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Bob Uecker: 'When he called me about wrestling, I didn’t really want to do it', WWE Hall of Fame: 2010

July 26, 2017

27 March 2010, Phoenix, Arizona, USA

Thank you very much. Thank you Richie (Dick Ebersol), long time friend. I had a lot to say but that (Antonio) Inoki guy (who spoke in Japanese) said the same stuff I was going to say. I was back there saying, ‘What’s he doing? He stole my stuff.’

Anyway, I wasn’t always a great player. People say, ‘You can talk the way you do because you were always a great ballplayer.’ Well, I wasn’t. Signed for a very modest $3000 bonus with the Braves. Which aggravated my old man because he didn’t have that kind of money to put out. But the Braves took it. And from there, I went on, was with the Braves twice actually. they didn’t believe I was as bad the first time, the second time I proved it . St Louis Cardinals where I showed up for every game, which i think showed great team spirit. And those I didn’t show up for I always tried to catch on the radio.

I played for the St. Louis Cardinals, where I won a world championship in 1964. Bing Devine was the general manager of the Cardinals at that time. He asked me to do him a favor that would really help the club. I said, ‘Sure, I’m a team guy.’ He said, ‘We want to inject you with hepatitis. That will allow us to call somebody up to take your spot.’ I said, ‘Can I sit on the bench?’ He said, ‘Yeah, we’ll put a plastic thing around you. Maybe you can go over and shake hands with some of the Yankee players and infect them.’ We went on to win the World Championship that year.

Actually, the first sport I tried when I was a youngster was football. My dad didn’t know a lot about sports but he wanted me to do what all the other kids were doing. He gets me this football. We were passing it and trying to kick it. I couldn’t throw it. He can’t throw it. We were really getting aggravated and stuff like that. Then a nice-enough neighbor came over and put some air in it, and it made a huge difference.

Actually, I took an interest in wrestling, in high school. I wasn’t a very big guy. I was about 5-11. I weighed, I don’t know, maybe 75, 80 pounds. A couple guys used to wear my supporter as a wristband. I came from a family that didn’t have a lot of money. My mother made my supporter out of a flour sack. Little specks of flower came dropping out of it. In the front, it said ‘Pillsbury’s Best.’

Tonight, I wore my Hall of Fame ring from wrestling. They gave everybody one from the WWE, thank you very much. All the other wrestlers got a diamond. I got a zircon. And theirs is not adjustable like mine. At the awarding of the championship rings the following year, that’s what every player’s dream is, a world championship. I remember opening night in St. Louis, 1965, they’re presenting the rings and they threw mine out in left field. I found it and put it on. Nobody else got theirs thrown. They had to hand it to them (shrugs).

I set a lot of records. I never stole a base in the major leagues. I never attempted to steal a base in the major leagues. I showed up for every game, which I thought showed great team spirit. The ones I didn’t show up for, I always tried to catch on the radio.

Meeting (NBC Sports and Entertainment Chairman) Dick Ebersol a long time ago. Midnight Special. Saturday Night Live. All those shows through Richie I participated in. When he called me about wrestling, I didn’t really want to do it. I was doing baseball Spring training was when Wrestlemania III was going to take place in Detroit. I kept telling him no but he came out there and we finally agreed to do it, and it was one of the best things I’ve ever done in my life.

I remember going to Los Angeles to do the promotion stuff. It was Hulk Hogan, (Andre) the Giant, (Bobby) the Brain (Heenan), Jake ‘The Snake’ Roberts, who coincidentally said, ‘Uke, why don’t you take a picture with Damian?’ I said, ‘Who’s Damian.’ He said, ‘He’s in the bag.’ I said, ‘So am I. Give me a couple more beers.’ So he took the snake out and I put him around me. He said, ‘Don’t worry. He’s big and he's strong.’ He got his tail around my leg and I’m holding him and I’m looking at Jake and he’s got this huge scar right here (on his chest). I said, ‘What is that?’ He said, ‘That’s where Damian bit me.’ I said, ‘Oh, what a great time that must be. I hope he bites me, too.’

I remember the one thing with Jake with Donald Trump’s wife, Ivana. He put that snake down at her feet and she left Wrestlemania so fast, she just left Donald there and she ain't seen him since, I guess.

We did the promotional stuff. I got to work with Mary Hart. Beautiful lady, great sport and all that. When we go to Detroit to do the show, I’m having the time of my life. And when the Giant came out and choked me, and let me go, I didn’t know he was going to do that. I really didn’t. I was supposed to talk about Vanna White. He didn’t care about Vanna White. He wanted to kill somebody. When he choked me and let me go, now if the camera stays on, you see me on top of Andre. Oh yeah. Vince McMahon was screaming, ‘Get off him. He’s got a match.’ I got him in a step-over toe hold, I don’t really know what it was. It wasn’t all Andre. I remember later on, when I was changing underwear (laughter)… I wasn't going to let that guy get away with that.

As I said earlier, some of the greatest times I’ve had in sports, entertainment, anything else, was to be around Richie, Vince McMahon and all these wrestling greats. The old-timers back there, back when I wrestled, I think got more interested in wrestling, when I was 8 or 9 years old, my mother started taking in wrestler’s laundry to make a couple extra bucks. I remember taking Dick ‘The Bruiser’s’ tights and putting them on. They were tight, nice. He came in the booth one day. I was doing play by play, imitating Dick ‘The Bruiser.’ (Gruff voice) Swing and a miss, struck him out. One day he came in and said, ‘Let’s see if you think you’re funny now.’ He was a football player with the Green Bay Packers, Dick ‘The Bruiser.’ All the wrestlers that came to Milwaukee in those years wrestled at the (indistinguishable) Hall. I started becoming a wrestling fan. I got a kick out of that. I still do today. Unbelievably strong, athletic. It reminds me of myself when I was younger.

When I look back, I was a right-handed-hitting, strikeout artist. Sooner or later, I was going to hit .200. It tied me with another sports great, Don Carter, one of our top bowlers. To have been a member of baseball team, to broadcast baseball today, to mess around with television shows and movies and all of this stuff, and tonight especially to be here with you. When I walked in here tonight and looked around, I said, ‘Man, this pace is jam packed.’ I know it will be tomorrow, too, for Wrestlemania. I'll be there, too.

Anyway, I wanted to thank you for your time tonight and patience. To all the members of the WWE, like I said before, great athletes, unbelievable entertainment. I don’t know how you guys do it, I really don’t All the body punches you take. That’s why I didn’t want to play and get hurt. Getting a hit once a month was OK. Hitting .200, that was OK. If you did more, they’d expect more of you. One hit a year, let’s leave it at that. Anyway, thank you very much for your time. Thank you."

Source: http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/WWE_New...

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In BROADCASTER Tags BOB UECKER, WRESTLEMANIA, PROFESSIONAL WRESTLING, BASEBALL, HALL OF FAME, WWE, WWE HALL OF FAME, TRANSCRIPT
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Bob Uecker: 'My mother and father were on an oleo margarine run to Chicago back in 1934', Fricke Award, Baseball Hall of Fame - 2003

July 26, 2017

27 July 2003, Cooperstown, New York, USA

Thank you, Joe, thank you very much. And thank you ladies and gentlemen. And my congratulations to Hal (McCoy / winner of the J.G. Taylor Spink Award in 2003), Gary Carter, Eddie Murray, and to all of the members of the staff of the Hall of Fame, thank you very much. This has been a wonderful, wonderful time.

I, in deference to Hal McCoy, was asked to quit many times.

I was born and raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Actually, I was born in Illinois. My mother and father were on an oleo margarine run to Chicago back in 1934, because we couldn't get colored margarine in Wisconsin. On the way home, my mother was with child. Me. And the pains started, and my dad pulled off into an exit area, and that's where the event took place. I remember it was a nativity type setting. An exit light shining down. There were three truck drivers there. One guy was carrying butter, one guy had frankfurters, and the other guy was a retired baseball scout who told my folks that I probably had a chance to play somewhere down the line.

I remember it being very cold. It was January. I didn't weigh very much. I think the birth certificate said something like ten ounces. I was very small. And I remember the coldness on my back from the asphalt. And I was immediately wrapped in swaddling clothes and put in the back of a '37 Chevy without a heater. And that was the start of this Cinderella story that you are hearing today.

