Thursday 25 August 2011

How to be crap and still win!

I think I've mentioned more than once that in terms of skill, power and pace I was definitely  NOT  up there with my team mates. I was a fat, wonky knee'd Winger (mainly because at Winger you rarely passed which saved my team mates) however that's not to say I didn't have my good games.


One of these games was up at Cumbria, where for 70  minutes I played some of the best Rugby of my life in what was one of the most a gruelling games I've ever played in. What was even more amazing is that I wasn't even the best player on my team that day. In the last few minutes of the game I clashed knees with a huge prop forward who was trying to wipe his feet on my face. I went down like a sack of shit, and dragged the fat tosser with me. I couldn't get back up and rolled away in agony. My mates all thought I'd done my knee again and the game carried on. Fortunately I hadn't, although it did feel like someone had just took a sledgehammer to my kneecap. I hobbled about for the last few minutes and we won the game,  we didn't realise until the referee told us we had won (we all thought we were behind). Fast forward two days, my knee is now completely black and I'm walking down the stairs backwards. 


Saturday comes round and we're playing with a scratch 14, I'm playing in my usual position because we're short. I end up eating a load of painkillers and spent about twenty minutes in the physios room whilst she tries to manipulate my knee to bend.


We're playing against someones C team (their third team), they had a team in the NCL and the Premier as well. Now when you play against someones C team you come across a few players that have "passed their best days". A certain number of these players don't like the fact that you're still young and are able to muster a jog, these players then take it out on your face. For 80 minutes it was a scrap, our halfback ends up on the floor somehow getting nutted whilst he's on the deck! Naturally we are behind and don't have the fire power to fight back against guys who basically want to punch first tackle second.


But in the 65th minute something amazing happens, despite no longer being able to bend my left leg, I manage to hobble onto a pass from my centre and outpace the 40 year old winger I'm against and score a try in the corner. I'm frikking delirious, for the first time in 4 years I've actually outpaced someone and I've only got one leg.


Then something better happens, it happens again, (mainly due to my centre again making a great drive and pass). I slide in the corner in slow motion trying not to snap my leg and end up with three players landing on top of me. As I try and ungracefully get up with one leg, the other teams captain runs across. 


"How the fuck has he just scored again, he's absolutely WANK"


At this point I turn back around "Yeah I know, and I can still score past you twats" thankfully they decided not to try and beat the living crap out of me as it quickly dawned on them I was right.


So remember this, no matter how slow you are, how much you can't pass, no matter how many times you get put on your arse ......never give up. Because somewhere out there is a player even shitter than you are.......

Monday 22 August 2011

Supporters

Its been two months since my last post, I could pretend its because I've had something far more important to do. Like going to the gym, or fixing the bathroom or a long list of other things I probably should have done by now. Actually its mainly because I'm a lazy git, and its took about 5 emails from people threatening me to make me take it up again Example-"If you don't rite another blog, Im gonna find you and make u eat ur shoes".


So to save me eating my £4.99 bargain trainers, here's my thought for the week. What would an amateur Rugby League match be like without our supporters? They travel with us, watch us get our heads kicked in and then tell us what we did wrong and how the ref was a blind git for the entire 3 hour coach ride back.


I personally think that supporters are the most dangerous people in the world, no matter what the size they are able to swing the match in your favour, or against you.


One such group of supporters was typically good at doing this, when I played for a team in Oldham. It was only my third or fourth game for them, and they were gearing up to play against my old club (to which my brother still played). I was away with the missus that weekend and gave the lads one piece of advice: "Don't run at the hooker".


The hooker was a lad who went by name of "Lomas" and he was a player who had been at my old club for quite a while. He was neither the biggest or fastest player on the pitch, but what he did have was an amazing tackling technique. I don't remember a match where Lomas did not put in three of four tackles that would make Hulk Hogan cry. Now when you've a guy like that on your side its quite comical, you watch the forward trundle it in........ Lomas takes about 2 steps forward and then ........."SNAP" as Lomas' shoulder would connect with his chest. Normally you'd hear this girlish scream (similar to one I did when I did my knee in) and they'd drop like a sack of shit. Nothing illegal just an incredible technique.


