CAMPO: Dear rugby fans, don’t shoot the messenger
By David Campese, 12 Apr 2012 David Campese is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- David Campese, robbie deans, Rugby Union, Super Rugby, wallabies
Australia's David Campese escapes a tackle. AP Photo/Brian Little
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I’ve been reading the comments on The Roar in response to my columns and it’s been interesting to see what people write into the site about. Some have been critical of my opinions, some supportive.
But it’s important to remember that I’m always motivated by a genuine love of the game, which is why I care so much about its future.
Whenever I give an opinion on how I think rugby should be played, particularly in Australia, it seems to be interpreted by many that I’m making it out to be the end of the world; a monumental crisis.
I’m not trying to suggest that at all.
What I do want to see is rugby played in a positive and entertaining manner, with the players going out there to play a style of rugby that will keep the crowd happy. And coming back for more.
That’s what it should be about: creating an entertaining product that can be enjoyed by the players and fans alike.
Unfortunately, as I’ve addressed in my columns, the current rugby hierarchy in Australia seems to be working against these principles and instead encouraging a bland, negative style of play for our Super and national teams that failed at the last World Cup, and if not careful, will see more of the same in 2012.
The message behind everything I’ve been saying is very simple: the basic skills of players in Australia are not where they should be.
Want the proof? Look at the Super standings. All Australian teams are in the negative. There’s not one team in the positive side of the For and Against ledger.
I was once a player who could have an impact on the way things went on the field. But now, as a journalist, I hope my point of view can make a difference. And I wouldn’t be giving it if I wasn’t passionate about rugby.
Why would I? I cop enough flack for it.
I also coach rugby to kids, showing them the basic skills and, hopefully, instilling a love for the game at an early age. I do this in South Africa, Hong Kong and other parts of Asia predominantly, because my contributions there are welcomed with open arms.
Why? Because I’ve got an opinion and I’m not afraid to express it.
Someone asked me on The Roar about the grassroots and what I would do to address that problem in Australia.
Well, the answer is straightforward: use some of the former players who the kids know and respect to promote the game here and go around to the schools and see who would like to win a gold medal at the 2016 Olympics.
Get the kids’ idols out to meet the stars and be able to interact with them.
This would build more excitement about the game amongst those youngsters who are increasingly being lost to league and AFL.
For me, the best opportunities for this are there in South Africa, the UK, and Asia. It’s strange that these are the countries who, when I played, loved the way I played the game and respect me both on and off the field.
But sadly, the same doesn’t apply in Australia.
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- Explore:
- David Campese, robbie deans, Rugby Union, Super Rugby, wallabies


April 12th 2012 @ 1:45am
Matthew Skellett said | April 12th 2012 @ 1:45am | Report comment
Those kids are being lost to the AFL nad leaugue because the very real impression isd given that Rugby is a private school domain AND Mr O’Neill and the ARU have done absolutely NOTHING to dispel that correct notion Mr Campese
April 12th 2012 @ 2:21am
Gpc said | April 12th 2012 @ 2:21am | Report comment
Agreed.
April 12th 2012 @ 5:30am
mania said | April 12th 2012 @ 5:30am | Report comment
Matt – totally agree. argued on this site a few times that money, time and volunteers need to be invested at the grassroots level. primary task of the grassroots system is getting it introduced into public schools. aus elitism towards rugby is killing it and is an embarrassment in this day and age.
rugby is for everyone, regardless of class.
April 12th 2012 @ 9:42am
Markus said | April 12th 2012 @ 9:42am | Report comment
Sadly correct. Queensland and NSW could both take a page from Canberra in this regard, where the junior competition combines both private schools and local public club teams, and has been steadily expanding to include more and more of regional NSW.
Starting with Goulburn and Yass then expanding to Jindabyne, Wagga and now the Riverina, it has been working hard for years to spread the game in what are typically League strongholds and feeder towns.
April 12th 2012 @ 11:27am
PJ said | April 12th 2012 @ 11:27am | Report comment
I dont want the common person playing rugby, hence why it is a Private School boys game. Imagine someone like Greg Bird or Robert Lui playing Rugby, the club house would have to serve beer in plastic cups.
April 12th 2012 @ 11:30am
mania said | April 12th 2012 @ 11:30am | Report comment
PJ – I’m assumin thats sarcasm, but its still the reason why aus player depth is so shallow
April 12th 2012 @ 5:24pm
Tommygun said | April 12th 2012 @ 5:24pm | Report comment
Please tell me you are taking the piss PJ…
You are tarring alot of great men with the same brush there mate. Any code would be happy to have the calibre of people like Nathan Hindmarsh, Alan Tongue and Paul Gallen. Tough people on the field, tireless in their charity work off the field.
