Thursday 23 June 2011

BULLETIN > Round 14

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In the lead up to the big grudge match against the Premiers this weekend, an email landed in my inbox from the Sydney Swans Members Services, subject line: Mathilde, we need your help! I know it’s been 9 outings for no result but, at best, I am an unreliable right foot kick, no left foot to speak of. I’m a decent handball, but a fairly girlie mark. And my endurance is questionable. Has it really come to this?

As I read into the body of the email, I accepted that they didn’t want me on the field. They wanted me in the stands. With friends. In red and white. And, of course, the email was signed off with ‘Cheer cheer.’

Then days later, the Swans followed up with a special message to members from SwansTV, with a red-nosed Ryan O’Keefe urging supporters to get out and cheer for the team. Do we really need to be told how to behave, how to be good members, good supporters? What’s next, I ask myself, an app for it?

This correspondence from the Swans coincided with three consecutive days of bus travel between home and Circular Quay – a very Sydney total of 6 hours. I sat and read my book, trying not to listen to which Donna Hay recipe the blond behind me was cooking this weekend, or the ‘peanut butter bum’ encountered by the nappy changing Dad. I tried not to intervene in the disastrous game of Angry Birds the middle aged woman beside me was playing, her false fingernail reducing her touch screen to a percussion instrument, accompaniment perhaps to the ‘n ch n ch n ch n ch’ of the office dude with the paper bag and polyester pants. The combination of his gadgetry and synthesis gave me an electric shock. When I closed my book and looked up, I happened to notice a poster on the backside of the driver’s cabin.

It was a cartoon figure, a worm like creature with sunnies wearing a huge set of headphones. The Blaster - 'These doof doof blaster beasts bug you with noise blaring from their headphones and their way-too-loud-speakers. You said you'd rather hear nails down a blackboard than their second-hand music.'

Turns out it’s part of a series of posters aimed at making commuters more courteous on the buses, trains and ferries in NSW. All irritants are accounted for: the Blaster, Blocker, Bumper, Grubber, Hogger, Rubbisher, Shover, Splutterer and Yeller. Scanning the bus, my first thought was that maybe us humans really do need to be told how to behave. My second thought was that it seems to make absolutely no difference. And my third thought was … Collingwood.

Not the players necessarily, although the tags do sound appropriate if you say them out loud. But I was thinking of the supporters. You only need to be half footy literate to know the reputation of the Pie Army. They are the opposition supporters we especially love to hate: loud, loyal, parochial, unbearably smug when up and happy victims when down. There are almost 70 000 of them. And they travel.

But while the Pie Army may be at one extreme end of the supporter spectrum, Sydney supporters have often been lampooned for being poor barrackers. Only last week, a Sydney friend and co-mother at the Under 7s, who spent many years in Melbourne and had switched that weekend to cheer the Tigers in support of her black and gold son, reiterated that Sydney supporters don’t know how to cheer AFL style. They go silent when their team is down instead of rousing them into action. They cheer when the going is good and leave when the going is bad. In the O’Reilly stand, among the members, when the game looks gone, the rally does go out. But it usually only lasts three of four Syyyyyyydneys before the ghost is given up.

But it takes many types of tree to make the forest. We all barrack differently and the way a person barracks tells you an awful lot about them. We have our individual styles and out pet hates. We have the acts we pull out for different teams and for different time slots. And we have the various frowns and smiles we dish in the face of each other’s barracking personalities.

If I think on the O’Reilly boys, we have quite a variety.

The Cob has a gruff style. He berates as a default. He scolds. He emits disgust. It’s a way of defending his vulnerability. He turns off the radio and walks away from the TV, but he doesn’t leave live games early. For the really good times, he has a penetrating whistle and he bellows a mighty ‘C’mon Sydney’ into any gap in proceedings. It was the Cob himself, who made his mark among 72 393 people at Homebush in Round 21, August 2003. As the Pies overtook us on the scoreboard, he leant over the edge of the second tier balcony and yelled a primal ‘F*#K’ into the silence.

Then there’s the Delighter. He treats everything with the same wit and cheer, clangers and super moves. It could be his Scottish heritage. He wears his heart on his sleeve. His role is to get the meta narratives going, small returning gags and observations that give each game a shape and purpose, no matter how good or bad it gets. The umpires usually cop a spray from the Delighter. But it’s always in good humour. He is prone to silence from the end of the third quarter on. But it’s unlikely to be sulking, usually just the consequence of wearing himself out.

The Steadier has his place. He keeps a keen eye on the binoculars. It’s his job. His analysis is technical and mild, especially since his own Cygnet began to accompany him regularly. He is the epitome of fairness, the marathon runner, even tempered and measured.