Now you think such advice would have been taken from a player who had been at the club for over five years. However it was not......


So Saturday afternoon I get a phone call from my Brother, who is literally pissing himself laughing. Apparently my new team had started very well and ran in two unanswered tries. But at that point the supporters had decided to start heckling Lomas who at the time was not having a good game. Apparently Lomas didn't like this and decided to go on a one man demolition mission. 5 minutes later three of my new team members are stretchered off and my Brother runs in a hat-trick of tries. I turned up to training the next week and spoke to my new team mates, who admitted they were on top until the supporters started taking piss...... Sadly it was not the supporters that got the crap beaten out of them but the entire forward line.


The next week we were playing the top of the league, and once again we started strongly running in a few tries we had them on the back foot. All of a sudden our "supporters" start up again, "He's shite that number 8, he's got no balls" and "This lot are wank, we could beat you with our eyes shut". Surprise, surprise the top of league team that we were bossing took this to heart and start pummelling the crap out of us. At 60 minutes in, we're barely holding onto the lead and I wandered across to our supporters "For fucks sake, stop winding them up and shut the hell up". Did it work? Did it bollocks.


One of our supporters were then sent off for heckling the referee and the club received a fine , oh and we also lost the game.


So if you ever find yourself watch an amateur game of Rugby and feel like heckling always think of this:


Would you say it to them if you were wearing the shirt?





Sunday 19 June 2011

Youth Games

One thing everyone struggles with in sport is the jump from Junior/Youth competitions into Open Age. Athletes who have been the biggest or fastest throughout their career are all of a sudden chucked in against smarter and more capable opponents.

Some people work hard and get through, a lot however drop off, unable to adapt to a new more physical game. I never really had that problem personally, although I can see why some players struggle. I'd spent my entire junior years playing against "bigger boys." One of the biggest examples of this was the famous Greater Manchester Youth Games. This was a huge multi-sport competition that took place across loads of age groups across a weekend. My team put in three teams in the competition, Under 9's, Under 11's and Under 13's. I was 11 at the time and my brother was 14 (so technically he shouldnt have played for anyon but he played for the 13s).

The competition went as normal, after about 3 games our head coach game across to me and the captain of the under 11's. "Alright lads I need a favour, can you go and play in the Under 9's" Now at this point I thought he was taking the piss, both me and the Captain were both quite big for our age so were sometimes made to show our cards so we could play in our own age group. But we did as we were asked and turned up to the next game for the under 9's, the players on the opposition looked familiar. About 3 of them looked really familiar, that was because I'd see them playing against in the Under 13's squad a few weeks ago. Now there's cheating and then theres taking the piss, and this lot were well and truly taking the piss.

As with most memories of my matches they were hazy, the game was only 10 minutes long but it felt like an hour.We were getting destroyed and our only chance of us getting any points was with me taking a drive with them on their tryline. Rather than tackle me they decided to pick me up and dump me over their shoulders head first. I've no idea whether I put that ball down, I get the feeling the ref felt sorry for me and gave me a try. As I picked myself up feeling like my face had been shagged by a Land rover I walked back towards my team mates. Suddenly I felt the floor shaking. I thought that I'd knocked something loose in my head and my brains were gonna drop through my nose (or something else as dramatic). I turned to my right and saw a plume of smoke on the horizon, followed by a loud "BOOM"

That was the Manchester Bomb.

End of the game I limped off the pitch to find my entire Under 13 squad had come to watch us, they'd been kicked out because someone had found out that my brother was over-age.  But they did get one last game, they ended up convincing the team I had just been piledrivered by to play them in one game or else they would grass them up as well.

