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Scott Quinnell: 'And those dragons this year, I am convinced are going to breathe f*cking fire!' School of hard Knocks documentary - 2012

June 7, 2017

2012

I'm just so, so excited. I don't know whether it's a bit of nerves, anticipation, it's just what is gonna happen in the next 80 minutes, is gonna to reflect what has happened in the last eight weeks. For some of us it's gonna to reflect on what's happened most of our lives. It's gonna to be a fuckin' battle. Eight weeks ago you made the choice to walk through that door, that rugby club door and you said to us "I want to be part of School of Hard Knocks. I want an opportunity in life. I want to go out and I want to be better rugby player. I want to be a better person but more importantly I want to be part of something that will change not only mine, but the rest of our lives."

I'm so fuckin' proud of you lads, what you've been through. We've had highs, we've had lows. I say something every year that if you don't feel those butterflies in your stomach now, the butterflies, those nerves in your stomach, if they are there now, when we walk out that door they turn to dragons because they get bigger and they get stronger and we use them. And those dragons this year, I am convinced are gonna to breathe fuckin' fire! We are gonna to go out and we are gonna to be School of Hard Knocks, the team that brings home the fuckin' big 'un. Are we ready? Are we ready? C'mon!

The butterflies, those nerves in your stomach, if they are there now, when we walk out that door, they turn to dragons because they get bigger and they get stronger and we use them. And those dragons this year, I am convinced are going to breathe fucking fire! We are gonna go out and we are gonna be School of Hard Knocks, the team that brings home the fucking BIG 'UN! Are we ready? Are we ready? C'mon!

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In COACH Tags SCOTT QUINNELL, SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS, COACH, TRANSCRIPT, RUGBY, DISADVANTAGE
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Glenn Tamplin: 'Sing it for your f*cking lives', pre game Alan Turvey Trophy Final - 2017

April 18, 2017

12 April 2017, Carshalton Athletic FC, Sutton, United Kingdom

Glenn Tamplin, a steel producing millionaire, owned Billericay Town FC from 2016-2019. The team won this game and Trophy.

All right boys, listen. I told this man, I told this man, Saturday afternoon when you went out second half, what did I say?

Player: They don't want it enough.

They don't want it enough. They don't want it enough. They're going to lose. I know you lot better than you think I fucking know you. I've called it. Called it that time on the group and I called it half time to him. What do you mean? I said watch. I get gut feelings about you lot. Right now, I think I've only got 70% in this room. I don't feel I got 100%. He's the only one- Look at his eyes. They look like I got 100%.

So we ain’t leaving this room. I don't care if it’s ten to eight. I’m not letting you go out now. Not ready. Because I let you go out Saturday, and I knew you fucking weren't ready. I fucking knew it. Don't know why I've got this fucking, whatever this is, this energy or whatever he's got. You weren't ready. I can feel you going up to 72-73. But trust me, right now, out there what I see, I don't see people that want it enough. I don't see people in today personal enough. I think people in here, might think they're going to do okay, or they're going to give their best. But you know what? You might think it.

We're leaving here, knowing it. We're leaving here today knowing, knowing for a fact we're not losing one single battle in our war today for 90 minutes. Okay? We're not losing one battle out of the 2 hundred we have with our opposite number. Not one! Cause one's too fucking many! And two, second place is first loser. Right? You don't lose one individual battle with your war. Cause it’s a fucking war today! Its a fucking war! And everybody's [inaudible 00:01:26] on Saturday.

I fucking knew it. We're going to get in here, we're going to sing the song. I'll put some words in the middle, we're going to sing that song properly. Then I'm going to do the thing where you shout greatest. Because that worked on the Saturday before. Right? So you suck in deep, now, you get in this fucking circle, and you sing this for your fucking lives.

Player: C'mon boys.

Sing it for your fucking lives.

Player:  Lets fucking get out of here.

Sing it for your lives, boys! Get in here! C'mon! [inaudible 00:01:47] Get up! C'mon! This is our day! We don't get no opportunity like today! We don't get no opportunity. C'mon! Here we go! Sing it properly! All you boys, this is what you get in the fucking game! Mean it! Shut your eyes and mean it!

Team: I am a mountain. I am a tall tree. Oh I am a swift wind, Sweepin' the country. I am a river, down in the valley, Oh I am a vision. I can see clearly. If anybody asks you who I am, just stand up tall look them in the face and say, I'm that star up in the sky. I'm that mountain peak up high and I made it.

Shut your eyes!

Team: I'm the worlds greatest.

Shut you eyes!

Team: I'm that little bit of hope, when my back's against the wall. I can feel it. I'm the worlds greatest.

Shut your eyes and think about today. Think about what you're going to do in that pitch. Make that vow with yourself, shut your eyes and sing!

Team: I am a giant. I am an eagle. Oh, I am a lion, down in the jungle. I am a marching band. I am the people. Oh, I am a helping hand. I am a hero. If anybody asks you who I am.

Team: Just stand up tall! Look them in the face and say! I'm that star up in the sky. I'm that mountain peak up high. Hey I made it. Hmm. I'm the worlds greatest. Hmm, I'm that little bit of hope, when my back's against the wall. I can feel it. I'm the word's greatest.

Yes boys!

Team: Yeah!

I want to beat my opponents. I want to embarrass my opponents. I will not lose one fucking battle. Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

I will conquer what has never been conquered before! Defeat will not be in my creed! I will believe in others! When others are doubting. What are we?

Team:The greatest!

I will always honour, respect and protect my brothers in this room today in orange. I've trained my mind, I trained last night as I'm going to play today. Today my body will follow! I acknowledge that my opponent does not expect for me to iron him out today in this battle. But he doesn't realise I will never surrender! Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

I will never surrender! Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

Weakness will not be in my heart. God will be by my side. I will look at my brothers. I will draw strength from them. Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

I will groove. I will move. I will do anything for my brothers in this room. I will get my family through this battle! I will arrive with sheer belief! I will act violently! I will fucking rip out the heart of my enemy! I will leave them bleeding on the floor because no one can, and no one can stop me! Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

I will fight for my brothers! I will sacrifice! I will draw blood! I will draw sweat and tears! I will not let my brothers down today! None can deny me! No one can defy me! No one will tell me who I was or am! I will show them what I am! Belief will change my world! Who are we?

Team:he greatest!

I do not understand the definition of retreat! I do not understand when things go wrong! I do not understand mistakes! But I do understand this! I understand victory! I understand sacrifice! I understand never surrendering! No matter how hard it gets! Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

I understand if I fight for my brother with all I have, he will die for me, like I will die for him. Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

It's not tomorrow. Tommorow's too late. Not next week. Right now we fight! Right now we believe! Who are we?

Team:  The greatest!

In your home, in your house you will never let anyone defeat you or your family. Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

Who are we?

Team:  The greatest!

Every fucking inch today! We fight and we win! Who are we?

Team:  The greatest!

Who are we?

Team: The greatest!

Who are we?

Team: Yeah!

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t48GzrhCyR...

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In COACH Tags COACH, PRE GAME ADDRESS, TRANSCRIPT, GLENN TAMPLIN, R. KELLY, I AM THE WORLD'S GREATEST, SONG, SINGING, FOOTBALL, SOCCER, PRE GAME
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Luke Beveridge: 'This is yours mate, you deserve it more than anyone', AFL Grand Final - 2016

December 27, 2016

1 October 2016, MCG, Melbourne, Australia

Beveridge coached his team to first premiership for 62 years. Western Bulldogs stalwart, captain and people's champion Bob Murphy had done his knee in round 2 and missed game. 

Thank you for an amazing year. Commiserations to the Swans, took our very best. You’re an unbelievable side. An enormous effort by our players obviously.

[sponsors]

This group of players are incredible, their hearts are so big.

We know how long you’ve waited for success, and I really thought at half time, it;s going to take something extra special, even though they’ve given their all already.

Absolutely special.

Also a call out to all our support staff. Especially all the people whop have put in so much work over a long period to time.

Peter Gordon, our President, you deserve this as much as anyone.

And to you the fans, our supporters, it really was an amazing day yesterday, we kinda felt like The Beatles.

And you boosted our spirits, we’ve ridden on your wings really, and our players couldn’t have done any more. They’re totally spent.

Thank you very much.

[returns to lectern]

... Finally, I'd like to get Bob Murphy to step on the stand.

This is yours mate, you deserve it more than anyone.

 

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtvC19-JPz...

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In COACH Tags LUKE BEVERIDGE, WESTERN BULLDOGS, BOB MURPHY, INJURED CAPTAIN, SPEAKOLIES 2016
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Gregg Popovich: 'My big fear is -- we are Rome', Thoughts on the election of Donald Trump - 2016

November 14, 2016

 11 November 2016, San Antonio, Texas, USA

 

Right now I'm just trying to formulate thoughts. It's too early. I'm just sick to my stomach. Not basically because the Republicans won or anything, but the disgusting tenor and tone and all of the comments that have been xenophobic, homophobic, racist, misogynistic.

I live in that country where half of the people ignored all of that to elect someone. That's the scariest part of the whole thing to me. It's got nothing to do with the environment and Obamacare, and all of the other stuff. We live in a country that ignored all of those values that we would hold our kids accountable for. They'd be grounded for years if they acted and said the things that have been said in that campaign by Donald Trump.

I look at the Evangelicals and I wonder, those values don't mean anything to them? All of those values to me are more important than anybody's skill in business or anything else because it tells who we are, and how we want to live, and what kind of people we are. That's why I have great respect for people like Lindsey Graham and John McCain, John Kasich, who I disagree with on a lot of political things, but they had enough fiber and respect for humanity and tolerance for all groups to say what they said about the man.

That's what worries me. I get it, of course we want to be successful, we're all going to say that. Everybody wants to be successful, it's our country, we don't want it to go down the drain. But any reasonable person would come to that conclusion, but it does not take away the fact that he used that fear mongering, and all of the comments, from day one, the race bating with trying to make Barack Obama, our first black president, illegitimate. It leaves me wondering where I've been living, and with whom I'm living.

The fact that people can just gloss that over, start talking about the transition team, and we're all going to be kumbaya now and try to make the country good without talking about any of those things. And now we see that he's already backing off of immigration and Obamacare and other things, so was it a big fake, which makes you feel it's even more disgusting and cynical that somebody would use that to get the base that fired up. To get elected. And what gets lost in the process are African Americans, and Hispanics, and women, and the gay population, not to mention the eighth grade developmental stage exhibited by him when he made fun of the handicapped person. I mean, come on. That's what a seventh grade, eighth grade bully does. And he was elected president of the United States. We would have scolded our kids. We would have had discussions until we were blue in the face trying to get them to understand these things. He is in charge of our country. That's disgusting.

A reporter then interrupted him.

I'm not done. One could go on and on, we didn't make this stuff up. He's angry at the media because they reported what he said and how he acted. That's ironic to me. It makes no sense. So that's my real fear, and that's what gives me so much pause and makes me feel so badly that the country is willing to be that intolerant and not understand the empathy that's necessary to understand other group's situations. I'm a rich white guy, and I'm sick to my stomach thinking about it. I can't imagine being a Muslim right now, or a woman, or an African American, a Hispanic, a handicapped person. How disenfranchised they might feel. And for anyone in those groups that voted for him, it's just beyond my comprehension how they ignore all of that. My final conclusion is, my big fear is --- we are Rome.

Source: http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/spurs/a...

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In COACH Tags DONALD TRUMP, SPEAKOLIES 2016, TRANSCRIPT, ELECTION, NEWS CONFERENCE, ELECTION 2016, GREGG POPOVICH, SAN ANTONIO SPURS, RACISM
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Dave Belisle: 'There's no disappointment in your effort', postgame Little League World Series - 2014

September 30, 2016

15 August 2014, Cumberland, USA

Hey. Everybody, heads up high, heads up high. Let's talk for a moment here. I got to see your eyes, guys. There's no disappointment in your effort, in the whole tournament and the whole season. It's been an incredible journey. We fought. Look at the score eight to seven, 12 to 10 in hits, came to the last out. We didn't quit. That's us. Boys, that's us.

The only reason why I'll probably end up shedding a tear is because this is the last time I'm going to end up coaching you guys. I'm going to bring back with me, and the coaching staff is going to bring back with me, you guys are going to bring back something that no one other team can provide, but you guys. That's pride. Pride.

You're going to take that for the rest of your life, what you provided for our town in Cumberland. You had the whole place jumping. You had the whole state jumping. You had New England jumping. You had ESPN jumping. Want to know why? They like fighters. They like sportsmen. They like guys who don't quit. They like guys who play the game the right way.

 If everyone would play baseball like the Cumberland Americans, this would be the greatest game. This would be the greatest game. The lessons you guys have learned along the journey, you're never going to forget, but we're going to have some more fun. We've got two more days of fun. You guys earned that right to have a lot of fun. When you walk around this ballpark in the next couple of days, they're going to look at you and say, "Hey, guys, you guys were awesome."

I'm not going to have to tell you, because everybody has said you guys are awesome. Awesome. Awesome. Absolutely awesome. We're going to enjoy the next two days because we deserve it. We've been going since the 12th, and we're going to enjoy it. It's okay to cry, because we're not going to play baseball together anymore, but we're going to be friends forever. Friends forever. Our Little League careers have ended on the most positive note that could ever be. Ever be.

There's only going to be one team that's going to walk out of here, guys, World Series champions. Only one. Only one. We got down to the nitty-gritty. We're one of the best teams in the world. Think about that for a second. For the world. We need to go see our parents because they're so proud of you.

 Now, one more. I want a big hug. I want everyone to come in here for one big hug. One big hug. One big hug. Then, we're going to go celebrate. Hey, boys, then we're going to go celebrate it with our parents, and then tomorrow, we're going to celebrate and then we're going to come back home to a big parade, okay? Got it?

