tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310459132024-03-07T20:57:28.802+11:00Up where?There's a lot of things around.
But when you line 'em up together,
The footy wins hands down.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.comBlogger73125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-26831354066675353112009-08-24T11:35:00.002+10:002009-08-24T11:36:50.465+10:00Sport and LIteratureI have been thinking for a while now about the lack of good writing about sport in Australia, and because of my own personal interest, football in particular. <br /><br />I don't mean sports reporting, or opinion, but the bigger picture stuff, the literary stuff that has a shelf life of longer than 24 hours.<br /><br />Melbourne is meant be a city of literature and books or some such, yet in the currently occurring Melbourne Writers festival there was only one event that discussed sport, and it was a comedy debate. Don’t get me wrong, it was an enjoyable event, but why don’t Melbourne writers take football more seriously (or less seriously) as an area of consideration?<br /><br />This has coincided with me reading an article about Jews and baseball in America.* The author offers a litany of authors, books, plays, and songs written by Jews about baseball, but remarks upon how few have become elite players, and the generational struggle that played out over baseball - the second generation trying to assert their ‘americanness’ with the game. <br /><br />The author argues that it was partly because they were immigrants that they wrote about the game. It was through trying to understand the nation that they came to write about their own experiences as a new citizen and that led to experience with sport and baseball. <br /><br />So why is the same not true of Australian writers and football? Are we not allowing migrants to Australia to write? Are we not allowing them to experience football? If not migrants, why haven’t other authors spent more time thinking about the influence of football on culture in Melbourne? <br /><br />Not surprisingly I don’t have the answer to these questions. All I know is, I would certainly like to read more literary writing about football, because I am pretty sure it would be a worthwhile field of endeavour.<br /><br /><br /><br />* the article was Eric Solomon, “Jews and Baseball: A Cultural Love Story” in Eisen and Wiggins (eds.) Ethnicity and Sport in North American History and Culture, Greenwoon press, Westport Connecticut, 1994cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-46627504763698932332009-08-10T12:19:00.003+10:002009-08-10T12:29:21.106+10:00Time and tideA week is a long time in football, or so the well-worn cliché goes. Last week the Melbourne footy club were being accused of tanking, sending players off for surgery, and ‘experimentation’. This week, the collective football community has conceded that Melbourne are not tanking, they are just <span style="font-style:italic;">that</span> bad. The less said about the North Melbourne v Melbourne game the better. <br /><br />I went to the friday night game at the MCG, Geelong v Blues. I made the journey with two cats fans and was looking forward to a win. I thought it would be fun to see what its like for fans who win on regular basis! Sadly it was not to be. I fear the cat’s era of domination cannot hold much longer, injuries are mounting and age is catching up with some of their biggest stars. <br /><br />And while I know the ebb of this Geelong side will upset the many loyal cats fans I know, their tide will rise again. That’s one of the things I like most about football, the ebb and flow of teams. And while they undertake the inevitable ‘rebuilding phase’ their absence from the top of the ledger makes room for other sides that desperately deserve some time in the sun. Melbourne, Fremantle, North…<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzz5teUeznC_8JuoJ3SFl2sXclbahJ1tw5rjL9QpwnANnfKOsTXKIHKN0T9sWKmUFrG7Wg0Iq7kfuzlJlmrCezba1Hq6Kqwfmci2YJk76GwwFZmXPVA0vt6AB3ez1H0nUARxQOhg/s1600-h/49-Low-tide-beachscape-at-dawn.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 150px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzz5teUeznC_8JuoJ3SFl2sXclbahJ1tw5rjL9QpwnANnfKOsTXKIHKN0T9sWKmUFrG7Wg0Iq7kfuzlJlmrCezba1Hq6Kqwfmci2YJk76GwwFZmXPVA0vt6AB3ez1H0nUARxQOhg/s200/49-Low-tide-beachscape-at-dawn.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5368155003117821938" /></a><br /><br />Actually, we all deserve some time in the sun. It was frickin’ freezing at the football on Friday night, despite the six layers of wool I had on, and I am afraid I wont ever feel my toes again. This cold and windy winter has brought me more misery than just endless dees losses and frostbite and I, personally, am ready for it to be over. <br /><br />Bring on the sun, bring on the bbqs, and, most importantly, bring on the finals!cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-1923832332463472272009-08-04T11:54:00.005+10:002009-08-04T12:05:21.160+10:00Blah, Blah, Tank, Blah, Blah, BlahSeriously who really cares? I am so monumentally over all of this talk about tanking. <br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1Rjqs2v6ugK5YCfZmKICWrM65SywEmpdN07F72vXyfPld7Z5-eSk19o3flpAgwOOfTtWsJSU_O4HoiuEJgRH-QIIk4B85mXKxENfJAvZdjUOzUvP905q8uAN1iahyphenhyphenGKmZiy95Kw/s1600-h/tank+2.gif"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 194px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1Rjqs2v6ugK5YCfZmKICWrM65SywEmpdN07F72vXyfPld7Z5-eSk19o3flpAgwOOfTtWsJSU_O4HoiuEJgRH-QIIk4B85mXKxENfJAvZdjUOzUvP905q8uAN1iahyphenhyphenGKmZiy95Kw/s200/tank+2.gif" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5365922646139138066" /></a><br />I like that we have a competition that is designed to try and keep competing clubs as close together in ability, resources and opportunity. It makes sure that we do not have the same team winning each September. <br /><br />Did you get bored with Brisbane won 3 in a row? I did. Are you bored now watching the fluctuations in Hawthorn’s form and the sudden rise of the perpetual promisers St Kilda? I’m not. What are the chances everything will change completely by the time finals 2010 roll around? Pretty good, actually.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiW69N-yuH1Ik16JD80wFsDHs9gnC8UolJWS3kjJhAhsys8zgBz8tbjLxz2r_vmixQ4pdI2oLO3aXigEvmUBgGTaiJ_vPTS9z0GDiWpzX3migViIZMRXfkg6CfxIYjjqTDiE2hiLQ/s1600-h/tank.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 250px; height: 302px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiW69N-yuH1Ik16JD80wFsDHs9gnC8UolJWS3kjJhAhsys8zgBz8tbjLxz2r_vmixQ4pdI2oLO3aXigEvmUBgGTaiJ_vPTS9z0GDiWpzX3migViIZMRXfkg6CfxIYjjqTDiE2hiLQ/s320/tank.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5365921478184230866" /></a><br /><br />There is an incentive to lose. So what. There really isn’t any great incentive to win for any of the clubs outside of finals contention. Better they get their guys patched up and ready for a good preseason than have them play injured for another month. <br /><br />There is an incentive to experiment and play people out of position. So what. I doubt many of the players object - it might be their one chance to prove themselves to be the gun forward/backman/midfielder/ruckman they always dreamed of being. Good luck to them.