Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Rugby and Politics

RUGBY

POLITICS

Why would those two words ever be seen together? They shouldn't! However here in the great land of sunny South Africa you cant seem to seperate them.


The use of rugby as a cohesive tool to help mend a broken country, joining all under one flag has been examined and discussed at length, the fact of the matter is that rugby can and is used as a political tool. I dont seem to mind when the tool is used with out interfernece with its mechanisms but let me explain.

When Nelson used the Afrikaaners passion for rugby to create a common ground to show unity, to appeal to their hearts, thats clever and thats politics.

When the politicians ride on the backs of a rugby victory, 1995, 2007 world cup, thats ok, its great advertising and great use of a national resource.

However the use and abuse of rugby by administrator and politicians is killing the game I love, and that isn't ok with me. When half wits, Butana Komphela, use rugby to get there names in the paper (we will take away their passports, sprinbok emblem is a swastika,) it messes with the players minds, unsettles supporters and creates negativity of various forms.

When politicians use the rugby entity to maniplulate situations to further their own agendas, it should be seen and acknowledge as an abuse of their position and not tollerated.

There are HUGE problems is so many aspects of this country, there are huge problems with our sports, from olympics, to soccer and rugby. I see them, others see them, the country cry out for our leaders to try and solve them, and yet they dont.

We need change.

Not in emblems but in action.

Butana, be part of the solution, not part of the problem.

Nelson Mandela Rugby's role in his rise. From The Economist print edition

Nelson Mandela
Rugby's role in his rise
Sep 11th 2008 From The Economist print edition

TOWARDS the end of his 27 years in jail, Nelson Mandela began to yearn for a hotplate. He was being well fed by this point, not least because he was the world’s most famous political prisoner. But his jailers gave him too much food for lunch and not enough for supper. He had taken to saving some of his mid-day meal until the evening, by which time it was cold, and he wanted something to heat it up.

The problem was that the officer in charge of Pollsmoor prison’s maximum-security “C” wing was prickly, insecure, uncomfortable talking in English and virtually allergic to black political prisoners. To get around him, Mr Mandela started reading about rugby, a sport he had never liked but which his jailer, like most Afrikaner men, adored. Then, when they met in a corridor, Mr Mandela immediately launched into a detailed discussion, in Afrikaans, about prop forwards, scrum halves and recent games. His jailer was so charmed that before he knew it he was barking at an underling to “go and get Mandela a hotplate!”

Mr Mandela’s story never fails to inspire. As a young man, he started an armed struggle against apartheid. It went nowhere, and he went to jail. While maturing behind bars, he decided that moral suasion might work where bombs had failed. It did. South Africa’s white rulers surrendered power without a civil war. Several books have been written about Mr Mandela’s crucial role in coaxing his countrymen towards a more civilised form of government. John Carlin’s is the first to tell the tale through the prism of sport.

This premise is not as odd as it sounds. It was not only Mr Mandela’s regal charm that won over white South Africans. It was the fact that he took the trouble to study and understand their culture. At a time when many blacks dismissed rugby as “the brutish, alien pastime of a brutish, alien people”, Mr Mandela saw it as a bridge across the racial chasm.

The game is not an incidental part of Afrikaner culture, like cricket is to the English. To many Afrikaners, who have grown up playing rough games on sun-baked ground so hard that every tumble draws blood, rugby is little short of everything. Mr Mandela knew that if he was to convince these people that one man, one vote would not mean catastrophe, he had to “address their hearts”, not their brains. If the fearsome terrorist on the other side of the negotiating table was a rugby fan, could he really be as bad as they thought?

Mr Carlin focuses on the decade after 1985, when most blacks thought the country was sliding into war. He draws on his experiences as the South Africa correspondent for the Independent, a British newspaper, during the transition to democracy. But the book does not climax, as a standard historical text might, with South Africa’s first proper multi-racial elections in 1994. Instead, it builds up to the rugby world cup final in 1995, which was held in South Africa and which the home team won.

This makes sense. Elections are all very well, but the moment when black South Africans started cheering for a mostly-white rugby team, when white fans in the stadium tried gamely to sing a Zulu miners’ anthem and when Mr Mandela donned the green jersey of the Springboks—“It was the moment I realised that there really was a chance this country could work,” gushes a teary-eyed rugby official.

Mr Carlin brings the story alive by telling it through the eyes of a broad spectrum of South Africans. Among these is Desmond Tutu, the Nobel prize-winning archbishop of Cape Town, who was in America on the day of the final and had to find a bar that would let him watch it at an ungodly hour of the morning. Also, Niel Barnard, a former chief spy for the apartheid regime, who used to keep a thick file on Bishop Tutu. And Justice Bekebeke, a young township firebrand who killed a policeman for firing at a child during a riot and spent time on death row.

Mr Bekebeke is the most interesting of Mr Carlin’s portraits. On the morning of the match, he is still too bitter about a lifetime of injustice to support the Springboks. But then, something changes. The surging emotion of the event sweeps him along. “I just had to give up, to surrender,” he says, “And I said to myself, well, this is the new reality. There is no going back: the South African team is now my team, whoever they are, whatever their colour.”
Many writers reveal the nuts and bolts of South Africa’s transformation to non- racial democracy. But few capture the spirit as well as Mr Carlin.

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I wonder how many administratos, players, coaches etc, read this article, and how it changed their views, if at all.