I then spent my the next twenty minutes literally pissing myself laughing as my brother and his demented mates took out their revenge on the lads who had battered me. In ten minutes they'd racked up 40 points, sent three lads off injured and generally managed to destroy any chance the cheating shits had of winning anything over the weekend.

Moral of the story, no matter how big you are, there's always someone bigger. So don't throw your weight around too much with the little ones, because you'll just make yourself a target.

Cheers for reading, the next one will be out on Monday!

Sunday 12 June 2011

Smashing props

The one thing no-one can ever deny about Rugby League is that its a physical game. Tackling in Rugby is similar to driving two cars straight into each other, except the crumple zone is normally your rib cage. I've never been a player who could put in the big hits every week, I've recieved a few over the years, it was normally left to the forwards and my cape-wearing Brother to do that type of stuff. However there were those rare occassions when I was able to play above my normal standard.

When I got back playing Rugby after my knee injury (see last weeks Blog) I went back to my old club to find them struggling to put out a 13 and sat at the bottom of the league. Although this led to some of the worst drubbing of my career, I actually enjoyed this year the most. The 13 we had was the same 13 every week, our oldest player was 24 and we had no actual coach. Training had at best 6 players and all that we could do was work on skills (tackling, passing) and fitness.

We travelled to the top of the league with these 13 lads and I ended up out on the wing as usual and we turned up to find that not only did they have a full 17 but they actually had three forwards from their Premier team that had dropped down because their game had been called off. We started off as usual, they crossed for a try early on and pretty much kept us in our half. Their kicks were always high, leading to everytime I caught the ball I was boomed straight away.

Half time came and we were only 12-0 down but our fullback had limped off and our only close attempt at scoring came with a truly shit attempt at a drop goal. However what gave us a lift was the sight of their coach giving "top of the league" an absolute bollocking. According to him we'd bossed them in defence and made them look average at best. The worlds shortest team talk ever (my brother telling us all to not let them score) and we were off again.

Second half was a different story, they were now running complicated plays right down the middle of us. Our forwards were knackered and I was getting increasingly getting pissed off at having to chase their forwards 40 yards down the pitch when they broke through. The thing was no-one was coming down my wing meaning I had no-one to take my frustration out on. An added bonus was the heckling from the touchline, the rest of their Premier team had turned up to watch the game and were basically taking the piss from the sidelines.

At this point I was well and truly miffed, I was piss-wet-through, getting beaten, and had not run in the ball in the entire second half. Then all of a sudden they decided to come down my wing, it was the fifth tackle and they'd gone for a power play. This means that instead of kicking they'd run it in. Their Premier Prop came steaming towards me with about 5 players in support. To be quite honest I don't remember what happened next, my brother tells me it was the funniest thing he's ever seen. Apparently I ran pult pelt into him and as he went into pass I then flew in shoulder first and absolutely cleaned out the forward leaving the ball to bobble forward. Their prop was dragged off the pitch looking back at the 12 stone winger half his size that had practically knocked him out. For the next ten minutes we were on top, whether it was our team were lifted or theirs went downhill, I don't know. But we managed to actually get into their half of the pitch a couple of times I even got to run in the ball!

The problem was I got the ball because my centre massively high tackled a forward. The referee didn't blow (perhaps out of mercy for us) and I picked up the ball to run it in. I might as well have been wearing a pink tutu and a t-shirt saying "I've had all your mums". To a chorus of "Get him fooking banged" I ducked the first two high shots but then got cracked on the jaw, instant payback, as I lay on the floor trying to find my chin about 4 of their players then piled on top of me. I had never been so popular on a Rugby Pitch.

We ended the match 34 - 0, and despite not even getting close to scoring its still one of the games I still look back at and enjoy. The 13 lads I went to Rochdale with were genuine mates and despite getting battered we actually enjoyed the game. We could pretend that with a few subs it would have been a different game, but it didnt matter. I'll take that memory and remember that one day, despite never repeating it again, I actually managed to clean out a prop.

