A whimsical new feature on The Roar, each week Andrew Jones will select a list of sportspeople united by some feature other than competence. This week it is the truly soft target of waistline.
Jonesy welcomes your alternative line-ups as long as they are selected in the same ridiculous pub-chat spirit (and using the traditional not-just-soccer definition of football).
My Top 5 Fat Blokes in Football
1. Matt Dunning (c) – the reason today’s list exists, thanks to his imminent appearance in the final of the world’s best provincial rugby competition. Sure, the Waratahs scrum may end up somewhere on the North Island, but at least a Teletubbie made it to the big time.
2. Danny Wicks – known for his backflips and blistering turn of speed, this Newcastle Knights front-rower earned his spot by letting Brett Hodgson in for a Round 10 try as soft as his waistline. As I am a Wests Tigers fan, this is a plus.
3. Artie Beetson – citing a late-’60s Test Match vs. Great Britain in which the Immortal laid on four tries, my greying mate Greggy said Big Artie played “the best half-game I’ve ever seen”. For a fat footballing icon, there can be no greater compliment.
4. Tony Lockett – Plugger virtually picks himself, or should I say “pigs” himself. The porker launched onto the SCG in 1993 with Lockett’s #4 spray-painted on its side also rockets into the Top 5 Pigs Released Onto Iconic Aussie Sportsgrounds, behind only the Eddie Hemmings/Ian Botham tribute bacon from the Gabba, 1982. (Admittedly this list may also have 3 vacancies.)
5. Maradona – Never has a nimble-footed genius of the World Game gone to seed quite as satisfyingly as Diego. While the Hand of God remains, the Stomach of God has been stapled. (I reckon the Septum of God might be struggling as well.)
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In addition to being a sports nuffy, Andrew Jones is a co-founder of local business ratings website Customer Underground - check it out at customerunderground.com.
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May 30th 2008 @ 4:31pm
Kento said | May 30th 2008 @ 4:31pm | Report comment
Erm…do we dare mention Link? If not then…most certainly now
May 30th 2008 @ 5:09pm
Spiro Zavos said | May 30th 2008 @ 5:09pm | Report comment
Ollie le Roux dropped a pass with the try line open and one of his team-mates shouted out to him: ‘Ollie man, you’d wouldn’t have dropped it if it’d been a meat pie.’
May 30th 2008 @ 5:20pm
Alan Reid said | May 30th 2008 @ 5:20pm | Report comment
Fosi Pala’amo – I had the privilege of coaching Fosi’s brother Sana a few years ago, a bash & barge centre/No8!! Both are great blokes but I can imagine Ma Pala’amo’s weekly shopping was equal to the GDP of a small nation!!!
May 30th 2008 @ 5:21pm
mcxd said | May 30th 2008 @ 5:21pm | Report comment
What was the name of that Fijian prop during the 2003 world cup ? he was absolutely massive. Strangley, his stamina was not as large as his dinner bill.
May 30th 2008 @ 6:09pm
swifty said | May 30th 2008 @ 6:09pm | Report comment
what about Rod Kafar – that bloke was the fattest flyhalf ever!
June 2nd 2008 @ 9:33am
Jamie said | June 2nd 2008 @ 9:33am | Report comment
Kickett who played for Essendon in late 80′s early 90′s was also a fatboy. Especially at the end of his career.
Can we do a list of general fatboys of sport. Long John Daly was (although no role model) a large boy!
June 6th 2008 @ 7:44pm
Andrew Jones said | June 6th 2008 @ 7:44pm | Report comment
Jamie – Kickett also got a mention inthe June 6 comments, albeit for entirely different reasons! cheers, Jonesy
July 6th 2008 @ 10:35pm
Dublin Dave said | July 6th 2008 @ 10:35pm | Report comment
Oi!! I won’t have any criticisim of Ollie Le Roux. He just finished playing a Celtic League winning season for Leinster and he’s a complete and utter LEGEND!!!
Scored two tries in his last match, the title clincher against the Dragons. Both were from sweeping backline moves in which he used his pace, deft handling and elusive running skills to evade the desperate defence before scoring in the corner.
OK that’s a lie. Both were in fact tap and gos from penalties awarded 5m from the try line. Hey, would you want him flopping down on top of you from that distance? He’s gone now to be replaced next season by somebody called CJ Van Der Linde who apparently DOES have the pace and skill to score the type of fictitious try described above.
Give me the baby-faced burger belly Le Roux any day.
January 31st 2009 @ 6:27am
Brendan said | January 31st 2009 @ 6:27am | Report comment
Obviously none of you ever saw the late, great, Frans Erasmus??
A bigger more athletic, pacey ball handling prop you are never likely to see. Actually I think I could have walked faster than he could run but then in those days props weren’t supposed to perform like back’s or loosies. He was a auto mechanic by trade and the story goes that one day he needed to raise the rear wheels of a car he was working on however the jack wasn’t working so he simply lifted up the back of the car while his offsider put blocks under the axle.
Flippie Van Der Merwe also desrves a mention in any discussion about large overweight rugby players. I checked the stats, he, apparently, weighed in at a hefty 130kg back in 1981 when playing for the boks in NZ. The heaviest props in world rugby in those days were only just nudging 110 kegs!!