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Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2013 11:10 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
Dark days for AFL family
Date
February 7, 2013
Caroline Wilson
IMAGINE yourself right now as the parent of a young Essendon footballer. Not so long ago, James Hird had looked you in the eye, shook your hand and assured you that your son was joining a great football club and that he, too, would be given every chance of greatness both on and off the field.
Or maybe it was the recently-removed football boss Paul Hamilton who made those assurances, or perhaps chief executive Ian Robson. Clearly, your son is one of the chosen few. He is in good hands.
Then, after a very strange season in which the team starts with a muscled-up bang but finishes with a sloppy, injury-depleted yelp, you learn that your boy is the subject of an investigation by ASADA and the AFL. You hear the beloved Hird tell the public he cannot quite say that everything that took place with his team was above board.
You learn that your son was taken across the road from Windy Hill to a botox clinic and administered with supplements from someone who was not a registered doctor. That your son's part in all of this is miniscule and part of a much wider investigation involving Australian customs officers and the federal police. And that one of the experts entrusted with your son's young body was let go for undertaking highly unusual practices and another has been stood down.
You read that the players' union has enlisted a QC to represent your son and that, if your worst fears are realised, he could be rubbed out of football.
Even if the supplements your son was injected with prove to be legal, you must be wondering why your club employed these people and seemed so vague about it.
And why he was asked to sign a secrecy document regarding his medical treatment - administered with no doctor in sight - when his standard playing contract surely covered all that. In fact you must be starting to wonder whether Essendon is such a great club after all.
Or maybe your son played for Melbourne in 2009. At first you thought it a little strange when, despite showing good form in the midfield or up forward, he was moved to the back pocket.
Perhaps he told you what the club was trying to do. That the club could not afford to win any more games because they needed to secure Tom Scully and Jack Trengove in the draft. Or perhaps you simply saw it with your own eyes and then heard the coach, who was later sacked, virtually confirm it.
In the coming days you will learn that your son's club - or former club - has been charged with attempting to manipulate the draft and perhaps even perverting match results. The coach, the footy boss and maybe even the chief executive could also be charged.
Then again maybe your son was lucky enough to join the great Collingwood Football Club at the same time Nathan Buckley had been appointed to the coaching position.
Once again the coach, the CEO and almost certainly the president shook your hand and spoke of the proud association into which you were about to enter. Of course they all meant it.
Except then, after a time, your boy started to notice a division among the senior players. Between those who did and those who didn't. Maybe he mentioned it to you although probably he didn't. Except that then you read that the chief executive had spoken out about a volcanic illegal drug problem within the competition and - it seemed - Collingwood.
Or maybe your son is called Kurt Tippett, the 25-year-old who was probably overpaid and tried to be shrewd but signed a dodgy deal as a 22-year-old after receiving some very bad advice. You probably have some regrets there.
Shocked to find himself in such a position your son stood before the AFL Commission to be judged and found himself handed the almost identical punishment to the club chief executive with 15 years of AFL experience behind him. The man who promised to do the right thing by your son. And now your son has been suspended for half an AFL season - a relative eternity for a man of his profession.
That's AFL football for you. Surely it's every parent's dream. Except when your son finds himself at a football club that puts success before everything and tries to take shortcuts to beat the system - or simply thumbs its nose at it. That's when it becomes a mother's - or father's living nightmare.
Yes Carro, well done, but we all know this is just the tip of the iceberg don't we? I mean, you could've dragged up a whole host of other things like, St Kilda, West Coast, Cousins blah blah blah blah blah blah x alot more blah, I guess you can bring them up on another day eh? Dark days indeed alright, but you the media have to take a lot of the blame for this, you have protected and worshipped the almighty VFL/AFL and have never held them accountable like the Media up in NSW has with Rugby League going as far back as Kevin Humphreys and the Royal commission (Your old sparring partner would know all about real well eh, good old Roy). That helped bring in and start the clean up of Rugby League way back then (late 70's-early 80's iirc). Meanwhile, the VFL/AFL has had a compliant media protecting them.
Now look, you guys have puffed up your code to all of us Australians as Australia's game, this that and the other and you are the leaders in this that and the other, you have all the Australian Super Stars of Sport playing your sport and if you haven't got them, you'll buy them..
