Quote tad rhino="tad rhino"Footballers do cheat but all sportsmen cheat in one way or another. Rugby players reef the ball out then unashamadly claim a knock on. Batsmen know they have nicked the ball but stand there ground. Dont just label footballers as cheats then take the moral high ground. It happens in every sport at every level.lance armstrong is a great example.'"
I'd agree with that. There's plenty of cheating or attempts at cheating on the rugby pitch as well as the football pitch. Tomkins constant wriggling and flailing around at the ptb for instance is an attempt to gain a penalty, or players diving at the ptb.
If rugby league were scrutinised as closely as football then I think people would say rugby league players were diving cheats.
I do think though that there is a more respectful attitude on the rugby league pitch. Whilst not perfect, there is certainly a lot more respect toward the referee, and there certainly is toward opposing players and the fans. It is very very rare to see a player make gestures toward or antagonise opposition fans, whereas in football you regularly see players deliberately celebrate at opposition fans.
I just think that in general there is a less selfish attitude in rugby league than football. I think that goes for the fans too. Obviously there are incidents. Whenever you get thousands of people in one place there's going to be an idiot somewhere, but in general these incidents are far more commonplace at football grounds than at rugby league. Partly due to the nature of the game, every single score is vital and could easily be the winner, whereas it's unlikely to be in rugby league, but also I think that selfishness on the the pitch in football seeps its way into the crowd and creates or at least encourages an "us & them" attitude. You only need to see how when 2 clubs in Man Utd & Liverpool put their minds to it they can decrease tensions between 2 sets of fans. A few complimentary words for the opposition, a few pleas for sense to prevail from both sides and you get a far less intimidating atmosphere at the game.
I don't have figures for it but from my observations of crowds on tv and at games there appear to be proportionately far fewer families at football games than at rugby league games, and far more small groups of lads/men. This is probably part of the problem. If you're with your family you're far less likely to get worked up and shout/do stupid things and less likely to be tanked up before the game.
To put the 2 sports into some sort of, albeit anecdotal, context, on the way out of Wembley this year, despite the odd drunken group here and there, we were told "good luck for the rest of the year" by at least 3 different groups of Wire fans, got chatting about the game with some Wigan fans on the tube, and some Bradford fans in the train station.
Whilst I don't think it's some kind of carnal slaughterhouse, I can't imagine that happening to the same extent at the FA Cup Final between 2 rival teams.