The last of the regular O’Reilly boys, I will call the Headmaster. He barracks for a sound strategy and, this season, more often than not against a bad one. He barracks for fine play and demotes at least two players each week. He is dignified, solid. He is the person you want to be sitting next to when the tightness squeezes you to your limits. He never raises his voice. Unlike his wife.

His wife comes infrequently. But when she does, she comes in a leopard print faux fur coat, with seaweed snacks and a voice to kill. The midfielders definitely hear her before the centre bounce. She not only encourages feverishly herself, but she gets into the poor, long suffering members around her and berates them for being lacklustre. This woman is sass and feistiness incarnate. This is the woman who, on being casually told that Myles Baron Hay, then Chief Executive Officer of the Swans, was on the concourse at Homebush during half time one night, approached him and negotiated her dislike of the blinking boundary advertisements during play.

There are those for whom barracking is a kind of meditation. It is about endurance and forbearance and their countenance changes little between a 60 point loss and a 60 point win.

There’s G in front, who addresses the team collectively. Swans. C’mon Swans. Man up Swans. Stick with ‘em Swans. Her role is to mozz the opposition. She has chewing gum for all of their boots. G is as steady as she comes.

And then, there’s JDH two rows ahead, who greets every goal by rising to his feet and waving whatever is in his hand like a helicopter trying for lift off. Each one of the average 30 possessions it takes the Swans to score is released on that unwind.

The Cob and I knew that our contrary Cygnet had finally converted to the Swans only when he let out an almighty, deep throated scream one day … in favour of the red and white. He was unaware of what he’d just done. We looked at each other with pride.

*

This weekend, the Swans are asking us to be at the ground. They know how much we hate Homebush. They are asking us to cheer. They are asking us to make even our noses red.

It’s tempting, with a forecast high of seven degrees at Homebush on Saturday night, to stay at home and enjoy some pyjama barracking. Although I tend to think that it's possibly worse alone in front of the tele than it is in the crowded stadium. All sorts of primal survival fears surface in the solitude of the domestic cave, fears that can be abated by the shared experience of barracking the only way we each know how, altogether.

And if the occasion arises or demands, and we get far enough behind (or in front) and we get enough Scottish juice into us, we may all rotate in Asile 132. I may yet become the Blaster. And the Cob may become the Delighter. And the Delighter may yell.

Happy tipping!

Wednesday 22 June 2011

TIGER DIARY > 22.6.2011

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These are just some of the wonderful items available on sale from the Yellow and Black Shop online and at Tigerland.

The Gnome, the Kimono and the Knock Down Stand Up Inflatable Santa are all worthy sale items, but pity the parent whose child is a Huge Tiger's Fani.

Meanwhile the good burgers of MFC spruik that this $20 book used to be $70........

Thank goodness IT'S ALL ABOUT THE FOOTY for the most anticipated and exciting local derby in years!

Monday 20 June 2011

Word from the Big Movers



The turmoil of the Cats' off season has thankfully breathed some life into (a competitive group of) aging legs.

There must be something about coaching Geelong; Bomber Thompson always looked calm and relaxed (OK those bags under his eyes grew substantially towards the end) but what a composed young man Chris Scott is, or is it Brad, maybe there-in lies the secret. There are definitely adjustments to the game plan. There are signs of patience, and temperance as the Cats now use the outer margins of the field when in doubt. There are still daring raids through the centre, but there is an understanding that maintaining possession is as important as scoring.

Bomber's darlings, have been forced back into the reserves, or resting old injuries, of course - until really needed. If the honey moon continues for Scott, I believe there is no room to risk Mooney - out to pasture. Some young talent has been blooded, with exciting results. Menzel, Duncan and very recently Vardy look promising. The playing stock of Geelong's on-ballers has been rich for a number of years, and there was an over reliance on Ablett, but of course no one complained. As he disappeared into the Suns_et, the player rotations give freshness and fluency to a midfield or forward line that I believe is challenging to adjust to. Johnson, Kelly, Selwood, Chapman are being switched about, as now has Stokes and Varco.

The backline looks sound too. Once again it is variety that has been their strength. Lonegan has found himself a place in this team as a solid key defender. Both he and Taylor are beatable, but on such occasions to date, they swap roles and manage. Scarlett provides further reinforcement when things are tight, but well, that hasn't been required now for a little while. Hope he remembers to man up when things tighten up. Again the Cats boast talent they are able to shift through the backline in a crisis, Jimmy Bartel has had a cathartic season, and ol' partner in crime Joel Corey looks very fit again.

So far we have no injuries. There are some old legs out there. Ling - China's finest AFL export to date - has managed to keep up with the speed of the game this season, but his legs in particular looked very worn late last year. Beating the Hawks twice in a season is cause for celebration for me. Beating the Pies is always good for the soul. I hope they aren't going to be really pissed that we (well the umps) managed to trump them back in round 8.

