Thursday, September 22, 2011

appears to know what he is doing



Followers of fashion,

So, what to make of MJ Clarke's first test series as Captain of his country?
1-0 speaks for itself, of course, but all reports coming in on the bush telegraph from Ol' Ceylon suggest he deported himself most satisfactorily both on and off the field.
Skippered a comprehensive win in the first test on a featherbed that turned into a Death Valley dust bowl, found himself a rain victim in the second test through no fault of his own while well placed, and played out a sensible draw to secure the series win in the third test, while scoring a century himself on the last day of the last match to put the issue beyond doubt.
Pulled off a couple of strokes to genius, most notably putting on that formidable strike weapon MEK Hussey to bowl, and pick up the crucial wicket of Sangers on the opening day of the second test.
Huss said "he couldn't believe" that he'd been asked to warm up the bowling arm, but afterwards described Pup as "the thinking man's Captain".
The poo-bah's down at the Sinhalese Sports Club in Colombo suggest Clarke followed all the local customs to the letter, was very gracious towards his hosts, got on well enough with officialdom, and commanded the confidence of his men.
They say he appears to know what he is doing.
All in all, a debut that can't be faulted, and above all resisted singing his own praises.
Respect.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

only had themselves to blame




Flabbergastees,

Devastated, crushed, shattered, heart broken are all good words in the circumstances, but none adequately sums up the bitter, bitter disappointment felt by thousands upon thousands of fans world wide at such an ignominious finish to the season.
SC Sheens was "too distressed" to attend the post match press conference.
If the coach was speechless, so was everyone else.
For a bloke who won the '05 Grand Final and knows what it's all about, Marshall described the result as "the worst loss of my life".
We are right there with you on that one, Benji.
And it's never nice to be done in by a stroke of extraordinarily appalling bad luck.
Not that they weren't without blame, oh no, sir.
Just in a game when they didn't need it, a poor performance in defence resulted in the leaking of soft tries; all but the last Worriers try can only be described in classical terms as "soft".
It was clear to me that a touch of arrogance afflicted them at 18-6, along the lines of "we've got you beat here, all we need to do is put the fruit on the sideboard, without having to work very hard".
More often than not that's a fatal attitude.
Two failed field goal attempts just before half time were a good idea [ie it's easier to get them early than late, in theory], but they worried me.
For mine, it planted the psychological seed in the opponents mind that the Tigers were intent on putting the game to sleep with a good lead, when it was patently obvious that more than one point was needed on the scoreboard.
It was like trying to take out an insurance policy, only to find the bastards refused to pay out in the end.
It aint over until the Fat Lady sings when the Bamford blows the whistle after 80 minutes, no more no less.
At half-time the bush telegraph in the corner of the loungeroom chattered into life with a message from Mary MacKillop.
Pulled the tape off the machine and saw that it read "New Zealand needs a miracle".
And so it came to pass.
The, by now, old ploy of grinding the opposition into the dust and waiting for them to tire and the gaps to open up just didn't work here - it never happened; this mob of Brown Brothers are some tough nuts, to be sure.
The Worriers just kept on taking it up time and time again and managed to keep the scoreboard ticking over.
With two minutes left in the match came the bad luck to end all bad lucks.
Desperately trying to hold out the opposition within a couple of metres of the try line, Inu took the ball at fair pace and looked like he had crashed over, but he knew he was inches short and had never lost control of the ball and wasn't effectively tackled even though he was fully stretched out on the ground.
Inu accepted the invitation and scored with a legitimate double movement, as he was perfectly entightled to do, putting the ball on the chalk to win the match.
Joisus.
Moltzen was clearly to blame; he thought he had made the tackle, but he only played at the ball without stopping the man, never mind that the defence was in disarray and he really had no one onside to help him
Lord help me.
The Bamfords had a poor game - the winning coach complained about them, for chrissake! - but the TV umpire got it quite right in this case.
To think that a season that promised so much could be snuffed out in an instant by a matter of centimetres.
Sat stunned on the lounge thinking how on earth this could happen; to mix a metaphor, you wouldn't read about it in your wildest dreams.
The Good Lady Wife appeared to be distraught.
After she recovered from her eyes glazing over with the aid of a large draft of dry red, she asked me straight out, with a heavy sigh, whether the whole season had been a worthwhile excercise, with a suggestion in her voice that the time, money, emotion invested in it might not have been.
It really wasn't a good time to ask the question, but tried to be positive and put on a brave face, and mumbled something along the lines of "well, you know what they say, it's all about the journey, not the destination".
She pulled me up there.
"No it's not!", she cried, "That's bullshit! And you know it. I'm really upset by all of this, to go out like that in the semi-finals. It's f*ckin' f*cked."
Who's to argue?
We agreed that four games at Leichhardt Oval was well worth doing, that the late season purple patch was a thing to behold, after they hovered in the bottom of the eight half way the season and for a while there looked for all the world that they might not make the grade.
But, of course, it was naive to think that the patch could go on forever.
Losers of course can please themselves, and there is the temptation to fill the off season with questions of "what if", but SC Sheens will make it his business to put a stop to that forthwith.
Walked past the Front Bar at The Local on Saturday morning pretending to be on my way to the shops; just eased the door ajar and peeped in surreptitiously.
It was no good, the Brown Brothers spotted me and burst into uproarious laughter, before one big boofhead came over to the door and opened it wide saying "sorry bro, bad luck, eh bro? don't worry, bro. come in, mate, its alright"
They poured me a schooner out of the jug and passed on their condolences while extolling the virtues of the Kiwi victory and their chances of going further.
Didn't last long in that company, finding it rather distasteful.
On leaving the bar, found The Philsopher alone, slumped in his usual corner, nursing a large brandy balloon.
He looked catatonic, as he compulsively shook his and muttered to himself over and over again "they only had themselves to blame."