I did not have a lot of ability as a kid, and my dad wanted me to have everything that everybody else had. I think the first thing that he ever bought me was a football. And I was very young. He didn't know a lot about it, he came from the old country. I mean, we tried to pass it and throw it and kick it, and we couldn't do it. And it was very discouraging for him and for me. Almost, we almost quit. And finally we had a nice enough neighbor, came over and put some air in it, and what a difference.

I got a lot of my ability from my father. As a lot of these other guys did. My father actually came to this country as a soccer player. He didn't play, be blew up the balls is what he did. And they didn't have pumps in those days. And to see a man put that valve in his mouth and insert it into a soccer ball, and blow thirty pounds of air. And then have the ability to pull that thing out without it fracturing the back of his mouth was unbelievable. You had to see his neck and his veins popping. It was unbelievable. How proud I was as I watched him do it time after time.

My first sport was eighth grade basketball. And my dad didn't want to buy me the supporter johnny, you know, to do the job. So my mother made me one out of a flour sack. And the tough thing about that is, you put that thing on, you whip it out of your bag in the gym. You know all the guys are looking at it. And you start the game. The guy guarding you knows exactly where you're going since little specks of flour keep dropping out. And then right down the front it says 'Pillsbury's Best.'

I signed a very modest $3,000 bonus with the Braves in Milwaukee, which I'm sure a lot of you know. And my old man didn't have that kind of money to put out. But the Braves took it. I remember sitting around our kitchen table counting all this money, coins out of jars, and I'm telling my dad, 'Forget this, I don't want to play.' He said, 'No, you are going to play baseball. We are going to have you make some money, and we're going to live real good.' My dad had an accent, I want to be real authentic when I'm doing this thing. So I signed. The signing took place at a very popular restaurant in Milwaukee. And I remember driving, and my dad's all fired up and nervous, and I said, 'Look, it will be over in a couple of minutes. Don't be uptight.' We pull in the parking lot, pull next to the Braves automobile, and my dad screwed up right away. He doesn't have the window rolled up far enough and our tray falls off and all the food is on the floor. And from there on it was baseball.

Starting with the Braves in Milwaukee, St. Louis, where I won the World's Championship for them in 1964, to the Philadelphia Phillies and back to the Braves in Atlanta, where I became Phil Niekro's personal chaser. But during every player's career there comes a time when you know that your services are no longer required, that you might be moving on. Traded, sold, released ,whatever it may be. And having been with four clubs, I picked up a few of these tips. I remember Gene Mauch doing things to me at Philadelphia. I'd be sitting there and he'd say, 'Grab a bat and stop this rally.' Send me up there without a bat and tell me to try for a walk. Look down at the first base coach for a sign and have him turn his back on you.

But you know what? Things like that never bothered me. I'd set records that will never be equaled, 90% I hope are never printed: .200 lifetime batting average in the major leagues which tied me with another sports great averaging 200 or better for a ten-year period, Don Carter, one of our top bowlers.

In 1967 I set a major league record for passed balls, and I did that without playing every game. There was a game, as a matter of fact, during that year when Phil Niekro's brother (Joe) and he were pitching against each other in Atlanta. Their parents were sitting right behind home plate. I saw their folks that day more than they did the whole weekend.

But with people like Niekro, and this was another thing, I found the easy way out to catch a knuckleball. It was to wait until it stopped rolling and then pick it up. There were a lot of things that aggravated me, too. My family is here today. My boys, my girls. My kids used to do things that aggravate me, too. I'd take them to the game and they'd want to come home with a different player. I remember one of my friends came to Atlanta to see me once. He came to the door, he says, 'Does Bob Uecker live here?' He says, 'Yeah, bring him in.' But my two boys are just like me. In their championship little league game, one of them struck out three times and the other one had an error that allowed the winning run to score. They lost the championship, and I couldn't have been more proud. I remember the people as we walked through the parking lot throwing eggs and rotten stuff at our car. What a beautiful day.

You know, everybody remembers their first game in the major leagues. For me it was in Milwaukee. My hometown, born and raised there, and I can remember walking out on the field and Birdie Tebbetts was our manager at that time. And my family was there: my mother and dad, and all my relatives. And as I'm standing on the field, everybody's pointing at me and waving and laughing, and I'm pointing back. And Birdie Tebbetts came up and asked me if I was nervous or uptight about the game. And I said, 'I'm not. I've been waiting five years to get here. I'm ready to go.'

He said, 'Well, we're gonna start you today. I didn't want to tell you earlier. I didn't want you to get too fired up.'

I said, 'Look, I'm ready to go.'

He said, 'Well, great, you're in there. And oh, by the by, the rest of us up here wear that supporter on the inside.' That was the first game my folks walked out on, too.

But you know, of all of the things that I've done, this has always been number one, baseball. The commercials, the films, the television series, I could never wait for everything to get over to get back to baseball. I still, and this is not sour grapes by any means, still think I should have gone in as a player. Thank you very much.

The proof is in the pudding. No, this conglomeration of greats that are here today, a lot of them were teammates, but they won't admit it. But they were. And a lot of them were players that worked in games that I called. They are wonderful friends, and always will be. And the 1964 World's Championship team. The great Lou Brock. And I remember as we got down near World Series time, Bing Devine, who was the Cardinals' general manager at that time, asked me if I would do him and the Cardinals, in general, a favor. And I said I would. And he said, 'We'd like to inject you with hepatitis. We need to bring an infielder up.' I said, 'Would I be able to sit on the bench.' He said, 'Yes, we'll build a plastic cubicle for you because it is an infectious disease.' And I've got to tell you this. I have a photo at home, I turned a beautiful color yellow and with that Cardinal white uniform. I was knocked out. It was beautiful, wasn't it, Lou? It was great.

Of course, any championship involves a World Series. The ring, the ceremony, the following season in St. Louis at old Busch Stadium. We were standing along the sideline. I was in the bullpen warming up the pitcher. And when they called my name for the ring, it's something that you never ever forget. And when they threw it out into left field. I found it in the fifth inning, I think it was, Lou, wasn't it? And once I spotted it in the grass man, I was on it. It was unbelievable.

But as these players have bats, gloves…I had a great shoe contract and glove contract with a company who paid me a lot of money never to be seen using their stuff. Bat orders…I would order a dozen bats and there were times they'd come back with handles at each end. You know, people have asked me a lot of times, because I didn't hit a lot, we all know that, how long a dozen bats would last me? Depending on the weight and the model that I was using at that particular time I would say eight to ten cookouts.

I once ordered a dozen flame-treated bats, and they sent me a box of ashes, so I knew at that time things were moving on. But there are tips that you pick up when the Braves were going to release me. It is a tough time for a manager, for your family, for the player to be told that you're never going to play the game again. And I can remember walking in the clubhouse that day, and Luman Harris, who was the Braves' manager, came up to me and said there were no visitors allowed. So again, I knew I might be moving on.

Paul Richards was the general manager and told me the Braves wanted to make me a coach for the following season. And that I would be coaching second base. So again, gone.

But that's when the baseball career started as a broadcaster. I remember working first with Milo Hamilton and Ernie Johnson. And I was all fired up about that, too, until I found out that my portion of the broadcast was being used to jam Radio Free Europe. And I picked up a microphone one day and my mic had no cord on it, so I was talking to nobody. But it's such a wonderful, wonderful thing today to be here. And one of my first partners was mentioned earlier, Merle Harmon, and Tom Collins, he's here today. All of those who I have worked with from Merle to Lorn Brown to Dwayne Mosley, Pat Hughes, who now works for the Chicago Cubs, and my current partner today, Jim Powell and Kent Summerfeld. My thanks to all of you.

To my good pal Bob Costas out there. Thank you, Bobby. All of the network people, that has been as much a part of broadcasting for me as anything. The days with ABC and 'Monday Night Baseball' with the late Bob Prince and Keith Jackson and Al Michaels and my great pal, Don Drysdale. All of those people have played such a big part in me being here today. Dick Ebersol, the head of NBC Sports. All of them are a big part of what I am. My family is seated over here. I love them very much.

