... and if she's under 8 or there abouts you could almost certainly celebrate on the Saturday and she wouldn't know the difference.
For some reason I am feeling quietly bullish about the tahs this weekend. There is no logic to it.
Unfortunately I won't be at the game this weekend, daughters birthday on Sunday.
Jeez, mate, get your priorities straight. Your daughter has a birthday every year.
This phenomenon is known as the Southern Depression index. It has a counterpart which can be charted over months. It starts in October, with new signings, and reaching a fever pitch from November to February, as the previsouly lame tired and hiuddled masses return from surgery and the end of season Wallaby tour. In many years it can last into March. Sociologists have noted that the mood tends to start breaking down in April and is rarely discernible in May - by which time a new thread will have appeared in GGR the title of which is predicted by the following formula:Of course you are feeling bullish, mark_s, it is Friday. As can be seen in the following diagram, with state of mind on the Y axis, those afflicted with supporting the Tahs feel remarkably positive on Fridays, sometimes supported by evidence, sometimes not. Positive feelings peak early in the game each week - let's say, at the point of a try scored after 26 seconds of superb play, but tend to dwindle after that point. State of mind reaches its nadir on Monday, either after another unimpressive win or depressing loss, when the supporter is forced to endure taunts from workmates - this year from NZ and Sth African colleagues, last year from Reds supporters - before the supporter slows starts to unearth nuggets of hope for the upcoming week - surely re-arranging a couple of deckchairs in the backline will spark a revival, perhaps Tim Horan will be able to inspire Berrick to rise from his sickbed and cut the midfield of the Crusaders to ribbons.
Once or twice a season, the Tahs supporter's state of mind will rocket upwards after a particularly impressive win - hypothetically in this case over the Crusaders. Inevitably, such a win will be followed soon after by a devestating loss, usually to one of the weaker teams, although in this case, the Brumbies probably do represent about as weak a team as the Tahs will face in the coming rounds.
Of course, I too think the Tahs will play well at home for an afternoon game with a better crowd than recently. Feeling quite bullish myself. Apologies for my complete lack of graphic design panache.
View attachment 2281
GGR new Thread Title = "Waratahs" + (current Year + 1)
Point 4 above. People's criticism of Gaffney is misplaced IMO. As I posted in the Tahs 2013 thread, the backs are playing like they have since 1999 or eariler. It doesn't matter who the coach or players are the same results are obtained. When I asked that question last year I received much angst. Another year on new head coach, new backs coach, largely the same players, result no different. Why?
Now to Gafney. He has been brought into a sick system which no coach in the last 15 years has influenced. Will he be the latest in a long line to be blamed for a system that achieves an average to above average result, but never achieves the potential of the players signed to its roster?
I agree with you.
But how can this be? No one who was there in 1999 is still there - is it the water?