Players: Yes, coach.

Dave Belisle: love you, guys. I'm going to love you forever. You've given me the most precious moment of my athletic and coaching career, and I've been coaching a long time. A long time. I'm getting to be an old man. I need memories like this. I need kids like this. You're all my boys. You'll be the boys of summer. For the last time, we're going to try to suck it up, and we're going to yell, "Americans." One, two, three.

Players: Americans!

Dave Belisle: Okay, boys, good job. Let's go. Time to go.

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rs3FJnTP7Y...

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In COACH Tags DAVE BELISLE, LITTLE LEAGUE WORD SERIES, BASEBALL, KIDS, CUMBERLAND
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Bill Stewart: 'Leave no doubt', West Virginia Fiesta Bowl game - 2008

September 30, 2016

2 January 2008, University of Pheonix, Arizona, USA

We got a great opportunity.  We got a dandy waiting for us out there.

Offense.  Play fast.  Assignment free, man.

Defense.  Swarm.  Swarm and tackle.  Punch that ball any chance you get and keep bustin’ them.

Special teams:  Lay it on the line and attack your responsibility.  Attack.

We can out-block them.  We can out-tackle them.  We can out-hit ‘em and hustle.

It’s real simple.  You out-block them.  You out-tackle them.  You out-hit ‘em.  You out-hustle ‘em.

And, you stay within the legal limits of the game!

It’s Mountaineer pride!  Nothing cheap!  From the heart!  Strain them!

Damn. I’m proud to be a Mountaineer!  I picked you a good one, didn’t I?  Huh?

We got a good one.  We are going to out-strain and out-hit these guys.

Let’ em know.  Leave no doubt tonight!  Leave no doubt tonight!  No doubt!

They shouldn’t have played the old gold and blue.  Not this night!  Not this night!

Don’t ever leave your wingman.  Never, ever, ever bail out on your brother!  You help.  You strain and you fight!

Source: http://aplus.com/a/inspiring-sports-speech...

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In COACH Tags COACH, BILL STEWART, FIESTA BOWL, WEST VIRGINIA
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Vince Lombardi: 'Winning is not a sometime thing; it's an all the time thing' - 1961

September 30, 2016

1961, Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA

The voice in the YouTube clip above is an actor doing a paraphrase of the speech below, which is Lombardi’s most famous speech. There is no surviving audio of it. This clip before Super Bowl 2 has Lombardi’s voice on it, preserved by Hall of Fame linebacker Jerry Kramer.

Winning is not a sometime thing; it's an all the time thing. You don't win once in a while; you don't do things right once in a while; you do them right all of the time. Winning is a habit. Unfortunately, so is losing.

There is no room for second place. There is only one place in my game, and that's first place. I have finished second twice in my time at Green Bay, and I don't ever want to finish second again. There is a second place bowl game, but it is a game for losers played by losers. It is and always has been an American zeal to be first in anything we do, and to win, and to win, and to win.

Every time a football player goes to ply his trade he's got to play from the ground up - from the soles of his feet right up to his head. Every inch of him has to play. Some guys play with their heads. That's O.K. You've got to be smart to be number one in any business. But more importantly, you've got to play with your heart, with every fiber of your body. If you're lucky enough to find a guy with a lot of head and a lot of heart, he's never going to come off the field second.

Running a football team is no different than running any other kind of organization - an army, a political party or a business. The principles are the same. The object is to win - to beat the other guy. Maybe that sounds hard or cruel. I don't think it is.

It is a reality of life that men are competitive and the most competitive games draw the most competitive men. That's why they are there - to compete. The object is to win fairly, squarely, by the rules - but to win.

And in truth, I've never known a man worth his salt who in the long run, deep down in his heart, didn't appreciate the grind, the discipline. There is something in good men that really yearns for discipline and the harsh reality of head to head combat.

I don't say these things because I believe in the ‘brute' nature of men or that men must be brutalized to be combative. I believe in God, and I believe in human decency. But I firmly believe that any man's finest hour -- his greatest fulfillment to all he holds dear -- is that moment when he has worked his heart out in a good cause and lies exhausted on the field of battle - victorious.

Source: http://www.vincelombardi.com/number-one.ht...

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In COACH Tags VINCE LOMBARDI, GREEN BAY PACKERS, SUPERBOWL, TRANSCRIPT, AMERICAN FOOTBALL, FOOTBALL, NFL
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Ted Whitten: 'You’ve got to show me all the guts and the determination you’ve got in your body', Last game address - 1970

September 25, 2016

2 May 1970, Whitten Oval, Footscray, Melbounre, Australia

This was Ted Whitten's last game as a player, Rnd 5 v Hawthorn, 1970. The Dogs held on to win by 3 points. Whitten later said, 'I cried, but you couldn't tell because it was raining'.

Provided we control the rucks and the air like we were doing, we’ve got a real chance.

In that quarter, you let the rucks get on top us a little, particularly from the centre bounce, and around the ground, which we can’t afford to do.

You had them in your hand, and you’ve let em out.

Now we’ve got to get them back in there and close it up.

They played attacking football, we went negative in that quarter.

And you can’t afford to. I want attacking football all the time.

And providing you had a # in that quarter, we had a real chance of winning it in that quarter.

Now we have our backs against the wall we’ve got to fight and fight hard.

It’s going to be a do or die effort. It’s going to be a determined #.

You’ve got to show me all the guts and the determination you’ve got in your body.

You’ve got to inspire me with this last quarter finish.

You’ve been in front all day and you’ve got to stay there.

Are you going to sit there ... or .... [growling player response]

 

 

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zPbgRZPH8...

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In COACH Tags TED WHITTEN, EJ, MR FOOTBALL, COACH, THREE QUARTER TIME, LAST GAME, CAPTAIN, WESTERN BULLDOGS, AUSTRALIAN RULES, AFL, TRANSCRIPT
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David Parkin: 'The philosophy of Marx, the beauty of Shakespeare, and the passion of Churchill', Testimonial dinner for John Kennedy - 1977

February 22, 2016

August 1977, Melbourne, Australia

My own association with John has now spanned 17 years – firstly as a player, then as a captain, then as his assistant coach for eight years,  working for him on match committee, and it’s interesting to hear others talking about their association with him in other eras and in other capacities.

The effect that this man has had on so many people who were and still are Hawthorn, must be quite unique in the football world. It is not difficult to see why a man such as John is held in such high esteem (no it is more than that , revered) by those who made contact with him. This reverence comes about, not because of his physical achievements (numerous as they have been) but because of the respect of the qualities of the man himself.

Most of these personal qualities have been mentioned by previous speakers, but at the risk of duplication, I would like to speak briefly about some of them.

1.    His tremendous sense of humour, (for example Bremner/Moore ‘dollars on your backs’)

2.    His complete objectivity in decision making – I’ve met no other man in life in any situation who can make decisionswithout being influenced by personal feelings or relationships with others.

3.    His absolute single-mindedness, where nothing superficial or extraneous ever interfered with the achievement of an objective.

4.    His exceptional oratory ability, where players in particular, saw at its best the way in which the Queen’s English can be used to project the philosophy of Marx, the beauty of Shakespeare, and the passion of Churchill.

5.    His complete and utter humility – where as tonight he is embarrassed by the accolades of others. Hawthorn’s success  to him was due to the outward and visible signs, that is the players, nevber John Kennedy.

6.     His ability to pass through the pain barrier was an example for us all to follow, eg The Walk for Want 18 miles, to be beaten by Des Meagher who took a short cut.

7.    His ability to influence the character and lives of so many young men gave players purpose and meaning to what they were doing. There is no doubt, for this reason alone, all those who donned the brown and gold in the past 16 years have been better people, the Hawthorn influence through John for having passed this way .

When John sought leave of absence at the beginning of March this year, I called the senior players together at Scotch College – as they will recall. Immediately following John’s announcement, people close to the club and those not so close, were saying to me and the players, ‘we must forget John Kennedy and get on with the business of winning football matches’.

My response then, and still is now, is that I sincerely hope that John Kennedy is never forgotten at Hawthorn, by players, administrators and supporters too. For in being reminded of Kennedy is also being reminded of what Hawthorn is all about 

The present Club, and the application of the present team, is, in my opinion , a direct reflection of Johnhimself. The qualities which he has instilled into all of us – aggression, self sacrifice, dedication, resolution, determination, personal accountability and emotional control – will be the very qualities that will enable a successful passage through September. If they are forgotten we will be losing the basic ingredients that have made our club an honest and respected power in the VFL.

Finally, if this is a testimonial dinner, then the greatest testimonial we can give John is surely the 1977 flag.

 

 

 

Source: Supplied by David Parkin

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In COACH Tags DAVID PARKIN, JOHN KENNEDY, HAWTHORN, VFL, AFL, AUSTRALIAN RULES, COACH, TESTIMONIAL DINNER, TRANSCRIPT
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John Kennedy: 'Hawthorn has done more for me, than I have ever been able to do for Hawthorn', Testimonial dinner - 1977

February 21, 2016

August 1977, Melbourne, Australia

Mr President Ladies and Gentlemen

I am very sensitive of the honour that the Hawthorn Football Club have done to me this evening, and I thank very sincerely the committee and all those who are associated with arranging it and I thank very sincerely all of you people who have come and have done me the honour of coming here.

David can string words together perhaps better than I can. He is pretty good at this, and it’s probably he had an in for being coach. But I’ve always said this and can repeat it without any false modesty – Hawthorn has done more for me, than I have ever been able to do for Hawthorn.

You personally, as people, who have played for the team and barracked for the team and have been associated with the club may not look at it that way, but we know ourselves best of all and I know how much in the first few years of playing football for Hawthorn, a League club, gave me some sort of confidence that I felt I lacked. I never quite overcame it, but Hawthorn gave me a great start in that respect.

Hawthorn, too, gave me the chance to play League football, to be part of football and football for me has always meant two things. It’s meant the opportunity to play the game and to be judged according to your performance an d nothing else. It doesn’t matter if you are black, white, Protestant or Catholic. It doesn’t make any difference – you are judged by your performance and nothing else.

As I go on a little bit in life I wish it was the same everywhere else – I don’t know whether it is quite as straight as football. The score goes up on the board after every week and that’s the judgement that’s made. That is the way it is and I think that’s a great thing. It’s an attraction for me, it’s always attracted me to football and Hawthorn gave me the opportunity to be part of this.

But Hawthorn did more than that for me. Hawthorn gave me the chance to meet some wonderful people and over the years it’s been my privilege and pleasure to work with them. To meet the first president of our club, Dave Prentice, who has passed on since, to meet two people such as Dr Ferguson and Phil Ryan.

Sandy Ferguson was president of the club when I first came here. I think he was everything rolled into one then -- president, MO, and everything Dr – and he set a tone in the administration or the club. He set the goal before us players, and though we weren’t winning, the ideas were there, the dedication and selflessness was epitomised in the President who seemed to be there all the time, willing to give his time and energy and his medical acumen to the progress of the Hawthorn Football Club. And he still is this way. And Sandy has been associated with the club certainly for longer than I have, and I had the opportunity of meeting him, and becoming, I hope, his friend, certainly his friend, through playing for Hawthorn.

And Phil – who became president after Dr retired. Phil Ryan, I don’t know whether people really understand Phil. There has been a lot of talk about Kennedy and all of this but they say really that the best leaders in life are those fellows who, and those people, whether they are men or women, who are able to lead people in such a way that when the target is achieved, when the victory is won and the goals have been scored, the people will turn around and say, ‘Gee how did we do it”, and they look and say “yes, he was in charge”. They are not even conscious that they are being led in many way, and these are the best types of leaders and, in this way, I think Phil is outstanding – in this kind of way – as President of our club.

Phil heads a committee, a rugged lot of fellows. We have got all kinds of people on our committee. We’ve only got twelve now – we used to have twenty two and the meetings were quite electric when we had twenty two around the table. But Phil’s tolerance and broad acceptance of the part that everybody can play in the administration of the club just has to be seen to be believed, and so I believe that in Dr Ferguson and Phil Ryan, we’ve had the continuity of administration that has put us where we are today. And I don’t really want to individualise but I felt that I had to say that Hawthorn has given me the opportunity to meet these two men and to be influenced by them, and to copy, imitate – which is the sincerest form of flattery – some of their methods.

I am honoured to have here so many people this evening whom I know, and as always at hawthorn I always feel very remiss that there are so many people who I meet, and when I was coaching and when I was playing I scarcely had the time to say ‘gooday how are you’ or pass the time of day.

Always seem to be going somewhere, either coming from losing, or we won, or something like that, and you’re on your way, but to all of those people, I say, thank you very much. I said it at a previous occasion like this, and I won’t be Madam Melba I can assure you of that, but on a previous occasion like this, I said I would be happy to return and be assistant boot studder to Ted Laws, and Ted has been associated with the club for as long as I have, and once again it’s people like Ted Laws and Athol Taylor who was there for some time too. All of these people I’ve met and made friends with and I treasure the friendships I’ve made.

To hear Kevin (Curran), Graeme (Arthur) and Roy (Simmonds), people with whom I had the honour of playing, speak this evening has indeed also been an honour for me. ‘Dobbin’ we used to call him, he used to sing a song called ‘Jog Along Mr Dobbin’. I’ve always marvelled at people who could sing one note off key right through you know. You can imagine people who get out of tune, that’s understandable, but they are real geniuses that can drop a half key and go right through. – well Kevin could do that whether he was full or whether he was sober, he could still do that. You might think Kennedy trained hard, but nothing beside McCaskill. Kevin was associated the night when we ran round and round the ground. Bob, dear old Bob, he was a tremendous fellow but he had had a couple of whiskies this evening, and he was in good form and the rain was coming down, and the team was were going round and round the Hawthorn Ground until we almost got giddy. And it was punctuated by short sprints every now and then, and do a lap that way, and a little Fox Terrier joined in. It was Kevin that was with us that night, leading the bunch, and we ran round and round and the Foxie died – and there he was, lying on his back with his four legs poking up to the sky. Kevin said, ‘look the little dog’s dead’. McCaskill said, ‘get another dog – run on!’ Great feeling to play with him.