<br /><br />And OMG, is it really <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/rfnews/victory-demonised/2009/08/03/1249152558490.html">that difficult</a> as a supporter? It just means I am happy either way. I am happy when we win, because winning is what we are here for, and I am happy when we lose because it gives us the opportunity for more wins in the future. <br /><br />It is true that I have lowered expectations – its what you do to survive tough times at your football club. Maybe I would feel differently if I was a Collingwood supporter and I always expected to reach September. But I don’t. And I trust that the peeps who run my football club are trying their hardest to make sure the club sticks around, not just this year, but for decades to come. <br /><br />To those muppet Dees supporters who sang the Richmond club song after the game (there were probably two people if we are honest and not looking for a good headline) just STFU and go back to the pub, you are just encouraging the hysteria.<br /><br />End transmission. Let us speak of tanking no more, lest my head explode from rage. <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjwOQ6Yp46tZBNkQ4-C2sac40KRKyGg6GqvaswhybEePH4V9Ovlma0BjGnDIQLHchCPvJbNuYI5U1wmiSLCIfinUmGwZsElnqU7ma6t___zQwNxd03Mh8PkKWqNFzOUTtzjfLGENQ/s1600-h/Tanks-photo.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 85px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjwOQ6Yp46tZBNkQ4-C2sac40KRKyGg6GqvaswhybEePH4V9Ovlma0BjGnDIQLHchCPvJbNuYI5U1wmiSLCIfinUmGwZsElnqU7ma6t___zQwNxd03Mh8PkKWqNFzOUTtzjfLGENQ/s200/Tanks-photo.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5365923082018261458" /></a>cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-38052231228037744072009-07-31T10:53:00.002+10:002009-07-31T11:06:05.525+10:00Two Bulls in a Paddock<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjHivWT0IA923ud4un7vokq1E7XzBvFa8gr3Lo3gQzhWjYaLy3liCnurKH5qHtpBQUu2jqZ-2hdZ3kMRaSJWpz_07ArZoInwbub4M80Ins8ZpY3EAxefDCOf-KpldSqwLbD_UmjKw/s1600-h/bulls.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 133px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjHivWT0IA923ud4un7vokq1E7XzBvFa8gr3Lo3gQzhWjYaLy3liCnurKH5qHtpBQUu2jqZ-2hdZ3kMRaSJWpz_07ArZoInwbub4M80Ins8ZpY3EAxefDCOf-KpldSqwLbD_UmjKw/s200/bulls.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5364421258942750322" /></a><br /><br />What an ugly and demeaning expression that is. <br /><br />They’re doing it at <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/rfnews/malthouse-to-hand-baton-to-bucks/2009/07/28/1248546727652.html">Collingwood</a>, it seems like <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/rfnews/port-eyes-pies-coaching-plan/2009/07/30/1248546822363.html">Port</a> might be keen, and now it turns out that they tried to do it at <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/rfnews/lions-tried-succession-deal/2009/07/30/1248546822357.html">Brisbane</a>, failed to get the contract signed, but ended up with the bloke they wanted, when they wanted him, anyway. All of this succession planning is interesting but jeepers, what a beat up.<br /><br />In the modern era of the game one club has one coach, or at least that’s how it appears from the outside. But things are always more complicated than they appear. Historically the coaching position was never so clear cut, there have been plenty of captain-coaches like Jesaulenko and Barassi, as well as formal and informal succession plans down the ages. And in the modern game the head coach might have the final say, but there are almost as many coaches as there are players at today’s football clubs. Fitness coaches, weights coaches, midfield coaches, kicking coaches, etc. As well as directors of coaching, welfare officers and the like. The players don’t seem to have any trouble figuring out who is boss. <br /><br />Perhaps the media are the only ones who have a problem with it? Presumably because they are not sure who to hassle for a quote or whose resignation to call for when things are going pear-shaped. Or perhaps its just because anytime they put Collingwood on the back of the newspaper they sell more copies.<br /><br />I predict that the next two years will be all sunshine and roses down at Collingwood, as long as the team keeps winning. Come round 6 2011, if the pies aren’t in the top half of things, then it will take significant board level intestinal fortitude to not give Mick the boot and install Nathan a smidge early. We shall see...cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-67463661281530927902009-07-30T12:43:00.004+10:002009-07-31T10:22:05.777+10:00History never repeats, I tell myself before I go to sleep...<span style="font-style:italic;">(with apologies to Split Enz)</span><br /><br />I have been taking a stroll down memory lane with a copy of <span style="font-style:italic;">Football Ltd</span> by Garry Linnell. It is truly great football book wich not only gives a fascinating insight into corporatisation of the AFL, but also a beautiful and terrifying snapshot of the recklessness and hedonism of entrepreneurial business during the era. <br /><br />I have just finished reading the chapter on the creation of the Brisbane Bears, their disastrous move to Carrara on the Gold Coast and the alliance with Christopher Skase that ended in debt and tears. So it is with wry amusement that I note the signing of NRL player Karmichael Hunt to the soon-to-be-realised Gold Coast Football Club. I can’t help wondering, if the Bears had managed a coup like that in 1988 instead of signing fading star Warwick Capper, would the Queensland public (and everyone else for that matter) have paid a bit more attention? Could the path of football history have been changed if we had just thought to poach rugby players sooner?<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCg2UHGHfrZEOmEyz7spa_vRZ44-nLtN9AbT_MlIzpm8qT06trq_XCmF9sRZ_ort4Ie9JM4T83XkCemULdhTPF-QBkIsBiIOTQ08p9dz0zUCZaNLsWY6u2Mq5p9egQ8tGOc-MU0A/s1600-h/200px-Brisbane_Bears.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 181px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCg2UHGHfrZEOmEyz7spa_vRZ44-nLtN9AbT_MlIzpm8qT06trq_XCmF9sRZ_ort4Ie9JM4T83XkCemULdhTPF-QBkIsBiIOTQ08p9dz0zUCZaNLsWY6u2Mq5p9egQ8tGOc-MU0A/s200/200px-Brisbane_Bears.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5364078710250141186" /></a><br /><br />Good luck to Hunt and the GCFC. I hope it is an experiment that works. And I hope that they have all read <span style="font-style:italic;">Football Ltd</span>, because within its pages are the inglorious mistakes the league and its clubs made in the pursuit of expansion. Mistakes the GCFC would be wise not to repeat.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-68993405943301486342009-07-30T10:25:00.002+10:002009-07-30T10:38:20.921+10:00A hen in the roosterhouseKelli Underwood is calling football on TV. And she’s a lady. <br /><br />I know, we all thought that the gates of hell would open and the MCG would be dragged on in the second a woman was allowed to tell men something about a game a football, but it seems those fears were unfounded. It turns out, external genitalia is not the only qualification for knowing something about football. <br /><br />Well done to channel 10 for giving her a shot, and for recognising that football calling is not the sort of thing one is good at overnight. For the moment they appear willing to give her the time and support to improve. I hope that continues. <br /><br />I personally thought she was good. I like a commentator who is humble enough do to the research and actually knows the names of the players (I am looking at you ABC commentary box calling the Melbourne v Sydney game last week. “Is that Morton or Bate?”* ) and tells you what said players are doing on the field. If she didn’t have Malcolm Blight providing his own brand of staggeringly useless special comments, she might have even had something to work with. <br /><br />I would prefer a few less newspaper articles which damn the woman with faint praise. Underwood’s has had a pretty fast rise from getting the twilight game call on ABC radio to the hot seat of the Cats v Hawks game on a Saturday afternoon, and I think she is entitled to a little time to adjust. Can we give her more than two weeks on the air before tearing her call to pieces?