Where have all the good guys of Aussie sport gone?

By Dan Talintyre / Roar Guru

For sports writers, it’s been one of those weeks. It’s only Tuesday and yet, already, the sheer number of news stories flowing in are starting to pile up.

And while many of them were expected – like the Origin teams being announced or the Socceroos’ impending World Cup qualification – many of them have been truly unexpected. More than that, they’ve been unwanted.

It started last week with the news that Australian batsman David Warner was involved in a physical altercation with an English cricket player. Warner was quickly fined and suspended for four weeks amidst allegations that he has a drinking problem – something that the opener has vehemently denied.

The news quickly then turned on footballer James Tamou, who was caught drink driving despite being four times over the legal limit.

Tamou – one of the stars of NSW’s Game 1 Origin heroics – was quickly suspended by the National Rugby League for two games and shamed for his actions. He will not take part in Origin 2 on June 26.

That, however, would be only the tip of the iceberg.

Monday brought with it the now infamous Blake Ferguson saga, with the Canberra Raiders’ star formally charged by police for indecent assault. He was suspended by the NRL, and while the Raiders might plan to stand by their troubled centre (per Canberra Times), the reality is that Ferguson’s image – along with the game of rugby league – has already been tarnished beyond repair for now.

Canberra, like so many others, is both “speechless” and “disappointed”.

However, even that news was overshadowed by what was to be revealed around lunchtime on Tuesday with the revelations that Victoria police have charged St. Kilda star Stephen Milne with four counts of rape following an alleged attack on a woman in 2004. Milne – a two-time All-Australian – continues to protest his innocence, but investigations are now set to take on an entirely different look.

Much like the sporting complexion of Australia.

See, sport is as fundamental to the identity of Australia as anything else.

It’s what unites and divides us all at the same time. It is what allows us to develop and harness relationships that we otherwise would never have thought to grow. And for the most part, sport plays that role perfectly.

Wander down to your local footy field or soccer ground on Saturday and you’ll see it. Take the stands at the ANZ Championship or soak up the sunshine mixed with wind at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and you’ll see it too. Talk to someone at your local pub or bar when the footy’s on and they’ll be calling you “mate” in an instant.

But sport, like seemingly everything else in the world, has a dark side to it as well.

It isn’t always celebratory cheers and incredible comebacks. It isn’t all about mate-ship, camaraderie and rejoicing over shared victories.

As this month alone can testify, sport has its dark spots. And when the light of the media and public scrutiny finds those dark spots – or the dark spots find them – it’s clear that not everything and everyone involved in sports is a positive thing.

Not everyone can be a hero.

In fact, for there to be a hero, there must be a villain. For there to be the “good guys” in sport, there must also be the “bad guys”.

The “bad guys” per se, are evident. That’s not to say that the players themselves are evil and that everything they do for all of time will be bad. Anyone who thinks that way seems to misunderstand that athletes are still humans; they are prone to the same mistakes and same problems as everyone else. What it does mean is that the “bad guys” are the ones that, for however long, lower the effectiveness of sport.

They reduce the impact of what sport can do, and right now, the image of sport is perhaps lower than we’ve seen in a long time.

Now is not the time for them.

Now is the time for sporting heroes, and for good guys to re-emerge once more.

What we need now is for the successes of athletes to make front-page news. Instead of celebrating an impending World Cup berth, victory in Hockey, and the prospect of defeating the British and Irish Lions, the news is filled with names like George Burgess, Glen Boss and the slew of fallen stars listed above.

That’s got to change immediately. We don’t need their names right now.

What we need, are the names of sport’s “good guys”.

I’m not sure where all the good guys have gone in sport. But one thing I do know – we, as viewers and fans of sport right around this beautiful country, need them to emerge out of the woodwork and give us something to cheer about.

Chief Justice Earl Warren once said that he always turned to the sports section first. His reasoning was that the sports section records people’s accomplishments while the front page records nothing but people’s failures. But at this rate, our back pages are soon going to bear an uncanny resemblance to the front.

For that, sport needs its good guys to shine.

Be that the Socceroos, the Wallabies, Queensland or New South Wales. Whoever you’re cheering for and in whatever code you’re following, cheer for the good guys to win and for sports news to be filled with positive stories once more.

Goodness knows we need it now more than ever.

The Crowd Says:

2013-06-19T16:13:19+00:00

Rowdy

Guest


So Aus sport isn't doing so well the last 3-4 years, and yet the country hasn't actually fallen apart, there's been no increase in suicides. This is good; it's an indication that Australians, contrary to what their political servants and media believe, are actually all grown up and don't actually need to be told how we're The Best in the World at this that and everything else in order to feel good about themselves. The sporting success of a bunch of people you'll never meet and over whom you have no influence whatever affects your mood and may even spoil your weekend, but it's not something to base your country's self-esteem on.