We in other states do not take this kinda arrogant talk, and too us now with bad news after bad news for your code after all the preaching and cultish like begging for approval yet with a venom attached like you know better deep down, we see you as you really are, a puffed up little pimple that has finally gone Pop.
Enjoy eating your own, been there done that, finally moved on.
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2013 11:15 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
Oops, before I forget and our resident mod goes crazy and deletes my thread because it has not link.
Here you go Xman.
http://www.theage.com.au/AFL/AFL-news/w ... 2dywt.html
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2013 11:27 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
Love it how the AFL media is passing the buck to other sports already, first day, Manly Rugby League/NRL are mentioned over and over, today, a big pic on the main newspaper of a Soccer player under the heading
A history of injection allegations across a host of world sports". Oops, I now look and the pic has changed to an unknown Baseball player, typical, too many complaints from the Soccer mob? Well good on them all I can say.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/AFL/more-ne ... 6571644232
How disgusting to use a Soccer Star out here under that heading. See, passing the buck.
About time the AFL loving media and the AFL stopped passing the buck and instead, fixed the damn Culture from top to bottom, one truly too despise as an old AFL mate once said.
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2013 11:37 pm
by eelofwest
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2013 11:46 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
Yep, I thought it was disgusting, talk about a cheap shot at a rival sport.
That's the arrogance everyone outside of AFL recognises.
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 7:32 am
by Xman
About the only facts the media have got right is that Danks came from the NRL.
The rest is speculation and will no doubt be proved incorrect.
But, run with it dumbarse. You can't look much more stupid than you already do.

Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 12:26 pm
by Drac
One of the only benefits of living in the sinkhole that is Canberra is the grapevine. Have known about this report for a few weeks now.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/AFL/more-ne ... 6572459574
The report makes specific allegations about one nRL club and one player, but have it on pretty good authority that it makes broader claims about the nRL as a whole.
As I said the other day, this story started with Essendon, but it's going to go volcanic and engulf all of Australian sport. All leagues (AFL, nRL, ARU, Soccer) are implicated, no one has a high horse to stand on, it's going to become a battle of disgusting PR spin, and as stated by previous posters, the AFL knows what it's doing in this regard. Meanwhile scum like Rothfield and Badel will smell blood and drag the nRL side of this story out for months.
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 3:04 pm
by pookus
ParraEelsNRL wrote:Dark days for AFL family
Date
February 7, 2013
Caroline Wilson
IMAGINE yourself right now as the parent of a young Essendon footballer. Not so long ago, James Hird had looked you in the eye, shook your hand and assured you that your son was joining a great football club and that he, too, would be given every chance of greatness both on and off the field.
Or maybe it was the recently-removed football boss Paul Hamilton who made those assurances, or perhaps chief executive Ian Robson. Clearly, your son is one of the chosen few. He is in good hands.
Then, after a very strange season in which the team starts with a muscled-up bang but finishes with a sloppy, injury-depleted yelp, you learn that your boy is the subject of an investigation by ASADA and the AFL. You hear the beloved Hird tell the public he cannot quite say that everything that took place with his team was above board.
You learn that your son was taken across the road from Windy Hill to a botox clinic and administered with supplements from someone who was not a registered doctor. That your son's part in all of this is miniscule and part of a much wider investigation involving Australian customs officers and the federal police. And that one of the experts entrusted with your son's young body was let go for undertaking highly unusual practices and another has been stood down.
You read that the players' union has enlisted a QC to represent your son and that, if your worst fears are realised, he could be rubbed out of football.
Even if the supplements your son was injected with prove to be legal, you must be wondering why your club employed these people and seemed so vague about it.
And why he was asked to sign a secrecy document regarding his medical treatment - administered with no doctor in sight - when his standard playing contract surely covered all that. In fact you must be starting to wonder whether Essendon is such a great club after all.
Or maybe your son played for Melbourne in 2009. At first you thought it a little strange when, despite showing good form in the midfield or up forward, he was moved to the back pocket.
Perhaps he told you what the club was trying to do. That the club could not afford to win any more games because they needed to secure Tom Scully and Jack Trengove in the draft. Or perhaps you simply saw it with your own eyes and then heard the coach, who was later sacked, virtually confirm it.