I have never forgotten the story that Graeme told me about Kevin. Greame played his first game for Sandhurst when he was about – well it started when he was sixteen, then he was fifteen, then fourteen, I think he must have been twelve when he played his first game for Sandhurst. He was only on the ground, Kevin had left Hawthorn by this stage and gone to captain and coach Sandhurst and when Mort (Graeme) came down to Hawthorn, he was talking about Curran, and said ‘when I played in thefirst game, I was knocked over in the first minute, someone whacked me behind the play, and down I went.’  He said, ‘I was looking around, I was a bit glassy eyed but then this big form came up and said, “don’t worry Mort. We’ll get that one back quick and lively”. And sure enough, about five minutes later, one of the opposition was getting carted off over the other side – Curran had ... great feeling to have a leader like that with you and not against you.

And I can remember at Footscray when Roy Simmonds and I were at the end of the cricket pitch, with Jack Collins in between us, and we were engaging in a bit of repartee. We were as long way behind in the game. There was a bit of mud slinging going on. Kevin got the ball at the other end of the pitch and took off. He was a fearsome sight when he was full steam ahead, and Jack looked up and he said to Simmo, ‘look out!’ He jumped one way, and Simmo went the other way,  because he was no respecter of guernseys, Kevin, when he was in full flight, didn’t matter whether you had his guernsey on or the other one, he’d take you just the same. But it was great to play with him, and great to have him on your side, and, as I say, to see him here tonight is a great honour for me.

And Jack Hale. I thank you Jack for coming here, and for your comments. My father used to go to football when I was so small I could hardly remember it you know. The only thing I could ever recall my father saying, he used to follow Essendon , he’d come home some times and there were two things he used to say. ‘You could kick me from here to Bourke Street if I ever go to another final” because they used to jostle him and so on, and another thing was he used to come home and say, ‘That Hale’s mad!’ – and little did I know, later on I was to meet that fellow Hale, and the description was an accurate one – but in the right way.

Jack had many – he won’t mind me saying it – he had many wonderful attributes as a coach, not the least of which was tremendous psychiatric ability.  Roy has referred to it, and I even thought after Jack left off sending players down there for psychiatric treatment, because if anybody had any problems injury-wise, Jack could guarantee to fix them. He had a way with him when it came to fixing injuries. David talks about single mindedness. Well Jack had single mindedness to the enth degree. There were no injuries for Jack, none, just none. Unless you had an obvious break, when the arm was broken you weren’t injured. And he’dalways point to his head and say, ‘it’s up there, it’s up there.’ And we had a memorable ten minutes before the game, these electric things were happening always, when Jack was coach. Mort (Graeme Arthur) had a bad shoulder and we were in the little room there before wetook the field against Fitzroy, and Mort said, ‘my shoulder’s pretty crook’. And I was brought in to act as an intermediary between Jack and Graeme.

Jack said, ‘Nothing wrong with your shoulder, nothing wrong with it, nothing wrong with it – it’s all up here’.

What are you talking about?’ said Mort. ‘My shoulder’s sore’

‘Nothing wrong with it, it’s all up here’ he said.

One thing led to another and things got pretty heated, but in all events,. Graeme went out and he played. He was best man on the ground.

‘There ‘are’  – said Hale ‘Nothing wrong with your shoulder’

And you see, after this comes over you for two or three years, it gets you in the finish, and there aren’t any such things as injuries.

The other aspect of Jack was the disappointed look on his face when he’d be talking to the team, and he’d see any player who had a bandage on him. These things used to worry Jack. I’ve seen him visible affected by a bandage. He’d be speaking to the players before the game and suddenly someone who had a piece of plaster on his leg, or a knee bandage, or even a slight bit of tape around his leg, and you’d see his eyes, they look at it, and you could see him distracted.  I’d say, ‘for god sake take the thing off and let him get on with what he’s saying’ because it really used to worry him. Nobody was allowed to wear bandages or anything like that. But it had its affect. It had its affect and it made all of us who played with Jack, and for Jack, and for Hawthorn, much better for having been with him.

Graeme – I’m very grateful for your being here, and I think it’s a great thing to have played football with you.  I suppose time goes on and the younger players now – Graeme Arthur is just a name. The newspaper coined a phrase when Graeme came down, or they used a word. The word was unobtrusive. Unobtrusive they said. We used to reckon he was so unobtrusive sometimes that you didn’t notice him at all, he just seemed to be not in the game at all. Some days he was more unobtrusive than others, but he was a great Hawthorn player, and it was great to have played with him, and to be privileged to coach the team when he was captain. And I don’t want to go through and enumerate people and start to single people out because I could do this for such a long time, but I say that I am very grateful also to see so many players with whom I was associated with in 1961 and 1976, and in between those years this evening. In a funny sort of way, I suppose I like to think that I’m friends with all the players.

Morton Brown is here, and I think if I can say I’m your friend Morton, I’m everybody’s friend.

In respect of that remark, I suppose of all players, between Morton and me there was an invisible le bond. I don’t know what it was made of -- if it was mutual distrust, or mutual antipathy. In all eventsI probably roasted Mortonmore than any player that I’ve ever known, and yet I can still see Morton Brown taking the mark that won us the [blank on page] ... a most gifted footballer.

I would say too, to the people ar4oudn the club, the administrators, Secretary Ivan. I think perhaps today’s Secretaries really don’t know how easy they have it. Sometimes they might think life’s hard, but in Hale’s day as coach at Hawthorn, you know anything could happen. This is a true story. I have vivid recollections of being in the Secretary’s office one night when he had to two young boys he was trying to sign up to play with the team. Our Secretary at the time was Bill Newton, a very fine chap – didn’t have much of a sense of humour, and you certainly needed a sense of humour, because he was talking to these two lads, and he had me there as Captain of the team, to sort of add the right wordsat the right time. And the Secretary’s office at that stage is where the two doors are where Jan is now, in between the two doors there. Standing there in the middle of signing up these players, the door burst open and O’Mahoney and Arthur came through one door, absolutely nothing on, straight out the other door, and flat out slammed the door behind them. Bill was absolutely flabbergasted. He said, ‘well what’s going on there?’ He got back on the trail, undaunted, , with the two recruits, and just sort of got the thing running again, when the door came open again and Simmo came through, dressed exactly the same, but carrying his sausage on a plate. Bill was still undaunted, though he was by this time getting disgusted, and I think it would strain anybody’s sense of humour, but he just moved into action again. Then, a third time the door opened and in came the coach, Jack Hale, absolutely starkers with a bucket full of water, running out the other door after them. He’s chasing them too –

Well at that time I sympathised with Bill. What can you expect when you have got the bloke in charge of them, and that’s what he’s doing?  So things have toned down a lot since then, and there’s less of that – more decorum, and a little more dignity associated with the place, but nevertheless they were happy days.

I thank to Lou (Richards) and Peter for their attendance here tonight, and what they have done, and their excellent comparing g of the show, and I should say perhaps – I can recall my fourth game of the year when we played Collingwood, and Lou was captain, and we were playing at Hawthorn, and we were getting beaten. It’s always impressed me, this. Lou mightn’t remember this, I don’t suppose he would, but he was captain. He was roving for the Collingwood side, and there’s as pretty big ruckman named Neville Waller. Lou and Neil Mann will remember him, and Neville must have got something wrong with him. He was down on the ground, lying there, and Lou ran up sand said, ‘get up!’ – so it’s not only Kennedy who says get up – Lou said, ‘get UP!’ And Neville went ‘oooooh’, he was winded I think,  and Lou said, I thought it was a bit tough, but Lou said, ‘well if you can’t’ get up, get off!’ and out they came the Collingwood trainers and took him off. And it struck me that Neville was such a big fellow, and Lou was rover, he was shorter. He was captain, and I thought it was an example of the tremendous control he had over them, and it impressed me, and I thought if ever we get knocked down, we’ll get up too. So all of you who have been blaming me for saying ‘get up!’, well blame Lou. He’s the one who started me on the bad road.

The present coach David Parkin, he obviously has a masochistic streak in him, because Dave had concussion eight times when he was playing. Anybody who’s silly enough to run into his opponent eight times and get concussion when he’s playing, well he’s got the first qualification for beinga coach.

And I saw the game this year against Footscray. At the bounce of the ball Scotty got one and was in agony. Scotty was doubled up in pain and down he went, rolling on the ground. A terrible act, and the umpire blew the whistle to give him a free kick, and Scotty, too bad he couldn’t take it, so he struggled manfully and got hold of the ball, and you know, in the best tradition, handpassed it to Rodney Eade, to get himself off the hook. And what did Eade do? I’m sure with Parkin’s instructions in mind, he kicked the ball straight back and hit Scotty in the head with it – deliberate.

Any coach who would instruct his players to that is absolutely heartless. But in all events, it had the right effect because Scotty forgot about his agony and he thought about his head,  and he sprang up and went back and kicked a goal, so there you are.

Alf (Brown), I must thank you for writing the very complimentary things you did.  I appreciate that because you usually say what you mean.  Those of you who know football probably don’t know Alf Brown so well, and a lot of people don’t like Alf’s criticism. I don’t mind Alf’s cricticism. I never have because he never jumped on the bandwagon blaming us because we didn’t play it according to the exact Marino rules you know. He has always been quite factual, but he also has his way of getting information, and I always recall when I was first made coach, he rang me and said, ‘if you can just help me with a little bit of knowledge about the team,  you know, who’s going to be where, it will help me write the article a bit,’ so we kept up this practice and I found out in the first week his technique was to choose any player, he’d say ‘Sted Hay’ for instance:

‘Sted’s no good is he?’

And straight away I’d jump in and say, ‘course he’s a good player, he can run and kick’ and he’d have the pencil out and he’d be writing all these things down, andI found that he’d do that. So I learned after that to shut up and say nothing when he said, ‘Ian Law wasn’t a good player’, ‘I’d say ‘No he’s out of form Alf, he’s not playing too well.’ So it doesn’t pay to come back. Never let them get you in. But I thank you Alf for your presence and for your good wishes and I do thank too the people who have come from opposing clubs here, because I suppose at Hawthorn we have tried to adopt the policy of not expecting any quarter, not asking any, and not giving any either, and we hope we have gained the respect of opponents.

Finally I’d like to not finish at all on a note of reminiscence but just to pause for a moment and think, ‘have I not said anything I should have said?’. Well if I have I can only just say again that my thanks go out to you all, and my sincere feeling is that Hawthorn has given me far more than I can ever give back to Hawthorn. Now I don’t want to finish on a note of reminiscence at all, though you might be tempted to do so when you see fellows like Kevin Heath here. Remember Heathy, that morning? Heathy and I used to run of a morning 5.30 AM outside Heath’s house. We went p4retty well until one morning I got there and I was whistling – I’ve always envied people who could whistle, S-S-S-T-T, like that. I was whistling in the dark, no sign of him, so eventually the door creaked open and the voice said, ‘is that you John?

I said, ‘yes,’

The voice replies, ‘It’s [Kevin’s father ] Joe here. I’ll get him out.’

So the door shut as I waited around for a while, but still not sign of him.

Ten minutes later, it’s still pitch dark but the cars are going past now, when the door opened again.

‘That you Kev?’ I said.

‘No Joe, John. He won’t be long.’

The door shut and again another ten minutes goes and finally the door opens and out he comes and he’s coughing and spluttering and we run up Bourke Road over Cotham Road and up to my place. But he had a bit of Johnny Peck in him – he always managed to put in a bit of a sprint at the end, and then he turned and back he used to go, and I’d trot off. But I hope you are still having that run, Kev. It makes a difference. It makes a difference.

Now one more before I finish. Thank you Noel for your good wishes. I can still see Noel McMahon in about 1952, it might have been the game Alan Nash mentioned, could scent victory you know, we didn’t win many in those days. We thought, here’s a chance to win the match. Jack McLeod had gone round the bend, as he usually did when he smelt victory – he was ready to knock anybody down who got in his way. The umpire was a bit panicky, and Denis Cordner and I had a bit of a practical difference of opinion at the previous knockout,  and Denis was just out of the action, and the ball was bounced up again and Noel was on the other side of the ring, and I can still see Noel wagging his finger, saying, ‘you’ll do me Kennedy’ and by this time I was round the bend too, and I was saying ‘right Noel, you’re good enough for me’. I don’t know how it came off. It was probably a pretty big collision, but I suppose neither of usis any the worse for it.

But what I want to say is that the best victories we’ve had at Hawthorn are the victories which we’ve had when we’ve had to come from behind. I don’t mean behind on the day – but when everything was running against us.

As Dave (Parkin) said, he mentioned he philosophy of Karl Marx, the underdog I suppose, I thrive on that a bit, but when all of us were down, and with respect to the Melbourne Football Club which I admire greatly, and I’ve always had tremendous respect, our best victory that I can recall in this sense was in 1961,  not in the Grand Final, but in the Semi Final, when we were in the right frame of mind, when every Hawthorn player who went onto the field knew what was ahead of him. When every Hawthorn player knew there was a chance.

We had to beat Melbourne because Melbourne stood between us and the premiership. We had a little bit of luck too, which made it even better, because its crook to lose when you have bad luck, you know. I know how Melbourne must have felt, but football is a ruthless game, but things went our way that day – a few things happened too that made a little bit of spice to it, a little bit of spice to the game. But that had happened to us plenty of time over the years – we’d copped it for year after year. 