<br /><br />Having called two cats games in a row, the fan forums are alight with complaints of bias, but seriously, even the most fabulous and virtuous caller of the game, Gerard Whateley is prone to a little bias, so is Tim Lane and don’t get me started on the rest of the special comments crowd. Still if I called a dees game, we could be down by 70 points and you still wouldn’t know who we were playing against. <br /><br />There is only so much of the fan forums you can read on this topic before involuntarily tossing your computer out the window, but I would like to draw your attention to this gem, posted by melbournemartin on the bigfooty forum,<br /><blockquote><br />"This is the problem. She sucks (apparently, I was at the game instead) but if we say it, then we're racist."</blockquote><br /><br />Now that is quality analysis.<br /><br /><br />* Bate<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjToZIHYRMvbBZpL8CBVPdZy66_WZh_4X2saG2UbNGkNq1_kFPqjf_b3LM70OgGIGRQVQFQ-UbWGBa1nHZ4bnNjk3B_9iWdBNKc0NfeYvng8feq4BkGX4hQiBtawO7NYk2h61kn8g/s1600-h/BATE.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 156px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjToZIHYRMvbBZpL8CBVPdZy66_WZh_4X2saG2UbNGkNq1_kFPqjf_b3LM70OgGIGRQVQFQ-UbWGBa1nHZ4bnNjk3B_9iWdBNKc0NfeYvng8feq4BkGX4hQiBtawO7NYk2h61kn8g/s200/BATE.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5364043075677758642" /></a><br /><br />Morton<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhalACFskUUf3DZKmdC6KTd6MaLIZZlPugISqpx2rHPTwlkqjVD1cm82i9ID3h3KGd5zvd55AN1Vt4R2OHLCcnogCV9p_h6zqAVq7boE_Vww5dzPFSRbtd_1nfEnzRD7splwfW8gw/s1600-h/MORTON.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 156px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhalACFskUUf3DZKmdC6KTd6MaLIZZlPugISqpx2rHPTwlkqjVD1cm82i9ID3h3KGd5zvd55AN1Vt4R2OHLCcnogCV9p_h6zqAVq7boE_Vww5dzPFSRbtd_1nfEnzRD7splwfW8gw/s200/MORTON.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5364043217574223090" /></a><br /><br />Hard to tell apart aren't they?cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-49213187771643779422009-07-30T10:10:00.003+10:002009-07-30T10:16:14.509+10:00Well, that was quite the hiatusIt turns out I have not graced these pages for over a year. Sorry about that. Still, I am pretty sure there was nobody hanging out for the next installment, so can we all just pretend like I have been posting witty, insightful and well-researched pieces on the world of football this whole time. Okay, great.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-82249958378545355012008-06-26T10:34:00.004+10:002008-06-26T10:58:04.166+10:00Listing the MFCThis week the areas of my past and present university life have intersected. It has been <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/national/demons-seek-free-kick-on-heritage-20080624-2w67.html">proposed</a> that the Melbourne Football Club be put on the National Trust Heritage register. <br /><br />This is an interesting thing, because intangible heritage is still a new and contested area among heritage studies and practice, so much so that Australia is yet to become states party to <a href="http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich/index.php?pg=00002">UNESCO’s 2003 Convention on the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage</a> and the <a href="http://www.nattrust.com.au/">National Trust</a> are having a conference next week to discuss the issues surrounding intangible heritage. <br /><br />I wont bore you with the details here. The intricacies of the world of national and international heritage legislation are interesting to only a very few. Find me in a pub after about 3 wines if you want to hear the full story.<br /><br />Were the Melbourne Football Club to be listed, which incidentally I think there is a lot of merit in doing, it would not afford the club and protection whatsoever. And this is where the <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/national/demons-seek-free-kick-on-heritage-20080624-2w67.html">media always get it wrong</a>. They don’t understand heritage and report everything to do with it badly - when they report it at all. <br /><blockquote></blockquote>‘Club spokesman Leigh Newton rejected suggestions the push for heritage listing was a strategic move to stave off extinction or stymie attempts to forcibly relocate Victorian clubs interstate.’<br /><br />No kidding. The reason it is not a strategic move, is because there is absolutely no strategic advantage to doing so. National Trust heritage listing is a plaque, a little recognition, advice on advocacy from the National Trust if it is threatened, and if the planets align correctly, a marginally more favourable attitude from Heritage Victoria – thought at present they have no capacity to recognise intangible heritage at all. <br /><br />I think there is value in listing the football club, in recognition of its development of the game and as a founding club. But no one should be deluded into thinking such a listing could have any impact on the chances of the club's survival.<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Update:</span> <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/jake-niall/2008/06/25/1214073341418.html">Jake Niall</a> gets its almost half right: <br /><br />'Similarly, it would be wonderful to maintain the presence of the game's oldest club. But Stynes can't ensure the survival of the Melbourne Football Club via a heritage listing. It will live or die on the basis of its present-day relevance.'<br /><br />Its still a really annoying article though.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-52181408827527719902008-06-12T12:03:00.002+10:002008-06-12T12:19:55.775+10:00The MFC, nightclubs and other things I dont know anything aboutRadio silence over. Apologies for the slackness people, I discovered <a href="http://www.nbc.com/Friday_Night_Lights/">Friday Night Lights</a> and a month of my life disappeared. <br /><br />The last month has been an interesting one in the world of football. My football team has celebrated its 150 years of being in style (I gather - the tickets were so hugely expensive I didn’t go and I don’t know anyone who did). And the team now oscillates between half-arsed, bullshit, membership tearing losses, and impressive, really quite near to good, gallant losses. Its heady days! One day, sometime, we might actually get a W. But looking at the fixture and our “forward line”* I don’t think its going to be this year. <br /><br />By the end of toady we will also have a new board. It all looks good to me, everyone seems pretty qualified and like all Melbourne supporters I think Jim Stynes is a dead-set champion who can do no wrong. I would, however, like to note the lack of women on his ticket. At the end of this rigmarole we will have only one woman on the board. This is not pleasing. <br /><br />The topic of footballers and nightclubs has arisen a couple of times in the last month, and what I have to say is this:<br /><br />I don’t actually know anyone who has been thrown out of a nightclub, and given the behaviour of some people still inside, I’m inclined to believe that it probably pretty difficult to get thrown out. <br /><br />Can these footballers not keep their head down, have a beverage with their mates, take a few happy snaps on their mobile phones and bugger off home like the rest of us? Apparently they can't because they are