Quote WiganBurt="WiganBurt"half the bloody games players act like this all the time and the sooner everyone realises it the better.'"
Indeed!
This isn’t a Wigan, or Hull or Cas thing (the clubs who’ve seen things like this happen with their players of late); this is a culture within rugby league across both sides of the World.
AND IT HAS TO STOP!
I think as a community of fans for this sport we have to get together and almost do something like an open letter to the players/coaches/clubs. They have their heads a few decades behind if they think that as professional athletes they should be drinking alcohol during the season, never mind if it’s a “day off”, and never mind going as far as being completely bladdered! That’s just an absolute disgrace.
Being a professional athlete means their body is their job. Being a professional athlete means that during the season, bar a glass of wine with a meal every now and again, these players should not be touching pints of beer/bitter/stout or spirits with sugary mixers. It’s not good for their muscles or organs and it takes more than a day of drinking water or some nice juices after a drinking session to get this stuff out of the body, it takes days, so how is it affecting them in training and how is that then affecting them on game days?
All this “cheat day”/“day off”/“treat day” stuff within athletes is such a 1990s-2000s way of thinking that it’s embarrassing to see it still goes on. Slamming a McDonald’s, a full pack of biscuits and and a full pack of Haribo down your cake hole on a day off isn’t a cheat or a treat, it’s acting unprofessionally. Never mind getting completely p¡ssed or shoving what these guys shove up their noses these days. That’s just an absolute ing disgrace that that goes on (and we all know it does, they aren’t all going to the toilets together and making those jangly metal and sniffing noises to clean each other’s sets of keys on the sly in a toilet cubicle!) or smoking as well.
A cheat day would be having a slice of cake or a lemonade with their meal instead of abstaining. A day off is sitting and relaxing or having a massage instead of training. A treat day is going shopping and maybe having a steak+potato wedges with glass of red wine in a bar instead of weighing their protein and carbs out for the day.
But we see these idiot rugby league players acting like mobs of teenagers on their first nights out banging fifteen pints and a gram of coke down them and ending up arguing, acting the hard man or fighting. Why do they have to act so unprofessionally and immaturely? Sam and Joel are 29 and 31. Not 17 and 19. And they aren’t the only ones. And I’ve seen worse than this video from RL players.
The argument of “but they are allowed to let their hair down on a day off, and they’re young lads acting like loads of young lads do across the country” is null and void. Yes the British and Aussie drinking culture is there and there are young men doing this all the time who aren’t rugby league players. But go to the Mediterranean and have a look at how young men act. Yes they drink and go out in groups but they are so much more mature and sophisticated about it than we are. It’s about time our whole culture changed rather than excuse it. And look at other athletes; Andy Murray, Adam Peaty, Anthony Joshua, Mo Farah - they are all young British men but does anyone think any of them are hammering fifteen pints, a gram of coke, a few Es and a bit of magic and maybe a bit of ketamine down them on their days off?
No?
So why is it alright for rugby league players?
If they want to act like amateurs maybe we should sack off the game as we see it and change to being an amateur sport. Clubs could thrive a bit more if they don’t have to pay the players all this money and fans could get into games a bit cheaper as well. The players can go and get jobs and train in the evenings and play at weekends. Then they can go and get leathered on their day off and it won’t affect any kind of “professionalism” because the word doesn’t exist in an amateur game...