So that day , as I said, when Morton kicked a goal, I think most Hawthorn supporters knew that we had the game and we had the premiership when we beat Melbourne that day, and that’s the sort of victory that stands out in my mind. Now to contrast that with our performance in 1975, when that was what was missing. My fault, I’ve said it all the time. Our team, our team was not in the right frame of mind. We were not prepared to pay the price that’s required when you are going to win a premiership.  Because everybody want to win a premiership, and it’s a big game, and it’s a big price that’s got to be paid, and there is no question in 1975 we just didn’t have it.

I had slipped a little bit, just enough to make a difference, and this is nothing to take away from the tremendous effort of North and Ron and the boys, this is not to take away from that at all, but it took that – to get into all of our heads, that we weren’t going to let that happen again in 1976, and it didn’t happen again. And though we didn’t play at our top, we had the right approach.

Dave, you’ll forgive me for saying this, because this is more important than whose testimonial it is – this is more important. This year we have seen, I believe, I can say this without any humility at all, tremendous improvements in the team. We’ve got a daring team who are prepared to do things that perhaps we weren’t prepared to do before with a more conservative approach. And don’t let us mistake our attitude when the final series come. All of us here and this important for the team, this is important for the present team because football after all is a game for the present, very much a game for the present. All of us here from 1961, from before that time, 1971, all those years, the players who are here tonight are Hawthorn players and the administrators are all together for Hawthorn’s sake. As Phil said, ‘it’s a great club, a wonderful club that it’s worth doing something for, absolutely worth doing something for. Now when we get into the final, into the finals this year, when we get onto that ground make sure, make sure, make absolutely sure,, that the eighteen we have got there, and Dave, and everybody is in the right frame of mind. If we are doing that, then I think we’ll get there, and it will be two in a row, and Dave will have his first premiership, and that’s what I want.

Thank you ladies and gentleman.

Thank you for this tremendous night, this tremendous life, at Hawthorn.

Source: Provided by David Parkin

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In COACH Tags JOHN KENNEDY, HAWTHORN, COACH, RETIREMENT, TESTIMONIAL DINNER, TRANSCRIPT, AFL, VFL
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Ian McGeechan - 'Be special for the rest of your lives', pre game 2nd Test, Lions Tour - 1997

February 3, 2016

28 June 1997, King's Park, Durban, South Africa

There are days like this ... when many ruby players never have it. Never experience it. It’s special.

Jim and I have been involved in rugby a long time.

I can tell you , these are the things , these are the days that you never believe will come again.

It has.

And I can tell you. I’ve given a lot of things up.

I love my rugby. And I love my family.

And when you come to a day like this, you know why you do it all.

You know why you;ve been involved. It’s been a privilege -- is a privilege. Because we’re something special.

You’ll meet each other in the street in thirty years time, and there’ll just be a look, and you’ll know just how special some days in your life are.

We’ve proved that the lion has claws and has teeth.

We’ve wounded a springbok.

When an animal is wounded it returns in frenzy.

It doesn’t think. It fights for its very existence.

The lion waits, and at the right point, it goes for the jugular.

And the life disappears.

Today, every second of that game -- we’ve talked about what they’re going to do, or everybody else has -- we go for the jugular.

Every tackle, every pass, every kick, is saying, you’re a fucking springbok, you’re dying.

Your hopes of living in this test series -- are going.

And on that field sometimes today, all it will be between you is a look. No words, just a look. That will say everything.

And the biggest thing it will say is, ‘you are special’

You are very, very special.

It has been, and is, a privilege.

Go out, enjoy it, remember how you’ve got here, and why.

And finish it off.

And be special for the rest of your lives.

Good luck, go for it.

 

McGeechan's forwards coach, Jim Telfer also gave an extrordinary speech on this tour, aslo on Speakola.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riNUUEYrpL...

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In COACH Tags IAN MCGEECHAN, RUGBY, BRITISH AND IRISH LIONS, LIONS TOUR, SPRINGBOKS, MOTIVATIONAL, PREGAME
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Jim Telfer: 'From now on, gloves are off. It's bare knuckle f***in’ stuff', Lions tour, Forwards meeting - 1997

February 3, 2016

June 1997, British and Irish Lions tour, South Africa

Sadly, there is no full version of this speech left on YouTube, just the Gillette ad. It gives a feel, without the full majesty.

There are two types of rugby players boys.

There’s honest ones, and there’s the rest.

The honest player gets up in the morning and looks himself in the fucking mirror, and sets his standard. Sets his stall out, and says I’m going to get better. I’m going to get better. I’m going to get better.

He doesn’t complain about the food, or the beds, or the referees. Or all these sorts of things.

These are just peripheral things that weak players have always complained about. The dishonest player.

If I tell a player he’s too high, or he’s not tight enough, he’s too fucking high. He’s not tight enough. And that’s it. I’m the judge, and not the player.

And we accept that, and we do something about it.

I’ve coached Lions teams before, and we’ve complained and carped and this that and the next thing.

And I liken it a bit to the British and the Irish going abroad on holiday.

The first thing they look for is an English pub, the second thing they look is a pint of Guinness
and the third thing they look for is a fish and chip shop.
The only thing they accept is the sun. They don't take on anything that’s good or decent of different abroad.

If we do that we’re sunk!

We don't go back bitchin'. We don't go back carpin', Oh we've done it this way at Twickenham or Cardiff Arms parks or Lansdowne Road or Murrayfield!

No, no these days are past.

 What’s accepted over there is not accepted over here. It's not accepted by us -- me and you.
So from now on the page is turned. Were in a new book, different attitudes. We’re honest with ourselves.

And in many respects in the forward play, and let's be fuckin honest, we've been second best.
We can match them! But only if we get it right here (points to his head) and right here (points to his heart).


Two weeks. There’s battles all along the way. There’s a battle on Saturday. There’s a battle next Wednesday. There’s a battle the following Saturday. A battle the following Tuesday -- until were into the fuckin’ big arena. The one we’ll be there on Saturday. And by that time the fuckin’ Lions have to make them fuckin’ roar for us.

Because they'll be baying for blood. Let’s hope it's fucking springbok blood

We’re focussed. From now on, kid gloves are off. It's bare knuckle fuckin’ stuff. And only at the end of the day will the man that’s standing on his feet win the fuckin’ battle.

 

ian mcgeechan.jpg

Related content: Ian McGeechan coach's address on same Lions tour, 'Be special for the rest of your lives', 1997.

 

"We’ve wounded a springbok.

When an animal is wounded it returns in frenzy.

It doesn’t think. It fights for its very existence.

The lion waits, and at the right point, it goes for the jugular.

And the life disappears."

Read and hear speech.

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pHqw4XZhP...

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In COACH Tags JIM TELFER, LIONS TOUR, FORWARDS, PREGAME, RUGBY
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Angus Hamilton (West Brunswick FC): VAFA Coach of the Year - 2015

December 11, 2015

7 December 2015, VAFA AGM Presentation Dinner, MCG, Melbourne, Australia

Like most successful coaches, it comes down to having good players who perform as a team.

First and foremost, I would like to thank the players of the West Brunswick Amateur Football Club who for the last four years have spilt blood, broken bones, tackled hard, kicked goals, and most importantly built a bond of trust and belief as strong as I have seen at any club. At no stage did you yield, and conquering undefeated sides in consecutive GF’s is testament to your strength of character.  You did the work, and the rewards are yours.  You are magnificent young men, a credit to yourselves, your parents and family and also marvellous ambassadors of our club and the VAFA. The story perhaps is a little deeper than that though, as we are a club where the players not only play, they also fundraise and form the committee. There is a no burnout mentality; the job just needs to get done.

Football can be a cruel game, and a game of inches. St Leo’s in particular have ended their year by a point in consecutive seasons, the manner in which they conducted themselves post game was a credit to them, and they will be a force again next year.

VAFA President, Tim Nelson, the VAFA Executive, the team at VAFA headquarters Elsternwick Park, VAFA major sponsor, Sportscover, thank you. We are all privileged to be part of what I truly believe is the most amazing and unique Football League in the Country. 1000’s of people each and every week, the majority unpaid, doing what they do for the love of football. Not because they have to, because they want to. Along with an overwhelmingly safe football environment, this is what continues to make the VAFA a “Destination League” in what is an increasingly competitive leisure/sporting market. Whilst we are Amateur, we should continue to strive, if we are not already, to be the most professional Association outside the AFL. With your continued vision, planning and communication, I believe the VAFA is in safe hands. Again thank you.

When I received a call from Benny, my first thought was “what I have done now”, a bit like getting called to the principal’s office. When Benny explained the reason for his call, a different wave of emotions/feelings came over me:

Excitement
Embarrassment
Disbelief
A hint of pride
But overall, I was extraordinarily humbled to be recognised.

These initial feelings were quickly replaced by fear and nervousness, as the realisation of two of my greatest fears; being centre of attention and public speaking! As I sat down and tried to formulate some thoughts, it quickly became apparent that this award was not about one, but rather a reward for many individuals, and mostly the West Brunswick Amateur Football Club. A place that I walked into in 1995 and has had me on the hook ever since.

Established 1959 – 56 Years

Premierships (7): 1960, 1976, 1980, 2002, 2008, 2014, 2015

3 VAFA Life Members:Cliff & Mavis Bastow, Bruce Ivey

4 VAFA Certificates of Merit Recipients:

Peter Webber, Cliff Bastow, Bruce Ivey, Steve Fyffe

VAFA games record holder and VAFA personality of the year in 2002, Bob Baker.

Former club Captain, Steve D’Andrea was awarded VAFA Junior Coach of the year in 2013.

As a club, West Brunswick is special. Clubs are always about the players, but never have I been part of a club that is completely player run. As we have had some success over the last two years, the efforts of a number at the club will highlight what I mean.

President – Anthony Gibson, not only oversaw back-to-back Premierships, was also a key contributor on the wing in both sides.

2014 Vice President – Louis Martin was also head of Football Operations 2015, and also happened to skipper the Senior side in both grand finals.

2014 Secretary – Raph Touzel, was also President 2012 & 2013, played in Senior flag 2014 and Reserves flag 2015, and I think he has retired for the 5th or 6th time but we expect him back again. He also won the Raph Touzel 3rd XVIII B&F award this year!

2016 President – Ben Lichtenstein, was Secretary last year, as well as captaining the Premiers and champions Reserves side.

I could go on, but will just add that all committee and football-related roles except VAFA Rep and Senior Coach and Runner are filled by current players.

The club also prides itself on being very socially aware and proactive, particularly in the area of men’s mental health, particularly young men. We were extremely proud of the Uni Blacks #GayThat’sOK initiative, the way in which the VAFA embraced it, and we’re proud to have played a small part.

This year we also linked with VICE Media; leading youth media company and Movember – a global charity committed to men living happier, healthier, longer lives. We featured in a film about how difficult it is for adult men make friends, by having a member of Vice come and train, interact and talk with our players and coaches. This involved players being miked up, cameras on the field during training, and having a guy that had not played football, and didn’t know anyone taking part in training.  I put it to the senior players as to whether they would support this going ahead, as it would be a bit of a disruption to training, it was unanimously supported.  By the way this was set for our Thursday training session prior to this year’s grand finals. I felt a great sense of pride towards the boys, that as much as playing in a GF mattered to them, there was a realisation that football is a game, and that as a club we could be part of something that can make a positive change in someone’s life.

I would say that my coaching is more mentoring and guiding, and to be honest quite an easy job as we have so many on and off field leaders at the club.  Trying to ensure that all our parts are working together is my main role.  My mantra is be positive and be consistent.

I have been fortunate to have crossed paths with many amazing people in my VAFA journey, but two in particular have played a huge part in my coaching philosophy/style.

John Jackson – Took a punt on a lippy back pocket and appointed me Captain of the club in 1998.  He is the single most positive person I have ever come across.  I think we lost our first three games reasonably easily, and I thought we were in for a very long year. John saw something and continued to promote belief and trust in the group.  We started to believe and made finals for the first time in a number of years. It was his continual positive messages that turned us around, and to this day when negative thoughts come into my mind, I have four letters at the front of my notebook; WWJS (What Would Jacko Say). So happy he could be here tonight.

Matthew Drain – I had been in the UK working for a number of years and returned to Melbourne at the end of 2011, with no intention of coaching again.  West Brunswick had just been demoted to D4 and was without a coach, when Matthew asked if I would be interested in a co-coaching arrangement. With his other commitments he was unavailable every week, but was keen to take on a coaching role in his own right. To have someone of his football, sporting pedigree keen to be involved at our club and at our level was a once in a lifetime opportunity, how could I say no. He brought experience and knowledge of the game from the highest level that blew me away, but also an ability to make the complex seem simple.  I brought a terrific ability to text, email and phone players, the perfect recipe, so we thought.  At 2-7 and close to the bottom of D4 this didn’t seem to be the case. Some tweaking of how we went about it and the decision to pick players on their “now”, rather than their “might and could” slowly started to turn things around. Belief grew and confidence appeared. A positive ratio in the 2nd half of the season showed we were heading in the right direction. The following season was a breakout year, one in which we understood the strength of a plan, training to that plan, and sticking to it. A close loss in the preliminary final to the amazing story that is the Northern Blues, cut us deep, but provided us the fuel for the next two seasons. Unfortunately Matthew couldn’t continue as work and travel from Ballarat became too much. But his vision and ability to convey a message has been the cornerstone on what we have achieved over the last two years.

Over the last two years we have as a club continued with the co-coaching role, but tweaked it to include senior playing assistants. It has been an honour to work alongside two brilliant young men in Scott Hulm (2014 & 2015), and Bill Irving in 2015. I think the opportunity to be both a player and coach is not one to be taken lightly, but the rewards have proven immense. To see the growth in both Scott and Bill’s leadership qualities over the last couple of years has been incredibly satisfying to me. They both are still young and have fantastic futures ahead of them both in out of football. To see them lead the charge when we were 26 points down with a quarter to play in this year’s GF was one of the more inspiring things I have witnessed in my life.

