Good luck Steve Mortimer and let’s hope the narrow-minded dinosaurs take notice

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

When Steve Mortimer suffers a paper cut, I suspect blue and white blood streams from the wound.

The man affectionately known as ‘Turvey’ played 272 matches across 13 seasons for one of Australian rugby league’s most famous and successful clubs. Mortimer is unquestionably the greatest halfback and captain to have ever represented Canterbury-Bankstown.

Minor premierships, premierships and representative footy feature significantly in his rugby league CV, with a State of Origin triumph as captain in 1985 perhaps his most famous and noteworthy achievement in the game.

The last time I was up close and personal to Mortimer was in a corporate box at Stadium Australia, in late July of the 2019 season. As has been the repetitive story for Canterbury in recent years, it was another frustrating day, this time against the Roosters.

Mortimer sat alone at the front of the box, his body lurching forward and tense. A Big League magazine was rolled up in his right hand and he rode every bump, hit, dropped ball and half chance like the passionate Canterbury man that he is.

With the Bulldogs struggling to score enough points to place serious pressure on an equally unconvincing Roosters team, Mortimer grew more and more frustrated the deeper the game drifted into the second half.

At one point he exclaimed, “Where is the support? How hard is it to support the ball carrier?”

The comment was laced with all the frustration of the recent troubles that have had the club close to its knees. Yet Mortimer was far from a disgruntled fan shouting out ill-informed advice to professional players who actually know far more about the game than those offering the advice believe.

In this case, Mortimer was right. Spot on, in fact. As he was throughout the match with all of his comments.

Fellow Bulldogs great Terry Lamb was also present that day and I’d bumped into him in the corridor just prior to kick off. His passion for the blue and white runs as deep as his former halves partner, yet he watches the game in a far different way.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Lamb is more of a ‘roll with the punches’ type of guy and cheers up a room instantly with his cheeky smile and clever wit. No matter how bad the Bulldogs might be travelling, he will view the game from something of a philosophical view, rarely displaying excessive emotion and frustration.

Mortimer is cut from a different cloth and his passionate and obsessive support for the only professional club for whom he has played remains as strong and committed as ever.

Last Tuesday’s announcement that Mortimer had been officially diagnosed with dementia sometime in March this year rocked the foundations of Canterbury-Bankstown.

Quite simply, Steve Mortimer means more to the fans of the club than any other player.

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He was there as the young star at the dawn of the new era of Canterbury: the family club entertainers who frightened the life out of the competition in 1979 before claiming the title the following year and three others throughout the 1980s.

He was simply an inspiration. He was blessed with a turn of foot owned by few halves, an insane footy instinct that saw him do the impossible and produce moments of which others would dare not dream and undoubted leadership qualities. Mortimer was one of the most talented players of his era.

As an asthmatic, his jack-in-the-box style of play was somewhat necessary, yet compared to the challenge he now faces as the scary reality of dementia sets in, it was merely an obstacle to which he found an answer.

Mortimer has struggled for some time, with many in his close circle realising that all was not right with the 64-year-old. No doubt he knew it as well and with the rugby league world in bitter debate around the NRL’s recent crackdown on contact to the head, he has potentially selected the most apt and telling moment to announce his struggles to the public.

(Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Mortimer can recall three significant moments where he was seriously compromised by contact to the head. He is also well aware that the game has indeed changed.

However, he is also in full support of the new interpretations being applied by the officials and the zero tolerance approach being taken.

While veteran league writer Phil Rothfield has rather idiotically suggested that the upcoming State of Origin series could become unwatchable thanks to the crackdown, Mortimer’s announcement reminds us all as to why it is occurring.

No game is worth its salt if it is in any way responsible for a man as young as 64 having his roles as a father, grandfather, uncle or partner diminished. That is to be the path ahead for Steve Mortimer.

Sadly, it is too late for him and many others. Yet there is still hope for the modern player that they may finish their careers with extremely low risk when it comes to their future health situations.

Each and every time we think about the arguments on both sides, we should remind ourselves of Mortimer, what he stands for as a Bulldog and just how great he was.

The Crowd Says:

2022-02-08T20:44:34+00:00

Jimbo

Guest


Mortimer was a great player .. but also a 'thug'. He's lucky he wasn't booted out of the game for an absolute cheap shot which prematurely ended the career of Mark Wakefield .. who really was lucky that he wasn't killed

2021-06-08T19:57:56+00:00

Joey

Guest


The biggest statement about high contact comes from Qld coach Green, who says he would hate for an Origin to be decided by innocuous incidental contact, and fans far and wide echo the same sentiment. The people are unanimous. They want Origin hard and tough, and they want the rest of the product soft, and weak.