AUTHOR

2013-06-19T07:29:47+00:00

Dan Talintyre

Roar Guru


@Scuba. I understand your point, but we're talking about a guy who deliberately caused the fall of another jockey. That jockey lost teeth, fractured ribs and broke his jaw. If that happened on the field in any other sport, we'd happily pot ray that guy as one of the "bad guys". Hence why Boss (in my mind) was written in the sentence that he did.

2013-06-19T05:55:09+00:00

AdamS

Roar Guru


Well, to be fair a few of those are mostly true... Fact is Player X went to bed early, trained well and ate healthily this week isn't news,

2013-06-19T05:28:04+00:00

Sideline Comm.

Guest


I agree with this actually, as strange it seems to have a strong authoritative woman around a football team. Spending too much time around the same sex is simply not healthy for developing attitudes towards the other. Just look at how so many private school boys treat or think about women (yes a generalisation, but also too often true). I wonder if the bulldogs now having a female CEO will change their culture, and possibly start a trend for the betterment of others. I hope so, 'cause these blokes too often treat women like animals.

2013-06-19T02:52:05+00:00

Scuba

Guest


Glen Boss is in the headlines because of a suspension for causing interference in a race. To lump him in with the rest of the people mentioned in this article who have (in some cases allegedly) disgraced themselves to varying degrees off the field is a pretty long bow to draw.

2013-06-19T02:30:33+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


The problem is these are young men with a lot of cash, a high profile and an attitude crafted by the concept that they are special (from a very young age). You throw booze and/or a poor attitude towards women into the mix and this is the result. It is really starting to fascinate me that these sporting organisations don't look more into hiring "minders" for these guys. For example, the fact that a bloke in the NSW Origin team was allowed out at all, let alone to drink and without anyone supervising to some degree is amazing. State of Origin makes a lot of money for the NRL, surely the teams could afford a few professional bodyguards to supervise these blokes when they're out. The same for the Aus cricket team. For those who think this sounds ridiculous, most NFL players have bodyguards to avoid this sort of trouble - they still get into it, but at least an attempt is being made. As an example, it has always struck me as amazing that Carlton didn't have someone pull Fevola off television once it became clear he was drunk - surely this is something that can easily be achieved on their budgets.

2013-06-19T02:19:25+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


I don't totally buy that. If there is nothing else to read we would still read it because we like reading. The influential organisations (News, Fairfax etc) putting it out there are just as much to blame.

2013-06-19T01:56:05+00:00

James

Guest


we can not bemoan the negative journalism as we are the only reason it exists. if we didnt read it it wouldnt be news.

2013-06-18T23:47:54+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Totally agree. There are plenty of "good guys" out there. They just aren't that interesting. And this is not something that is confined to sport. If you consume any sort of media, you'd think that every Catholic priest is a paedophile, that every politican incompetent and/or corrupt or that every CEO is a money hungry charlatan.

2013-06-18T23:43:38+00:00

cuzza

Guest


+ 1

2013-06-18T23:35:26+00:00

Pendy

Guest


In regards to Cricket, all the "good guys" are retired or playing for Australia A.

2013-06-18T23:33:30+00:00

Pendy

Guest


hear hear!! Very well put.

2013-06-18T22:43:31+00:00

itsuckstobeyou

Roar Pro


We all know the good guys are there and we all know why we don't see them... Good guys don't sell newspapers. There has always been bad guys in Rugby League. It seems worse of late. Personally I think much of this behavior, the DUI, sexual harassment and destructive behavior, is a result of spending too much time around other blokes. I think that introducing more women into the club structures will retard these incidents a little. Anyone who's married knows how spending large amounts of time with women will change a man. I doubt any of the incidents you mention in your article would have occurred if there was a strong, authoritative woman looking over these bloke shoulders.

2013-06-18T22:30:16+00:00

Bluebag

Guest


Warm and fuzzy stories don't sell so most media outlets are in race to the bottom... Have a look at the rise of "journalists" (and I use the term very loosely) such as Rebecca Wilson, Phil Rothfield, Danny Weidler, et al. They are professional sh*tmongers who deal and misery and gossip

2013-06-18T19:14:33+00:00

kid

Guest


I think it comes down to a change in culture. We didn't speak about domestic violence, covered up sex scandals, and the press actively created heroes because it was thought good for public morale. Today information is no longer distributed through a moderator (news editors, parliamentarians) and its no longer rude to invade someones privacy. Is ignorance bliss or is knowledge power? I don't care either way just hope my team can get a win this weekend....

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