I would like to save my biggest thank you to my wife, Ana. Without your love, support and backing I wouldn’t have been able to continue to live the dream.

We have over the past two years produced a grand final booklet, in which we ask each player to provide their thoughts and what actions they will bring to the game, and then a reflections post game.  The following is an excerpt from one of our players, not our most talented, but probably our most passionate, and it was his first season at the club. To me such raw emotion (and willingness to share it), more than any win loss ratio, is why I coach.

“I had for a period of time been living in a very unhealthy way, both physically and mentally ( both alcohol and drugs leading to anxiety/panic attacks), I needed to play again. Coming to the Ransford Oval, I have never felt so welcomed upon arrival at a football club, the sense of egalitarianism, fairness and friendship is warm and generous, whilst the banter is relentlessly entertaining. I love this club, I love all the players, the care and dedication we have for each other from the thirds through the reserves to the seniors. We are one club, which is a rare and awesome. When I take the field I promise not let my teammates down and have full confidence in each and every one of them.”

Again thanks to the VAFA, I am truly honoured, embarrassed, proud and humbled to receive this award.

Source: http://www.vafa.com.au/latest-news/angus-h...

Enjoyed this speech? Speakola is a labour of love and I’d be very grateful if you would share, tweet or like it. Thank you.

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In COACH Tags ANGUS HAMILTON, AUSTRALIAN RULES, VAFA, WEST BRUNSWICK, COACH OF THE YEAR, AMATEUR FOOTY, LOCAL FOOTY
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Jim Valvano: 'Cutting down the nets' - Million Dollar Round Table meeting - 1987

December 6, 2015

1987, Million Dollar Round Table, Chicago USA

Thank you, thank you, thank you very much! I need as much applause as I can get after that last presentation.

Thank you very, very much. I'll tell you, what a morning I've had! I have cried from the young lady from Mexico, and then I laughed with your own Mr. Donaldson, and then I thought, the Rabbi made me think, and made me feel guilty, and all kinds of things. I'm going to bring up the thing about descending opinion, Rabbi, if you don't mind. Then the last one, President Ross, I mean he scared the pants off me. That's a bad choice of words maybe.

Holy cow! Now we're gonna talk about- I love that film [film of Valvano's team winning the NCAA championships], I'll be honest with you. Kinda like that picture up there too, as a matter of fact. They told me I had to stand behind that, and I cannot do that. I just gotta explain that, I'm an Italian kid, from Queens, New York. All right? This section, watch your wallets, this section over here. Be very careful.

I have to move around a little bit, I have to. And I will try, they told me I have to keep this thing to thirty minutes. Its hard to get my hands going, takes me a while to get cranked up. But what a fantastic group this is, I'll be honest with you. This is a privilege and an honour to speak here today. I mean you folks are fantastic. Absolutely fantastic. It's not often I get to speak with an audience that really excites the speaker and that's the case today, this is a great group of people.

I want to explain that film first of all though. A lot of times people see that and they say "What a wonderful job." The people who run the presentation, to bring that film so that you can better acquaint yourself with the speaker, I don't assume that everybody knows who I am and follow sports. But the fact of the matter is: I brought the film. I want you to know that. I brought the film. Okay? I love that film, you know? Oh yeah.

People say to me, and I apologise Rabbi but in 1983, won the national championship, and they say do I think about it very much? It's in the past I shouldn't think- well the fact of the matter is: other than I have that film in 16mm, colour, sound, I've got it on VHS, beta, half inch, three quarter inch. I've got, when I go to work a little cassette I put in, I listen to the last minute and half of the game and if you came to my home in North Carolina if you ring my door bell, the last forty four seconds of the game play. I love it, I love it! In fact, lets run that sucker again, if you get a chance back there. I love that.

That's not what I want to talk about today. I want to talk about, the topic is cutting the nets down. In my profession cutting the nets down means you reach the top.  Two hundred and ninety schools division start the year and one school gets to cut the nets down. And that's what you saw, that we cut the nets. I

have to explain a little bit, I gotta talk fast, you got so many things I want to tell this group, there's so many things I'd like to share with you. Because I think there's so much similarities between us. I was talking to some of the people about making the million dollar round table. And what it takes to get there. And yes you know the success of the competition that you have each year, great [inaudible 00:03:40], that's what I do after we won the national championship, the following year,  the ball goes up again, and you have to do it again. If you want to make the NCAA tournament again you must earn your way in it, just like you do every year. I have a great feeling I think for what you do. And I'm also admiring so much.

But that film, you see, there's one thing before I go on and say anything, I'd like to hopefully say something significant, everybody still laughs and I want to explain it. There's a point there you see when I run around, and people laugh. And I know why you're laughing. People laugh because they think that I lost my mind at that moment. That I didn't expect to win, that it was a shock that we won the game, not a whole lot of folks thought we could win. Washington Post said trees would tap dance, and elephants, and all that stuff.

Well its true not a lot of people, nobody out there, nobody, my mother. I am the son of Rocco and Angelina Valvano, I want to tell you that. You got that? Yes, and my mother, little Angelina, little Italian lady, about four foot three with the bun in the back, the knitting needle goes through there, black mark over- dresses in black, all the time in case there's a death in my neighbourhood, and that's where I grew up. Where I grew up, she's a professional mourner, my mom. My mother, her second son, who she loves, like no other, I mean she, my mother, she took Houston and gave eight points for that game. I'm telling you, I'm very disappointed.

So, nobody thought we would win that game, so I want to explain to you, because you'll understand it, more than anything. A business group like yourself will understand, what I was doing that night in Albuquerque, New Mexico. When I was sprinting around. I didn't lose my mind, I wasn't shocked we won, what I was doing there, very simply: I was marketing myself. I know how important that is.

Let me explain it to you. I grew up watching Wide World of Sports. You've all seen this. Spinning the globe, spanning the sports world. Joy of victory, agony of defeat, they said that every week. What was the agony of defeat they show every week? Somebody tell me. Every week this came on, and I was born in Queens not a lot of slopes there. I assume the fella is supposed to go like a bird in flight. What does he do each week that guy? He takes one of the worst falls I've ever seen. I check these things out, that man is still alive, and every week of his life, no matter where he is, its true. He's in a bar, they go "oh here you come Pierre, check it out again" . So embarrassing that man. Everybody remembers that, but nobody remembers the joy of victory, because they don't have a good one in the Wide World of sports. So I was going to give them a great joy of victory. That's what I wanted to do.

Let me picture this, you gotta picture this. I'm down in the locker room before the game, biggest game of my life I gey, any Italians out there we got a [inaudible 00:06:50] or two around here? All right one right here, you know what [inaudible 00:06:53] means don't you? What's your name? Tell me your name. Federico, he he. Do you fix the equipment where you work? I'm only kidding, I can say that Federico, what's your first name? Frank? I knew that, only two guesses: Tony, Frank. What else could it be? I got a sister named Tony, what are you kidding me?

So the fact of the matter is: I get [inaudible 00:07:26] before a big game, its a nervous stomach I get, you might wonder, what do the great coaches do? I heard a gentlemen being [inaudible 00:07:31], you might think the great coaches probably spend- before a big game, going over strategy. Last second plays.

This is what I do before a big game, I get [inaudible 00:07:40], so I spend most of the time in the men's rooms before a big game. And that game was so big I was so nervous so I came out, "whoa a big game". And a fellow from the NCAA came over to me said "Coach Valvano. Thought you'd like to know, if you win tonight's game you'll become only the 28th coach in the history of the game to win a national championship" I said "wow I didn't realise that's all, only 27?" He left. Zoom! I went right back into the john. I want you to know what I was thinking for the biggest nigh of my life, I came out again said "What a moment I have" fellow from CBS television came to see me, said "coach, good luck" I said thank you, he said "thought you'd like to know, we expect tonight's game to be the most watched game in the history of televised basketball." I said "how many people" he said "we expect over 50 million people are going to tune in,".

In fact 50 million people watched, how many people out there saw it? Unbelieve- hey roll the film again. Oh I don't have time, sorry. I said "50 million?" He said "yup" he left. Zoom! I went right back in. So I want you to know, what I was thinking before the biggest basketball game in my life, I said "holy- I got a chance to become the 28th coach in the history of the game, to win the championship, and I can do it in front of 50 million people." If we win, what should I do?

The year before me, Dean Smith, beat Georgetown in the national finals, I watched, I was there I said "How'd he handle it?" This is what he did, buttoned his coat, and he walked over and shook hands. With John Thompson, he shook hands and then he went down to the locker room. And everybody said "What class that man has, what dignity." And I said gee, I was dreaming, "I wonder if I ever win, if I- nah, no way."

And there it was. There I was thinking what I would do if we won, was sprint out on the court why? Because the Rabbi said he talked about Chariots of Fire before and that kind of- I remember those- I would sprint out on the court- you had Rocky Balboa. Figured I would run out and the cameras would go where? Right to the coach. So here I come, running out, and what do they do? Television? They capture that, and put it in slow motion, you know that. And they put music in the background, probably the theme from Rocky. Or Chariots of Fire, and here I come running in slow motion. Not bad? Pretty smart.

And the kid, Derek Whittenburg, who took the shot is a kid who broke his ankle, after 7th game of the season. Doctors said he'd never play again, but he made it back. Miraculously with rehabilitation just for the tournament, the next game we lose, is the last game of his career. Not only varsity, his career, so every game we won he'd run over and he'd hug me. We won 9 games in a row. And he'd run over and he'd hug me every single game. And we had one game we beat Los Vegas on a last second shot we missed it we tapped it we missed the tap, they had three Los Vegas players had the rebound, once the games over, and they knocked it out of each others hands and my kid [inaudible 00:10:44] Bailey, plays Utah, falling to the ground, caught it and threw it up, at the buzzer and banked it in. He was on his keister, threw it up and it went in. And the writers said to me, "would you explain that last play?" I said "that's something we work on every single day. In practise, sometimes its hard to get the opposition to fumble it like that, but-." And Derek Whittenburg would run over and he'd hug me. So for 9 games.

So picture what I had in mind, what I thought. I figured, I'd run out, in slow motion, Whittenburg would turn and see me, right? Nine games he'd hug me, and he'd run to me, in slow motion, you get the picture? Can you see the commercial coming? What a wonderful thing it was. That's what I had in my mind you see? When with 44 seconds to play, you saw that, I called time out, I set up that last play, that lob pass that we threw to the-.

Hey, Federico. You believe I called that play? Yeah. What are you kidding me? You think that just happened? Lorenzo Charles, the kid who dunked its from Brooklyn, New York. You understand what I'm saying you folks from Brooklyn. He's from Brooklyn, New York. I'm from Queens, two city kids, right after I diagram the play, and I thought, "what if it didn't work." So I called Lorenzo over, I said "Lo, come here" he said "what's up coach?" I said "look, pay attention, it's very important, anything, like if this play doesn't work, anything that's up near the basket, at the end of the game, make believe it's a hub cap." You understand me? You see? That's a smart coach you know? You didn't get that from Enterprise, Alabama. To be honest with you.

The shot goes up, it's to the right, I see its gonna be short, Lorenzo Charles grabs it and he dunks it. And at that moment I knew two things: I was the 28th coach in the history of the game to win a championship and there were 50 million people, so I took off to run my commercial, Wide World of Sports. What you see there, is an incredible thing that happens in marketing sometimes. I sprinted and got to centre court, in Albuquerque, New Mexico with 50 million people watching me, to hug Derek Whittenburg, and for the first time in 10 games, he's hugging someone else. I'm out there all by myself. With 50 million people watching me, so embarrassing you know?

That's what happened to me back in 1983. That's what I want to talk about I want to talk about 1983, the year I got to cut the nets down. And what I would like to say, because we are in, okay? I'm going to be tunnel vision for a while, just tunnel vision, about the world that we both travel in, in the business sense. My job. My goal, what I want to do each year, is to win a national championship, I want to cut the nets down. There are 290 division one schools, that have that same goal. There are only three coaches in the history of the game that have done it two times. Only nine coaches who have done it twice. Now its 30 coaches in the history of the game-. Its hard to do, but that's my goal.

What I want to discuss, is how I do my job, in a very competitive field, and see if, in any way, we have some similarities. See if there's a way when I'm done that maybe, it helps you in your highly competitive world too. Because I'm starting again. Each year, season ends, doesn't matter what I did last year, we won a conference championship last year, doesn't matter. We've been in NCAA's six of last seven- doesn't matter. Starts over again.

So how do I do my job? Here's what I'd like to share with you. Of how I try and get it done. I think it's important when the seasons over, I always remember, I love to remember from whence I came. There are three things I think about: where I was, where I am, and where I want to be. If where I am is exactly where I want to be that's as far as I go. If I'm satisfied with where I am in life, professional life's as far as I go.

Well I'm not, I want to win, I want to be the 10th coach to win two national championships. We've been in the final eight three times in the last five years. I'm getting close. To do that, as I begin the journey again, I'd like to remember where I started.

I think its important, you're here because you folks are the best. That's why you're here, but think for a second, about the journey it took to get here. All of you, I'd like to think about your first job. How was it? How did handle it? What was it like?

My first job was the freshmen coach at [inaudible 00:15:46] university, at [inaudible 00:15:46] New Jersey. I wanted to be the best, amazing, I looked at your book it said "Dedication to Excellence".