Friday 3 June 2011

Don't forget your Insurance!

I saw the news the other week about Keith Senior, and how after a knee injury his season may be over. Now in Rugby League injuries happen all the time, infact pretty much every game has some injury whether it be the pro's or us morons at the bottom. Someone is gonna get hurt.


The one bit of advice I will give to anyone playing Rugby League, or infact any contact sport is this: "Get yourself some bloody insurance" because there is a one in 26 chance that this week will be your unlucky week.


One of my unlucky weeks, in fact scrap that, my unluckiest weeks came on a wet Saturday lunch time against a team in Barnsley. I had been playing open age on the wing for one year, and as usual we travelled with a scratch 13. One of our props was turning up in about half an hour and we'd have to survive until then without any subs.


The other team were well and truly up for it, and were running through the middle of us for fun. We didn't have a bad team but for some reason the Forwards were just not doing anything in defence. To be quite frank we were all shite that day, me included. In the first ten minutes they ran in 3 tries and we were camped in our own twenty metre line for nearly all of it.


Our fullback gave me a bollocking, they broke through our middle again and went in for a try, I slid in and tried to get under him to hold him up but didn't. Our fullback thought a better choice would have been to try and boot the ball out of his hands on the way down.......


Now thoroughly pissed off and getting embarrassed at getting owned like this on a Rugby pitch, I decided to let off some steam. I ran in front of the prop and took the ball in, instead of leaving him to take the pass. I was fed up of being camped on my tryline and wanted to show those forwards how to drive it in. With the first guy coming in at my side I decided to try and shoulder him off, except what I didn't see was his mate coming from the other side. What happened next I have no idea, I remember spinning around and landing on the ground with about 4 big fat forwards on top of me. I yelled out like a big jessie and tried to bend my left leg, but it wouldn't move.


My brother dragged the players off the top of me and I glanced down at my leg to find me kneecap on the outside of my leg. If you haven't already guessed it I'd dislocated my kneecap.


The usual stuff happened that goes on when someone is hurt, the refs stops the match, you get covered in tinfoil like a turkey and you get an ambulance to turn up about an hour later. When they did finally turn up I got introduced to gas and air for the first time. Bugger me that stuff is weird, whilst the paramedics tried to get my leg in a position to put me on the stretcher I decided to act like the biggest nobhead in the world. 


At one point I turned over "Coach, Coach come here coach", he trundled over "Yeah what is it mate?" "Can I skip training on Tuesday?" Now to me I was suddenly the funniest guy in the world, I was asking the Paramedics would I be back for the second half, I was waving to the other team and generally just being a pratt. I was quickly put back in my place by my brother who walked up with a quick word in my ear "Bro, shut up your being an idiot go to Hospital and let us get on with the game." 


And so I was carted off, with my knee popping back into place I then began talking absolute bollocks to anyone within 5 yards of me until the gas and air ran out about half an hour later. In Barnsley hospital I was put into a full-leg pot and sent on my way within an hour. I went to the only place you ever go when your hurt, your Mums. I pretty much didn't move from her sofa until about a week later when I could put pressure on my leg again. It was 9 months before I could play again, to be fair it didn't affect my performance. I was crap before I got injured and I was crap after I got injured so I can't claim it ruined my career.


However I didn't have insurance, which meant for the 4 months I couldn't work I lost everything else. My flat, my motorbike and my most prized possession  my surround sound TV system (that was nicked by my Brother). If you could, do, or are going to play Rugby go off and get some insurance it costs twenty quid a month and when your unlucky game comes up at least you'll be ok financially.


Oh yeah, I almost forgot when my Brother met up with me at home he told me how after watching me get carted off in an ambulance he gave a team talk that William Wallace would have been proud of. "Awesome, so you won?" I said, assuming my injury had inspired my team mates into a monstrous performance. "No mate" he said "we got one try back and they ran in 7 more."