harassed by people wanting autographs and blokes wanting to test their manhood by picking a fight. I believe them, and that doesn’t sound like very much fun to me. So my question is, why are footballers still going to nightclubs? <br /><br />These guys are on enormous paychecks, they all have shiny houses they live in with their footballing mates, so I’ve got an idea, a quick post game trip to <a href="http://www.danmurphys.com.au/">Dan's</a> and they can enjoy themselves in the comfort of their own home free from harassment, bouncers and Herald Sun photographers. The only front window they will take a piss on is their own. Problem solved. Next…<br /><br />Having said that, Buddy didn’t really do anything terrible, and it seems Richo didn’t do anything at all, so I think we should all just take a chill pill. <br /><br />Round 12 here we come. <br /><br /><br /><br />On reflection, its possible I might have read a little too much <a href="http://www.wwtdd.com/">wwtdd</a> today, so things are more acerbic than usual. I’ll aim for something more cerebral for the next installment. <br /><br /><br /><br />*These quotation marks are on purpose. Something else entirely is going on with <a href="http://quotation-marks.blogspot.com/">these</a>.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-91065856784755378702008-05-07T16:23:00.005+10:002008-05-07T16:28:15.808+10:00City of Casey?<a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/demons-want-land-at-casey/2008/05/06/1209839651311.html">This </a>all sounds great to me. I really really want my football club to have a single place for training and administration. There's just one problem. I'm a snob. And a large number of Melbourne's members are snob. <br /><br />Are they going to want to go here for family day? <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhX4CPCRKCNoHTz4h2ut4On2O-MrivAebQqtoVDyB72e2poDPBqNZzlSFfRtEAv8nlCv-8EE5IDSRw7-DudZ3TrMYyBioVRvc8MEkE3QP78z0LFbXqhu2WpaG9fpUCwmsP3LbOSGA/s1600-h/Y6ilV1so_Suburbs+-+Jan+2007.gif"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhX4CPCRKCNoHTz4h2ut4On2O-MrivAebQqtoVDyB72e2poDPBqNZzlSFfRtEAv8nlCv-8EE5IDSRw7-DudZ3TrMYyBioVRvc8MEkE3QP78z0LFbXqhu2WpaG9fpUCwmsP3LbOSGA/s400/Y6ilV1so_Suburbs+-+Jan+2007.gif" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5197518457321418562" /></a>cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-2719606896577029082008-05-05T16:35:00.003+10:002008-05-05T16:41:03.436+10:00After the Second SirenYesterday afternoon my football team won. It was awesome.<br /><br />What was also really good was that the crowd were allowed out onto the ground after the game. And I’m pretty sure all 19,000 of us took up the opportunity. <br /><br />It was lovely -mildly dangerous- but lovely. Amidst the wayward species, the flailing arms and the shanked kicks, there was a real sense of community. People marked each others balls, there were smiles everywhere (even the faces of Freo supporters - which I thought was especially magnanimous) and everyone relished the opportunity to stand in the middle of the G and look up. <br /><br />The community spirit and sense of fun on display that evening under the lights of the G was worth every patch of damaged turf, and I sincerely hope the MCC and AFL consider allowing it more often –again.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEip8w16l4sOuiEH_fCo_YQ4Z_kerGRdOkK0I2YvgBaf7j_XJooMcWk1Ciy2_ppIf32i7AcE3C6rdvsmG-aTLg3peE5GOlwEHs3ELNuO6JE0MjlLAEecjntux6EB4NT9Y0s3S2XlYA/s1600-h/DG_Crowd_gallery__470x182.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEip8w16l4sOuiEH_fCo_YQ4Z_kerGRdOkK0I2YvgBaf7j_XJooMcWk1Ciy2_ppIf32i7AcE3C6rdvsmG-aTLg3peE5GOlwEHs3ELNuO6JE0MjlLAEecjntux6EB4NT9Y0s3S2XlYA/s320/DG_Crowd_gallery__470x182.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5196778958442327842" /></a><br />Actually, when I say the crowd got to stand in the middle of the G, that’s not strictly correct, they fence off the centre square to protect it from wear and tear so only two people got to stand right in the middle of the ground. Me and little boy called George. <br /><br />I was enjoying a bit of kick to kick with my companions when a little boy near to me got clocked in the head with a football. Tears welled in his eyes and those in the vicinity all rushed over to see if he was alright. It transpired that poor little George had not only copped a footy to the side of the head, he was also lost and after many minutes of trying to work out where his dad might be, I went to security. They then got George and me to stand right in the middle of the ground so that George’s dad might see him. <br /><br />Standing there with George, trying to pick a face I had never seen out of the crowd I was overcome with that same gut wrenching feeling I has as a kid, that George was having right at the moment, of being lost and totally helpless. The feeling passed in a moment, but I was surprised it had come at all. I was the grown up, confident and consoling, but it seems that feeling is never too far from the surface no matter your age. <br /><br />Don’t worry, this is a happy story. I have never seen a little boy run so fast as George when his dad did finally emerge out of the crowd and I’m pretty sure the bump on the head was long forgotten! I'll wager, if you could ask him, George would still be keen to run onto the ground for a kick after next week's game too.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-47367339290062897612008-05-05T09:02:00.001+10:002008-05-05T09:04:24.498+10:00<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicmoJYA9N5AY-SLfdAahJaS0_75VUcDHRZ_D4D4iGtmmIhdj_g7kN-unjkY8HwX1aGkPOms3c94csOWb6mVVEKKCZsyvdopwzMPLvYVkEUqHkevJHbqYraORAlsyLAGY_M_nScWQ/s1600-h/DG_Song_gallery__425x400.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicmoJYA9N5AY-SLfdAahJaS0_75VUcDHRZ_D4D4iGtmmIhdj_g7kN-unjkY8HwX1aGkPOms3c94csOWb6mVVEKKCZsyvdopwzMPLvYVkEUqHkevJHbqYraORAlsyLAGY_M_nScWQ/s400/DG_Song_gallery__425x400.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5196662036547628818" /></a> <span style="font-style:italic;">Photo from The Age</span>cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-57398763895518365172008-05-02T11:00:00.002+10:002008-05-02T11:03:01.901+10:00InsufficientJust so Channel 9 know, An <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/sam-newman-gets-official-rebuke/2008/05/01/1209235064882.html">offical rebuke </a>is not an adequate response. <br /><br />And where is the AFL exactly?cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-38218690277807519342008-05-02T10:37:00.004+10:002008-05-02T10:54:47.215+10:00Shrieking, Hysterical and DesperateIt seems Sam Newman might have trouble escaping his own ignorance this time. <br /><br />The highlight for me was his <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/newman-lashes-hysterical-critics/2008/05/01/1209235039858.html">comments on radio</a>:<br /><blockquote>"I love women. Been married to two or three of them," he said. "(But) tell me what they've ever done in football or for football.<br /><br />"I'm talking about the people on football clubs. I'm talking about women in football who use football as a vehicle to do whatever else they wish to do that's got nothing to do with football ... they have an agenda."<br /><br />He continued: "The AFL does not need shrieking, hysterical, desperate women trying to bob up with causes that they just get their excitement out of, or some self-fulfilling gratification out of very minor and trivial issues."