Ulice Payne is here, the president of the Brewers. The commissioner of baseball is a guy that gave me my start. He said, 'I want to bring you back to Milwaukee.' And I said, 'I'll come.' And here I am, 33 years later. Thank you, Al. I call him Al, Bud Selig. Wife Sue is here. To all of my Brewer family, Wendy, Laurel Selig… Wendy Selig-Prieb, Laurel Prieb. Tony Migliaccio, one of my great friends. Mike LaBoe, all my people. Jon Greenberg, I didn't even know you were here. You took care of Hal McCoy, what the hell's going on. But all of these people play such a big part in all of our lives.

And to all of you baseball fans around America and any place else, for your letters, your thoughts, your kindness, for all of these years, it's been a great run, but number one has always been baseball for me. No matter what else I ever did, baseball was the only way I wanted to go. I thank you very much for your attention today, thank you for having me, and congratulations to everybody here. Thank you very much everybody, thank you.

Source: http://www.baseball-almanac.com/quotes/quo...

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In BROADCASTER Tags BOB UECKER, FRICK AWARD, BASEBALL HALL OF FAME, TRANSCRIPT, FUNNY, BROADCASTER, MILWAUKEE, BREWERS, MLB
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Phil Rizzuto: 'Any time you want to leave, just leave', Baseball Hall of Fame - 1994

July 26, 2017

31 July 1994, Cooperstown, New York, USA

Holy cow!

I have had problems with my voice, never had this before.

You can read transcript of speech here. 'Top of the Heap - A Yankees Collection'

 

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Tags PHIL RIZZUTO, NEW YORK YANKEES, BASEBALL, BASEBALL HALL OF FAME
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Drew Brees: 'There maybe only one name that goes into the record book but its all about you guys'', locker room speech, post record - 2011

June 7, 2017

26 December 2011, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Sean Payton:Number one, anytime we win this division, everybody in our organisation gets a game ball. It's the third time in six years now. Listen it's the very first step. [inaudible 00:00:16] we list is winning our division. We played a real good team tonight, we played better than them. That's a great win, that's a great win. Win the division at home on Monday Night Football like that with everything else that went on, it's outstanding.

Second thing here, I want to reflect on something here. Guys [inaudible 00:00:32] by a pro tonight, quarterback by the name Dan Marino was drafted in 1983. Now it took about four or five others ahead of this guy and he might be one of the top five that ever played this game. He had big arm, great release. This guy won a lot of games, but never won the Super Bowl but the year he set this record was 1984 his team was 14-2 that year, the Miami Dolphins. He threw for 5,087 yards. They won the AFC East. This is his second year in the league. They went to the Super Bowl that year and he lost to San Francisco 49ers but it's important for us to understand the history of this league.

Now he's a badass player tonight, alright, but another badass player broke his record tonight. 

Players: Yeah! [Applause 00:01:26]

Sean Payton: We are definitely going to make him speak in a second but I'll say this too, alright, and I'm serious when I say this, there is about ten, fifteen, twenty more chapters in this book, all right, all of us as a team, led by him at quarterback, all of us staying together, winning together, walking together forever. Each year we do something special, this years we got a chance to do that, Drew you gotta say something.

Players:Speech!

Drew Brees: Well I'm trying not to get emotional because I can't have me doing that, especially when a lot of you guys ... because I love y'all so much and you mean so much to me.

To think that we had this opportunity, it's pretty amazing. We came close to this a few years ago and to be perfectly honest with you I thought man no way we'll ever get that close again, but I guess I underestimated the opportunity we would have because of the guys in this room.

And I say that with all sincerity and as genuine as I can because I truly feel that way, there maybe only one name that goes into the record book but its all about you guys. I'm not just talking about players, I'm talking about coaches that bust their ass staying late nights away from their families putting together game plans that allow us to go out there and succeed and play well, to get our name in the paper. To everybody in the building, our staff, Mr. Benson, Mrs. Benson, Rita, the equipment managers that rub down those balls.

 [Laughter 00:03:24]

Y'all know what I mean. Full service.

 Mr Benson: We gotta get up here and give him a hug. 

Drew Brees: And to trainers Scotty Panduch, who stretches my shoulder twice a week, we got a tradition. I can't tell you just how much I love you guys and I wouldn't want to be in this journey with anybody else. You make me so proud and I know that this is just another stepping stone to our ultimate goal, this is something we can look back on and we can talk about.

But what I want is for us to look back and a guy on the defence to say yeah, I was on that team I was a part of that I made plays that year to help that guy had that opportunity, I was an offensive liner that blocked for that guy, I was a receiver that caught balls, I was a running back who caught balls ... ran, set up opportunities, I was a coach on that team.

I want everybody to be proud of this because it's all about you not about one person and that's the journey we're on and it's going to be about us as we continue on as we win this week and we continue to win and we continue this journey cause it's all about the prize at the end, so I'm just happy to be out with you and love you. 

[Applause 00:04:43]

Hey, hey listen y'all know what time it is team on three, one, two, three

Players: Team!

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In PLAYER Tags DREW BREES, SEAN PAYTON, DAN MARINO, RECORD BREAKING
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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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Mel Jones: 'If she was Bradman on the field, she was definitely Keith Miller off the field', Betty Wilson's induction into Australian Cricket Hall of Fame - 2017

February 20, 2017

23 January 2017, Sydney, Australia

Mel Jones is a Southern Stars legend herself, but she was inducting a true great and pioneer of Australian cricket, Betty Wilson. The speech first appeared in The Footy Almanac.

Here is the video via cricket.com.au

Firstly, Betty will be looking down on us from somewhere, listening. To Betty: I know you’re going to love this and hate this at exactly the same time, so please just bear with me.

I’m up here tonight on behalf of Betty’s extended cricket family; from her former players all the way through to the current members of the Southern Stars team, and everyone in between. Everyone who has been touched by either her playing career, by her humour, or by her legacy.

For me, I’m not a big one on playing comparisons, but I think sometimes it does give some good context. For Betty, her on-field feats often had her being reminded that she was the Bradman of our game. Our 25th Test player, she was exceptionally talented, she was fiercely competitive, and she had an unwavering desire to be the very best.

Sir Alec Bedser said to her on meeting her: “Betty, it’s lovely to meet you. Do you know that your statistics are better than mine?” And he was right. In just eleven Tests, she amassed 862 runs at a wonderful average of 57.47 and in that time she took 68 wickets at a ridiculous 11.81.

If she was Bradman on the field, she was definitely Keith Miller off the field. In 1951 she went on a tour of England and she put her engagement on hold and she was over there for two years. And in that time she became a household name. When she returned, she picked up a few other loves in her life until her passing in 2010. She loved her lawn bowls, she loved a flutter, and she definitely loved a chardy – and it probably wasn’t in that order, either.

She also loved coming down when she could, in Melbourne, to watch the Vic Spirit or the Australians play. She would sit in the stands and she would hold court. All the people of different eras would sit down and just hang on every word.

Stories like her historic Test match where she became the first ever player; male or female; to take 10 wickets in a match, including a hat-trick (the first time a female had done it), and also score a century as well. Other stories she would tell us were of her father, who was a boot maker, who would hand-make her cricket spikes. And in between all these stories she would keep a little watchful eye on players out in the middle.

No one was immune to a cheeky Betty technique spray. One day sitting there, watching the cricket, we had this little debate about playing spinners. And Betty was all about footwork. And she turned to me and she said: “Mel, I would have got you out in six balls.”

I said: “Oh, six balls, Betty?”

And she said: “Well, even I have my off days.”

Betty was our link to the pioneers, she was our very own personal historian and story-teller. But I think the best part about Betty, her best delivery, was her character. And she always did remind us and I think she always will remind us to uphold the values and tradition and spirit of our great game.

Betty’s induction to the Hall of Fame tonight, for me, cements her truly as one of our greatest ever.

Source: http://www.footyalmanac.com.au/almanac-cri...

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In PLAYER 2 Tags BETTY WILSON, MEL JONES, CRICKET AUSTRALIA, ALLAN BORDER MEDAL, WOMEN'S CRICKET, SOUTHERN STARS
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Paul O'Connell: 'I want them standing back thinking what the fuck is going on here?' Lions captain, pre game - 2007

January 4, 2017

11 February 2007, Ireland v France Six Nations, Ireland

If someone’s walking, if someone isn’t filling a gap, you get on his case, you say it to him. If I’m fucking walking, I want to hear it.

