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Existence
in the Nanny State
Rugby league is a game played by
men. Men with heavy testicles and thick necks with deep wells
of courage and a drive that puts even the best merchant bankers
and politicians to shame. The athletes who cross the chalk
and enter the rectangular battlefield are brave and brutish,
skilful and competitive, beguiling and coarse. They have
a thirst for violence, admittedly controlled, that most normal
humans cannot fathom along with a skill set that allows them
to make a living from playing the game because people are
prepared to give their money and time to watch them.
They are outstanding athletes who should be lauded for their
courage, competitiveness, skill and ability to entertain
through their extraordinary sporting deeds. Their athletic
abilities are to be admired and in that sense they can be
held up as role models.
Rugby league players cannot, however, be held up as role
models for good citizenship. At least not as a collective,
just as no collective can have the individuals that comprise
it simplistically sterilised into sameness. No group of people
can be held up as role models for good citizenship as doing
so simply exterminates any sense of individuality.
We have been over this before. Many times. Most recently
with Michael Phelps. Athletes are athletes. They should not
be held to a higher or lower standard because they excel
at sport rather than accounting, poetry or snake milking.
They are citizens who make a living from playing sport. They
make a living from playing sport because the market allows
for it. There is a demand for entertainment and athletes
provide that entertainment.
Some citizens who make their living from sport are law-abiding
do-gooders who commit few wrongs. Others are serial recidivists
who break the law and harm others. Most fall somewhere in
between. None of that is particularly relevant other than
to say that the individuals that comprise a group of people
are different. They should all be held to the same laws and
social standards just as people across different groups should
be held to the same laws and social standards. An excellence
in athleticism does not mean you need to adhere to a higher
form of social behaviour than those of us who sit somewhere
between decent and abysmal in the continuum of athletic ability.
This, of course, is a tiresome
argument and one that has been trotted out on innumerable
occasions on these pages.
It is a liberal opinion that is not only valid but entirely
correct to anybody with enough common sense to avoid bandwagons
and lynch mobs. But I am sick of arguing it and I dare say
the great majority are sick of reading “The Sportsman
Is Not A Role Model” line. I just can’t let it
slide, however. More to the point, I won’t and if this
turns into some form of crusade then so be it.
In the last few weeks, four NRL players have been out on
the drink and have been torn down by the media and punished
by the league who have acceded to yet another populist campaign.
They have not only suffered greater punishments because they
are footballers but different punishments based on their
differing talents as footballers.
Brett Stewart is a fine footballer,
a tremendous athlete and a try scoring machine. He is a
role model fullback. He
is not a role model for good citizenship. He was suspended
by the NRL for four weeks, allegedly because he was publicly
drunk and because he was selected to partake in the NRL’s
advertising campaign. The punishment was given without warning
and made without precedent but allegedly had nothing to do
with a sexual assault charge hanging over his head, David
Gallop going to great lengths to exert that the NRL was not
infringing on the notions of a presumption of innocence and
natural justice.
Anthony Watmough is a tough rugby league player and a fine
example of a fearless and hard-working forward. He is not
a role model for good citizenship. He was drunk at the same
function as Brett Stewart and allegedly punched a sponsor
in the face. He suffered no league punishment, a somewhat
interesting position seeing as Stewart was suspended for
being drunk and not over allegations he was involved in a
sexual assault.
Jake Friend is, well, a first grade footballer. He may turn
out to be a decent hooker. He may not make the nut. Either
way, he is not and should not be held up as a role model
for good citizenship. He was caught drink driving after a
Roosters bonding night. He has accepted his guilt. Yet he
only received a two-week suspension from the NRL with David
Gallop and company seemingly considering drink driving half
the offence of being drunk at a club function if you are
in the NRL advertising campaign and twice the offence of
being drunk at a club function and punching a club sponsor.
Brett Seymour is a serviceable half and a rugby league player
with an admitted drinking problem. He is not a role model
for good citizenship. He was videotaped after a ten hour
drinking binge, stumbling around with his shirt off. He received
no suspension from the NRL but was suspended for two weeks
by his employer, the Cronulla Sharks. Sharks CEO Tony Zappia
stated that Seymour would not have been suspended if video
tape of the incident did not exist suggesting Seymour was
suspended for being caught rather than for being drunk. He
did nothing illegal.
These four footballers have all, however, been held up as
role models by a media that does same only so they get the
opportunity to throw them to the wolves the moment any of
them slips up. All four have been out on the drink in recent
times, a practice not uncommon among men in their twenties.
Jake Friend admitted committing a crime whilst intoxicated.
Stewart and Watmough were both accused of committing a crime
whilst under the influence. Brett Seymour, while acting somewhat
inappropriately whilst pissed, did nothing illegal and nothing
particularly unusual among those who binge drink.
Yet they were all led to the stoning by a rabid media hell-bent
on holding these athletes to higher standards than the rest
of society. It is vile populism run wild. The Daily Telegraph,
the same newspaper that printed nude pictures of a woman
named as Pauline Hanson without ever corroborating the story
and without ever seeing the original slides and where the
pictures turned out to be manufactured, has continued its
rabid campaign of high-end moralism that sees league players
torn apart at the first opportunity. Channel Nine paid a
woman $3,000 for footage of Brett Seymour drunk despite the
fact he committed no crime and was harming nothing but his
own reputation, further encouraging money-whores and con-artists
to set up the well-known in order to earn a payday. The media
has engaged in a hypocritical and fanatical campaign in order
to justify their own existence.
Worse, the NRL has acceded to it, joining the lynch mob to
appease low-brow media outlets with the short-term hope that
it will boost the image of the game. As such the NRL has
continued its habit of making policy on the run and then
not enforcing it consistently. See the Bulldogs loss of 37
points in 2002. If the NRL was serious about eradicating
a culture of drinking in rugby league, they would develop
a clear policy with obvious penalties and would then enforce
those penalties consistently. That is the NRL’s right
and would actually assist in reducing the drinking culture
and protecting the game’s image. Their belief in ad-hoc
decision-making and unclear and inconsistent enforcement
of penalties simply makes the NRL look weak and only further
fuels a Fourth Estate which believes they can direct the
fate of the sport.
The NRL needs to stop reacting to populist moralism driven
by a media operating out of self-interest. It is that simple.
If men want to drink, they should be allowed. If the NRL
is concerned about it happening in public, they should develop
a policy and make sure it is enforced consistently with acceptable
and unacceptable behaviour and punishments for breaches clearly
spelled out and signed off on by the league and the RLPA.
Failure to do so will only further indict the league on charges
of weakness and hypocrisy while the continuation of ad-hoc
punishments dished out inconsistently is an offense to all
liberal-minded rugby league lovers who believe in the right
of the individual.
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