</blockquote><br />I don’t think I have the energy to go line by line through the wrongness of these comments. I think you get the point. There is a recording on <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/">The Age </a>if you feel the need. <br /><br />He and Garry Lyon made things worse on The Footy Show last night, first with Lyon trying to dismiss the letter written to the station by prominent football women by arguing that Caroline Wilson accepted the apology so everyone else should let it rest. And then by letting Newman argue his case – badly. <br /><br />Let me make this clear, Caroline Wilson was not the only person offended by Newman’s comments and actions.<br /><br />Newman said something very revealing on live television last night, something that those who do care about the role of women in the game should take notice of, <br /><blockquote><br />When co-host Garry Lyon said the game had come a long way in its treatment of women, Newman retorted: "We've been forced to come a long way."</blockquote><br />That’s it right there people.<br /><br />That is the attitude of Newman, and one can only assume the large portion of the overexcited sycophantic Footy Show audience who cheered him on. For many, women are not an equal, they are not even relevant.<br /><br />Newman comes from the school of thought that if you never played, you’ll never know and you can never be a part of the game. Women can be taxi drivers for their sons, they can be fundraisers, they can dress up and look nice on best and fairest night, but they cannot have anything to do with the running of the game – How could they possibly? They never pulled the boots on. These people may have been forced to keep their opinions to themselves but that doesn’t mean they are going to change them. <br /> <br />I believe <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/not-all-football-fans-are-blokes/2008/04/26/1208743332030.html">Caroline Wilson is right</a>. Women in football do have to ‘just keep plugging away’, making our presence know, showing individuals that hold this opinion that the time for attitudes like theirs has passed. That is the only way we are going to change opinion. And we just have to come to terms with the fact that we probably never will change everyone. But I also believe that The Footy Show and Sam Newman make that fight harder by every day by giving that misogynistic attitude a public voice. <br /><br />In this instance ‘just plugging away’ is not a satisfactory response. Newman has to be publicly held to account for his actions. A private apology (or even a half-hearted public one) is not enough. To those who agree with him, silent resignation sounds much the same as quiet approval. <br /><br />Those that watch The Footy Show need to understand that his attitude is wrong and that it has no place in the game today. I don’t care that Newman thinks women ‘serve very little purpose’ but I care that by publicly stating his opinion he gives permission for many more to agree with him. <br /><br />The only consolation in all this is that with every opportunity for comment Newman digs a deeper hole for himself. One I sincerely hope he cannot get his way out of.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-19124202290352089172008-04-24T10:29:00.005+10:002008-04-24T10:50:11.964+10:00Neitz<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyRu11P15TJCcM31A0TuWjK4M4v8GxHPkOhdAt3tvhT0KFAmxYzKiJh-H_O7K9v1bR2c32DH09j3wwJBpGn6_sCoVEIuMZSrfjNE9jROiJJ03Y-qx7tQIrIreRUjinxelvj39wcQ/s1600-h/neitz.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyRu11P15TJCcM31A0TuWjK4M4v8GxHPkOhdAt3tvhT0KFAmxYzKiJh-H_O7K9v1bR2c32DH09j3wwJBpGn6_sCoVEIuMZSrfjNE9jROiJJ03Y-qx7tQIrIreRUjinxelvj39wcQ/s320/neitz.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5192607724859158274" /></a><br /><br /><br />It is always sad to watch a footballer finishing off his career. Particularly when the heart and mind are there, but the body just can't do it anymore. More so when it is your own team captain.<br /><br />David Neitz has been an excellent footballer and a strong leader. Under his leadership, the Melbourne football club has had a quiet strength and stoicism that has served it well through the ups and downs of the seasons and got the job done with a minimum of fuss. I do hope that if he wants to return after this <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/dees-new-low-neitz-faces-careerending-neck-injury/2008/04/21/1208742851522.html">injury</a> he will get that opportunity but if he is forced to retire he can begin his life after football proud of his achievements. <br /> <br />Chris Connelly described him thus:<br /><blockquote><br />"I have never come across a player who loved his football club or would do more for his football club than David Neitz," Connolly said. "He is the most passionate club man I think I've ever met."</blockquote><br /><br />I don't think there is any higher praise.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-16409581211691009652008-04-24T10:18:00.002+10:002008-04-24T10:27:43.327+10:00Trial by Media<a href="http://helen.artsblogs.com/blog/blog.asp?blogId=8167">Helen</a>’s comment on my last post about Barry Hall posed some very interesting questions, which are more than worthy of a post in and of themselves. It has taken me several days of pondering to venture a response.<br /><br />Helen wrote <br /><blockquote>"How do you think trial-by-media relates to sport, given sport's symbiotic and mutually dependent relationship with media? Would suppression of media reports verge on censorship? Is the media capable of controlling itself and resisting reporting on such events? Or is sport outside the realm of natural justice, given it writes and adheres to its own set of laws?"</blockquote><br />I suspect I am likely to tie myself in knots of contradiction on this topic, but here goes…<br /><br />I think trial-by-media is absolutely an important issue in sport, and has been for as long as someone pointed a camera at a game. I will focus my attention on its role in football, but pretty much everything to be said can be applied to all sport. <br /><br />Football and media have a mutually dependent relationship that has grown more important, and more dangerous with every passing year and every passing dollar. Just ask the <a href="http://www.abc.net.au/mediawatch/transcripts/s2216728.htm">staff of the Age</a> who argue the <a href="http://www.maintainyourage.org/">independence of their journalism</a> is a threatened by The Age’s cosy relationship with Melbourne Victory. Journalistic integrity in football reporting at the Herald Sun has long gone out the window, though I hazard to guess few of its readers noticed. <br /><br />Is the media capable of controlling itself and resisting reporting on such events? Sadly the answer is no. A few years ago now, newspapers and nightly news programs noticed that articles about sport sell. And big. So sport sections, grew and grew to the point where now, the weekend papers (and Monday, and Friday) are all about the sport. Not that I’m complaining, its all I ever read. Oh no, wait, I am complaining. I complain almost every weekend as I open the paper and read another bullshit article cobbled together to fill column inches around some really good photography. <br /><br />Actions on the field are now replayed ad nauseum (literally in the case of Nathan Brown’s broken leg) until any infringing player cannot possible get a fair hearing at the tribunal, nor at the local bar or around kitchen table one imagines. This is made easier and more impressive thanks to the instant replay and the numbers of cameras now around the group. But it is the product of the need to fill air time and column inches. We hear everyone’s opinion, get every angle, discuss every scenario before it reaches a tribunal and while our nation’s