If you’re not gonna bet, get out of the ground
By Ben Pobjie, 15 Jun 2012 Ben Pobjie is a Roar Expert
Jarryd Hayne is cornered by two referees. (AAP Image/Action Photographics,Colin Whelan)
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I feel so ashamed of myself. I had thought that I was a committed sporting fan, that I was really devoted to the spectating of quality professional athletic endeavours, and that I followed my teams with as much fervour and passion as anyone could ask for.
I thought I was a true fanatic, but while watching the second State of Origin on Channel Nine (motto: We’re Still A One!), I came to the depressing realisation that I was a fraud.
Because you see, though I was watching the game, I wasn’t really involved in the game. I wasn’t fully engaged.
Because I… I… look this is pretty hard for me to admit in front of you all… OK here we go…
I… don’t care about the odds.
Oh! The shame! But yes, it is good to get that off my chest and stop living a lie.
You’ll remember of course, the appearance at regular intervals during the match of a pretty young lass, smiling in friendly manner at us, and expressing a sincere and heartwarming hope that we were enjoying the game (we were, young lady, by the way, thanks for asking!).
She then informed us of the odds on the two teams, and gave us a valuable reminder that we could still bet during the game, a generous service offered by gaming agencies for the edification of their customers. The woman was performing what can only de described as a crucial public service, and much kudos is due her public-mindedness.
And yet…
And yet it fills me with sorrow to say that I took no advantage of her perky pronouncements. I did not, in fact, bet on the game. I didn’t have a flutter. I didn’t make the sport come alive by putting my money where my mouth was.
No wagers, of an exotic or otherwise nature, were laid by me, and it thus became impossible for me to avoid the conclusion that as a sports fan, I am but a flitting dilettante.
Why, even when an ad came on informing me of the thrilling news that while a certain company couldn’t promise me that every bet would win (haha, oh they kid, they kid!), they could promise me the best online betting experience ever… even then I kept my credit card firmly in my pocket.
And if I can’t be tempted even by the promise of a really high-quality online betting experience, what hope is there? Obviously there is simply no sporting blood in me.
I had suspected as much, of course, when I heard Tom Waterhouse tell me “I was born to bet”, and utterly failed to react by thinking, “Goodness, with that sort of bloodline, I would foolish not to give him my money”, and instead thought, “Goodness, what a five-star platinum-plated knob-end this fellow is.”
Harsh, unworthy thoughts for someone who claims to be “into sport”.
And my awful suspicions were only confirmed during the Origin match, when like some lazy braind-dead slug of a man, I sat there staring witlessly at the ‘action’, perfectly content to let the tense, brutal drama of state football whiz past, without once taking any positive steps to bring the game to life through the magic of gaming.
God knows the commentators did their best. “Look at the Keno replay!” cried Wally Lewis, trying to help me help myself, but I ignored him just as I ignored the pretty young gambling lady, happy to let the sponsor mentions wash over me as if they were no more significant than Phil Gould’s constant calls for the rules of rugby league to be suspended, or Ray Warren’s habit of calling players by their first names in the mistaken impression they are his grandchildren, because I am just a poser. Not a proper fan at all.
And so I have a lot of hard thinking to do. Maybe I’m just not cut out to be a fan. If all I can be bothered to do is watch the game and cheer the players and become engrossed by the play and pore over the match reports and emotionally invest myself in the fortunes of the teams… what’s the point of watching sport at all?
If I am going to go through life not even having the basic good old Aussie decency to get my wallet out and have a splash, to feel the delicious thrill of having cash riding on events out of my control, to enjoy the bliss of a big win or the crashing despair of blowing a week’s pay on the likelihood of Inglis scoring the first try… if I am to remain so detached from the true meaning of sport… what right have I to follow sport at all?
Should I not just give it up and find another interest, one where my apathy and indifference don’t matter so much?
Or should I make the effort to become a true fan, by flinging money at the TAB and Betfair and Sportsbet and Sportingbet and Centrebet as hard and as fast as I can, in the hope that finally it will click, and I will, at last, understand what sport is all about? It might be expensive, but surely it would be worth it, to finally feel like I belong?
One thing is certain – I can’t continue the way I have been. Because if a man isn’t willing to bet on a game, that game might as well not even happen.