Monday 30 May 2011

Junior Rugby - That'll toughen him up

I got a phone call from my brother last week, and as always we started talking about Rugby. For some reason we got talking on my lad, and whether he'd play Rugby when he was older. Now thats a toughie, on one hand I loved Rugby League, but reality is I've got a body of a pensioner a good 30 years before my time because of it. I thought that my Mum must have had the same thoughts when I was a kid, whether it was wise to let her chubby little lad go and have a rumble with a load of over lads for over an hour.


My brother had always been good a player, the sod was one of those annoying gifted players who whenever he gambled it would come off. He even gave himself his own nicknames "Captain Marvel", "Cape Wearing Centre" all the usual shite that you have to put up with when someone is naturally athletic. However I was not, my only true talent was the ability to shovel food down my mouth and occasionally I'd be able to fart on demand but that was about it. 


So when I started playing Rugby League I was not what the coaches were probably hoping would be waddling over. Not helped by the fact I was playing for a team about 3 years older than me because there was no squad in my age group. So after a couple of training sessions and spending most of a Saturday morning trying to put a gumshield in mouth, I trundled off to my inevitable arse kicking. 


The game I came on against was probably the best game for me, because the other team were complete crap. I came on at about 65 minutes on the left wing, we were about 70 points ahead at this stage and the aim was for me to get a few minutes under my belt with doing anything stupid or better still - breaking anything.  


That was all going well until I looked at my opposite number, now I'm was no expert but I'm guessing the guy facing me was not a winger. He was as wide as he was tall (and he was fecking tall) and he looked more like 23 rather than 13. Their game plan was obvious, put the prop at wing and run at the little fat kid, fooking brilliant plan in fairness. They ran in 4 tries like that, and I must have looked like a complete retard trying to wrap my arms around the other lads legs. This went on until the rest of my team got a bit pissed off and decided to clean tubster out with the usual mental tackling that our 9 was famous for (his Dad used to give him 50p for each tackle until he put in 65 tackles in a game and he bankrupt him).


Tubster limped out the game, and we managed to run in a few more tries in the last few minutes to save my face. I look back at that game now, and I still remember it vividly, like a shit movie you've seen, like Megashark vs Giant Squid, it just stays in your head. But, in all my years since, I can't remember ever being dominated like that in a game again. The return leg 4 months later at their ground was infact an even bigger drubbing for "tubsters" team and I played a larger chunk in that game without doing anything stupid I even remember putting in some decent tackles.


So although I'll be bricking myself when it comes to my poor sprogs first game, I know in a few months he'll slowly start becoming that perfect balance of stupid and heroic that you get in a Rugby player. I look forward to that conversation when he comes back and goes "Dad I played shit today, I feel like such a moron" so I can tell him my story of how I started out as awful and years and years later I became "not-crap."


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Tuesday 24 May 2011

State of Origin Special - Derby Days

I made a promise that in 24 hours if I got over 300 views I'd post this earlier than planned. So cheers to everyone who's read my blog and for the guys and girls who've left me decent comments on twitter (@4thchoicecentre) its appreciatted.

So anyway, the State of Origin is tonight and my skyplus is all ready to record whats always been one of the best games. But why are games like this always better, why is Wigan vs St Helens always far better than Bradford vs Hull? There's something about derby's, the fact it gets your blood boiling, there's so much more at stake than just points. Call it what you want - bragging rights/pride/respect, whatever it is it makes players want to smash each other to pieces and its bloody entertaining to watch.

So I'm going to share with you three of my memories (or whats not been knocked out of me) of Derby Days I've played over the last 20 or so years of Amateur Rugby League, feel free to leave your comments at the bottom of your derby matches:

1. I had just started playing open age Rugby moving up from Junior and to be honest I was really enjoying it. I was playing out on the wing and the team I was playing for was a really good crack. Half way through the season we went to our local derby match away from home. Apparently one of our forwards used to play for them, which made matters worse. We pitched up and started getting changed, the floor was wet but it was chucking it down so we just thought it was because of that. It was only when one of the lads picked up his bag and smelt it that we figured out what it was........ The dirty gits had decided to piss all over the away changing rooms just before we arrived. They were laughing their heads off when we walked out to warm up.