courts may still have the capacity for impartiality, the football tribunal certainly doesn’t (and I don’t suspect it ever really did). Pressure from public opinion, and indeed from an AFL more interested in protecting its brand that anything else cannot help but influence the tribunal. <br /><br />Having said all of that, in the case of Barry Hall I think the tribunal did well to hold firm to its decision of 7 weeks, rather than 9 because of Hall’s guilty plea. It was correct within the laws of the game, and showed they were able to resist the pressure of the media, and various members of the Staker family. So maybe I’m wrong. <br /><br />I don’t agree with suppression, but I suspect that even if the AFL could suppress media reports about an incident, it would be less than effective. There is more gossip, and more loose lips in football than anywhere else I have come across, and as people like Bomber Thompson can probably testify, the truth is never as dangerous or damaging as the rumors that will abound in an information vacuum. I would rather see a glut of uninformed commentary on actual events/facts that a handful of articles made up of innuendo laden speculation. In conclusion, Suppression just wont work – how many episodes of Underbelly have you seen?<br /><br />So well, what’s the answer? I’m not really sure. I don’t think newspapers and nightly news programs are going to give up the cash-cow that is football lightly and tribunals will always face outside pressure when making decisions. I just hope that editors have enough freedom, ability and integrity to make a reasoned judgment about each story they run, and whether it contributes anything further to a discussion.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-57981557347023704672008-04-16T09:11:00.004+10:002008-04-16T09:18:07.836+10:007 weeks - then we'll dredge it up againWell, <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/seven-up-for-hall-of-shame/2008/04/15/1208025192805.html">Barry Hall got seven weeks</a> and all I have to say is, whatever. <br /><br />Frankly I’m not quite sure what everyone got so hot and bothered about. As far as I can tell a player infringed the rules of the game- yes it was really really bad, and very dangerous and could possible have killed the guy* – but it was against the rules of the game and Hall has now been punished under those rules. Where exactly did the system fall down? We have already eradicated that kind of violence from the game and this is proof positive.<br /><br />There will be those that say he didn’t get long enough, there will be those that say he got too long, there will be those that say he shouldn’t start serving the penalty until he is fit to play (though how the game could police this is a pretty big questions). But I think that on the whole the AFL has handled the whole thing with composure while the media worked itself into a tizz. <br /><br />Please don’t <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/one-question-remains-why/2008/04/15/1208025192808.html">ask Barry Hall why he did it</a>. He wasn’t thinking when he hit Staker and I can just about guarantee you that no clearer or more rational explanation is going arise over time. It’s pointless to ask and Hall’s lame excuse of a ‘mind snap’ is somehow even worse than not saying anything at all. <br /><br />A fuss will now be made about whether players <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/sendingoff-rule-is-overdue-kb/2008/04/15/1208025192811.html">should be able to be sent off </a>during a game. Call me old fashioned, but leaving players on the field after they have been reported is one of the few rules that distinguish Australian Rules from other forms of football around the world, and it is one of the few rules that hasn't been fiddled with over the game’s 150 years. So I think we should leave it. <br /><br />In conclusion, a guy hit another guy on the footy field. It was ugly and it was not within the rules of the game. As a result the guy got suspended. Can we all calm down a bit now? <br /><br />And while we are calming down, can we perhaps discuss the fact that a player broke their arm on an advertising barrier on the side of the ground and will now be sidelined for weeks? I don’t know about you, but I’d be pretty keen to make sure that didn’t happen again. <br /><br /><br /><br /><br />*Anyone who disputes that a single punch can kill or permanently brain damage anyone (I’m looking specifically at the male panel members of Footy Confidential) is flat out wrong.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-58188815609887760402008-04-14T15:34:00.007+10:002008-04-14T15:54:41.602+10:00The Misogynist and the DummyIt has been a week and a half since the episode of The Footy show where Sam Newman in his inimitable manner demeaned women in general and Caroline Wilson in particular and offended anyone on the planet with half a brain*. I know this is an almost weekly occurrence, but this segment did not just step over the line, it left it several miles back in the distance.<br /><br /> I think I might just be able to speak about it without losing my cool.<br /><br />I didn’t see the incident. I long ago gave up trying to watch The Footy Show - it is too dull, too stupid, and too unrelated to football to hold my attention. But I did see a very unhappy Caroline Wilson fronting up for work at Footy Confidential the following Monday night and taking Garry Lyon to task. For anyone who did not hear about it read Sam Lane’s excellent <a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/tv-show-segment-demeans-women/2008/04/09/1207420487762.html">article</a> for the full details.<br /><br />Over the days that followed I discussed these happenings with many people and had a pretty tragic back and forth with my partner about the lack of interested the football community had in setting things right.<br /><br />Partner: why don’t the AFL do something about it?<br /><br />Me: Well the footy show is made by Channel 9 so the AFL can’t control it.<br /><br />Partner: But couldn’t they boycott and tell the players they’re not allowed to go on the show?<br /><br />Me: The players aren’t contracted to the AFL they are contracted to their clubs, so the AFL would have to get all of the 16 clubs to agree to the boycott. And even if you could get 15 of the teams, the president of Collingwood is Eddie McGuire and he sort of works for Channel 9 a bit. And even if you had a few of the clubs boycott, some of their players have individual contracts with Channel 9 so they wouldn’t boycott anyway.<br /><br />Partner: That’s shit.<br /><br />Me: Yep.<br /><br />The truth is that while a boycott is a extreme response there was nowhere near the amount of interest in this story and community outrage that there should have been.<br /><br />The only vaguely prominent article written about it was by another female journalist and Andrew Demetriou gave a bullshit, “check out how much good we’ve been doing with our rights and responsibilities stuff over the last few years” answer when asked about it on Offsiders on Sunday morning (Caroline Wilson was sitting on the couch opposite him while he said it too). Where were the articles from the men of the game and the media who do respect women? The deafening silence leads me to doubt there are any at all.<br /><br />Caroline Wilson levelled a lot of her criticism at Garry Lyon. As the host of both The Footy Show and Footy Confidential he didn’t even have to courtesy to stick up for his colleague. I am a loyal Melbourne supporter and have long defended Lyon as he has compromised and embarrassed his way into a successful media career. I have little doubt that he apologised off-air, but his miserly on-air apology and the lack of any attempt to make amends for his part in allowing the segment to happen at all, let along continue, has saddened me.