Tuesday, 17 June 2008
Rugby Smugby
We were 18-12 down with five minutes to play and on the attack. A converted try would put us ahead and better still leave Australia little time to come back at us. I was on the edge of my seat and so were the thousands of Irish fans around me.
Aine and Sinead sat directly behind and I had the pleasure of listening to the dull tones of their midland accent for most of the game. My accent recognition software has taken a bit of a battering since I came here, but I'd still put these girls within 12 miles of Clara, County Offaly. This was despite the fact that Sinead was wearing a fetching badge attached to her figure hugging Ireland Rugby Jersey (when did theystart making Rugby Shirts for women by the way) that said "I'm notIrish, but kiss me anyway".
Like me, Aine and Sinead were perched on the edge of their seats asBrian O'Driscoll intercepted a stray Australian pass and took off forthe corner. "It's coming, it's coming" Aine screamed and she edged forward on her seat. Then she was up and whooping. Unfortunately, it was not to celebrate a try but to take part in the Mexican wave that was just tsumaning it's way past our section of the Telstra Dome.
As the wave passed, Aine and Sinead sat back and followed its progress around the stadium. "It's dying" one of them whispered with a voice so sad you'd think she was talking about family members. Ireland were camped on the Australian try line at the time but Aine and Sinead didn't seem to notice. They were there for the occasion, an opportunity to take some pictures to add to their face book profile and the on-line album that would record their backpacking year out. Or maybe they heard that a Mexican wave contest was in town.
The reasons people go to Rugby matches are multitude, although watching Rugby seems well down the list. By the length of the queue at the bar, I'd say drinking is important and fancy dress is also becoming an important part of Irish days out, if the amount of leprechaun outfits is anything to go by.
I come to this issue with the missionary zeal of a recent convert. I came to Rugby late. The first game I went to was on November 2nd, 1991 at Twickenham. England were playing Australia for the William Webb Ellis trophy, or the World Cup as the Tabloids liked to call it.
I like to think that I started at the top, although my memories of the day aren't so noble. The rugby was pretty awful and the weather wasn't much better. I also felt guilty about the seven empty seats to my left, particularly when there wasn't another empty seat in the house. My ex-girlfriend had procured eleven tickets from her power broking father.We trawled through our friends and acquaintances and could only find two other people who were interested in going.
It's hard to believe now, but in the days before pay per view satellite TV, Rugby wasn't that popular. I worked in the Finance Department of a large Insurance Company and despite the fact that we had 42 thoroughly middle class Accountants, none of them wanted to go. Although the fact that we decided not to offer tickets to English people may have accounted for some of that number. And that's what I feel guilty about.
It would have been so much better to have seven English people sitting in those seats, if only so that I could take piss out of them when Australia won.
Like all new converts, I threw myself into the game with the enthusiasm of a ten year old. I schooled myself on the rules and personalities of Rugby, followed the annual parlour game of regulation changes and read all the analysis the media had to offer. And what does all this knowledge do for me? It allows me to be a smug bastard at Rugby matches and to sit in a minority of one.
Nobody understands Rugby. They don't know how forwards are supposed to bind in scrums, what constitutes a forward pass or how many points you get for a successful penalty goal. The scoreboard operator inMelbourne had this problem, which just goes to prove what an alien sport Rugby is in this City.
So I find myself in perfect isolation, screaming at the injustice of refereeing decisions or imploring our front row forwards to get off their backsides and push. This means that Rugby is a totally unhappy experience for me because Ireland aren't very good. I've watched them twice in eight days in two different countries, which almost qualifies me to be middle class. I just have to perfect my accent and develop a loathing for people on social welfare and I'm in. The highlight of both matches was a burger I got before the game in Wellington which put fastfood to shame and the halftime entertainment in Melbourne which consisted of two men racing each other around cones in what looked like12 feet tall inflated condoms.
The Rugby itself was a battle of eager amateurism against bored professionalism and on both weekends the boredom won. So I tucked away my Ireland Jersey on Sunday morning, resigned to the fact that sport is a cruel mistress. But like all good mistresses, sport teases you and then tempts you back with the promise of future redemption. So I settled down in front of the TV on Sunday to watch Carlton take on Collingwood in the AFL in a mood of hope rather than expectation.
Beating Collingwood is up there in my sporting priorities with Dundalk beating Drogheda, Wexford beating Kilkenny, Arsenal beating Man United and Ireland beating anyone in the top eight in Rugby. Carlton won by 30 points and my hero Setanta O’Hailpin had a fantastic match. The mistress of sport has once more tempted me into her bed. How long before I die between the jaws of lust again?
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