Listen to me, listen to me. I want them standing back thinking what the fuck is going on here? Not for the first five minutes, every fucking minute of the game.

Fucking manic aggression.

Did you scare anyone? Did you fucking put the fear of God into anyone?

 

Source: http://rugbylad.com/paul-oconnell-on-that-...

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In PLAYER 2 Tags PAUL O'CONNELL, TRANSCRIPT, IRISH, BRITISH AND IRISH LIONS, RUGBY, CAPTAIN
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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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Sachin Tendulkar: '"Sachin, Sachin" which will reverberate in my ears till I stop breathing', farewell speech - 2013

December 18, 2016

16 November 2013, Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai, India

All my friends. Settle down let me talk, I will get more and more emotional (crowd gets louder as he composes himself). My life, between 22 yards for 24 years, it is hard to believe that that wonderful journey has come to an end, but I would like to take this opportunity to thank people who have played an important role in my life. Also, for the first time in my life I am carrying this list, to remember all the names in case I forget someone. I hope you understand. It's getting a little bit difficult to talk but I will manage.

The most important person in my life, and I have missed him a lot since 1999 when he passed away, my father. Without his guidance, I don't think I would have been standing here in front of you. He gave me freedom at the age of 11, and told me that [I should] chase my dreams, but make sure you do not find shortcuts. The path might be difficult but don't give up, and I have simply followed his instructions. Above all, he told me to be a nice human being, which I will continue to do and try my best. Every time I have done something special [and] showed my bat, it was [for] my father.

My mother, I don't know how she dealt with such a naughty child like me. I was not easy to manage. She must be extremely patient. For a mother, the most important thing is that her child remains safe and healthy and fit. That was what she was most bothered and worried about. She took care of me for the last 24 years that I have played for India, but even before that she started praying for me the day I started playing cricket. She just prayed and prayed and I think her prayers and blessings have given me the strength to go out and perform, so a big thank you to my mother for all the sacrifices.

In my school days, for four years, I stayed with my uncle and aunt because my school was quite far from my home, and they treated me like their son. My aunt, after having had a hard day's play, I would be half asleep and she would be feeding me food so I could go again and play tomorrow. I can't forget these moments. I am like their son and I am glad it has continued to be the same way.

My eldest brother, Nitin, and his family, have always encouraged me. My eldest brother doesn't like to talk much, but the one thing he always told me is that whatever you do, I know you will always give it 100%, and that I have full faith and confidence in you. His encouragement meant a lot to me. My sister, Savita, and her family, was no different. The first cricket bat of my life was presented to me by my sister. It was a Kashmir willow bat. But that is where the journey began. She is one of those many who still continue to fast when I bat, so thank you very much.

Ajit, my brother, now what do I talk about him? I don't know. We have lived this dream together. He was the one who sacrificed his career for my cricket. He spotted the spark in me. And it all started from the age of 11 when he took me to Archrekar sir, my coach, and from there on my life changed. You will find this hard to believe but even last night he called to discuss my dismissal, knowing that there was a remote chance of batting again, but just the habit we have developed, the rapport we have developed, since my birth, has continued and it will continue. Maybe when I'm not playing cricket we will still be discussing technique.

Various things we agreed upon, my technique, and so many technical things which I didn't agree with him, we have had arguments and disagreements, but when I look back at all these things in my life, I would have been a lesser cricketer.

The most beautiful thing happened to me in 1990 when I met my wife, Anjali. Those were special years and it has continued and will always continue that way. I know Anjali, being a doctor; there was a wonderful career in front of her. When we decided to have a family, Anjali took the initiative to step back and say that 'you continue with your cricket and I will take the responsibility of the family'.

Without that, I don't think I would have been able to play cricket freely and without stress. Thanks for bearing with all my fuss and all my frustrations, and all sorts of rubbish that I have spoken. Thanks for bearing with me and always staying by my side through all the ups and downs. You are the best partnership I've had in my life.

Then, the two precious diamonds of my life, Sara and Arjun. They have already grown up. My daughter is 16, my son is 14. Time has flown by. I wanted to spend so much time with them on special occasions like their birthdays, their annual days, their sports day, going on holidays, whatever. I have missed out on all those things. Thanks for your understanding. Both of you have been so, so special to me you cannot imagine. I promise you [that] for 14 and 16 years I have not spent enough time with both of you, but the next 16 years or even beyond that, everything is for you.

My in-laws, Anand Mehta and Annabel, both have been so, so supportive [and] loving and caring. I have discussed on various things in life, generally with them, and have taken their advice. You know, it's so important to have a strong family who is always with you and who are guiding you. Before you start clapping, the most important thing they did was allowing me to marry Anjali, so thank you very much.

In the last 24 years that I have played for India I have made new friends, and before that I have had friends from my childhood. They have all had a terrific contribution. As and when I have called them to come and bowl to me at the nets, they have left their work aside to come and help me. Be it joining me on holidays and having discussions with me on cricket, or how I was a little stressed and wanting to find a solution so I can perform better.

All those moments my friends were with me. Even for when I was injured, I would wake up in the morning because I couldn't sleep and thought that my career was over because of injuries, that is when my friends have woken up at 3 o'clock in the morning to drive with me and make me believe that my career was not over. Life would be incomplete without all those friends. Thanks for being there for me.

My cricket career started when I was 11. The turning point of my career was when my brother (Ajit) took me to Achrekar sir. I was extremely delighted to see him up in the stands. Normally he sits in front of the television and he watches all the games that I play. When I was 11/12, those were the days when I used to hop back on his scooter and play a couple of practice matches a day. The first half the innings I would be batting at Shivaji Park, the second half, at some other match in Azad Maidan. He would take me all over Mumbai to make sure I got match practice.

On a lighter note, in the last 29 years, sir has never ever said 'well played' to me because he thought I would get complacent and I would stop working hard. Maybe he can push his luck and wish me now, well done on my career, because there are no more matches, sir, in my life. I will be witnessing cricket, and cricket will always stay in my heart, but you have had an immense contribution in my life, so thank you very much.

My cricket for Mumbai started right here on this ground, the Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA), which is so dear to me. I remember landing from New Zealand at four o'clock in the morning, and turning up for a game here at eight o'clock just because I wanted to be a part of Mumbai cricket, and not that somebody forced me. That was for the love of Mumbai cricket, and thank you very much. The president is here so thank you very much, along with your team, for taking care of me and looking after my cricket.

The dream was obviously to play for India, and that is where my association with BCCI started. BCCI was fantastic, right from my debut they believed in my ability and selecting me into the squad at the age of 16 was a big step, so thanks to all the selectors for having faith in me and the BCCI for giving me the freedom to express myself out in the middle. Things would have been different if you had not been behind me, and I really appreciate your support. Especially when I was injured, you were right with me and making sure that all the treatments were taken care of, and that I got fit and fine and playing [right] back for India.

The journey has been special, the last 24 years, I have played with many senior cricketers, and even before that there were many senior cricketers with whom I watched on television. They inspired me to play cricket, and to play in the right way. Thanks to all those senior cricketers, and unfortunately I have not been able to play with them, but I have high regards for all their achievements and all their contributions.

We see it on the mega-screen, Rahul, Laxman, Sourav, and Anil, who is not here, and my team-mates right here in front me. You are like my family away from home. I have had some wonderful times with you. It is going to be difficult to not be part of the dressing room, sharing those special moments. All the coaches for their guidance, it has been special for me. I know when MS Dhoni presented me the 200th Test match cap on Day One morning. I had a brief message for the team. I would like to repeat that. I just feel that all of us are so, so fortunate and proud to be part of the Indian cricket team and serving the nation.

Knowing all of you guys, I know you will continue to serve the nation in the right spirit and right values. I believe we have been the lucky ones to be chosen by the Almighty to serve this sport. Each generation gets this opportunity to take care of this sport and serve it to the best of our ability. I have full faith in you to continue to serve the nation in the right spirit and to the best of your ability, to bring all the laurels to the country. All the very best.