<br /><br />On-air was where an example needed to be made for all those viewers that thought Newman was funny or that the segment was appropriate. The response from Lyon, Craig Hutchison (who was on The Footy Show at the time) and Channel 9 was far from adequate. I doubt I will be so vociferously defending Lyon from criticism in future. <br /><br />The reality is that until individuals like Sam Newman (and there are many more than just him in the game and the media – including, it appears, Garry Lyon and Craig Hutchison) are publicly held to account for their behaviour and for their unacceptable attitudes towards women nothing will really change. I doubt whether they even realise why what happened was inappropriate and offensive. <br /><br />Watching Before the Game on Saturday night a friend asked whether I thought they might have considered replacing Peter Hellier with another woman on the panel instead of Mick Molloy. Sadly, I doubt it. A token woman on the panel is seen as all that necessary for television programs and the game to claim that women are equal in the game.<br /><br />There is no women’s round this year – not that the AFL ever put any effort into promoting it or recognising women as anything more than mothers and taxi drivers anyway.<br /><br />Sorry, I may have lost my cool anyway.<br /><br /><br /><br /> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size:85%;">* Not The Footy Show’s target demographic to be sure.</span> </p>cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-27411382857565321122008-03-17T16:38:00.000+11:002008-03-17T16:39:24.939+11:00Richo. Over here!Can I just very quickly say how absolutely hilarious I find the commercial they have been running this week to advertise ‘Before the Game’. <br /><br />I won’t spoil it if you haven’t seen it. Just make sure to keep an eye out.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-87884104833986120882008-03-17T16:35:00.001+11:002008-03-17T16:38:40.767+11:00Long DormantAfter a long hiatus I am going to attempt to do this blogging thing again. And to try to do so at semi-regularly*. <br /><br />The reason for this is that the football season is about to start and I can hardly contain my excitement. After the miserable sham that was this year’s pre-season competition (my cynicism owing in no small part to Melbourne’s inability to win at a single outing of any kind over the pre-season) it will be nice to get down to some serious football business. <br /><br />I also want to spend more time thinking and talking about football in general. This is a radical shift for me. For the last few years of my life at least, I have tried hard to diversify my interests during the winter months - to hold conversations, and go out on the weekends and stuff. In other words - to not let football rule my life. <br /><br />But everything has changed. The world has shifted on its axis. I now have perfectly legitimate and even tax deductible excuse to spend my every waking moment immersed in football. I’m writing a PhD about the game and the gentlemen who play. Bring on Round One.<br /> <br /><br />Is that a siren I hear? <br /><br /><br /><br /><br />*Apologies in advance if this proves less than successful.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-11746877241744619222007-05-02T10:02:00.000+10:002007-05-02T10:08:04.832+10:00Gentle Reminder NoticeMelbourne’s public transport system is overcrowded. Everyone knows this. Everyone who regularly catches public transport has known this for five years. <br /><br />Melbourne’s commuters are bad tempered, and they have every right to be. But that does not give them an excuse to be bad mannered. I feel it is time for a little refresher course in public transport (in particular, tram) courtesy. So, I bring you the <br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Guide to Harmonious Tram Travel</span> <br /><br />In no particular order:<br /><br />Anyone over the age of 70 automatically gets a seat. This is non-negotiable. This is for a good reason. Old people break. You’re not going to be helping an old guy learn to walk again after the tram stops suddenly and he breaks his hip, so maybe you should just give him a little help now? Give up the seat. And don’t do it begrudgingly, there is plenty of seat time in your future.<br /><br />Pretending you didn’t see the old person because you were listening to your Ipod is not acceptable. Eyes and ears are different people. <br /><br />Sit in the seat correctly. I don’t care how much the guy next to you stinks. Knees forward. Poking your legs out into the isle takes up premium standing space for those who have not scored a seat like you. <br /><br />Put your bag on your lap, or tuck it under your seat, don’t take up what little ankle room there is with bags.<br /><br />We are not children and therefore you cannot ‘bags’ seats. Sprinting onto the tram, grabbing a seat, and then using your bag to mind it for 10 minutes while you get up to buy a ticket is not fair play. <br /><br />Those standing, take your backpack off. This is non-negotiable. While it might not appear it to you, your backpack makes you a meter wide, and every single time you turn around someone scores a backpack to the chest/shoulder/face (depending on victim height). <br /><br />Wearing outrageously high and flimsy stilettos does not automatically give you access to a seat. It is your own stupid fault for wearing them on a tram in the first place. Of course if you are over 70 and wearing stilettos I will not only give you a seat, but a medal as well.<br /><br />If you are sitting, don’t stare at those standing as if they are somehow cluttering up you world. It is likely to make people angry beyond reason.<br /><br />When sitting next to strangers on the tram, do not lean on them. Not even just a little bit. If you spine is so weak that you can't hold up your own body for the duration of the trip then perhaps you should consider getting up from your desk for some exercise occasionally?<br /><br />Do not talk loudly on your phone to your secretary about how much you have to do today and all of the meetings you will need to reschedule. This can be done in 5 minutes when you actually reach the office. I’m sorry, you are just not that important. <br /><br />Ipods have a volume control for a reason – use it. Listening to ‘I want to be your girlfriend’ in tinny reverb because some guy three seats away has his Ipod up too loud is not fun and likely to incur revenge.<br /><br />If you are sitting in the seat next to the ticket machine and the machine it is defective, it is your responsibility to inform every new ticket purchaser before they put the money into the machine. Yes, this is tedious and unfair, but so is losing you money in the ticket machine. Would you like to be told before you lose all of your gold coins to the machine? That is a glass of wine or a posh beer you’ve just missed out on. <br /><br />Please, for pity sake, put your perfume on when you get to work. The commingling of 120 different deodorants and perfumes on the morning tram is enough to put anyone into anaphylactic shock.<br /><br />When the tram driver gives you instructions, like ‘please get out of the doorway’ or ‘move to the centre of the tram, please’, don’t stand around stupidly and look at other people as if they driver is quite clearly not talking to you. The tram driver is not threatening your civil liberties; they would just like to get the tram moving. Things will go a lot more smoothly and the tram will move a lot more quickly if you just do as they say. <br /><br />If you see someone sprinting franticly for the tram as it begins to pull away, don’t be a prick, pull the cord and help them on. It’ll be the only good deed you have to do all day, I promise.