Scoey
Tony Shaw (54)
About 5 years ago I stopped playing Rugby.
At the time I was playing reserve grade on the Sunshine Coast with the odd cameo off the bench for A-Grade and, as we all do, was spending more and more time injured than fit. In my mind, I was still the early 20's bloke who was an A-Grade starter but in reality I was beginning to resemble a Egyptian mummy - about as old and 98% strapping tape.
One night at training, after getting my kit on, I walked out onto the field to join in the pre-training game of touch. I had only just broken into the lightest of jogs when my knee went. That loose bit of cartilage had finally come free and lodged in my knee joint, locking it. I hobbled to my car, cracked the shits and went home. The writing that was on the wall could not be ignored, if I could get injured walking out onto the pitch, my playing days were done.
But I digress.....
I always wanted to stop playing Rugby by choice. Not because of injury. With this on my mind I've always said I would go back for one more season. The problem is, that I was barely keeping up with the young fella's when I was nudging 30. I'm carrying a lot less weight now but still, I'm now mid 30's and the young blokes all seem to be built like gorillas these days - fast gorillas!
So I started thinking about Golden Oldies. I believe my local club can take a couple of Junior Members in their 30's. I was reading up on the modified game that they play and I have to say, it doesn't sound like a that much fun. No pushing in the scrums, no cleaning out of R&M's. It just seems' too watered down. I still want to play Rugby, proper Rugby.
I'm sure there are plenty on here who have made the transition from Seniors to Golden Oldies and some that are currently playing.
Was it frustrating?
Did the modified game make that much difference?
Should I just sack up and front up for Reserve Grade again?
The focus seems to be more on the off field aspect of Rugby with Golden Oldies, which sounds great. But I'm not certain it's the place I really want to be. Having said that though, getting tenderised on Sat arvo playing reserve grade may make me reflect differently.
I'm really interested in hearing other people's thoughts on retiring from the game we love so much or making the transition to Golden Oldies and therefore never really retiring.
In my mind, I'm still a Rugby player, I just haven't played in a few years. I think that needs to change one way or another.
At the time I was playing reserve grade on the Sunshine Coast with the odd cameo off the bench for A-Grade and, as we all do, was spending more and more time injured than fit. In my mind, I was still the early 20's bloke who was an A-Grade starter but in reality I was beginning to resemble a Egyptian mummy - about as old and 98% strapping tape.
One night at training, after getting my kit on, I walked out onto the field to join in the pre-training game of touch. I had only just broken into the lightest of jogs when my knee went. That loose bit of cartilage had finally come free and lodged in my knee joint, locking it. I hobbled to my car, cracked the shits and went home. The writing that was on the wall could not be ignored, if I could get injured walking out onto the pitch, my playing days were done.
But I digress.....
I always wanted to stop playing Rugby by choice. Not because of injury. With this on my mind I've always said I would go back for one more season. The problem is, that I was barely keeping up with the young fella's when I was nudging 30. I'm carrying a lot less weight now but still, I'm now mid 30's and the young blokes all seem to be built like gorillas these days - fast gorillas!
So I started thinking about Golden Oldies. I believe my local club can take a couple of Junior Members in their 30's. I was reading up on the modified game that they play and I have to say, it doesn't sound like a that much fun. No pushing in the scrums, no cleaning out of R&M's. It just seems' too watered down. I still want to play Rugby, proper Rugby.
I'm sure there are plenty on here who have made the transition from Seniors to Golden Oldies and some that are currently playing.
Was it frustrating?
Did the modified game make that much difference?
Should I just sack up and front up for Reserve Grade again?
The focus seems to be more on the off field aspect of Rugby with Golden Oldies, which sounds great. But I'm not certain it's the place I really want to be. Having said that though, getting tenderised on Sat arvo playing reserve grade may make me reflect differently.
I'm really interested in hearing other people's thoughts on retiring from the game we love so much or making the transition to Golden Oldies and therefore never really retiring.
In my mind, I'm still a Rugby player, I just haven't played in a few years. I think that needs to change one way or another.