2021-06-08T08:31:54+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


There are people trying to make this an emotional issue. Surely no-one thinks deliberately or recklessly attacking the head should be tolerated. It is incidental and unavoidable contact that is going to continue to happen that opponents are up in arms about. The debate is whether a player should be sent from the field in situations like a ball-carrier's head falls into their shoulder.

2021-06-08T05:18:57+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


This story is timely today, with the passing of another Canturbery great, Tim Pickup.

2021-06-08T02:24:43+00:00

Joey

Guest


What a great ironic photo with Baa Baa, the psycho willing to take out anyone on the field, as well anyone in group in front of him on the golf course, I hear. Virtually ended the career of Ellery Hanley in one cheap shot to the head.

2021-06-07T12:50:46+00:00

Kerry Hanson

Guest


In some cases people are dead from it long before 64 , that haven’t had a history of head trauma. It’s not exactly a consistent condition, and plays out in all manner of different ways. But getting belted in the head on a regular basis certainly isn’t going to be beneficial in the long run . The way. I see it , ya get what ya given in this life , some don’t live past their first birthday, and others live to be 100 . Bahala na , as the Filipinos would say .

2021-06-07T07:26:33+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


2 comments in 2 threads, but both relate to high contact: "the head high contact issue – AFL stripped protection from players that led with their head in an effort to draw a penalty from a player doing the right thing. No longer any incentive to put yourself at risk, so players went back to standing up for contact (when possible). I think league needs to look at this one too and see how they could adapt it to make it work." AND "there needs to be a penalty both on field and on report for staging for penalties. Players are taking advantage of a crackdown begun in the name of their long term welfare. I saw T Peachy stay down in a deliberate attempt to secure an unwarranted penalty – he should be ashamed of himself right now. The word on this round is that he was not the only one. AFL has a staging offence so it is not unheard of. Potential sin bin + week will help ensure on field integrity. Thoughts anyone?" Apologies for the long reply. It will also be obvious I follow AFL as well as League - and often a good idea in one code can be adapted to become a good idea in the other :happy:

2021-06-07T07:07:29+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


He always was a class act.

2021-06-07T07:06:48+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Can you repeat them?

2021-06-07T07:05:44+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Pretty simple, Turvey played in a more violent era when thugs like Tommy Raudonikis and Terry Lamb were idolised. Today with multiple cameras and the bunker you can’t get away with deliberate high shots. And there are HIA protocols if you do get hit high so you don’t do more damage. Plus you cant punch. That doesn’t meant that accidents can’t happen. But the game is nothing like it was in the 70s and early 80s.

2021-06-07T07:01:58+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


He’s actually pretty cool about it and doesn’t bring it up every five minutes…

2021-06-07T06:52:51+00:00

Diamond Jackie

Roar Rookie


How do the coaches and commentators complaining about the current crackdown respond to the likes of Turvey and his current situation ?

2021-06-07T05:58:24+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Really appreciate this article Stuart. I'm noticing your writing style is improving quite a lot lately. Keep up the good work, shame the subject matter is so serious.

2021-06-07T05:13:43+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


I wonder what Ellery Hanley thinks of him.

2021-06-07T03:52:57+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


You've seen my thoughts regarding rule tweaks to encourage players to keep upright and not lead with their head, or stage for penalties from non-existent contact. Hopefully the NRL follow up on this soon to prevent players putting themselves or the integrity of the game at risk.

2021-06-07T03:12:19+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


:laughing:

2021-06-07T03:02:19+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


He’s a great man. The last 50 metres into Belmore Stadium must take him 2 hours. He stops for photos, shakes hands and makes time for everyone

2021-06-07T02:59:36+00:00

catcat

Roar Rookie


I was coming out of Belmore sportsground from that last game where the Dogs played the Storm (and lost)- maybe 2019??. I must have had a long face. Turvey came across the road grabbed my hand and said something like "Dont worry, the good times are not far away.." I looked up and thought wow Steve Mortimer!!

2021-06-07T02:02:18+00:00

JOHN ALLAN

Guest


Good morning Tony. I recall seeing the names of people who respect Gus. Couldn’t distinguish them clearly as they were written on the head of a small pin.

2021-06-07T01:43:10+00:00

Wal

Roar Guru


this week being players simulating injuries to get penalties and then laughing about it I guess you can never count for the lowest common dominator Simple fix though, if you go down with a head knock compulsory off field concussion test by in independent doctor.

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