I would be failing in my duties if I did not thank all the doctors, the physios, the trainers, who have put this difficult body together to go back on the field and be able to play. The amount of injuries that I have had in my career, I don't know how you have managed to keep me fit, but without your special efforts, it would never have happened. The doctors have met me at weird hours. I mean I have called them from Mumbai to Chennai, Mumbai to Delhi, I mean wherever. They have just taken the next flight and left their work and families to be with me, which has allowed me to play. So a big thank you to all three of you for keeping me in good shape.

My dear friend, late Mark Mascarenhas, my first manager. We unfortunately lost him in a car accident in 2001, but he was such a well-wisher of cricket, my cricket, and especially Indian cricket. He was so passionate. He understood what it takes to represent a nation and gave me all the space to go out and express myself, and never pressurised me to do this ad or promotion or whatever the sponsors demanded. He took care of that and today I miss him, so thank you Mark for all your contribution.

My current management team, WSG, for repeating what Mark has done, because when I signed the contract I exactly told them what I want from them, and what it requires to represent me. They have done that and respected that.

Someone who has worked closely with me for 14 years is my manager, Vinod Nayudu. He is more like my family and all the sacrifices, spending time away from his family for my work, has been special, so big thank you to his family as well for giving up so much time for my work with Vinod.

In my school days, when I performed well, the media backed me a lot. They continue to do that till this morning. Thank you so much to the media for supporting and appreciating my performances. It surely had a positive effect on me. Thank you so much to all the photographers as well for those wonderfully captured moments that will stay with me for the rest of my life, so a big thank you to all the photographers.

I know my speech is getting a bit too long (crowd roars with 'noooo'), but this is the last thing I want to say. I want to thank all the people here who have flown in from various parts of the world, and have supported me endlessly, whether I scored a 0 or a 100-plus. Your support was so dear to me and meant a lot to me. Whatever you have done for me.

I know I have met so many guys who have fasted for me, prayed for me, done so much for me. Without that life wouldn't have been like this for me. I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart, and also say that time has flown by rather quickly, but the memories you have left with me will always be with me forever and ever, especially "Sachin, Sachin" which will reverberate in my ears till I stop breathing. Thank you very much. If I have missed out on saying something, I hope you understand. Goodbye.

Source: http://www.dnaindia.com/sport/report-full-...

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In PLAYER 2 Tags SACHIN TENDULKAR, TRANSCRIPT, FAREWELL, CRICKET, INDIA, MUMBAI, SPORT, RETIREMENT
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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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Martin Flanagan: 'Is sport the opiate of the people? Is sport the great distraction?' Sports Writers Festival, Opening night address - 2016

October 18, 2016

14 October 2016, Melbourne Town Hall, Melbourne, Australia

Opening oration at Sports Writers Festival. Tim Cahill features at Melbourne Town Hall tonight (18 October, 8pm) Tickets.

SPORT & POLITICS:  THE ADAM GOODES CASE RE-CONSIDERED, ONE YEAR ON.

for Doug Vickers

1.

In the 19th century, Karl Marx famously declared that religion was the opiate of the people.

In the 21st century, it seems fair to ask - is sport the opiate of the people?  Is sport the Great Distraction?

The poet TS Eliot said “humankind cannot bear too much reality”.  I happen to believe that’s true. Is sport now the principal means by which many of us insulate ourselves from reality? I think the answer to that is probably yes.

Someone once said that sport is the most important thing in the world that doesn’t matter.  At one level, I agree - but at the same time I never forget Nelson Mandela saying that sport has more power than governments to change social attitudes. That is true also.

Furthermore, sport has the power to illuminate aspects of our society and our social past that otherwise remain hidden.

My point is that sport - by which I mean popular sports that attract mass audiences - swing or pivoton a series of paradoxes so that often, in public arguments arising from sport, when others are absolute in their opinions, I find myself thinking. “Yes, but….”

2.

People have suggested thetheme I should address today is “Should sport ever be political?” I am tempted to reply – is sport ever not political?  It’s the story behind the creation of the modern Olympics. It’s the story behind the 1936 Olympics in Hitler’s Berlin.  It’s the story behind the State-sanctioned systematic doping instituted by Vladimir Putin’s regime in Russia and the turmoil since that was discovered, both the banning of Russian Olympians and Paralympians from the Rio Games and the subsequent hacking and release of the medical records of athletes who did compete. These are dark disturbing stories but the special magic of sport is that it also throws up bright, uplifting stories, too.

One of the best sports stories of my adult lifetime was the 1995 Rugby Union World Cup final between South Africa and New Zealand played in South Africa just at the time when people on the political extremes in that country were on the verge of initiating a full-on civil war. That story is expertly told in “Playing the Enemy” by John Carlin, one of my half dozen favourite books on sport. It was in John Carlin’s book that I found Mandela’s quote that sport has more power than governments to change social attitudes.  Who am I – who is any one among us? – to argue with Nelson Mandela on that score?

But just as the theme of politics and sport is universal, it also has to be understood locally. Right now in Melbourne, as Eddie McGuire found out to his cost, you’d be a fool if you thought the views of women don’t matter in footy debates.   Personally, in seeking to balance the views of the two sexes, I like the Aboriginal idea of men’s law and women’s law.  That is, there are two ways of seeing the world, two separate codes. They are not identical, but they have certain assumptions in common and need to co-exist.  In Australian football, this gets complicated since when I say I’m talking about football I usually mean men’s football. There is now also women’s football. And men’s football, throughout the length and breadth of the land, is hugely dependent upon the women working as volunteers around the clubs and not merely selling pies and cordial - as presidents, board members, commission members, secretaries, treasurers….. It’s a political fact that Australian football has to listen to the voices of women if it wants to have a future.

In 2000, a Dutch journalist writing a book on the great sporting events of the world attended the AFL grand final and tracked me down to ask two questions.  This was one of them: “The average percentage of women at premier league soccer matches in Europe is 13 per cent. With your game, it is 48 per cent. Why?” My answer is that women always seem to have been a big part of the game. The reason for this, I think, is that during the game’s adolescence, the period between 1858 and 1880, Australian football was basically free entertainment in the parks. Among the crowd which circled these games, there was neither a Members’ pavilion nor a ladies Pavilion. No-one could be prevented from attending since there no fences, everyone mixed as one.

The best account of an early match was provided by an English journalist who merely signed himself as the Vagabond. He saw Carlton play Melbourne at the Carlton ground in 1879. He describes the women he sees in the crowd, the lack of distinction between men and women, and between people of different religions and class. The Vagabond judged the game to be unruly and violent. He ultimately asked if it was to the detriment of civilized values and concluded that it was, thereby giving expression to an idea which has never really gone away and regularly re-surfaces, particularly during controversies about player behaviour. 

Social and political debates conducted through the medium of sport are like historical stews.  Sport is like a mask that people can hide behind and sound off so that many of the views that are expressed contain prejudices against women, prejudices against men, class prejudices, racial prejudices and prejudices against sport itself. One of the most radical and refreshing changes of our time has been young women flooding into sports that were previously regarded by some as the embodiment of male aggression and violence. If anyone wants further evidence of continued change in the culture of Australian football, it was surely Jobe Watson returning to Essendon after a year of exile and introspection in a cap with theword FEMINIST written on it.

Because sport is in everyone’s face all the time in this culture, everyone thinks they know about it.   Often, people who don’t like sport have opinions on sport which, when boiled down, come back to the fact that they don’t like Sam Newman or Shane Warne or some other cartoon character from the world of tabloid media, or they don’t like the fact that the endless shows on radio and television given to analysing sport serve to prevent people considering everything else that’s happening in the world.  Well, yes, it’s hard to argue with that. But, as I said before, it is also true that sport can be socially illuminating. An example of this can be seen right now on the walls of the Ian Potter Gallery in Carlton. Put together by Melbourne artist Grant Hobson, the exhibition is about the Koonibba Football Club, the oldest surviving Aboriginal football club in Australia. 