FRANK

Monday, September 1, 2008

Reasons to support the sharks

Simply put, Durban has the hottest woman!




The sharks girls are a piece of Natal rugby history, they have been around for longer then I can remember (thats not saying too much, as im not that old), and I know they (the sharks) were the first South African franchise to start with the "hot girls at rugby games" concept.


The sharks girls dont dance.


They don,t distract from game time.


They aren't cow girls with stupid, weak choreographed (ok that word looks wrong) moves.


They are some of the hottest woman SA has on offer and they support the Sharks.

It doesnt get any better!




ps: For the record these arent mindless barbie dolls, the last S sharks girl in the picture to the right -------------->
is a qualified accountant, ex- tutor.

And the most legendary sharks girl (in my limited opinion), Courtney (sorry no pic:)), has a Business Science degree in Finance, and had a song on East Coast Radio for a while, and will eventually take over the world. So for all those hottie haters out there, dont hate the player, or the game, but what ever you do DONT hate the shark girls.

Thanks you ladies, see you all again soon!


FRANK














Bok Quick Hitters

Habana, no one can deny the talent, however I feel he could be getting bigger then the game. Can anyone really think of anything incredible he has done lately? I unfortunately can’t. Maybe the defences are just covering him better, but a great wing adapts and still make mince of the defences. He is a great talent and has proved himself at international level, however I feel he has lost his way a bit and that he needs the right kind of coaching to be recoverable.

The Beast, fantastic scrumming! You are all over the field in defence and when you are caught on the wing, it’s like watching a elephant bull at full charge, but most importantly you keep the ball alive and don’t get fumbled into touch like so many winger/props before you. Keep it up!

Adrian Jacobs, people have said you were too small and that you have unbalanced the backline. BOLLOCKS! South Africans have an obsession with size, we wasted arguably one of our greatest talents, Brent Russel and we often get punished by Giteau! Sorry old boys, SIZE ISN'T EVERYTYHING! Adi, you are the example to all those school boys out there, run the right lines, keep your line, hit it at pace and score tries. Simple. You have been a great center and with Jean, a great pairing. When Fourie comes back (hopefully attempts to tackle lower, thereby avoiding cheek to head collisions) I look forward to seeing you accept the challenge and hold on to your position.

Nokwe, Great talent, blistering pace, hands look perfect so far and his ability to step without slowing down is deceptively important.

JP, I was never your biggest fan, in fact I wanted to shoot you after your first 5 games for the sharks, however I stand by the fact that I was wrong, there is a reason Eddie Jones is a international coach and I’m not, he saw your talent from the get go, and its taken me time to see it (or you to prove itJ). You have been playing phenomenal rugby and you have made the green and gold proud. Thank you, and good luck!

Andries Bekker, definite talent, my only question is where will he fit in, as the enforcer in the Bakkies mold or as the specialist, Matfield mold? I look forward to watching a promising career.

Bismark, he has been Smit's understudy for years, and a great replacement. He has size, strength, experience and capability. He is more powerful and dominating then we may realise, he never looks tired and is always keen to run at someone, and often over them. However I would like to see him hold onto the ball a little more in contact, I believe it involves more technique then strength.

Ndungane, does the job, I have no complaints.

Jean, ridiculously quick for your size, a step that still fools the greatest opposition, you came back time and again from the most daunting odds and South Africa is grateful.

Spies, you have been given the chance, and I'm left wondering "was Spies on the field?".

Bolla, not a game winner, not quick enough and I've met you in person and you are always polite and very accommodating but I have never liked your attitude on the field. Not to mention that there are greater scrummies in this country who beat you on several levels, passing, kicking, speed, defence, etc etc.

Steyn, to much to say for the quick hitters.

Luke, great to see you on the bench.

Ruan, SEE THE LIGHT! You are the next fly half for South Africa, accept it, embrace it, and take us to greater heights.

BLAKE

Percy by numbers... Thanks SASI

For his 100th time in a Springbok jersey, Percival Colin Montgomery will become the most capped Springbok off all time and first to reach 100 test caps. Thats not his only record!

Most career conversions in Tests. (150)
Most conversions in a Test match. (12)
Most career penalties in a Test match. (148)
Most penalties in a Test match. (7)
Most tries as Springbok fullback. (18)
Most points in all Springbok matches. (898)
The leading point scorer in Test matches. (897)
Most Test points by a player in a season. (219)
The leading point scorer in a Test match. (35)

Most Tests as a backline combination with Stefan Terblanche, Pieter Muller, Andre Snyman, Pieter Rossouw, Henry Honiball and Joost van der Westhuizen in 1998. (6)

Most Tests as a three quarter combination with Stefan Terblanche, Pieter Muller, Andre Snyman and Pieter Rossouw in 1998. (8)

Most capped player in a single position. 82 Test matches as fullback (World record). He has also played in three other positions: 11 as centre, 2 as wing and 4 as flyhalf.The most capped Springbok off all time. (99)

Highest South African points scorer in World Cup rugby.(111)
The Springbok with the most Tri-Nations caps. (31)
The highest South African points scorer in the Tri-Nations. (204)
The joint record holder for most tries in a Tri Nations series. Montgomery shares the record with Marius Joubert, Jean de Villiers, Jaque Fourie, Bryan Habana and Fourie du Preez. (3)


BEHOLD, A LEGEND!


FRANK