Scarfman
Knitter of the Scarf
Growden piles in. And you know what? I think he's spot on. J. le S. has never impressed me and the place seems to be defined by inaction to protect the status quo.
Not quite sure why it's in the League section, though.
http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...eing-a-different-ball-game-20100502-u1ky.html
Not quite sure why it's in the League section, though.
http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...eing-a-different-ball-game-20100502-u1ky.html
Some great spin but we're seeing a different ball game
It was absolutely spiffing to be told, via a letter to the Herald, the Waratahs and NSW Rugby Union are doing ''great work in taking the game to the people.''
Well, at a time when the NSWRU has reported a $459,248 loss, the Waratahs have lost their way in New Zealand and their pay TV ratings are poor, I'd hate to be around when the NSWRU ever conceded it had done ''bad work''.
Just as spiffing was the NSWRU explaining how gung-ho it is about playing matches at ANZ Stadium at Sydney Olympic Park. Sorry. Pass that one by me again? What is the date on this letter from the NSWRU chief executive officer Jim L'Estrange? April 1?
It's May, so we'll assume they are being serious. If so, questions must be asked of the NSWRU.
L'Estrange took to task two of my articles, including the previous Monday Maul column, because I said the Waratahs-Brumbies game was ''not helped by being played at an oversized stadium with zilch atmosphere''. He stressed that by playing at Sydney Olympic Park, ''the geographical centre of Sydney'', it was all part of taking rugby ''outside the eastern suburbs of Sydney.''
If that's the case, then how many Waratahs players made public appearances before the game at either ANZ Stadium or west of ANZ Stadium ? How many team training sessions did they have out there, rather than at Moore Park? And as several sources confirmed yesterday, did NSW officials really say in high level meetings they ''couldn't wait'' to get out of the ANZ Stadium deal because a good proportion of their members didn't want to go there?
Why did their star recruit Berrick Barnes say ''unfortunately'' the game was not being played at the Sydney Football Stadium? Why did the former Waratahs hooker Brendan Cannon write in his newspaper column: ''NSW officials are treating Waratahs fans with disdain by making them travel to ANZ [Stadium] to watch their team.'' Instead of a cauldron-like atmosphere at the SFS, Cannon wrote ''we got the open spaces and minimal atmosphere of a half-full stadium at Homebush.''
It might also have been worth the NSWRU mentioning a good reason the Waratahs play at Sydney Olympic Park is the lucrative seven-figure financial inducement they get each year from the ANZ Stadium authorities.
Then again, the NSW spin doctors are good at garbling the message - they announced on the night the crowd at ANZ Stadium was the Waratahs' biggest ever regular season attendance. The next day they had to issue an apology, because it wasn't.
But that's nothing new for a spin department which gave itself a big rap in the 2009 NSWRU annual report, only to get the year wrong, while often leading the Sydney media on wild goose chases working out where Waratah training will be held. This includes the Monday training session before the ANZ Stadium game, when the press weren't alerted until after 9pm on Sunday night, via email, where the session would be held. And they wonder why the Waratahs receive minimal coverage.
It may have also been worth mentioning how numerous NSW officials were, for a time, actively trying to get rid of the Parramatta rugby club - also in the geographical centre of Sydney - and replacing it with a team from Canberra. Several Waratahs officials told me: ''Parramatta's gone''.
It was only after the Australian Rugby Union and the media got into the act that an abrupt about-turn took place. For the NSWRU to now carry on as if it was the one who saved Parramatta is sheer hypocrisy. And don't get us started about those at NSW HQ who tried to get rid of the Western Sydney Rams a few years ago.
But we're obviously wasting our breath. At the Moore Park cocoon, the NSWRU is clearly more focused on slapping each other on the back than getting the game back on track in this state.