It feels like a fast break in the Tour de France. The Cats have made a solid break from the pack, but are now peeping over their shoulder as another break out from the Peloton seeks to chase them down. (Collingwood & Carlton)

The Cats have been a great side to follow over the last few seasons, as a fan there is much to savour in the remaining weeks of 2011.

Lyndon of the Snouthlings

Sunday 19 June 2011

BULLETIN > Round 13



As many of you will no doubt have guessed from my not so weekly bulletins, I’m in a bit of a football slump. After last week’s games, I realised that I didn’t know where the Swans were on the ladder. I didn’t know who was in the Top 8! The players I ‘grew up with’ had been freshly inducted into the Hall of Fame. Maybe it’s just a mid season crisis. But somehow I feel emotionally removed. Must be why my tipping’s so good.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m on my team. I’ve been at the SCG for five out of five painfully close and despicably wet home games. I know that the now 20 year old Hanners is already talking about blooding ‘the young kids’. I know Mummy’s knee has been in Arizona for the last two weeks getting ready for the Pies. I know that I love the new number 34, Alex Johnson. I know Reid, S is on the rise.

And I’m on the broad brushstroke of the weekly events of the game. I know Barlow’s leg is back and Roughy’s Achilles is bust. I know Adelaide must be a miserable place to be. I know the small men are kicking goals and the big men are resting forward. I know that Karmichael’s thighs are thinning, as is James Hird’s fairytale hair. I know the Blues are up and the Dogs are down and the Tigers are somewhere between. And I know that Mrs Selwood is not shopping for a frock to wear on Charlie Brownlow night.

But for all I know, it doesn’t feel quite as easy this year.

I’ve come to think that there may be a critical mass of football to which you need to be exposed in order to feel inside a season. It’s like getting a tan. You’ve got to put in a certain number of sessions in the sun until the pigment is finally receptive to the rays. I dare say, in the southern capitals, while some of the solar exposure may be more tricky, the footy exposure happens without thinking. Footy exposure down there is like the tan you get on your driving arm. It just happens. But on the Albury side of life, you have to work for it.

Shortly before 9.30 on Monday night last week, I sat down to watch One Week at a Time, the kind of touch-base that every Sydneysider needs and must settle for. We don’t have the luxury of choice up here. As the opening credits spun, I remembered that there is now a League version of One Week at a Time which has usurped the 9.30 time slot in NSW. Disgusted, I forgot to record the 11.30 AFL version.


On Tuesday I cleaned off all our living room bookshelves. As I assembled my fourteenth ruckman like tower of paperbacks on the living room floor, it occurred to me that channel One replays the show the next day. I flicked it on to find the AFL credits rolling. I was just in time for the League repeat. I sat on the floor pouring over Tony Lockett’s My Life, then tossed it into the garage sale pile.

On Wednesday morning, I walked into the newsagents on King Street, Newtown. I let out an audible yelp when I spotted a single unit of the hologram covered 2011 AFL Game Card Album. A home for the Cygnet’s homeless cards! I bought it involuntarily. A reflex action. (I spent three days last year walking the August streets of Melbourne looking for one remaining folder!)

On Thursday morning I squatted down in a large basement-style homewares shop to look at a book on party cakes for kids. I almost rolled onto my back when I flipped past a red iced Sherrin, lace-up atop a chocolate field nestled in shoots of iced green grass. I read the recipe: ‘This could also be made as a Rugby ball instead of an Australian Rules Football.’ There it was, the old apologetic self deprecation. Published for the Sydney market no doubt.

And as we left for the country on Friday afternoon, we waited on the Princes Highway next to a Bigpond van, painted up with two life-sized, young boys leaping for a mark in junior club colours. I could have cried.

When I finally dived into my electrically warmed bed to catch the eleven o’clock replay of the Saints v Geelong last night, the gale in the Shoalhaven had completely decimated the digital reception and I had to suffer a mute and broken Goddard, executing the same single kick across two pixelated minutes. I finished my book instead.

Working that hard for your exposure can really take it out of you.

When you’re down, in any sphere of life, what you sometimes need is to be carried along for a while as you recalibrate. But if it’s a footy malaise in Sydney, you can’t rely on the sort of constant peripheral drip feed to carry you through. There’s no solid continuum of footy background noise into which you can slow and rest a while, imbibe and rise when you get up to speed again. Up here, you scrap and scrape for every little tit bit. You have to be vigilant. You keep your heel to the pedal or you get run up the ass by Rugby League.

Possibly I simply need my annual winter Melbourne séjour: a few days walking the city streets, eavesdropping on the trams, a bit of banter with the local taxi drivers, a weekend kicking around in Albert Park, the Sunday AGE and a coffee at Baker D. Chirico. Eleven years into this footy love, I am coming to think that it is a very necessary top up, essential foraging before (or even mid) hibernation.

