The 21-year-old was charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm, stalking or intimidation and destroying or damaging property.
His father, Talatau Amone, 47, is facing the same charges and an extra allegation of entering a building or land to commit an indictable offence.
The pair were found guilty on the charges over an altercation at Warrawong in Wollongong's south, where tradies on a neighbouring property were confronted by men armed with hammers in November 2022.
Lawyer Elias Tabchouri (L) reminded the court the elder Amone spent almost three months in custody. (Dean Lewins/AAP PHOTOS)
Lawyer Elias Tabchouri pointed Wollongong Local Court magistrate Gabriel Fleming to past decisions that considered the thresholds for an intensive corrections order, an alternative to full-time imprisonment, as the pair appeared for sentencing on Monday.
He reminded the court the elder Amone spent close to three months in custody before being bailed in February.
The younger Amone was stood down from all Dragons activities following the guilty verdicts in October.
The five-eighth earlier became subject to the NRL's "no-fault stand down" policy, suspending players facing charges that carry maximum terms of 11 years or more in prison.
But when his case moved from the district to local court, reducing his maximum possible sentence, the NRL cleared him to return in March.
He played 19 games, scoring one try and assisting seven others as the Dragons narrowly avoided the wooden spoon after only five wins from the 2023 campaign.
The league's integrity unit has been investigating the Tongan international but no further punishments have been delivered.
The pair will be sentenced later on Monday.