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Canberra - The team that makes you forget about Melbourne

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  • Canberra - The team that makes you forget about Melbourne

    Steve Mascord



    IMAGINE, if you can, that the Canberra Raiders win the comp.

    As I sit here at CUA Stadium reflecting on their 24-22 third qualifying final win over Penrith, it isn’t so hard to do.

    We hacks might be getting stale and cynical and burnt out by September but ... I mean ... what an effing great time of year this is! The Sydney Roosters-Wests Tigers game goes for 100 minutes and when the NRL man on hand at Penrith is asked how this will affect kick-off here, he says they’re “playing it by ear’’.

    A minute’s silence really does go for a minute as field goal attempts across town spew off boots in all directions. Eventually, kick-off here comes 15 minutes late and Fox Sports has a quarter-hour of exclusive finals football to show as a result - because Nine missed it.

    Unless you follow Penrith, you could not help but leave CUA with a warm glow. It’s not every day that a player dedicates his man-of-the-match performance to the courage of mothers in child birth.

    That’s what Terry Campese did, in honour of two-day old Billie and his partner Sarah. As he posed for pictures on the way to the bus, his was a pure, wholesome, unadulterated brand of joy that those of us who have never been parents cannot really comprehend.

    It’s not often that players and fans embrace so much, for so long, after a game that a fence collapses.

    The Raiders have not won a finals series match for 10 years. They haven’t won one in Sydney for longer. They are the first side to win six games in a row this season.

    And so without offending the other seven clubs which are still technically in the running, I want to say this: the Canberra Raiders are probably the only one left who can make us completely forget about the Shit Storm.

    Call them Storm-away.

    What better way to overshadow a team that gets $6 million a year from a media organisation and pays players with dodgy accounting than have a side sponsored by the CMFEU that always seems to be penny-pinching win the 2011 premiership?

    A club with talented juniors coming out its ears but a persecution complex that runs so deep it thought its star fullback had already signed with the Sydney Roosters.

    Until he re-signed with them.

    A mob that gives reporters vouchers for the canteen instead of catering the press box. A joint that took a stand and sacked Todd Carney, only for him to come back and win the Dally M medal playing for someone else.

    A place where the players know the fans and the fans know the players. Where they still go to the club for a beer after the game. Where the coach is the brother of the chief executive and the bloke who was chairman in 1982 still has a say.

    And a group of players who don’t just stick the ball under their arms for five tackles and kick. Blokes who actually see it as their responsibility to entertain.

    For anything that is still bad about rugby league, the Raiders can cancel it out with something good. Rugby league doesn’t need saving, but if it did Canberra could do the job.

    Imagine there’s no Melbourne. It’s easy if you try. No rorts below us. Above us only sky. Imagine all the Raiders. Living for today

    http://www.backpagelead.com.au/leagu...anti-melbourne

  • #2
    iff the roosters carnt win, id be happy to see the raiders there, you forgot to mention one large blight on youir name? your lot were part of the newscorp sauperleague fiasco!

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    • #3
      Originally posted by stephenj View Post
      iff the roosters carnt win, id be happy to see the raiders there, you forgot to mention one large blight on youir name? your lot were part of the newscorp sauperleague fiasco!
      What a segue into this article

      Falling in love, again

      Tim Gavel

      As a sports commentator manufacturing genuine passion is one of the hardest things to do. I know it's an act and so do the listeners.

      Thankfully, I have only had to do it a couple of times in the past 22 years and that was during the days of Super League when I publicly defended the players and their right to sign with News Limited. Rugby League was being played by players with day-time jobs who trained at night. My belief was they were not being paid what they were worth.

      I then became disheartened by the unabashed greed displayed by some people involved in the game; the fans became collateral damage.

      During that period, calling matches involving the Raiders was a test. They weren't playing the Dragons or Tigers. They were playing sides such as the Hunter Mariners and the Adelaide Rams in a manufactured rivalry.

      There were games during Super League when I knew my heart wasn't in it and times when I thought about changing careers. The thing that kept me going as a commentator was knowing that the time would come when my passion for the Raiders and the code would return.

      Before Super League I would go to as many training sessions as possible to cover injuries and team changes and so on, but for a couple years struggled to attend more than one session a week. Some fans haven't returned from the Super League Days.

      This year my interest has overtaken the feeling generated by the team in the late '80s and early '90s and, in many respects, it is not hard to work out why.

      Is it because of the emergence of the young players such as Josh Dugan, Joel Thompson and Jarrod Croker; is it the good, old fashioned values instilled by Alan Tongue; the toughness of the forward pack led by David Shillington; the work ethic of Josh Miller and the fact that the team is being coached by one of the club's former greats in David Furner? There is plenty to like about this team, not just for the present but for the future.

      It is one of the reasons I came out so strongly in support of Furner and the players mid-season when they were struggling to find their rhythm and some fans were overreacting to losses, threatening to tear up their season tickets and calling for the sacking of the coach and CEO.

      But the Raiders fought back to become one of the most exciting attacking teams in the competition. Now that they've made the finals, the platform has been laid for the future.

      If you are one of those who lost their passion for the Raiders in the wake of Super League, now might be the time to take another look because this team has the potential to be something special.

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      • #4
        ok i feel your, disgust for superleague, at easts though all our fg squad had become full time professional players some years before ( late 70's?), so lack of cash was no reason to defect? the bs line about broadcasting games into china must have hit a nerve with someone ? its still going on with news ownership of the nrl, melbourne brisbane and the cowboys? time they opted out completely? i too can understand the passion you feel for the raiders from a one team town, its a bit different in sydney, very tribal here? i dont have a dislike for the raiders as i do some of the qld and victorian teams who i feel have done their best to bring
        our'game into disrepute! iff easts are out its go the faiders for me!
        Last edited by stephenj; 09-14-2010, 02:00 PM.

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        • #5
          goodbye canberra, better luck next year?pity you didnt have carnage!

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