I read a book by [inaudible 00:15:52] called "Commitment to Excellence." [inaudible 00:15:56] I wanted to be the greatest coach that ever lived. So I read this book. He had a movie out too and I watched the movie. And there's an emotional point in it with [inaudible 00:16:03] standing before his Green Bay Packer team, for the very first time, wants to inspire them. Motivate them, lead them, and he does it in that dramatic fashion, after he finishes the game plan he turns and he challenges these guys. He says "Gentlemen, we'll be successful this year, if you think of three things and three things only: your family, your religion, the Green Bay Packers." And he paused, and he got up, knocked the walls and the rest was history. I said oh that's great, your family, your religion, Rutgers Basketball.

I'm now 21 years old, I got these 17 year old kids, my first time ever, speaking before a group and I finished my game plan and I turned and challenged these kids, just like [inaudible 00:16:48]. I said " gentlemen, we'll be successful this year, you think of three things and three things only: your family, your religion, and the Green Bay Packers." I said that. When you toss that out, you cannot get that back. So I stood there just like [inaudible 00:17:10], and the kids went "oh well I don't know".

 We went out and lost by about 18 point or so. We were tackling people all kinds of stuff. As I stand here before you today to talk about what it takes to cut the nets down, to reach the top in any business, I always like to remember, from once I came, what the journey was all about, what was it like. Remember, I'm the same guy who cutting the nets down, who told his team "the Green Bay Packers". I like to think of it. I worked at Rutgers a couple years got my next big break.

Next big break, worked a few years, became head coach. [inaudible 00:17:51] John Hopkins University. Hey, that's a big job right? I was the tallest person in the whole programme. I like to remember that, where I came from, I worked there, I left, the next big break I got, I worked about seven, eight years, in my business, to become a head coach at division one, there are three divisions.

Division one, I was so proud, I applied for the job at [inaudible 00:18:16] University in Louisville, Pennsylvania. I'm not saying they have a bad basketball team, they hadn't had a winning season wince the French and Indian war. Its one of those jobs where, they're telling you what a great job it is. And I'm telling the people "you won one game last year, one in 26, why do you think its such a good job?" Fella looked at me and said "coach you're overlooking one thing" I said "what's that?" He said "we've got everybody back from that team." I said "wow, am I lucky, the whole team we got back, huh? The guy without thumbs? Yeah he's back. We in good shape."

But you know, there aren't that many jobs, there's only 290 of them. So I got it and I took it. And I was excited, oh this is my- I've worked eight years, eight years, and now I'm on my road. First game I ever coached in division one in my business, was against [inaudible 00:19:07] university up in [inaudible 00:19:07]. Oh yeah, they ranked in the top 10 that year, that year they go to the final four, just like they did last year. I got this team, day before the game, reporters are saying "how do you think you're gonna do?" I said "we're all right, we're excited, we're ready, I'm ready. I've been training for this moment. I'm ready." Fellas said "you know you only won one game last year?" I said "yeah, but we got everybody back."

I want to tell you what you can accomplish, what you can accomplish in life. I took that team, that won one game before, played [inaudible 00:19:38] a team that went to final four, and at the half I was only down by eight, boy was that exciting. The bad news was it was eight touchdowns. I was losing by. At the half, I was losing. In the first game I ever coached, by 56 points. You're walking down the locker room, its not like chess where you resign, you say well I've had enough that's it. You took my king, my pawn, my queen, that's it I'm done. Its not like boxing, they throw the towel in, no. Heres where they said "hey come back up now 15 minutes." "yeah I'll be there."

You're walking down there and the fans are yelling at you "there's more where that came from turkey." "yeah I know, I know." I lost the first game in my business that prepared eight years for I lost by 72 points, wait a second, that's not a bad second half, think about it. I was getting smart even as we went along here. Could you imagine if someone had said to me after that game "coach V, 10 years from this date, you're going to win a national championship." I'd have said "in what sport? Its not going to be in this one, I'll tell you that."

 I'd start taking my picture for the resume, you know? I was done. That's what I like to remember, as I prepare again, in this competitive- I like to remember where I came from. I like to remember the journey. The biggest break I got, was- after that I got the head coaching job, as some of you may have heard of some of you may have not, I own a college. Its great. Every job has its problems every product you're selling sometimes has a problem. My owners problem was I a little credibility. First kid I recruited, not from the New York area, I said "Hi, Jim Valvano, I own a college," kid said "Hey ma, this kid own his own school" I don't own it, that's the name of it, "Maybe he'll give us a dormitory or something."

Unbelievable, worked there five years, then I got the job by presently hold. Which was the biggest break of my life. I am the head basketball coach at North Carolina State in the Atlantic coach conference. I'm not saying we're the best basketball in the country, but we're gonna be up in the top two, three every year. But I was a little worried about getting this job, I'll be honest with you.

I am the son of Rocco and Angelina Valvano, from Naples, Italy. And I'm going to get a job interview down on tobacco road in North Carolina. I sat next to my man Fred here from enterprise, we spoke to each other for 20 minutes I have no idea what he said, he has no idea what is said. But he was laughing a lot at what he said so it must've been funny. I mean here I am, I want this job so badly I go down for the interview. You'll understand this, I get off the plane they meet me at the airport. Fella says "Hi" says "I'm Billy Ray Bob" I said "where are the other two guys?"  [crosstalk 00:23:09] I tried to fit in I said "Jimmy Tommy Tony" tried to adjust, if I can.

So, picture now, I go for the interviews and we find out we kinda like each other a little bit. Month goes by and they offer me the job and I want it, I'm so excited, I'm gonna coach I Atlantic coach conference and I'm ready I get down there, and they're a little worried and I'm a little worried.

And they said "look in order for you to really do the job here we've gotta get you out and speak to our booster club, our alumni, our fans," so I said "I'm ready, what do you want to do?" Said "we have a wolf pack club, that's our support, wolf pack club" 11 thousand members of the wolf pack club, means I have 11 thousand assisting coaches every game that I play.

They've said "you've got to go to the first wolf pack club meeting. And knock them dead, give an inspirational, motivational talk, knock their socks off," and they'll say "we got ourselves a smart Italian from New York." I'm an Italian, so I say "I'm ready" I was dressed kinda like this and they said "no you cannot go that way" and I said "why not" they said "you got a lot to learn, living down south son, you gotta wear the school colours, you're gonna go to a wolf pack meeting, you gotta wear a red jacket," and that's what the wolf pack wore. So I said "okay." And the gave me my first official, eight years ago, NC state red coat, made out of that material, kinda like steel wool. You get hit by a truck, you just brush the sucker off, like that. Just keep going. I'm sure I should clean this thing but the way it follows me around, lets go, here we go. They give me these big wide lapels and it say NC state basketball, I said "I'm ready, I'm fired up, I'll do it" they said "not yet, you got so much to learn."

Those of you who are supporters of particular universities, understand what I'm saying, they say "we have school ties, yo can wear that tie with the redcoat, we have a wolf pack tie." I said "oh I'm ready let me have it" I thought it was gonna be one of those ties with little tiny wolves on it, where you had to get up real close to see "oh, gee, that's a wolf pack tie" nah. This guys got three wolves on it, one, two, three. I'm talking about, three angry wolves. With a fierce growl, and a hat- each wolf has a hat on it. That says "NC state" do you realise how big that's gotta be? To have a wolf with a hat on it? Each one. And its the kind of tie, when you wear that tie, you do not have to wear a shirt, if you know what I'm saying. Have you seen people with ties like that? You know what I'm talking about? Those wide, like that.

So I got this red steel wool coat on, I got this red tie, with a wolf and a half on it, you see because its made out of that material, no matter how you tight that knot, you pull it as tight as you want, size of your fist around your throat, makes your collar go up, kinda like that. I got this red coat on, this tie with a wolf and a half around my neck, and I said "I'm ready to roll" and they said "not yet, you got so much to learn." Now I say this with love in my heart, all of you born and bred southerners, I've lived there eight years, I love it. My wife loves it. My family loves it. But there are difference in every part of the country.

 I was ready to roll and in no place in this United States of America like the south, do you have more of an affection for checked pants. I guarantee you, Fred's got about 26 pairs right now. And I know when he was home he said 'Helen, should I bring about four or five pairs to Chicago or what?" They said to me "coach, you gotta wear your red checked pants." I tried telling them "very rarely, on a Sunday, did Rocco Valvano, yell up to Angelina, 'Hey Ange, where my red checked pants?'" They were shocked I didn't have a pair.

   They gave me my first official, one size fits all, NC- with blocks and in every block it said "NC state Basketball". They said "oh you look good now" I said "let me go" so I had to give my first speech, most important speech of my life, to 300 members of [inaudible 00:27:34] club, whatever I say, is going to spread throughout the state, of what kind of a guy I am, what kind of a speaker I am. Am I inspirational?

So I'm on a plane flying down there, some [inaudible 00:27:46] women sitting next to me, says "are you the coach at state?" I said "yes I am, mam, I'm proud of it. Are you an NC state fan?" She said "NO." I said "oh," got off the plane, got my luggage, fella behind the counter, he said "I saw your picture in the paper, you're the new coach at state." I said "yes I am, are you an NC state fan?" He said "nope" I said "well I'll make you one." He said "oh no you won't." well we don't have a lot of fans here in Greenville.

Now picture this now: I'm at the most important meeting of my life, I'm waiting, 5:30 I'm not picked up quarter to six, not picked up, six o'clock, 6:15 phone rings, I pick it up, page head of wolf pack clubs says "what are you doing there?" I said "I'm in Greenville, where are you?" He said "yeah, yeah, Greenville, describe the airport to me." I said "right behind me it said Greenville, Spartanville, airport." Now, that's right.

Most of you, just like me, until he told me the most important meeting of my life, I flew to the wrong state. I flew to Greenville, South Carolina. Dressed in a red steel wool coat, with a red wolf tie. 300 boosters waitin for their new leader, and I went to the wrong state. How would you like to start the most important job of your life that way? He told me he said "get your tail up here where you work." I said " I'm coming boss" you know what its like going thought that airport like this, and getting back there in line, and that same guy behind the counter says "yeah coach what can I do for you?" And I said "did you realise, that there is a Greenville in both North and South carolina?" True story he goes back and he says "hey Burt, I told you." True story.

You talk about starting a job and it get tough, I like to remember that before I start my journey, I'm the same guy who told his team "Green Bay Pack-", I lost my-, I flew to the wrong state. I also cut the nets down at the national championships. Become one of 28 coaches ever to do that. Its incredible the things that you can accomplish.

One last story then I want to talk seriously about something Rabbi talked about that was very dear to my heart.

My favourite thing happened 1983, what a championship. I'm home one night and the phone rings, pick it up and I said "uh yes" they said "is his coach Valvano?" I said "yes it it" they said "this is the White House calling." I'm like wow the White House. What would you do if you had a call from the White House? I hung up.

Maybe you get a lot of calls from the White House, this was my first you know, I figured it was my cousin or somebody, cousin [inaudible 00:30:30] calling me or whatever. So I hung up, phone rang again. "coach this is the White House calling, do not hang up." I said "Nah, I didn't hang up, we got cut off." And you know how it is, when you win a championship, you see it in football, baseball, basketball, they say "the president of the United States requests your presence at the oval office, tomorrow to present you with a plaque to commemorate your national championship," and that's heavy stuff a kid from Queens, New York. Son of Rocco and Angelina Va- I mean I'm gonna go to the White House. But you gotta play the role fist, so I said "let me check my calendar." Cannot just call me at the last minute like this you know what I mean? I was going grocery shopping tomorrow. I said "well I can be there tomorrow at 3ish" they said "you'll be here at 10ish." I said "Well I'll juggle around a bit." [crosstalk 00:31:24]

Now I call up home, you know what that's like call up your parents like "Mom, dad, I'm going to the White House." She said "what did you do?" I said "its good, its good, they're going to give me an award," she said "really?" One of the things she said was "please, do not embarrass the family." "keep your mouth shut." She said. "just smile and keep your mouth shut" I said "mom I'll be fine."

I went to the White House, what a great experience, [inaudible 00:31:57] gonna be on television, its a wonderful story, and we get there early, and its one of those things where you rehearse it a little bit, and they tell me "presidents gonna walk in, that's when we all get up," they had someone come in as a stand in, someone with clip boards, right. They say, "what are you going to say to the president?" I said "what's he going to say to me?" They said," don't get wise here now." I said "wait, I thought that was the way it worked, he'd say something to me, Id say something to him." If he's got nothing to say, I'll carry the whole conversation.

Picture this: president finally comes in, it was great, everybody gets up, you shook- I noticed some group dynamics, terrific. There's the president of the United States, has a little smile. Everybody in the room has a little smile. When he went like that we all went like that. He went to sit down onc, he faked, went like, everybody went like "whoa". I said what pressure I have on me. I'm not sure I can handle this pressure. Now he's a nice man, whatever your political affiliation is, he's a nice man, he really is. He's charismatic he's warm, he made me feel at home, that's probably not good for me, I'll be honest. He made me feel at home, I started you know, "want a piece of gum?" I said to him. It was really bad I only had one slice, I'd split it in half or something. I was feeling good.

So now, we're right before it goes on television, they said "Mr. President, one minute til air time." So he, he goes to sit down, he gives one of those where he looks back up to me and he says "coach I apologise, how do you pronounce your name?" I said "its Valvano sir" and he said "Valvano?" And I said "yes sir very good."

Now not everything I say starts down here, I mean up here, it starts here goes up here, and goes boop, and it comes out, I've no control over it. Once its here goes boop, then its out. Heres one of those occasions, picture this: the oval office, the president of the United States, says "how do you pronounce that?" I say "its Valvano sir" and he said "Valvano?" I said "yes sir." And I looked at him I said "is yours Reagan, or Regan?" I said that.

And as soon as I said it I said "Aw, ma, I'm sorry ma." And the whole room went *Gasp*. And its an amazing thing, what happens to your body, I started immediately to sweat. I mean up here, over here, my pits, I'm standing in a pool of water. In the oval office, and I said "please laugh sir, please laugh." And Ronald Reagan went "Aha ha ha." And everybody in the room went "Aha ha ha." And I went "Aha ha ha." That's a true story. I have it on tape, the president he says, "well coach Valvano, that was a great victory, are you gonna do it again? I said, I'm not gonna do it again, I won't do it again." He looked at me like I was crazy.