2. When I was kid I used to play in the same team as my brother because there was no team my age. So I was again out on the wing as possibly the smallest player in the league. We went to a team in Manchester to play a local derby. It was minus 16, mid winter and there was about a foot of snow, we played anyway. One of the biggest problems was no one was tackling properly because we were all so frozen. Unlucky for my brother at full back, who must have made about 40 one on one tackles because the rest of us were too cold to tackle. Finally when we got back on the attack, our kid runs the ball in only to get high shotted. He stayed on his feet and kept going, only to run into another forearm, finally a third forward came flying in and nearly took his head clean off. That was the end of his game, although he still reminds me he put in more tackles than anyone else before getting knocked out.

3. Finally my last Derby memory involved the worst fighting I'd ever been in. I was only about 13 at the time, and for some reason the match turned ugly very early. The main instigator was a gobby little scrum half on the opposition who continually would go in for sly digs. Dropping knees, scratching, eye gouging etc etc. Throughout the match there must have been 18 individual punch ups, in the end the ref called time early. As usual the home team creates a tunnel with its players at the end of the game to clap the other team through, a nice way to end the game. However when the little scrum half from the other team came through last, we closed the tunnel at both ends and decided to all dive in on the wind up merchant. However whilst we were lumping ten bells out of their scrum half, none of us had noticed that the rest of his team had decided to gang up on our Captain who by now had pegged it across three football fields trying to get away.

Thanks again for taking the time to read through my blog, feel free to leave your comments at the bottom with your derby day matches. The blog will go out weekly every Monday, with any special ones going out again whenever I can skive off work long enough to write it!

Monday 23 May 2011

My Last Ever Game

Sometimes its easier to start at the end, and in my case the end was my last ever Rugby League match. I've been playing Rugby since I was 8, my Brother had been playing it for a while and I was naff at footy so I decided to give it a go. I kept playing as long as I could, whenever I could. I was never a great player, I occassionally had great matches but this would normally only last 2-3 games before I'd be average or below sometimes.

I'll share with everyone my experiences of Rugby League at the grass roots level, where its at its best and sometimes at its bloodiest. I've had some cracking laughs over the years as well as some down right shite moments to boot. However I'll speak it from my point of view, from how I saw it, whether people agree or disagree this is how I saw the sport and in particular the guys I played with and against.

So enough bleating this was the last time I ever strapped on my boots and went out to play the sport I love.

I'd decided over the summer to give winter Rugby once last chance, I'd played the last couple of seasons in the summer and had not particularly enjoyed it. So I thought I'd go out find a new team and go and play for them in the winter, someone really low down where I could just pitch up and chuck a ball about. I'd been to one training session with this team and I'd decided to play at 6 or 7. I was too old to play in the backs anymore, well actually thats bollocks reality was I too slow to play in the backs by this time and I was too small to be a forward.

I turned up at the meeting point on Saturday, got myself my usual Lucozade and jelly beans and waited in the pub for them to name the team. With about 25 lads they knocked it down to 17 and told me I was playing 9 for the game. A little bit confused as I'd never said I'd played 9 before and most of the forwards hadnt been to the training session I'd be at. But sod it, I wasn't there to be technical I just wanted a game.

We were playing away so a few of the lads jumped in the car with me and we all set off. About 10 minutes in everyone pulled in for some petrol and all the lads jumped out and went inside to grab some scran. A sat down on the bonnet of my car and just started doing the usual rubbish I'd be taught about concentrating on the game etc. About 15 minutes later we've still not set off, so I ambled over to the coach and asked him when we were setting off, we were already cutting it tight for kick off and now it was starting to take the piss. At this point I turned around and looked back at my car to see two of the lads stood next to it having a smoke!!! "Oi nobheads are you mental, you're in a petrol station." So right next to my car the pair of them did the most sensible thing and dropped them on the floor to stamp them out. Feck me I cringed waiting for everything to explode, how I didn't tish myself I don't know.