Central to the exhibition are 11 black-and-white portraits taken in 1939 at Koonibba, on South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula, as part of an investigation mounted by the Adelaide and Harvard universities. During the 1930s, there were intense discussions among academics, politicians and civil servants about what to do with Aboriginal people of mixed race or what was then called the "half-caste problem". Proposed solutions included eugenics or what was then termed "breeding out the colour". The 1939 photographs taken at Koonibba were like mugshots, the subjects being photographed from the front and side-on. The notes with the portraits, which artist Grant Hobson and a Koonibba elder found in the archives of the Adelaide museum, contained skull and facial measurements plus descriptions of skin and eye colours. If you track the history of the ideas of racial superiority underlying the 1939 expedition back into the 19th century, you’ll find they mutated with Darwin’s theory of evolution to produce the notion that there was a missing link between apes and human beings. Aboriginal people were portrayed as “the missing link”. The strength and durability of this idea was displayed this year when a young woman, a Port Adelaide supporter, threw a banana at Eddie Betts. 

However, what the self-styled “scientists” from Harvard and Adelaide universities didn’t appear to note when they visited Koonibba was that, beneath their threadbare clothing, nine of the 11 men they photographed were wearing Koonibba football guernseys. These were members of one of Koonibba’s most successful teams ever, remembered to this day as the Koonibba Invincibles. Famous AFL names associated with the Koonibba Football Club are Burgoyne, Betts and Wanganeen. Aaron Davey (Melbourne) and Alwyn Davey (Essendon) are grandsons of Koonibba’s Dick Davey. Daniel Wells (North Melbourne & Collingwood) and Graeme Johncock (Adelaide) are connected to Koonibba.  Put simply, I would not have learned the Koonibba story, if it were not for sport. There is so much about my country I wouldn’t know, if it were not for sport. There is so much about the world I would not know, were it not for sport.

3.

I now want to move to the biggest political issue in Australian football in recent times – the Adam Goodes affair of 2015. Before I do so, however, I want to make a few observations about contemporary politics. This is an age in which people are losing faith in democratic politics. This happened before, in the 1930s, most disastrously in Germany. Our belief in democracy being able to produce suitable social ends is being questioned by people on both the left and right. Into this state of political paralysis walks sport with its ready-made mass audience and its central place in to the entertainment industry.

Sport ideally is not about politics but in this culture sport provides one of the simplest and quickest ways of making a political point. What this gives rise to are debates about sport which are not really about sport, or are about sport and so much more. Outside football, non-Aboriginal Australians – and by that I specifically mean non-Aboriginal Australians of all races, colours and creeds - display little active interest in Aboriginal Australia. We all know this to be true – it’s our secret shame. It’s in this atmosphere that Adam Goodes gets called a monkey. It’s in this atmosphere that he points to a 13-year-old girl – by his own account, reacting to the voice, not knowing she is 13 – and she is marched from the stadium. After weeks of being booed, Goodes does a war dance and throws an imaginary spear into the crowd…. .

The main article I wrote about the Adam Goodes affair was actually about Chris Lewis, the last Aboriginal player to be booed as vehemently – in fact, far more vehemently – than Goodes was. In 1991, as West Coast built to its first ever premiership, Lewis established himself as one of the most promising young players in the competition. The following season, he copped full-on old-style racism and fought back – literally. He got the reputation of being a “dirty” player but his side of the case, his defence, wasn’t being put. He became the game’s outlaw. Its black outlaw. I defended him – the only journalist, as I recall, to do so – and we have maintained a relationship ever since. Chris Lewis has a warrior spirit but he told me when he was 21 that he’d “meet anyone half-way” and his life shows that he has been true to this belief. He has plenty of reasons to be racist, but isn’t.  That, I thought, was the point of the article but you wouldn’t have known it from the responses I got. In fact, I don’t remember a single response – and there were a lot - which dealt with what I thought the article was about.

I was sent racist abuse about Chris Lewis which was unchanged from what was said about him in the early 1990s. I had expected that. It was the other responses I hadn’t expected. For example, an Indian gentleman contacted me, demanding Adam Goodes’ mobile number. I had written a story on the Indian gentleman’s guru when she visited Australia some years earlier; he had been deeply impressed by the fact that I had accurately reported what she was saying about how to control our lives with positive thinking. He now advised me that, if he had Goodes’ number and the number of a senior figure in the Swans’ administration, he would advise them how to cure the problem with positive thinking.

I didn’t have Adam Goodes’ number and I would not have handed it out without his permission. Under the circumstances, my chances of getting that permission would have been nil. In the wake of my failure to provide him with Adam Goodes’ number, the Indian gentleman contacted me again saying that I should look deep into my heart and examine the racist feelings I harboured towards Aboriginal people. Why did the Indian gentleman deduce that I possessed racist feelings towards Aboriginal people? Because I had failed to give him Adam Goodes’ number so that he could solve the problem – or so he thought - with positive thinking.

Another reader – an articulate young man who was an avid Swans and Adam Goodes fan - wrote in accusing me of trying to create a historical scenario in which Michael Long was “the good guy” and Adam Goodes was “the bad guy”. I had tried to make the point that Adam Goodes represented something different, something new, at least to non-Aboriginal Australians. I’d just spent 13 years trying to writing a book with Michael Long, trying to see his story as he did and not as whitefellas do. In race politics, things are always changing. I said Michael Long was like Martin Luther King, Adam Goodes was like Malcolm X. I didn’t say Malcolm X was a bad guy, I didn’t say Michael Long was a good guy. But between Martin Luther King and Malcolm X there is, or was, a difference.

And Adam Goodes was different. I’d first noticed it reading his essay in the AFL’s official history published in 2008. Adam Goodes said things Aboriginal people don’t normally say to a non-Aboriginal audience. He called himself a half-caste. Aboriginal people, as a rule, never use the term “half-caste” - the Koori singer Archie Roach told me it made him feel like people were talking about cattle. In his 2008 essay, Goodes also wrote about his formative years. If I learnt one thing from my 13 years trying to write a book with Michael Long, it was how big the Stolen Generation, and the vast cultural divide it made for, is in the families descended from the stolen. Goodes’ father is a white man. His mother is Stolen Generation who grew up with minimal knowledge of her culture. At school, he copped it from white kids for being black and from black kids for being white.

I know of no other famous Australian story which starts at that point – the narrator being someone who’s an outsider in both worlds, Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal!  As I understand the story of his life, his understanding of his Aboriginality starts after he gets to the Swans and falls under the influence of Michael O’Loughlin.

During 2015, I didn’t write about Adam Goodes as if I knew him because I didn’t. We met once but I came away with the feeling that I hadn’t really met him. I think he’d say that too. We were polite with one another. I certainly don’t believe I would have won Adam Goodes’ respect then or now by writing an article that implied I know him better than I do. That’s why the article I wrote about the Goodes affair was actually about Chris Lewis. I know Chris Lewis. I could discuss the matter with him. I read the article to him before I filed it. He struggled with it but agreed to let me send out his message another time. Chris Lewis, Aboriginal warrior, will meet anyone half-way. Isn’t that what it’s all about? Meeting others half-way?

By now the Indian gentleman was texting me daily saying, “You must denounce racism! You must denounce racism”. I thought he was seriously misreading the cultural politics at play.  The Adam Goodes affair was my first confrontation with I call Trumpism. A lot of people were making pious calls for the AFL to act. A characteristic of Trumpism is that the old sources of cultural authority are suddenly without authority. Limp, ineffective. To the people who became intent on booing Adam Goodes no matter what, Gillon McLachlan, or what he is perceived as representing, was one of the reasons they were booing. To those same people, I was irrelevant, if in fact they had any idea who I was. I wrote that the only people who could stop the booing were the players. The Indian gentlemen went nuts. “They are only boys!” he cried. No, the players are young men who make adult choices about risk and injury for all to see on the football field and, commensurate with the skill and bravery they show in doing so, they win the broad respect of their audience.

Bulldogs CaptainBob Murphy led the way, writing an article in The Age in which he called the boos being directed at Goodes “blows to the soul”. I still wonder why more indigenous players didn’t stand up at the time. If Cyril Rioli, Sean Burgoyne and Bradley Hill had fronted a TV news camera and said to Hawthorn fans, “We represent you, you represent us. Each time you boo Adam Goodes, you’re booing us too”; if that had happened – and if, as a bonus, some of their whitefeller team-mates stood with them like the Melbourne players stood with their indigenous team-mates at that time – then, I reckon, there would have been a different conversation in the crowd between those doing the booing and the many non-Aboriginal people of all races and backgrounds who were opposed to it.