In 1983, I had a wonderful year. Now I like to think each year as I try to get to the top again, I want to think about where my career began, where the journey began, every speaker I've ever heard, in a motivational sense has always talked about "do this, this, this and you're there". That doesn't work that way, not in my business, maybe in yours, but not in mine. Hey you think of where you started, and the journey and what it took, I understand there's a gentlemen here, Mr. Todd, 52 years, and a million dollar round table, am I correct? That's unbelievable! Congratulations, that's fantastic. And I bet you, if I gave him the mic, he'd come up and tell some stories, about where he failed, where he made a mistake.

Now I want to talk to you about, how I do my job. I have like 6 minutes left. How I do my job, in a competitive field, how each day I try to beat the Nortedames, North Carolinas, and everybody else, how am I gonna do that? I think every body has to have a personal philosophy of how you live your life. Heres mine. Very simply put, you, plus motivation, equals success. I have that only thing in my locker room, nothing else in my locker room but that sign. You, plus motivation, equals success, I have it on cards. Book marks. I have it on everything. It drives me. Its a passion.

I was 16 years old I heard the Reverend Bob Richards speak, remember him the Wheaties guy? Pole volt champion of Olympics. Here's what he said "the lord must've loved ordinary people, because he made so many of us." And there I am 16 thinking I'm special. And here's a man that respects it. The man must've loved ordinary people he made so many of us ordinary. You get a little down at 16 someone telling you that. And then he said the line that changed my life at 16 that I felt then, I'm 41 years old, I've been working 21 years in my business, and I feel it the same way today, he said "every single day, in every walk of life, ordinary people, do extraordinary things. Ordinary people accomplish extraordinary things."

And I raised my hand, I'm applying for the job right now, I'm an ordinary guy, I want to do extraordinary things in my life, and I believe it I think that true, I think that's what its all about. And I know this group has that same feeling. How do you do that? How do you go from the ordinary to the extraordinary I think its the second thing. Its motivation, and motivation to me is three things, three things each day I try to do. To get myself ready to roll. Some people will say to me, "how do you motivate 18 year old kids? How do you motivate yours-"

I don't in 21 years motivate anybody, except each day, one person, I get up. James Tommy Anthony Valvano, and that's a full time job, keeping me up at the level and while I hope that if I'm there my assistants my players, everyone else, but its a full time job for me. I'm not a finger pointer, say "hey, I'm working my- how about you-" no I work each day to get myself there. How? Motivation. Number one, enthusiasm, [inaudible 00:38:33] speaking at the graduating class at Harvard, said "nothing great has ever been accomplished without enthusiasm". How enthusiastic are you every day? Every day in your profession?

 interview people every day, and I'm very bad, I'm one of the worst coaches to come and say "what's the benefits here?" Id don't like that, I've never hired someone who's asked me what the benefits- one fella asked me last year "uh, do you have a dental plan?" I said "yeah, if we don't win, the alumni kick our teeth in." That's me, I don't like when people ask how many weeks off we get before they start to work, that's how I am. I love what I do, I'm very fortunate, enthusiasm, give yourselves an enthusiasm check.

One of the things which is disappointing to me at times is when I travel around and someone says "that was a good talk, I wish my son or daughter had heard it." I say "I've been doing this job 30 years. I don't know." Someone else "I've been doing this 23 years." See I never understood that, I didn't realise, that after a certain number of years in your profession you put it on automatic pilot. And you automatically win, you automatically sell, why because by the very force of your presence. I say "that's a great thing to know" if I hear another coach say "how long you been coaching?" They say "eight years." "oh, oh he's done. I'll kill him, I've been coaching 21, you've got no shot." Don't work that way, you must maintain each year, the enthusiasm.

My second part of motivation is dream. Do you still dream? I still dream. I dream all the time, I watch that film a lot, I also for my players we have one practise every year, they come up on the court, there's no balls, there's no drills, all we do is practise cutting the net. I have golden scissors, they carry each other up, they carry me up, I cut the last one. We do that, we film it, we go up and watch it, then we watch us at 83' doing it, we see the reality, we see the dream.

The dream can become the reality. How? By being enthusiastic. By fuel that you can accomplish that. Extraordinary events from ordinary people. And also by the work ethic that I don't have to tell you about, you know. It just took me a long time to understand eh relationship, between work and success was not direct. If you work hard you'll be successful. Relationship was if you don't work hard, you cannot be successful. That's a big difference. Too me a while to understand that. You work hard because that's part of being successful, but if you don't work hard you have no shot.

So there is my philosophy of getting the job done. A pinch of laugher each day. I think you should laugh every day. I want to be enthusiastic, and kep my dream alive each day and work even though I'm going to fail. And the last thing is what the Rabi was talking about. And when I was in the room listening, I almost cried. He talked about his father. I want to talk about my father, and then I'll go out of here.

Rocco Valvano. I have no problems telling you, maybe its my family, he talked about family, it means so much to him. I could look at anybody and tell you I love my mother, I love my father. I have no problem saying to them, I've never had a problem. I understand the statement that sometimes the people you understand the least- That wasn't the case with me. My father was the single most important influential person in my life. He never made a lot of money, and I think he's the richest man I ever knew. He never had a position of real importance, and yet he influenced more people than anyone else that I know. My father, Rocco Valvano. You have to share. So when I got this job my first job. I said to my pop, I said "Boy, its great dad," and he said "What do you want to do?" I said " want to win national championship." And he said "I'll be there"

It took me eight years of work before I even made the tournament that was my dream to win. Eight years. First year I made it coaching in [inaudible 00:42:34], I call up home. My dad and mom in New York I said "we made it, we got a bid." So we celebrated the way Italians celebrate, we eat. It was on a Sunday, we start at 2, finish at midnight, half time about 6. My father calls me upstairs in his bedroom, which I've never been in my fathers bedroom, and he calls you up and he says- there's a suitcase. My fathers never left New York. My father thinks everything north of the George Washington bridge is Canada, right? We lived in a neighbour hood with [inaudible 00:43:11], I brought in my wife was the first fair skin person that they ever met. Brought her home my father said "we're not sure what it is but lets keep it."

He's got the suitcase, "what's that for?" He said "I'm gonna be there when you win national championship, my bags are packed," I said "pop, its hard to w-" "you'll do it" we lost the first round. Next year same thing, we lost the second round. He said "you're gaining" I move to North Carolina, we made the tournament, I called him, it became a phrase. My father said "my bags are packed for you, my suitcase is packed for you." And we kept losing. The year we won, 1938, I got a great picture of my father and I on centre court in Albuquerque, New Mexico, hugging and my brother gave it to me and it said "like father, like son". Its the most important gift that I have from my brother. That picture, I know I'm not half the man my father is, but just that he knew what compliment that would be to me.

That night we celebrated, he said "what are you doing now?" I said "I'm going to do it again." He said "and I'll be there." And I said "I know you will." The next year we made the tournament, called "my bags are packed." We lost. Next year we made it, we lost. We lost the regional finals, after the game I called up, we lost to Saint John's. In Denver, Colorado, he said "what a great game I saw it. Next year you'll make it." Then I flew home that night.

He was one of those people who after I spoke to him I always felt better than before. Maybe you know someone like that, after you talk to them, you feel better then you did before you talked to them. I get home that night, two years ago, a get to my house in North Carolina. A lot of people there, I go what's the matter? They call me in, two years ago, April, my father had a heart attack and he died. And I lost my best friend in the whole world, this is not a sad story, its happy story. But I was knocked for a loop, those of you who've lost a loved one you know, what that's like this was my first time in my life. I didn't know how to handle it, I couldn't understand what it was I was missing. A lot of people lose the people they love, and maybe handle it a little bit better. What was it? I didn't see him all the time. I was travelling a lot.

The gift my father gave me. I think its the strongest most powerful gift I've ever received, and its a gift I find we don't like to give to each other, both in our business and in our personal life. I spent two years trying to give this gift to other people, the gift my father gave me, every day of my life, was he believed in me. My father believed in me, he believed in me when I failed, he believed in me when I wasn't as fine a son, friend, husband, father, as I could be. I've done all that. He the one person who when I didn't measure up to my standard or someone else's standard he'd look me in the eye and say "you're going to make it, I know you are, my bags packed, you're going to make it."

How many people do I give that to? My own players. And how often when they make a mistake am I critical but never ever, look then in the eye and say "son, you'll make it, I know you will. I know you can I believe in you." How many people that I work with do that? How many people I work for do that? Its an incredible gift and I've worked two years to add it to my personal philosophy.

I like to remember where I started. I know where I am. And I know where I'm going. And I know I'm gonna get there. I'm gonna be excited, enthusiastic, every day that god gives me on this earth. I am going to dream my dreams, I'm gonna work, not harder than anybody else, as hard as everyone. And accept the failures, and I'm gonna laugh a little bit and believe in the people I work with, the people who work for me, and the people I work for, and there's nothing going to stop me from cutting that net in my second national championship, and when I do, I'm going to sprint out on the court, you'll know why I'm sprinting out, and I'm gonna look up and I'm gonna say "Pop, this ones for you." And I know he's up there. Elbowing someone, I know its no a referee, its gonna be somebody else, he's elbowing someone, saying, "that's my son. I knew he was gonna do it, my bag were always packed."

I ask you to have your bags packed to share in the successes of others, to not only have your bags packed to share but be able to believe in the people you work with, if you can fill each day, I think, with that kind of belief and enthusiasm, the dream and the work ethic, a little laughter, I cannot imagine us all not having the chance, or cutting the nets down, years in a row. I said that at the beginning, this is a special audience, it a special group, its been very motivating and invigorating for me to be here, I know that yo folks can accomplish anything you want. I know because my father told me so. God bless you, and I hope you have the kind of year that you want to have.

Thank you so much.

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uezVYG4ba1...

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Lindsay Gaze: 'I thought he was playing one of his typical practical jokes', Basketball Hall of Fame enshrinement - 2015

November 22, 2015

12 September 2015, Naismith Hall of Fame, Springfeld, Massacheusetts, USA

No transcript availalbe at this time. submissions@speakola.com

Source: http://www.basketball.net.au/lindsay-gaze-...

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Knute Rockne: 'Win just one for the Gipper', Notre Dame v Army half-time - 1928

November 11, 2015

10 November 1928, Notre Dame v Army, Yankee Stadium, NYC, New York, USA

The speech is immortalised in the film 'Knute Rockne - All American' which starred Ronald Reagan as George Gipp. As a politician, Reagan turned the phrase into a folksy catch-cry. 

Well, boys ... I haven't a thing to say.  Played a great game...all of you. Great game. 

I guess we just can't expect to win ‘em all.  I'm going to tell you something I've kept to myself for years -- None of you ever knew George Gipp.  It was long before your time.  But you know what a tradition he is at Notre Dame...

And the last thing he said to me -- "Rock," he said - "sometime, when the team is up against it -- and the breaks are beating the boys -- tell them to go out there with all they got and win just one for the Gipper...

I don't know where I'll be then, Rock", he said - "but I'll know about it - and I'll be happy."

Alright.

PLAYER # 12:  Well, what are we waiting for?

With a single roar, the players throw off their blankets and rush through the doorway.

Source: http://archives.nd.edu/research/texts/rock...

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In COACH Tags KNUTE ROCKNE, AMERICAN FOOTBALL, FIGHTING IRISH, GEORGE GIPP, RONALD REAGAN
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Terry Wallace: 'I'll spew up!' speech, versus Collingwood, The Year of the Dogs - 1996

September 30, 2015

28 July, 1996, Footscray v Collingwood, Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia

I don't know about you blokes but I can't bear fucking losing a game like that! Look, fantastic effort but what does a fucking fantastic effort mean? It doesn't get us anything! We don't get diddly squat! We don't get a point. They don't just give us something for just fucking getting close! It means nothing. If you think that I'm going to be happy walking into this room when we get beaten still, we can't be! We just can't accept it! I don't know about you guys, but if I see one bloke walk out of here, getting a pat on the back from people out there for a good effort, I'll spew up! Because it's just not acceptable! We were a rabble in that first quarter, absolutely bloody disgraceful. Absolutely disgraceful. yeah, for three quarters we were worked our asses off, we worked our backsides off to get back into the game, but the game is about 120 minutes of footy, and that was the most winnable one that we get for a long time, and we just pissed it down the drain. We absolutely pissed that game down the drain. Don't any one of you forget about it. Take away one thing from this game. You have the ability to play in this competition and to play it very very very well. We cannot got from that [hand gesture] which we've displayed right in the three quarters, back to what we displayed in the first quarter ever again. Ever again.,

Go and have your showers, we'll see you back at the social club.

 

Similar content: Danny Southern's jumper presentation to Roarke Smith, mentioning death of his brother.

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wkA7qx-WJl...

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Unknown: 'Cammo, dunno if I like ya', Coach post-game meltdown

September 4, 2015

Date unknown, a football ground, Melbourne, Australia

Was it seventy points we were up by at half time? Granty, seventy points? Yeah. We’ve lost by three. Go and f*** yourselves fellas.  I could rant and rave. I could rant and rave but I realised today that I am coaching a s*** football team. Today - today’s the day, not the day the teddy bear’s had their picnic, it was the day I realised I was coaching a bunch of blokes that aren’t - aren’t there? Physically, I don’t think we’re there. Mentally I don’t think we’re there. And it’s doing my f***en head in! I put the f***en time in each week, I’ll get Fammo to do the videos, I get bananas, I get lollies, I get Solo ... shove the f***en Solo up yer a***!