Crisis past everyone got chased back to the cars to head off to someplace in St Helens for our away game. As I thought we arrived with just enough time to throw our kit on and get out onto the pitch. I've never had a pre-match routine and days like this were the reason I don't. There's been too many times I've turned up at an away game with just enough time to tuck my bollocks into a pair of shorts and run out to get my head kicked in on a Rugby pitch. Having a ritual to do would have made things worse, so I always just got ready as fast as possible and jogged out.

The match started and the suprisingly for the first ten minutes we seemed to be holding our own, except there was one problem. The guy was playing 7 called "stiggy" kept running in at hooker whenever we were on attack. Making me a bit of a bystander, the stupid thing was when we stopped for a scrum I asked him what he was doing. He looked at me completely confused "I always get the ball from the play the ball". I told him that the coaches had been bellowing for the last ten minutes to get him back to his own position as scrum half and I'd take the ball from the Ruck.

All sorted now, well actually no, because what I did next really ballsed things up right royally. My excuse is this was the first time I'd had my hands on a ball all day, I'd had one training session in 3 months and that was it. As I picked up the ball from the ruck and passed it, I completely got my technique wrong and ended throwing a ridiculously high looping pass to "stiggy".

Now it was a shite pass I'll not say it wasn't but "stiggy's" reaction was priceless, he theatrically leaped for the ball, missed and then went storming over to the coach. "What the feck is that, that was shite, get him off the pitch, he could have got me killed!" The opposition looked at this and burst out laughing, I would have too to be honest. I wondered across to apologise and explain it was a bit of rust, only for "stiggy" to take a swing at my jaw. About 5 minutes of scrapping later the ref decided he couldn't really send two players off from one team and decided to instead give us both a ticking off, the usual rubbish that I'd heard a few hundred times.

We're 15 minutes in, the opposition is now starting to run through the forwards for fun and whats more the coaches have now fallen silent. Bollocks to this, I thought I'm not going to keep running around trying to bust a gut for a bunch of players that would rather punch me than pass to me. For the next 65 minutes I did nothing but defence and take the odd drive in, I thought I'd get myself subbed that way and just bugger off home. But they decided to keep me on until the end, a resounding 78 - 0 thrashing which finished with a 4 man brawl....... once again just from my team scrapping with each other.

Now severely pissed off I told the lads that came with me to get a life home with someone else, paid my subs got changed and went straight back to my car. I'd come to release my frustration and anger onto the pitch, but I'd left worse than when I arrived. A quick glance in the mirror and I could see a shiner coming out, courtesy of "stiggys" awesome team play and as few scratches for  couple of high shots I'd taken. The boss wasn't gonna be best chuffed with me in the morning, nor was the missus I'd had 3 missed calls from her already wondering how I'd got on.

I started the car, and drove straight home to ring my Brother to see how he'd got on. It took me about 45 minutes to get back, but it gave me plenty of time to decide that I'd had enough. My best days were behind me, most of my mates had stopped or pretty much stopped playing. I'd tried playing for a couple of new clubs but never settled in, rugby wasn't fun anymore it was hard work.

I put my boots, pads and gumshield in a bag at the bottom of the wardrobe, infact they're still there. Not moved in over a year and a half, and they'll probably only move when the missus finds them. She still hasn't figured out that the strange smell comes from my boots that I still can't be arsed washing.

Thanks for reading, my next blogs will go back to some of my best memories in amateur rugby league. Not all were as awful as this, infact most of my memories still make me laugh today. Subscribe to keep in touch or follow me on twitter - @4thchoicecentre