I know I’ll keep soldiering on. Tomorrow I’ll come in from work, get the Cygnet to bed and stream Grandstand’s Sunday Inquisition. On Monday.

Friday 17 June 2011

Keep On Truckin' (or Busin')



Okay, so I have four half bulletins finished. The weeks fly by too quickly and old news is … old news. I will attempt a fully finished version this weekend. I have been out of form, I know. Not pulling my weight, playing my role. I should be dropped, I know. I can hear the coaches whispering.

In the meantime, let us think on the use of buses in the modern day game. The Tigers returned to Melbourne on the bus last week and just this morning, the Gold Coasters had to get to Launceston by bus. The Tigers played cards. The Coasters sang tunes. It could become a trend.

You might like to read this lovely interview with Robert Murphy’s parents. Murphy is playing his 200th game this weekend and, as one of the idols of the backpocket, I salute him.

You might also enjoy John Harms’ meditation on the link between beer and football and the modern bloke's identity crisis.

And the quote of the week goes to Collingwood's Heath Shaw:
‘You aim for perfection and if you don’t strive for it, you fall short.’

TIGER DIARY > 17.6.2011

sapcer

With a Lose, Bye, Lose streak I'm looking out for omens.
Reading about the Tiger Rag being played in Ondatje's "Coming Through Slaughter" the other night is a tough one to interpret positively?!!
Round 13 - unlucky for some?
Beat'em once already this season?
No other clues.

Despite the 9 goals apiece loss to the Swannnies last week (taking the term coming from behind into a whole new dimension), it was delightful to watch these Tigers in action.
Shane Edwards caught my eye.
Jack scorched - but twice wasn't nearly enough.
Houli is tough as nails and exciting with the ball.
Cotchin sure does the perpetual motion thing - I'd like to see Deledio link closer with him as
Dustin Martin has the Magic department well sorted at the moment- so long as the Royce Hart #4 jersey can keep him honest. I hope he never buys a pair of too flashy boots!
Ty Vickery has nearly got it through his head that he's made the big time.

Richmond has such a pattern over the last 30 years of promising stuff and not delivering - trying to depend on wonderful Richo for so long. This team just seems a bit different. There are several real potential match winners in the side. Rance, Connors, Foley, King, Nahas....and no rank passengers.

With a head-screwed-on coach and a respected captain they might just remember that they are not stars. they are just footballers who play to win. Never mind the omens.

But it is nice that despite Lions being King of the Animals, 'Tiger' backwards is Regit, Latin for 'He Rules'.

Thursday 16 June 2011

NEWS from ON PIE



Lucie sent word from Melbourne last week.

Ok I am the Pie around here so have permission to get a bit gooey about this but even dyed-in-the-wool Pie-haters will feel the love in the room when Harry O met His Holiness this week in Melbourne.

I did, L. Although am a little miffed that he (the Dalai Lama, that is) in on your side now. Brett used to ensure he was on our side. First they send their players to Arizona to ready them for us and now this? Can Collingwood leave Sydney NOTHING??

TIGER DIARY > 9.6.2011



You'll recall where you were
When the feathers and fur
Flew wild at the SCG
Near-skinned and near-plucked as they skilled and they lucked
Every muscle and gristle and knee.

A bristling coach with a vivid reproach
An interchange circus for free
Nausea surging at home and away
In the clash of the sash and the vee.

A shuddering post intervenes in a ballet of nothing so coarse as a poem
As blood trickles up it unconsciously flexes, recalling its xylem and phloem
Erupt at the bounce, every pound, every ounce
Gasping for oxygen Sherrin.
Grasping at truth, elusive forsooth. I've eaten another red herring.

Thursday 2 June 2011

TIGER DIARY > 2.5.2011

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Any loss is a bit of a bummer, especially before a bye.
But Tigerlanders couldn't bloody stand a bloody fairytale season. Ya gotta go down to come back up. Thanks Port. Thanks Darwin.

Snakes and ladders is the only way it's ever gonna work.
Coach Damo's off to the hardware store for some big drums of antivenin and a sponsorship deal from Bailey (not Dean, you idiot, the ladder co.)

Tiger licks his lips
Rested, alert and hungry
Swan on the menu

(nb. Photo selected by Tip Mistress. Anyone remember that tackle?)

Wednesday 1 June 2011

Another Leader Speaks

photo: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Dean Bailey may be under the pump with Melbourne's inconsistent season no doubt stalling signatures on a new contract for him down at the Dees.

But he's still this Tip Mistress' favourite 'journeyman'.
I salute the Melbourne football club for recognising that some things are more important than work and, dare I say it, footy.