In the coming days you will learn that your son's club - or former club - has been charged with attempting to manipulate the draft and perhaps even perverting match results. The coach, the footy boss and maybe even the chief executive could also be charged.
Then again maybe your son was lucky enough to join the great Collingwood Football Club at the same time Nathan Buckley had been appointed to the coaching position.
Once again the coach, the CEO and almost certainly the president shook your hand and spoke of the proud association into which you were about to enter. Of course they all meant it.
Except then, after a time, your boy started to notice a division among the senior players. Between those who did and those who didn't. Maybe he mentioned it to you although probably he didn't. Except that then you read that the chief executive had spoken out about a volcanic illegal drug problem within the competition and - it seemed - Collingwood.
Or maybe your son is called Kurt Tippett, the 25-year-old who was probably overpaid and tried to be shrewd but signed a dodgy deal as a 22-year-old after receiving some very bad advice. You probably have some regrets there.
Shocked to find himself in such a position your son stood before the AFL Commission to be judged and found himself handed the almost identical punishment to the club chief executive with 15 years of AFL experience behind him. The man who promised to do the right thing by your son. And now your son has been suspended for half an AFL season - a relative eternity for a man of his profession.
That's AFL football for you. Surely it's every parent's dream. Except when your son finds himself at a football club that puts success before everything and tries to take shortcuts to beat the system - or simply thumbs its nose at it. That's when it becomes a mother's - or father's living nightmare.
Yes Carro, well done, but we all know this is just the tip of the iceberg don't we? I mean, you could've dragged up a whole host of other things like, St Kilda, West Coast, Cousins blah blah blah blah blah blah x alot more blah, I guess you can bring them up on another day eh? Dark days indeed alright, but you the media have to take a lot of the blame for this, you have protected and worshipped the almighty VFL/AFL and have never held them accountable like the Media up in NSW has with Rugby League going as far back as Kevin Humphreys and the Royal commission (Your old sparring partner would know all about real well eh, good old Roy). That helped bring in and start the clean up of Rugby League way back then (late 70's-early 80's iirc). Meanwhile, the VFL/AFL has had a compliant media protecting them.
Now look, you guys have puffed up your code to all of us Australians as Australia's game, this that and the other and you are the leaders in this that and the other, you have all the Australian Super Stars of Sport playing your sport and if you haven't got them, you'll buy them..
We in other states do not take this kinda arrogant talk, and too us now with bad news after bad news for your code after all the preaching and cultish like begging for approval yet with a venom attached like you know better deep down, we see you as you really are, a puffed up little pimple that has finally gone Pop.
Enjoy eating your own, been there done that, finally moved on.
Went a bit early there didnt you dickhead lol Multiple NRL clubs involved and multiple players.Man at the center of it all involved with the nrl for years.It would seem you are not finished eating your own yet. How does Manly sea eagle taste.

Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:09 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
Hahah, NRL clubs are dragged in only because a certain sport wants to pass the buck, we can all see it.
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:11 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
so, instead of but but but from the vfl fanbois, it's going to be buck buck buck?
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:16 pm
by pookus
ParraEelsNRL wrote:so, instead of but but but from the vfl fanbois, it's going to be buck buck buck?
Read the facts idiot your new boss has been on to the acc for days.They are investigating a person who has been in league circles a long long time.Get ready to be bent over laddies.Now which blokes have the bigger muscles.

Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:25 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
Yes, lets look at facts, they said he was at the tigers, nup, the tigers just said no way not ever.
The Dragons were mentioned, they said, like hell he has been here, we have had the same fella here since the merger.
Panthers got some GPS stuff off him or a mate, I reckon one of those would stand out if injected, how bout you?
Keep digging and keep looking to pass that buck!
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:28 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
South Sydney just tweeted they have had nothing to do with this fella.
Parramatta hasn't either.
Shall we continue?
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:31 pm
by ParraEelsNRL
http://www.news.com.au/top-stories/cron ... 6572342154
Hahahahaha, the clubs this "reportër" mentioned have all come out and denied this fella has ever had anything to do with their clubs. Where in the world are the reporters integrity?
Re: Dark days for AFL family
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:35 pm
by pookus