early guilty plea. The same penalty applies if he fights the charge and loses.
In other charges from the representative weekend, Melbourne's Tongan forward Felise Kaufusi also faces a week ban for a grade one dangerous contact charge for a tackle on Samoa's Josh McGuire in Saturday's clash on the Gold Coast.
THE NRL'S MOST UNWANTED
MOST SUSPENDED PLAYERS SINCE THE NRL WAS FORMED IN 1998
John Hopoate: 45 weeks
Luke O'Donnell/Craig Smith: 32 weeks
Danny Williams: 28 weeks
Jason Stevens/Adrian Morley: 26 weeks
Greg Bird 21 + ? weeks
BIRD-BRAINED
GREG BIRD'S SUSPENSIONS SINCE HIS NRL DEBUT IN 2002
2004: Striking ref - 10 matches
2004: Dangerous throw - 3 matches
2005: Dangerous throw - 2 matches
2011: Striking - 1 match
2014: Dangerous throw - 2 matches
2014: Dangerous throw - 2 matches
2014: Dangerous throw - 1 match
*No bans resulted for Bird after judiciary appearances in 2003 and 2013.
-AAP