Ben Pobjie is a writer and comedian writing weekly on The Age, New Matilda and The Roar, whose promising rugby career was tragically cut short the day he stopped playing rugby and had a pizza instead. The most he has ever cried was the day Balmain lost the 1989 grand final. Today he enjoys the frolics of Wallabies, Swans, baggy greens, and Storms. Ben is also the author of the books Surveying the Wreckage, Superchef, and his latest, The Book of Bloke, available from Momentum Books.
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- NRL, Rugby League, sports gambling, State Of Origin, State of Origin 2012


June 15th 2012 @ 10:02am
TomC said | June 15th 2012 @ 10:02am | Report comment
Brilliant. Loved it.
June 15th 2012 @ 10:08am
turbodewd said | June 15th 2012 @ 10:08am | Report comment
Betting advertising should be banned from the NRL. Its anti-family and brings no joy to anyone.
Ray Warren himself admitted that gambling has badly ruined his finances.
Ryan Tandy and others tried to influence a minor part of an NRL game on a gambling plot.
Cricket in the sub-continent has little credibility now due to gambling.
Ive heard radio reports of sumo in Japan being infiltrated by gambling, presumably the Yakuza are in on it.
Pokies are shtt, they are a tax on morons. I mean does the NRL want to appeal to the povvo demographic who goes for pokies?
June 15th 2012 @ 10:11am
sheek said | June 15th 2012 @ 10:11am | Report comment
Another humorously clever article Ben.
June 15th 2012 @ 10:46am
Balmainslipperyeel said | June 15th 2012 @ 10:46am | Report comment
Jaimee Rogers for PM.
June 15th 2012 @ 11:57am
Gareth said | June 15th 2012 @ 11:57am | Report comment
I hate those Tom Waterhouse ads. I’d like to see an ad with Usain Bolt sitting there and saying “I was born to run. Wanna race me for money? Winner takes all.”
June 15th 2012 @ 12:41pm
The Barry said | June 15th 2012 @ 12:41pm | Report comment
I love a punt…I’ve just got back from putting on a couple of weekend multis.
I object to the adds forced down the throat all the time. My five year old is starting to watch footy with me and I’m dreading the day he starts asking “what does $1.50 +1.5 mean dad?” Give me the off-side law in soccer or the birds and the bees discussions any day !
Punters know where and how to get a bet on and likely don’t need constant price updates.
I read a Russell Crowe quote a few years ago where he said when did talking footy become all about odds and starts, it used to be ablout who was injured and he was in form.
Invariably when you ask someone these days who they think will win you get “Tigers 1-12″ or “I like the 6.5 start” or something similar.
June 15th 2012 @ 12:50pm
oikee said | June 15th 2012 @ 12:50pm | Report comment
Nice, and this might even make you think about betting that little bit more. Do you have kids, if and when you do, on Melbourne cup day,would you make sure that your kids are not subjected to watching this race. Its all about gambling.
I gave up smoking cold turkey, last december before xmas. Waiting for new Year is a waste of time, do it now i said.
Yet, we seem to encourage everyone to stop each year , its ok to gamble. Its only one race a year. ? Yeah, until you get a bug and become a utter digrace rolling around in a gutter with not a penny to your name, snap outta it oikee, where was i, oh yeah, i dont gamble either Ben, not even on the cup.
Cheers.
I dont buy lotto either.
I do like a odd tipple or 2.
June 15th 2012 @ 3:17pm
Pot Stirrer said | June 15th 2012 @ 3:17pm | Report comment
I wonder how many Dads are allready putting $2.00 bets on for their kids thinking its just a bit of harmless fun when in truth they are setting them up to be life long gamblers and many of thier lifes will be destroyed by it. Yes i hate gambling, i think the odds are a joke, Why any one would risk $20.00 to make $30.00 is beyond me.
June 15th 2012 @ 10:25pm
Carlos said | June 15th 2012 @ 10:25pm | Report comment
Brilliant, very funny take on an issue people should be taking very seriously.
I’ve stopped watching Sunday arvo games on 9 with my kids as I don’t want them exposed to the constant gambling adds, odds updates references to gambling by the commentary team
I’m also a little worried about the potential IQ lowering due to exposure to ray warren’s commentary.