WESTS TIGERS 20. Tries: Farah, Galloway, Marshall. Goals: Marshall (4).
NEW ZEALAND WARRIORS 22. Tries: Hohaia, Inu, Maloney, Mateo. Goals: Maloney (3).
At Sydney Football Stadium.
Crowd: 27,109.


The failure to kick a single goal in the first quarter of a semi-final well and truly put the writing on the wall.
Mr Ed was seen in the coaching box scratching his head and his chin simultaneously, while his legion of assistants frantically scrabbled through the sheaves of gin-soaked game plans, desperately looking for Plan B.
By the time they found it, the match was long gorn.
Going into quarter time with but a single solitary behind on the scoreboard was screaming "no coming back from this".
And so it came to pass.
Sydney found themsleves 28 points down before they put one through the big sticks, and catch up football is never going to work in big games.
All the more puzzling as Mummy dominated the hit outs early.
John F Kennedy didn't have a bad game; Rhino Keefe, Rick Shaw and Odd Head McVeigh battled away manfully, while the Goodes Train kicked a few beautiful goals; as for the rest, they were just spectators as the Hawks ran rings around them.
As predicted last week, class will always win out in the end at the pointy end of the season.
It didn't help that they once again ran into the Lance Franklin Show; never mind that Buddy was playing on one leg.
Given that the rugby league and the rules games were played simultaenously, really only saw the second half, which was a good thing in the final paralysis, as it was an entirely unsatisfactory thing to watch.
The flock of seagulls at the MCG might as well have umpired the game; there were so many of them, and they were real pests.
They might have to ban chips at the ground for the rest of the finals, or if the punters won't cop that, the authorities should just spray the arena with 12-gauge shot guns as part of the pre-game entertainment.
Dead and dying shot birds have always been a spectacle, just ask the duck shooters, so why not?
And since when have seagulls been a problem at night?
Do they not rest?
A very disappointing, if predictable, end to the season.
What made it worse was the Swans weren't even that gallant in defeat, going out with a whimper.

HAWTHORN: 3.5, 10.5, 12.6, 19.8 (122). Goals: Franklin 4, P Puopolo 3, Bateman 2, Hale 2, Rioli, Lewis, Hodge, Shiels, Bailey, Osborne, Suckling, Burgoyne.
SYDNEY: 0.1, 4.1, 9.6, 13.8 (86). Goals: Goodes 3, O'Keefe 3, Bird, Rohan, McVeigh, Spangher, Mumford, Reid Kennelly.
At Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Crowd: 55,198.

The Tigers have jettisoned the dead wood and have already bought well, securing the services of Adam "Stink" Blair and paying him a minor fortune to lock the pack next year, they have a marquee hooker and five eighth on long term contracts, the centres are fine and they have enough wingers, but they could really use another highly experienced half-back and full-back.
No doubt that will be seen to.
Otherwise, right as rain.
The Swans are developing their young talent well, but still need to pick intelligently in The Draft, not much required to add to the mid-field, but they must get busy in Trade Week for some genuine tall forwards and some more starch in the backs with the retirement of The Great Kennelly et al, while The Train should be encouraged to play on for just one more year, before he runs out of puff and is confined to a wheelchair.
Bob's your uncle.
As they say in the classics, there's always next year.
And so endeth the Winter Game wire, rather too abruptly for mine, for another season.
It's been fun.
If you could be bothered, thanks for reading.
Appreciated all the insightful [or otherwise] comments, corrections, suggestions, light-hearted banter, downright abuse, and drunken ramblings.
Now, bring on Mad Monday, Cup Week, and some first class cricket.