April 12th 2012 @ 8:08pm
Stin said | April 12th 2012 @ 8:08pm | Report comment
He’s joking!! Come on! Tools in all sports….
April 12th 2012 @ 3:01am
Gorman Kinchley said | April 12th 2012 @ 3:01am | Report comment
Yeah, and good on Campo for mentioning how negative people are on the internet. Lighten up people, and keep it up Campo!
April 12th 2012 @ 3:31am
bluerose said | April 12th 2012 @ 3:31am | Report comment
Campo i have the 1984 Gland Slam DvD with me and i wish Australian goes back to those glorious days where rugby was entertaining and enjoyable to watch, i thoroughly laugh every time i watch your cheeky wave to the Welsh crowd, i think the reason your’re not appreciated by the Australian rugby public is because you speak your mind and the truth, dont worry you still have fans all over the world
April 12th 2012 @ 4:11am
matthew said | April 12th 2012 @ 4:11am | Report comment
Also don’t forget what a difference Campo made to the Sharks backline as coach when they were finalists in 2007 Super Rugby. Completely different backline that played with depth, precision and belief.
April 12th 2012 @ 10:49am
steve.h said | April 12th 2012 @ 10:49am | Report comment
Yes and Campo if you don’t mind please go back and be the skills coach at the sharks (he was never the backline coach) we need you desperately.
April 12th 2012 @ 5:27am
mania said | April 12th 2012 @ 5:27am | Report comment
campo – “I was once a player who could have an impact on the way things went on the field”, really??? could this be anymore understated? give up the humility campo u suck at it. your one of the greatest players australia has ever produced if not the best ever. you played with a lot of passion, enjoyment, creativity and a willingness. the thing i liked most about your playing was your audacity.
campo get over it. as a player you got a lot of flack for the way you played. WC where u passed the ball in goal and gave away a try, the public were baying for your blood then and what did u say? something along the lines of “its not my fault Greg Martin cant catch” and you were right. you were behind on the score board and someting needed to be done and u went for it, it failed but the fact that your audacity and self belief saw an opportunity, a slim one but still a chance, and u went for it.
same thing applies here campo, dont let them stifle your audacity. if anyone has shown a love for australian rugby its you.
ps – i had the utmost respect for you before reading this article. but the thing that hits me the most is the fact that your out coaching a kids team. I’ve mentioned in other blogs how aus needs a grass roots system. sounds like your already out there doing it.
go hard campo, you’ll never be loved by everyone but what you say needs to be heard.
April 12th 2012 @ 5:42am
Emric said | April 12th 2012 @ 5:42am | Report comment
Campo.
I agree with Mania your biggest strength is to challenge the status quo. Your story reminds me of being a school boy in the under 10 side for the Avalon club in Avalon Wellington, New Zealand my team had a series of special coaching sessions with another Rugby great – Bernie Fraser and a club All Black at the time Chris Tregaskis.
It helped shape our love of our national sport in a time when Rugby League was being played on New Zealand FTA TV, getting awesome ratings and was a serious challenge to the status quo – Rugby with the help of the All Blacks prevailed.
Anyway I agree with your idea of using the stars of today to make the stars of tomorrow.
April 12th 2012 @ 6:02am
mania said | April 12th 2012 @ 6:02am | Report comment
emric – when the whole league movement in NZ during the 80′s happened i went and played. had an awesome time as well. what brought me bak to rugby was being inspired by christianCullen and the way he returned the ball (i’d argue he returned kicked balls better than garyJack.) .
“Anyway I agree with your idea of using the stars of today to make the stars of tomorrow.” – totally agree and this cant happen soon enough, especially the old players as the modern day aus team isnt as deserving of respect.
April 12th 2012 @ 4:55pm
Acorn said | April 12th 2012 @ 4:55pm | Report comment
“trash tregaskis” now there’s a name from the past, and definitely a trivia question
April 12th 2012 @ 6:57am
rl said | April 12th 2012 @ 6:57am | Report comment
Campo – this is one of the first times I’ve read you and nodded all the way through. It’s the same message you have been trying to give previously, but not getting clouded or lost in other noise. Well played!
April 12th 2012 @ 7:03am
Naranja said | April 12th 2012 @ 7:03am | Report comment
CAMPO – It’s not just Aussie rugby that’s faltering it’s all rugby. As I think you said once before, if you were playing in today’s game with its Maginot lines of defence and whistlemania, you wouldn’t have scored all those tries, certainly not from the wing. You would have done better (today) playing from the 15 position mainly because the kicking game gives a guy a chance to counter attack. But scoring long range tries, as you used to do, from first or second phrase ball is extremely rare now. What a shame.
