Walsh debunks the rigmarole of kicking for goal

By Dane Eldridge / Expert

Wowsers. What a collector’s item of sparkling goal kicking from Luke Walsh on Saturday night!

The Penrith halfback’s spotless 11 from 11 was a magnificent showcase of accuracy from sideline to sideline, not to mention a perfect accompaniment to the razzle dazzle being served up by the Panthers on the CUA turf against a porous Warriors defence.

But it wasn’t just the results of the metronomic slipper show that knocked my socks off. In my eyes, there was something else that stood out from Walsh’s marksman masterclass.

The whole thing packed minimal histrionics.

With every raise of the touchies’ flags, it affirmed the fact that there is still a place in the game for a dull, dime-a-dozen kicking action.

In recent times, boring and undistinguished routines have been under attack by a wave of alternative converters and their intricately detailed approaches.

So why is the ‘Goalkicking for Dummies’ manual slowly becoming eroded as a reading choice by the sharpshooters across all codes?

Up until recently, capably kicking a dead ball used to be so simple.

Settle down, wipe away some sweat, secure your mouthguard in some disgusting pocket of your body, take some right-angled steps and slot the thing through to papa.

Too easy!

But somewhere along the timeline of kicking history, theatrics and contortions became de rigeur. Just punching the footy over and/or through a set of poles is no longer enough.

Nowadays, you need an abstract statue pose followed by an audition for the Bolshoi Ballet to be in the running for kicking tee duties.

Cast your mind back.

Remember the uproar when ‘around the corner’ kicking first came in to the codes? Traditionalists of the toe poke lost their shizen at the time at what was considered a totally ludicrous newfangled method!

Then fast forward to the emergence of Ian ‘Chook’ Herron.

This wacky winger was considered a rugby league outcast with his blend of neck twisting and hot-stepping. Nobody imagined that things were going to get any weirder than him.

But no!

Cue Jonny Wilkinson in the heavenly game with the first of the stone sculptured poses, and then the nutcase workings of Mark Riddell, who seemed to be placing some kind of mid-air blessing on the Steeden just before he gave it the boot.

This lead to the current golden era we find ourselves in.

There’s one of modern footy’s most bizarre and long-winded routines with Jamie Soward’s version of a sedated soldier whose compass is playing up, which is complimented by Quade Cooper’s regular reminder that his favourite comic hero is Superman.

James O’Connor jumped on board for a while with his own zany stylings before coming to his senses when he realised the robot dance went out of fashion for a reason.

Don’t forgot those who appear to be experiencing debilitating stomach cramps while they carefully hold a fragile baby chicken in cupped hands, that being Adam Reynolds, Berrick Barnes and Jarrod Croker.

And the insanity isn’t just confined to the rugby codes either.

What about in the AFL?

There are extra trimmings on the usual stale bread and butter provided by West Coast’s Josh Kennedy and St Kilda’s Ahmed Saad.

Kennedy’s attention-seeking feet take over the whole show and regale the crowd with their version of the stutter rap, while Saad somehow incorporates a lazy Sunday arvo stroll that seemingly stretches from Coogee to East Perth.

There’s no doubt about it. The modern kicking culture has evolved in to something weirder than that slouching windmill dance your uncle does at family functions.

Does anybody have an intelligent explanation for this?

I’m sure many would say that it’s another sign that the psychological aspect of professional sport is becoming further prevalent, and fair enough. But could it be more than this?

Are managers and marketers encouraging their charges to build a brand through individuality? Is it time wasting? Or loss of bets with long-term consequences?

Or are footy players convinced that pretending to pray in a state of semi-constipation is genuinely effective when piloting a leather pillow on a beeline?

Whatever the reason, long may it continue.

I acknowledge the successes of guys like Walsh and their staple routines. Good luck to them all.

But there’s no doubt there is something entertaining about watching athletes blindly devote to their boot-scooting security blankets.

For some kickers, it seems keeping it straight relies on being slightly twisted.

The Crowd Says:

2013-05-20T15:28:32+00:00

Felix

Guest


Great posting! That takes me back - have a look at the kicks from Shearer then ET's return, pretty massive kicks! Those old balls used to sail when you got hold of them, or make your feet bleed as a young tacker! Again thanks a bunch for dragging that up, would love to see fullbacks learn the art again. GI might struggle...

2013-05-20T13:21:45+00:00

Dr NRL

Guest


Maybe Inu was trying to send Inglis to that happy place 6wks ago, and nobody appreciated his selfless gesture ...

2013-05-20T11:12:55+00:00

Bazzio

Roar Guru


Well, he did play for Manly. And Queensland.

2013-05-20T09:01:53+00:00

SuperEel22

Roar Guru


I actually asked Inu about it when he was at Parramatta. He said it's a reaction to the crowd behind him. If someone's giving him crap when he's lining up a kick that's how he deals with it. And if he's got supporters behind him he feeds off it.

2013-05-20T07:10:37+00:00

Elijah Weightman

Roar Guru


Quite funny to see a kicking duel in Rugby League. It would be quite interesting if they returned. The final scoreline for that game was pretty unusual as well.

2013-05-20T05:04:55+00:00

Bunyip (the other one)

Guest


that kicking dual was awesome! Aahh the memories!

2013-05-20T04:27:31+00:00

Paul

Guest


Not surprising, Dale Shearer clearly wasn't too bright in the thinking department if he thought he was ever going to win taking on Stuart and Daley.

AUTHOR

2013-05-20T04:15:14+00:00

Dane Eldridge

Expert


I'm tearing up with the nostalgia

2013-05-20T04:14:44+00:00

Haz

Guest


The painted fangs are a straight-up rip-off of Wolfman's mouthguard, which is freakin' hilarious.

AUTHOR

2013-05-20T04:14:19+00:00

Dane Eldridge

Expert


Inu... of course! And my thoughts exactly regarding his approach. I can understand some twinkle-toeing being effective pre-kick, but beaming warmth? Not a standard method for coercing a ball over the crossbar.

2013-05-20T03:51:42+00:00

solly

Guest


NSW won that one!

2013-05-20T02:38:11+00:00

Paul

Guest


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qv_PMbTXbKc - the last kicking duel in Origin!

2013-05-20T01:22:17+00:00

Jake

Guest


What were the kicking duels?

2013-05-20T00:24:46+00:00

solly

Guest


Yep!

2013-05-19T23:42:28+00:00

Chui

Guest


Inu was coached to go "to a happy place" when he kicked to help him relax. As for Soward. I just wish HG and Roy still commentated. They would have done well with that one. Spinning date, spinning date, prancing pony, hello boys.....I'm home.

2013-05-19T23:40:58+00:00

kiwiinoz

Guest


Bring back the kicking duels.........can anyone remember them??

2013-05-19T22:43:00+00:00

Monners

Guest


It's hard to say really. Mark Riddell said he needed to extend his left arm as he was overbalancing on the right in his action. Fair enough. But can someone please explain to me Christian Inu's cheesy grin? Quite obviously marketing/branding there and Channel 9 ate it up by zooming the camera right in every time. Then if that wasn't enough he added painted fangs to his mouth guard. Kudos to him and his manager though. Jamie Soward cracks me up though. Steps out his approach with accuracy then proceeds to bounce around "Bolshoi Ballet" style meaning stepping out the approach was all for naught.

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