I had some sympathy with those who said booing has always been part of the game. It has. The football codes go back to medieval street games and street theatre. They’re about heroes and villains. They’re about booing and cheering. A football stadium is not a church. Proceedings are not conducted in an attitude of reverence. So, yes, I believe booing has always been part of the game. But I mean those words literally – booing is part of the game but there are moments when games cease to be games. 

In the 2000 Grand Final, Michael Long hit Melbourne player Troy Simmons with a hip and shoulder to the head and upper body which knocked Simmons senseless. I had spent quite a bit of time that year helping a young man who had broken his spine in a skiing accident adjust to life in a wheelchair. When Michael Long collected Troy Simmons, I saw how that same accident could occur on the football field and, for a long moment, feared that it had. The game ceased to be a game to me. I didn’t watch any more, I didn’t care who won.  Michael Long is someone I have deep respect and affection for, but this was something I had to discuss with him in the course of doing our book together.

Well, booing is part of the game but the game can cease to be a game and for me the booing of Adam Goodes did cease to be a game. It wasn’t just Adam Goodes who believed there was a racist element to the booing, virtually the whole of Aboriginal Australia did and lots of other people besides. Each week, more people felt the hurt being caused but still the booing went on. The beautiful Australian game became the ugly Australian game.

Essentially, what happened was that a debate or discussion we should be having as a nation but never do – the relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australia – had surfaced through the medium of the national game. Did Goodes being Australian of the Year have anything to do with it? In my opinion, without doubt, as became clear when figures like Alan Jones and News Limited columnist Miranda Devine entered the fray arguing (1) that the booing had nothing to do with Goodes being Aboriginal, that (2) they didn’t like the way he played but, (3) they didn’t like things he said as Australian of the Year - when he spoke as an Aboriginal Australian.

I found the debate around the Goodes affair confused and confusing. A traffic jam of a debate. For example, the issue of war dances. A war dance is a war dance. As Goodes said after he threw his imaginary spear, it’s a challenge. The New Zealand haka is the great war dance of world sport. But there are very clear rules about the performances of the haka, as there was nearly an all-in brawl after the Irish rugby team decided to counter it by moving forward and standing inches from the faces of the All Blacks as they were delivering it. And the challenge of the haka is never issued to the crowd – always to the other team.  When I wrote this during the Goodes debate, a reader wrote in saying that I was therefore anti-Goodes. I would like to have asked the reader - have you ever seen serious crowd misbehaviour at a sporting event close-up? I have, both attending soccer matches in Scotland and England in the late 1970s when there was a spirit of barely controlled violence all around you, and on my first visit to the MCG in 1971 to see a one-day match, when the place was awash with alcohol and police lost control of whole sections of the crowd.  

The journalist I thought who wrote best about the Goodes affair – by which I mean with the greatest penetration and insight – was Stan Grant.  When I met Stan Grant earlier this year at the Sydney Writers’ Festival, I said to him that the Goodes affair was both simple and complex. He agreed. Grant’s book, “Talking to my Country” - an extremely important Australian book, in my view – explains the complexity of Grant’s own journey as a man with both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal heritage and how the tensions this has created in his life all came into focus for him during the Adam Goodes saga. One of the things Stan Grant’s book caused me to realise is that the Adam Goodes affair wasn’t merely about how non-Aboriginal Australians see Aboriginal Australians -  it was also about how non-Aboriginal Australians were being called upon to see Aboriginal Australians as they’d never seen them before!

Would I like to talk to Adam Goodes?  Of course. Have I got lots of questions to ask him?   Maybe  too many for a man walking a difficult and intensely personal path.  But at this year’s Sydney Writers’ Festival I heard that he had withdrawn permission for his biography, written by sportswriter Malcolm Knox, to appear. My understanding is that he  wants  to retire from the public gaze, as is his right. I am sorry about what happened to Adam Goodes but I am in no doubt he will be vindicated by history. In 25 years, probably less, he will be a huge figure in the history of the game. 

The AFL is routinely abused for having failed to eliminate racism. Two years ago, at the launch of the Long Walk, I sat with Michael Long on a panel while a television journalist said to him that the Adam Goodes affair was proof that he, Michael Long, had failed. You haven’t abolished racism, he cried.  This is a culture which provides huge public platforms for the likes of Donald Trump, Pauline Hanson and Andrew Bolt. Does anyone seriously believe that half a dozen sports stadiums around Australia are somehow going to be rendered immune from their combined effect?  The AFL can no more eliminate racism than it can end war. What the AFL can do is legislate for events which occur in its domain. have laws and enforce those laws, and thereby serve as a social model. Michael Long single-handedly revolutionised the cultural values of the game in 1993; that consensus held until the Goodes affair. We are now, historically speaking, entering new socio-political territory.

Recently, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick chose to sit rather than stand during the US National Anthem at a preseason game in protest against the treatment of black people and people of colour in his country. While I was preparing this speech I was asked, “Could that happen here?” Yes. And if it doesn’t happen here, something like it will happen in some other country around the world. I don’t believe the human frailties and weaknesses on display in the Goodes case are peculiar to any particular race or nationality. I take my faith from a dedication the great Aboriginal leader Patrick Dodson wrote for The Call, my book on Tom Wills: “The struggle never ends. The reward is the people you meet along the way”.  

I have tried to talk today about what happens when matters of national import arise through the medium of sport. I’ve also tried to frame the Goodes saga in a different way and untangle some of the knots that were drawn so tightly at the time. Another aspect of the relationship between politics and sport is the way people seize upon sport as a means of acquiring money and power. This happens in dictatorships, and by different means and to a lesser degree it happens in democracies. A famous Australian comedy was written about it called Strictly Ballroom. But there is little amusing about world bodies like FIFA and the IOC in which the most corrupt bodies and individuals have a history of flourishing shamelessly at the expense of the rest. I won’t talk about that in detail because you have another journalist speaking at this conference who is eminently more qualified to do so – David Walsh, the man who pursued cyclist Lance Armstrong for doping. These are serious subjects which deserve the serious discussions a forum such as this can provide.

But, whatever scepticism I have about the IOC, I still believe in the Olympic ideal. I still support the idea of young athletes from all over the world meeting every four years. I am in awe of the Paralympics. Ultimately, for better or worse, sport reflects human nature. One of my favourite sports stories happened one hundred years ago when the great armies in World War 1 ceased fighting on Christmas Day, met in no-man’s land, began kicking a can – maybe someone had a ball – and, in the mist of unprecedented human carnage, soldiers from both armies began playing with one another. One of those who disapproved intensely was Adolf Hitler. Why? Because he was a homicidal maniac and he understood intuitively that men who played together were less likely to kill one another. And, so, we are confronted with a struggle that never ends – sport is endlessly corruptible and there is a battle that has to be fought on that count. But sport, like hope, is constantly born anew and it is a fact that good things grow from it. And so I conclude today by saying: Play on.

 

See Tim Cahill tonight. (18/10/16, 8pm)

 

 

 

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In BROADCASTER Tags SPORT AND POLITICS, SPORTS WRITERS FESTIVAL, MARTIN FLANAGAN, TRANSCRIPT, MARX, ADAM GOODES, SPEAKOLIES 2016
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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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Billy Donovan: 'You guys have got to want this night to last forever', pregame - 2006

September 30, 2016
Source: http://www.motivationalvideo.net/greatest-...

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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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Tony Arcuri: "Be the intangible tonight', Indian Hill Braves High School - 2007

September 30, 2016

Most of you guys know I'm trying to be a spiritual guy. I'm not telling you what to believe, I'm not telling you how to believe, but everyday at some point during the day, I open up a book that I believe in, and I just pop to a page and I look through it, okay? Sometimes that page gives me great insight. I'm going to tell you what I opened up to today. It's [inaudible 00:00:24]. You don't have to be a historian of this to know what I'm telling you, okay? The first thing I opened to is the story about David, all right. David was the son of Samuel, one of the greatest kings of Israel, all right. What happened with David, he had eight brothers. When Samuel's time came to lose power, everybody was looking to his sons. He had eight. David was the least likely for the one chosen. He was the youngest, the smallest, the weakest. He was the one selected.