<br /><br />Further suggestions welcomed.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-49438281976159702552007-04-19T12:33:00.000+10:002007-04-19T12:53:38.472+10:00Rats of TobrukI just watched the sale of the Rats of Tobruk hall in Albert Park for 1,730 000 dollars.<br /><br />Every time a building gets sold in my suburb, every time a shop closes and a chain opens, we call it the ‘end of the era’. In fact, just last week I jokingly suggested that the installing of new check-out counters at the local IGA should be marked with a minutes silence for the old ones. The changes in Albert Park have been so slow and at the same time so fast that we have had many ends of many eras. The only difference this time that somehow, this time, I think it might be true. The sale of this building is indeed an end of an era.<br /> <br />My experience of the Rats building at the end of my street, was, for a long time, one of mild confusion. As a small child walking home form the school bus I was always slightly bemused. What is that building? Who are the rats? Why would rats need a building anyway? Despite not understanding its importance I always enjoyed seeing the building with is wrought iron gates and its mysterious stained glass windows. It was a hallmark of my neighbourhood. A familiar sight that meant that home was 'not long now'.<br /><br />Having studied much world war two history I now have a much better understanding about the Rats of Tobruk, their significance, and why that little hall has been an important meeting place for 50 years. <br /><br />As a cultural heritage student I have a much better understanding of what the building means. Standing next to the new owner of this place as he bid (or at least the man sent to bid for them) I looked at him, wondering what is in store for the Rats of Tobruk. I am curious and hopeful that they might be able to do justice to the important site they now hold and a little sad that it can no longer be the place that I remember.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-50746036121850504332007-04-13T15:07:00.000+10:002007-04-13T15:20:52.389+10:00Bully Boys5 teenage boys from Xavier College bully their classmate by sticking him in the 'wheelie bin of terror' and pushing and kicking the bin until he falls flat on the ground. They video it and distribute it to their mates. Xavier development director Graham Sharp describes it as "a prank that got out of hand".<br /><br />Nice.<br /><br />Now thats what I call developing 'reflective, compassionate and articulate men of Christian faith and hope, who will give service and leadership in our world'. <br /><br />Well at least we can rest assured that, given its Xavier, half these boys will probaly be drafted into the AFL in the next couple of years. One can only wonder what they'll be able to do once they have a massive disposable income and too much free time.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-46088711090268574482007-04-11T13:49:00.000+10:002007-04-16T11:42:39.919+10:00Political Inclusion?<p class="MsoNormal">Julia Gillard spoke at the Melbourne University <a href="http://www.public-policy.unimelb.edu.au/">Centre for Public Policy</a> last night, on the topic of ‘<span style="">Labor's framework for social inclusion’. </span><span style="">She spoke knowledgably and engagingly about what is essentially weet-bix dry public policy. </span><span style="">It clearly not a particularly sexy topic because, the public lecture was not nearly as packed out with punters (and whackos) that an event like this would usually be. <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="">I have long been a fan, but that was based almost entirely on the fact that she was a woman and a Melbournian. There was no rational basis on which I had formed my opinion.<br /></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="">Last night I was hugely impressed with her as a speaker and even more impressed with the depth of her knowledge of policy and ideas outside her own portfolios. </span><span style=""></span><span style="">During a Q&A session she fielded questions about gay & lesbian policy, the budget, indigenous affairs, women’s affairs, infrastructure and IR with ease and it was quite apparent that unlike certain minister within the current administration, she actually reads things that are given to her.* <span style=""> </span><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="">Its not really a surprise to me that the punters didn’t turn out in droves to this lecture, because social policy, and particularly policy surrounding social inclusion, is just not sexy. This is for two reasons. One, is that its really, really hard to find anything that works and twice as hard to pay for it. And two, its about helping the old, the poor, the uneducated, the disabled, migrants and aboriginal people, and most of the population couldn’t give a stuff about any of them.<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="">But it turns out Julia Gillard does. She actually believes in social policy and that we have an obligation to invest in social inclusion while the economy is strong enough to pay for it. It warmed my heart to see someone working within the government (or at least the alternative government**) talking about the things I care about and saying the sorts of things I like to hear. It has been a long time. <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style=""> <a href="http://itemisation.blogspot.com/2007/04/dont-hate-me-cos-im-pessimistic.html">Like Tom</a>, I am struggling to contain my pessimism (the dees season is quite obviously ruined and its only round 3) about the coming election and my disillusionment with the political climate in general, but last night’s lecture was a nice reminder that some of my values are also held by some of the politicians, some of the time. <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style=""><o:p> </o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style=""><o:p> </o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="">*She also had this very clever way of mentioning the shadow minister for whichever portfolio she was talking about, a bit of a ‘getting to know the gang’ kind of a thing. <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="">** I am enjoying the way Special K has started calling it the ‘alternative government’ makes it sound like they actually are an ‘alternative’ not just an ‘opposition’.<o:p></o:p></span></p><br /><br />You can now get a transcript of this lecture from <a href="http://http://www.public-policy.unimelb.edu.au/events/gillard.pdf">here</a>.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31045913.post-53270851851440277722007-04-05T10:17:00.000+10:002007-04-05T10:20:41.160+10:00You light up my lifeOh, my god, are you for reals?<br /><br /><a href="http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/saints-to-light-up-dome/2007/04/04/1175366325775.html"> This</a> is quite possibly the silliest thing I have ever heard.<br /><br />The game is now so fast and so controlled that nobody in the stands can tell whats going on. So what we'll do is turn the lights on and off to make it more <a href="http://www.crusty.com/home.htm">theatrical</a>... so the supporters dont get bored.<br /><br />Problems with game? Nah.cchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17890762977676135349noreply@blogger.com0