Seriously! Don’t open the can. Shove it up your f***en a***! I’m f***en sick of it! Each week, I put in till there’s no more to f***en put. I put in and I’m sick of it. Ben Kildo, you’ve had fifty five touches, win the f***en hard ball you red head c***! Cammo! ... dunno if I like ya. I love ya! But do you love playing footy? Morro, I’ll back you to the hills every week, cos I’ve got ya here. I’ve got ya here and I f***en love ya.  But get as a f***en goal ya c***! Ya f***en cost us the game! Go and root ya f***en mother! Cos yer shit! And we’ve lost! And you can all go f*** yourselves and next year I’m coaching St Albans.

Source: https://youtu.be/dQHEjHIweJY

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Brendan McCartney: 'You hope you can be a guardian angel, when it's your turn', Rising Star speech - 2013

September 3, 2015

4 September, 2013, NAB Rising Star Award

You don’t get too much time to watch TV when you’re a senior coach but there are two ads that are favourites of mine ... the Rhonda and Ketut serial that just goes on and on and on, there’s Trent Too Goods just arrived on the scene so it’s going to be interesting to see the way it turns out, and my other favourite ad is the NAB ad, where Joel Selwood is explaining the virtues of what happens when you don’t kick well for goal to an eagerly listening young boy.

And it took me back to 2007 and it mightn’t surprise you to learn that Joel Selwood won this award that year, and every Monday morning he’d be in to do his clips with me at about seven thirty quarter to eight, and then he would proceed to go about the rest of his week. And one day he played exceptionally well but he kicked one goal four. He actually made a mistake. Joel Selwood made some errors, and another coach heard us doing our clips and he wandered in. And this is maybe where the ad has come from, I can’t guarantee it, but he was explaining to Joel in his own unique way, he had an incredible capacity this coach, and he now coaches the Port Adelaide football club, to give direct feedback without offending anyone, he’s an amazing coach and an amazing football person, and he explained to Joel: ‘Joel, if you kick the ball between the little stick and the big stick, you get one point. But if you kick it between the big sticks, you get six points! Now if you’d kicked all those balls between the big sticks, we would have won by eleven goals four, and not seven goals ... whatever it was’ . So maybe that’s where it came from, but, it almost was like Joel  talking to the little fella, and Kenny Hinkley talking to Joel.

We’re all here because we’ve been footified, i don’t know what they means, but I’m going to try to have a go at explaining it, what it’s done to me,. And it first hit me at the age of four, at the 1963 mid Murray grand final., between Niyah, and the all conquering Lalbert football cub, who hadn’t lost all year. The Niyah boys contained three McCartney brothers. The coach, my uncleBill, the gun centreman, Graham, my dad, and Uncle Doc, who was a famous senior sergeant in the west, who ended up becoming a great Western Bulldogs patron and member.

And he had a way with words, Doc. He once described himself as a cross between Buddy Franklin and Tony Lockett. A good mate of his, who was also a very good judge, refuted the above, but he said, there were a couple of correlations. Sure, Doc was a left footer, like Buddy. And just like Plugger, he had two arms and two legs. But he said that’s where the similarities ended. The person standing here talking that day was actually the mascot that day and I still have the photo to prove it.

In fact when it came time to run on the ground, I froze in a fit of panic and went no further. The sea of faces, I don’t know how many were there that day, certainly wasn’t an MCG crowd and the blue and gold streamers spooked me, and I stopped and I don’t remember much of the rest of the day. I was only four at the time. But what I learned over the journey, listening to my dad, and family and friends who came in and out of our house, was that to win that day, they’d have to play out of their skins, and they’d need a lot of luck. Because the team they were playing was all conquering, unbeaten, and they had a dead eye dick full forward who never, ever, missed.

Well legend has it that with two minutes to go, the dead eye dick got the ball twenty metres out from goal. You guessed the rest - he missed, and they hung on and won by a point.

Some forty years later, I was lucky enough to go back to that area, for their first grand final since the 1963 triumph. And help with training, and just give them a little bit of a talk about winning finals, and what it means to do your bit and play your role in a grand final, so your team and your club can get over the line. It’s funny where footy takes you. I grew up idolising those boys, who played in that premiership, and there’s no doubt about it, country towns are the world champs at pinning nicknames on people. In that team, Bluey, Tiger, Nifty, Happy, Lefty, Champ and my all time favourite, Chesty Coburn.

When you were born into our clan it wasn’t hard to be footified. Dad played at the highest level. Somewhere in our family exists the letter Footscray sent him to invite him to come down and train. That year was 1954. Pretty famous and symbolic in our club. The Rose brothers were family friends, Collingwood greats. And a Geelong player by the name of Bill Ryan was a great friend of dad’s. Bill Ryan was the Jeremy Howe of forty years ago. And for you young people in the room, YouTube him, number 26 at Geelong, it’s a lot of fun to watch.

As a way of life in our family, Sundays dominated the week. We went to church, and we only ever ate after the World of Sport panel. Only ever when the panel was finished. Sweets got fit around the mark of the day and the woodchop.  Young ones in the room,  you should youtube the World of Sport panel. It was orgnanised chaos, but some of the most amazing people came together and expoused the virtues of footy and who was going to win the flag. There was no 3.20 game there was nof.40 twilight game, so we got kicked outside to kick and scrap, and tackle and harass and wrestle for the rest of the day. And we did it as well as we could. It was fun being Jezza, Baldock, Hudson, Nicholls, again for the young people in the room I’ll translate the names, Cotchin, Murphy, Natanui and Hawkins. They were amazing players those boys in the old days, and I guess of the beauty of being able to be in the game for a long time is you see so many great people through the generations.

And don’t worry about the old boys, if a press was on, back in those days or if there was tagging, or an open forward line, or if they were packing up the stoppages, they all would have been fine.

It was a simple life, it was a good life, but it was a footy life. There’s six of us children in our clan, mum and dad are now gone, and they’ve all walked the footy journey with me in different ways and they all communicated in their own style.  During any one season, one sister will text, ‘Bren are you okay?’ ‘Yes, I’m fine.’ Another will send, ‘hang in there, you’ll be fine’. Sister number three will text, ‘Brenno, they’re hating you on facebook mate’, or two weeks later, ‘geez, don’t Tim and Andy just love you’ .

My youngest brother is a civilian. I use the word ‘civilian’ to describe non AFL footy people. He;s forever optimistic and full of great ideas. He’s a great footy man. My other brother, well he doesn’t text, not sure if he doesn’t want to, or doesn’t know how to. The translation for him not communicating is ‘get on with it, quit your sooking, and harden up.’

For me though,  it doesn’t really matter, just to know that they think enough is the important bit.

We’re a football family. Being footified can take you across a myriad of people, experiences and landscapes. It’s amazing the bonds, and memories and friendships it creates for you. I remember once on a cold wet day at North Geelong as a young and skinny kid, I was getting a lesson and it sort of went like this. A big burly opponent who I’d kicked a couple of goals on said, ‘son you get another kick, and I’m gonna belt you.’  Might surprise some people in the room, might not, I chirped back. My lights were about to go out when a guardian angel arrived. My coach Johnny Schofield arrived just in time and knocked him out. John Schofield, bless his soul, was Will Schofield’s dad. It’s a small world, footy.

A couple of years later on, an older boy, I was having my character challenged at half time by a really irate coach. Just a young man, making his way in a really competitive game of footy. I left the rooms at half time bereft of confidence, not really wanting to go back out there, we can all relate to that, with these words ringing in my ears - ‘if you don’t lift, you’re not going to get a game next week’. Right on cue, another guardian angel appeared. He put his arm around my shoulder and said, ‘you follow me around for the next ten minutes, and I’ll make sure you get a kick.’ He then preceded to give me three goals, one after the other. That man’s name, John Scarlett, Matthew Scarlett’s dad. It’s a small world, this game. 

In fact some events can leave an incredible impact on you. And you hope when you’re needed, you can be a guardian angel when it’s your turn, for the next generation. Isn’t that how it should be at a footy club, the older boys help the kids, and the leaders create the environment that is right.

The month of September is a great month anticipation and excitement, or in our case it’s a month of reflection. And you know for us, it’s the latter. It’s hard to switch off a footified football brain. You get asked your thoughts on who’s the best coach, who’s the best young player. And it got me thinking.  I was looking at the coaches in our game. I stopped at Al Clarkson, a coach I respect incredibly, and I started to imagine Clarko as a contestant on The Block. He’d be a handful, wouldn’t he? Scotty Cam would know he was alive.

And I started to think about our young players, and I linked it up with the show Survivor. O’Meara, Crouch, Vlaustin, Wines, imagine those boys as contestants on a show like that.  Competitive environment.

I look around the room and see the faces of young men, who are recognisable but not as recognisable as they will be in years to come. I also see the faces of people that I know well in the various clubs, who just work tirelessly to shape, mould and give their young boys the best opportunity.

But most of all I see the proud faces of the parents. It’s a proud badge, the parent of a young player who is better than most wears. It ‘s our national game, and every young boy wants to be the next star. So the parent of a young boy who is already recognisable in our talent pathways, they also become recognisable. There’s Brad Crouch’s dad. There’s Lachie Whitfield’s mum they say at the local footy, when in fact if you dig a bit deeper, they are no different to any other parent.  In fact if you scratch below the surface, what you have seen is they’ve gone above and beyond - the travel expenses, the support mechanisms they put in place, they’re the crutch for the bad news, and they’re the leveller for the good news. Usually their brothers and sisters have been footified as well., generally the whole family.

When I close my eyes, I can still hear the words of Margot Ottens in 1997. She said, ‘he’s a quiet boy,  a good boy. He won’t let you down.’ She was right about her boy Brad.  I still hear the words of Rick Harley when his son became All-Australian. He rang and said, ‘we both knew he would do something special one day.’ There was a lot a lot more to come for Tom. 

To share an after premiership beer with Ted Corey, Gary Enright, Cameron Ling’s dad, Andrew Mackie’s dad, wasn’t hard to guess where the decency, integrity, humility, and determination came from. To have Joe Giansiricusa spend game day on the road with us in Tasmania recently, and to hear him speak about it being one of the great days of his life, watching his boy Daniel prepare to play, to see the tension, feel the tension, embrace the unique smell of a footy change room, to witness the exhaustion and the fatigue of the boys after the game, he got to share that with his son.

I got the feeling that Joe was footified before that day, but even more so now. To the boys we draft to our club, my pledge to them always, and their parents, is that I’ll look after them, like they’re my own son. Responsibility is then mine to deliver on that pledge. It’s a responsibility I’m happy to accept, and something that has been building in me since that day in 1963.

One night recently - you do have some unique experiences with your boys - I was watching some vision, and I started to get frustrated at what I was seeing from this young man. So I messaged him, it went something like this: ‘I’m seeing some poor habits emerging in your game. Please come and see me tomorrow so we can work through them. ‘ Within thirty seconds came the reply, ‘Sweet m8. Can’t wait to c ya tomoz!’ It got me a little agitated, so I sent back, ‘this won’t be a social chat mate, we need to fix this up!’ Fifteen seconds later, ‘Sweet as, coach, can’t wait to get in there and get better! C ya tomoz!’ We worked through the vision the next morning, and as he walked out it got me thinking, about his future and this boy, the person the man that he’s going to be. His future is going to be brilliant. He’s a good listener, he works at his craft, and he can already deal with the tension, stress and scrutiny that this game throws at you. Young people with talent who have those life attributes, they are our next champions of the game, and I’m sure that there’s many in the room today.

And as this world changes, so quickly, the one thing that I don’t think we should forget is that the fundamental principles of life, they haven’t changed. Honesty, work ethic, respect, humility and commitment to doing what’s right. We’re all privileged to work in this industry. As tough as it gets, as brutal as it gets, we must all respect our clubs, respect the game, respect the governance of the game, and most of all, respect each other.

Thanks so much for listening.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EcAS6r5zGH...

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In COACH Tags AFL, BRENDAN MCCARTNEY, FOOTY, RISING STAR, GRASSROOTS, PARENTS
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Nigel 'Occa' Dransfield: "There was this chick that did this f*cken marathon" - 2002

August 11, 2015

2002, Shepherd's Bush Raiders v Regents Park, London Aussie Rules, London, UK

Occa's Shepherd's Bush were 45 point down in first quarter and won by 2 points. This speech almost certainly got them over the line.

Best way to win this f***en game is these c***heads here want us to get out of the centre. Best way to f***en stick it up everyone’s f***en a*** is to take this f***en last quarter.

Team: Cmon boys! Let’s go! C’mon!

Can you feel it now that we’ve got our hand on it! These c***s are f***en stopping! I’ve seen it before so don’t just stand there and do nothing. We’ve got the run of play now, so we can take this f***en game! Stick it up their f***en a***s they’re nothing!

[Inaudible, team yelling]

Look at each other in the eyes. You see the f***en desire there. Their f***en dead! They’re dead. We’ll take this game away from these c***s and take the bloody thing home. F*** these c***s we’re going to run all over them.

[edit]

Listen hard. I dunno if anyone saw the Olympics f***en somewhere in the eighties there was this chick that did this f***en marathon and she f***en fair enough she come f***en tenth or twentieth or something but that’s not important. The poor bitch was f***en running ... she actually f***en crawled to the f***en line. She didn’t f***en give up. She f***en pushed herself, she pushed herself, she pushed herself to near f***en exhaustion. That’s what I’m asking out of you blokes. To push yourselves right to the final hooter. [team] C’mon boys. And take this f***en prize away from these c***s. They don’t deserve it. We f***en do.

[Inaudible - yelling ] Let’s go take it off em!

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thWqNof5nX...

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In COACH Tags AUSTRALIAN RULES, COACH, LOCAL FOOTY, AFL, THREE QUARTER TIME, TRANSCRIPT, VIDEO
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