You may say, why am I telling you that tonight? Why do we need to hear that? Here's why. I'm telling you one. He was the least likely candidate. There are a lot of people out here tonight who think you are the least likely candidate to be successful. David was chosen back then because he had an intangible. His intangible was his heart, all right? They're bigger, they got athletes ... they got guys going to Division One schools, all right. We can see that, and so can everybody else. But nobody can see the intangible with us, all right? There's a reason why I opened up to that passage. We got to make that happen tonight. Be the intangible tonight. Here we go. Lord ...

Team:           Lord.

Arcuri:           I will be one.

Team:           I will be one.

Arcuri:           I am one.

Team:           I am one.

Arcuri:           I do not do everything.

Team:           I do not do everything.

Arcuri:           But I can do something.

Team:           But I can do something.

Arcuri:           [inaudible 00:01:53].

Team:           [inaudible 00:01:53].

Arcuri:           Which I'm about to do tonight.

Team:           Which I'm about to do tonight.

Arcuri:           With your help.

Team:           With your help.

Arcuri:           I will do it.

Team:           I will do it.

Arcuri:           Thank God I play for [inaudible 00:02:01].

Team:           Thank God I play for [inaudible 00:02:03].

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In COACH 2 Tags TONY ARCURI, INDIAN HILL BRAVES, HIGH SCHOOL, FOOTBALL, HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL, BE THE INTANGIBLE, TRANSCRIPT, RELIGION, CHRISTIANITY, BIBLE
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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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Caroline Wilson: 'I was accused of giving votes to only the good looking players', Tackling the Sport of Men, Deakin University David Parkin Oration - 2016

September 5, 2016

20 July 2016, Deakin Edge, Federation Square, Melbourne, Australia

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XINbIqAk9m...

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In BROADCASTER Tags CAROLINE WILSON, DAVID PARKIN ORATION, DEAKIN UNIVERSITY, WOMEN, WOMEN IN FOOTY, AFL, FOOTBALL, FEMINISM
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Titus O'Reilly: 'Each year I can claim my Demons membership as a charity donation when I do my tax', Sydney Swans Redbacks Coterie Lunch - 2016

June 4, 2016

7 May 2016, SCG, Sydney, Australia

Titus O'Reilly is a footy satirist who has followed the Demons since 1809. He delivered this speech at a Sydney Swans Redbacks coterie function, that he was lured to by the prospect of an open bar. The Swans were playing Essendon that day.

Thank you ladies and gentlemen. I feel in good company being amongst footy fans.

What a great club you have in the Swans, so well run.

I’ll give you an example of how well run it is.

They saw that you play Essendon today and thought, these people are going to need a couple of hours of drinking to face that, so here we all are.

It must be nice to have your membership money go to a well-run club. Each year I can claim my Demons membership as a charity donation when I do my tax.

I actually felt quite nervous coming here and speaking to you this afternoon.

It’s hard to follow the comedic performance Collingwood put on for you all back in Round One.

Wasn’t that something? I bet you all felt very sorry for them and didn’t gloat at all.

They’re a club that’s caused you a lot of problems in recent years.

Not on the field of course.

Collingwood haven’t caused anyone trouble on the field in some while.

I mean how good was Eddie’s decision to take the Collingwood coaching position off Mick Malthouse and hand it to Nathan Buckley.

Collingwood have been lower on the ladder every year since and Malthouse going to Carlton has probably set them back a decade.

Talk about killing two birds with one stone.

I can’t remember a single decision that has made so many people as happy as that coaching change has.

At least not since no fault divorces were introduced in Australia.

Really, we should all be thanking Eddie.

Especially given you guys managed to also palm off Jesse White onto them.

That was just cruel.

They already had Travis Cloke and you gave them another forward that can’t kick goals.

Still, Collingwood have caused you a lot of problems.

You may remember Eddie McGuire’s disastrous attempt to promote musicals.

And as you know, they’re a big reason you lost your Cost of Living Allowance. 

That’s when a bunch of Victorian clubs got upset that you were correctly following an AFL policy.

There’s nothing more upsetting than when a club follows the rules.

So the AFL took away your COLA and that made the VFL people very happy.

Oh, except then the AFL went further and slapped you with that trading ban.

That really taught you a lesson for obeying their rules.

Remember, this is a sporting body that fined Melbourne for being found not guilty of tanking.

Now we still don’t really know the reasons why the AFL imposed that trade ban.

In all honesty, they can’t really come out and say they did it just to stop Eddie bothering them, even if that’s a perfectly understandable reason.

I mean, if someone said to me, ‘I’m doing this so Eddie stops contacting me every single day’ you’d understand.

Anyway, you guys seem to still find great players despite the ban.

I actually thought the lockout laws would cause you more problems.

At the very least, I expected the lockout laws to void a few of your existing contracts.

But despite all that you’ve got players like Tom Papley, Callum Mills, Tom Mitchell, Isaac Heeney, the list goes on and on.

The next move might be to just ban you from having players altogether.

What’s worse about the ban and the stripping of COLA is that hasn’t actually stopped the Victorian teams from complaining.

Now they’re complaining about zones.

They’re furious because the Giants have won a few games. This is a side that lost to Melbourne not that long ago.

Suddenly, the Riverina is being fought over like it’s the holy land.

It’s the heat that comes on any interstate team when they’re good. It’s lucky the Gold Coast are an absolute mess. No one is complaining about them.

Not even their six members.

I feel a bit sorry for the Giants, after all the AFL makes them regularly visit Canberra.

Surely that more than offsets any benefits they get in recruiting.

What we should look at instead is how many Victorian teams keep shooting themselves in the foot.

As a supporter of a Victorian club, I can tell you, they make enough mistakes to keep themselves out of the finals, let alone what anyone else is doing.

The problem with a lot of clubs is they’re run almost as badly as the Shane Warne foundation.

I was shattered when Warnie shut down his foundation. I don’t know how to donate to his parties now.

Anyway, speaking of badly run organisations brings us to today’s opponent, the Essendon Football Club.

Essendon are like the band Nickelback. They're terrible and the majority of people can't stand them but they still have a massive following.

The Bombers have been more a legal defence fund over the last three years than a football club.

That’s who have been the big winners out of this, lawyers.

Every year on James Hird’s birthday, lawyers light a candle to him.

Essendon members can actually choose when they sign up whether to sponsor a barrister or a Queens Counsel. It’s a lovely touch.

The Bombers, may not have the Riverina as a recruiting problem but they do have Melbourne University law school.

Today, you’ll get to see what happens to a team that has had its twelve best players banned from playing.

Yet they’ve still got one more win than Fremantle.

That’s also one more win than James Hird has had in court over the last few years.

This week he lost a case to get Essendon’s insurer to cover his legal coasts.

It’s the first time I’ve ever barracked for an insurance company in a court case.

Poor James. If the Victorian teams really wanted to stop the Giants they should try and get Hird to coach them.

It's sad that you can be run out of a club just because your players have been injected hundreds of time with unknown substances.

I’m going to go out on a limb here today and tip you guys to win.

It’s not just because I’m here at this event, it’s because I saw Essendon play Carlton last week.

It’s OK, I’m receiving counselling.

Did anyone here see it?

It was arguably the worst game of football I’ve seen and I’m a Melbourne supporter.

The whole second quarter had not one single goal scored.  

I would have been quite happy to have died during that game. I actively wished for it.

Yet no matter how much I wished for it, death did not come.

I must say in finishing, you really are very lucky to have such a well-run club, to have seen Premierships and great players like Tony Lockett, Adam Goodes and Paul Kelly.

I know it hasn’t always been that way.

Because the opposite is worse. So much worse.

I’m a Melbourne supporter and barracking for them has taken a decade off my life.

The only good news for me, is that means ten less years of having to watch them.

Good luck to your team today and thank you.

Source: http://titusoreily.com/

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In BROADCASTER Tags TITUS O'REILLY, FUNNY, SYDNEY SWANS, TRANSCRIPT, LUNCH, AUSTRALIAN RULES, AFL, FOOTY, SPEAKOLIES 2016
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