During
the winter months when it is dark and cold as you slink out of bed
towards the workday and closing in on the same by the time you
finally get home, weekdays can wear you down like a rain sodden
sweater. Two days and a Friday night take on more import in the
rejuvenation of the soul over this period, and there is nothing more
spiritually healing mid year than footy in its approach to the
finals.
Nicknamed 'the Rat' due to my Johnny Platten shoulder length curls |
Scorned, I tried desperately to defend my passion in terms that I thought they may understand. I compared my love of footy to great tv shows and movie twists of plot that you could never see coming. Footy is no soap where you can spout identical dialogue minutes before the bad actor does. Teams begin each game 0 – 0 and then the mystery unfolds with all its courage and cleverness and heroes and villains.
I
compared my love of footy with my love of music. In that in our
imperfect works as humans, now and then we reach beautiful heights.
That chord progression that sends a tingle down your spine, the
chorus which lifts your heart, the harmony that resonates in your
gut. These moments are akin to the player that spins out of a tackle,
sidesteps and makes the ball talk along the ground from the boundary
line, through for a goal. The team of telepaths that piece together a
chain of quick look-away handballs in a drive forward against the
wind. The young kid on the big stage that goes back and boots the
goal after the siren for a last gasp victory. The player that rides
the pack for a speckie and is lifted heavenwards on the shoulders of
others. Every game is replete with its moments of movement and
strategy and skill that bring me joy to have witnessed. Some don't
see it, that's ok.
Ted Whitten Jnr and Snr |
I
also recall another watershed moment in our family footy life. It
happened standing in mud and rain at the Western Oval on the opposite
side to the Doug Hawkins wing. We beat the Hawks that day in a very
low scoring affair. That was the day my mother switched from being a
Hawks supporter and finally made our family of four whole. We were no longer tainted with the poos and wees. Being red,
white and blue is a tradition that holds fast with me. Now if I can
just convert my wife from those blue and white hoops!
Perhaps
I'm drawn to footy not just by my soul but by my body and mind as
well. They say (whoever they are) that muscle memory plays a part in
your enjoyment of watching sport or movement. You see someone do
something and there are corresponding parts of your brain that light
up pathways and release endorphins. You don't even have to have
performed a similar feat to create the pathways. It is in the power
of imagination and why sportspeople often try to visualise what they
intend to do before they do it. I intend to do nothing bar watch the
visuals however.
So
I had my go at playing and I also had my go at being an assistant
coach of the Deloraine High Footy team while I was a Chaplain. They were a
fantastic blend of misfits and talent and courage but we lost a lot
more than we won. Perhaps I was inspired by another. Barry was
the Pastor of our church in Brisbane and applied to be Chaplain to the hapless
Brisbane Bears back in my youth. I remember standing on the hill with
him as he hurled abuse and encouragement in equal measure and with
equal delight. One overly exuberant day left him on the walk back to
the car with hardly the shirt on his back – his favourite blue check flannel torn to shreds
like he'd had an Incredible Hulk moment. I like to think that he thought he had. But a coach I am not – or am I?
is Stevie fit to carry my captaincy? |
Fantasy
football has its moments where you finally catch up with a mate who
has been avoiding you all Monday to bask in the glory of rubbing it
in that you knocked them off top spot. Alternatively there are
moments of despair where it is you that turns the phone off and stays
away from email. Fantasy footy with all its lingo around Pigs,
piglets, donuts and ghost kicks has meant more to me than killing
time. It is a genuine social network of geeks and characters that
helps to sustain me as I reside now in the foreign footy landscape
that is Sydney. We discuss trades and encourage each other during the
week and then trash talk each other over the weekend. I'm looking
forward to besting my best mate 'Rainbow Buttmonkeys' in the finals.
Yet as a Doggies supporter I'm more used to losing. So if and when I
get bumped out in a preliminary final by a mere handful of points it
will feel familiar to languish over the missed opportunities and the
injustice of it all. Strangely I can find that just as rewarding as
going on to beat one of my mates in the final.
Whether I'm just a footy tragic or exhibit A of a Geek Tragedy, and be
it real life or fantasy footy, it's still a bunch of passionate people dressing
up in their favourite colours and creating culture as they go.
Following the theatre of it all as it is played out yearly and builds
on the rich history that is forever present. I love it.
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