One of these days I hope you’ll let us know how much pressure, if any, is being brought to bear on the IRU for changes to the laws that are ruining things. Many people I know record the matches so they can FF through the scrum resets. And the penalty kicks unless they’re at a crucial stage.
April 12th 2012 @ 7:25am
kingplaymaker said | April 12th 2012 @ 7:25am | Report comment
Campo I wouldn’t worry too much about the comments you receive as many Australian fans share the culture of the sport they follow, that is mindless conservatism. Therefore any good and original article will often meet ferocious criticism, and so the more it receives the better it probably is.
I think perhaps the Roar allows the writers of articles to be abused a little too much: it’s ok to strongly and evenly violently disagree with the argument of the article, but often posters simply bash the writer or article without even making any argument.
What’s more Campo you’re right to point out that the problem with Australian rugby is not a small detail here or there but the essential nature or culture behind it, which is still amateur and hence extremely conservative. This might be ok if it didn’t have to face powerful competition from professional sports, but as things stand it is being smashed by the NRL and AFL. So questioning of the fundamental culture and structure of the game is what’s required.
And if there are those that don’t like novelty or the thought that things aren’t perfect and need revolution, that’s no need not to say it.
April 12th 2012 @ 10:02am
p.Tah said | April 12th 2012 @ 10:02am | Report comment
Ewen McKenzie mentioned this in an article from last year:
“I regularly read Green and Gold Rugby and The Roar – something you need to do so with your flak jacket on.
Nobody gets spared a mention and you need to take the good with the bad as there is plenty of both.
These are the diehards and the passionate, even if their memories over time get a little jumbled.
It’s worth visiting these spaces as perception is reality and if you want to know what people are thinking you may as well start with the ones that truly care.”
But I agree it doesn’t mean we should be abusive
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-union/reds/feeding-the-beast-20110526-1f5gb.html#ixzz1rmOLjwhQ
April 12th 2012 @ 10:15am
kingplaymaker said | April 12th 2012 @ 10:15am | Report comment
p.tah fair point, but I suppose I mean posters who spend more time trying to dismiss the writer and do so ungraciously, and never even refer to the argument.
April 12th 2012 @ 11:20pm
p.Tah said | April 12th 2012 @ 11:20pm | Report comment
That’s a fair point too KPM.
For what it’s worth, Campo was the reason I started following rugby. Amazing player.
April 12th 2012 @ 7:13pm
Frank O'Keeffe said | April 12th 2012 @ 7:13pm | Report comment
It dawned upon me a while ago that many professional rugby players actually read what we write on The Roar… which they shouldn’t, because I’m just a fan and no expert.
But I remember when Giteau retired and the people here blasted him for being overrated, and suddenly I felt bad for the guy. He played for Australia and tried his best… always.
We can be pretty harsh sometimes.
Regarding Campo, there’s more sense and more validity in what he says than 99% of the people who post at The Roar. We have a bizarre way of treating our greatest sportsmen in Australia. Shane Warne, Mark Ella, and David Campese are my three favourite sportsmen ever! I’d give a nod to Ella as my favourite.
April 12th 2012 @ 11:27pm
p.Tah said | April 12th 2012 @ 11:27pm | Report comment
I’m sure they do Frank and I’m lead to believe that some post under aliases. I try not to criticse players for that reason. As armchair critics we have no idea what’s going on in their lives and what other factors may be influencing their play. I can’t imagine what it’s like having anonymous posters unfairly criticse you. It must be infuriating. I’m not overly keen on people slagging off other posters either. It’s actually bullying and it’s well documented what sort of damage that can do.
I’ve thought about writing an article about this. Not sure if it’s something the roar would be interested in publishing.
April 12th 2012 @ 7:34am
Riccardo said | April 12th 2012 @ 7:34am | Report comment
Dude, you’re as forthright as a writer as you were as a player. Kudos Campo.
Your love of the game is as obvious now as it was the first time I saw you goose-step Stu Wilson (“Stu who?”).
You know you used to rile up us AB supporters something fierce Campo? One of the great foes.
Don’t let the negative posts get you down pal. The fact you can provoke debate is the success factor here. And the reality is that the Australian Conference is as weak as you say and this makes life difficult for the Wallabies. Any conversation talking to this has to be positive.
Addressing heaven’s game at the grass roots level in Australia would surely have more impact than South Africa and Asia though mate. I think you undervalue your worth in this regard but I wholeheartedly agree that former stars’ interaction with the youngsters is paramount, preferrably on the back of some Wallaby success… against Wales… and maybe the Boks… just not the AB’s, ok?