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Other Games 2024-25


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19 minutes ago, The Fish said:

Either that, or CT's latest hobby, a bathtub gin distillery.

 

He was posting publicly about wanking in his bath the other day, so that gin is ALL YOURS. 

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34 minutes ago, Gemmill said:

 

He was posting publicly about wanking in his bath the other day, so that gin is ALL YOURS. 

I've never vomited as much or as violently.

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2 hours ago, PaddockLad said:


Well he was old skool pre “ten pound poms” breed, as far as I can make out SOCCER is followed mostly by those from more recent waves of European immigration? …

 

Actually it is the reverse. Soccer was huge here before WW2, there are records of football ashes matches and I think Australia v NZ was one of, if not the first official national team match, played in the world.

And after with the post WW2, European skilled work migration influx to our steelworks and the like industries, it grew even more. But it was around the time of the "ten pound poms" that Australia was barred from FIFA because of issues with the national association, if I remember correctly the various States didn't want to be governed by a national body and because they could not get organised FIFA disoffiliated Australia from playing other countries.

Also being the 1950s and 60s it was the time when sport news coverage started to grow and in Victoria the media got behind aerial ping pong (what was then Victorian Rules Football aka AFL) and in NSW/QLD they got behind rugby league, union was for poncey private school boys and amateurs.

And that's what fucked football initially in Australia, TV in the 70 and 80s made sure it never had a chance to recover.

So then a lot of the migrants, especially their children rejected the old country football and played whatever the "footy" of choice was depending where they lived, in order to assimilate, especially at school. And those that did continue to play football, found that the professional teams all had a home nation association, so as I said prior Sydney Olympic, etc.

Both Newcastle and Wollongong were primarily football cities due to their Northern and Welsh roots (Newcastle) and Italian/Greek/Yugoslava (as it was then) populations and that's where I grew up. Eventually with the commercialisation of league, even those two places have moved to league as the number one football.

 

When I was 16/17, I played NSW State second division U18 for Fairy Meadow (suburb of the "Gong") Italia. They were paying their first team players more than what a lot of the National Soccer League were playing their first team. It's still the same, those that play top tier state league for a Sydney Croatia or Marconi earn better money than a lot of A-League players, the clubs just don't want to play in the national league because they would have to drop the country of their origin reference.

Edited by sammynb
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1 hour ago, RobinRobin said:

Sophie Monk Aussie GIF by Love Island Australia

 

@RobinRobin years ago I worked on a show that did a story on Sophie Monk when she was The Bachelorette. The network was a no smoking building but they allowed her to smoke on the roof terrace because she would have been out the front sucking them down.

And that terrace was just outside my office and she just chain smoked with her entourage.

Definitely a beer goggles stunner and fuck me, as bogan as they came.

Obviously once she tipped over 40 there wasn't enough spackfiller to maintain her TV career (watch her show up on something next month now!)

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35 minutes ago, sammynb said:

 

Actually it is the reverse. Soccer was huge here before WW2, there are records of football ashes matches and I think Australia v NZ was one of, of not the first official national team match, played in the world.

And after with the post WW2, European skilled work migration influx to our steelworks and the like industries, it grew even more. But it was around the time of the "ten pound poms" that Australia was barred from FIFA because of issues with the national association, if I remember correctly the various States didn't want to be governed by a national body and because they could get organised FIFA disoffiliated Australia from playing other countries.

Also being the 1950s and 60s it was the time when sport news coverage started to grow and in Victoria the media got behind aerial ping pong (what was then Victorian Rules Football aka AFL) and in NSW/QLD they got behind rugby league, union was for poncey private school boys and amateurs.

And that's what fucked football initially in Australia, TV in the 70 and 80s made sure it never had a chance to recover.

So then a lot of the migrants, especially their children rejected the old country football and played whatever the "footy" of choice was, in order to assimilate especially at school. And those that did continue to play football, found that the professional teams all had a home nation association, so as I said prior Sydney Olympic, etc.

Both Newcastle and Wollongong were primarily football cities due to their Northern and Welsh roots (Newcastle) and Italian/Greek/Yugoslava (as it was then) populations and that's where I grew up. Eventually with the commercialisation of league, even those two places have moved to league as the number one football.

 

When I was 16/17, I played NSW State second division U18 for Fairy Meadow (suburb of the "Gong") Italia. They were paying their first team players more than what a lot of the National Soccer League were playing their first team. It's still the same, those that play top tier state league for a Sydney Croatia or Marconi earn better money than a lot of A-League players, the clubs just don't want to play in the national league because they would have to drop the country of their origin reference.


Thats really interesting mate cheers 👍

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On 12/09/2024 at 11:23, sammynb said:

 

Actually it is the reverse. Soccer was huge here before WW2, there are records of football ashes matches and I think Australia v NZ was one of, if not the first official national team match, played in the world.

And after with the post WW2, European skilled work migration influx to our steelworks and the like industries, it grew even more. But it was around the time of the "ten pound poms" that Australia was barred from FIFA because of issues with the national association, if I remember correctly the various States didn't want to be governed by a national body and because they could not get organised FIFA disoffiliated Australia from playing other countries.

Also being the 1950s and 60s it was the time when sport news coverage started to grow and in Victoria the media got behind aerial ping pong (what was then Victorian Rules Football aka AFL) and in NSW/QLD they got behind rugby league, union was for poncey private school boys and amateurs.

And that's what fucked football initially in Australia, TV in the 70 and 80s made sure it never had a chance to recover.

So then a lot of the migrants, especially their children rejected the old country football and played whatever the "footy" of choice was depending where they lived, in order to assimilate, especially at school. And those that did continue to play football, found that the professional teams all had a home nation association, so as I said prior Sydney Olympic, etc.

Both Newcastle and Wollongong were primarily football cities due to their Northern and Welsh roots (Newcastle) and Italian/Greek/Yugoslava (as it was then) populations and that's where I grew up. Eventually with the commercialisation of league, even those two places have moved to league as the number one football.

 

When I was 16/17, I played NSW State second division U18 for Fairy Meadow (suburb of the "Gong") Italia. They were paying their first team players more than what a lot of the National Soccer League were playing their first team. It's still the same, those that play top tier state league for a Sydney Croatia or Marconi earn better money than a lot of A-League players, the clubs just don't want to play in the national league because they would have to drop the country of their origin reference.

The first ever international football match (or at least the first one with properly recognised representative sides) was Scotland v England. Played in Glasgow at a cricket ground. I wonder if the Australia v NZ match was the first in the southern hemisphere though? As an aside the first ever international cricket match was played between a touring Canadian team and the USA (in New York).

Also, speaking of the days before the A-League, does anyone remember the Australian Pools? Which filled the gap of English football pools in the close  season. 

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1 hour ago, Gemmill said:

Ah well, fuck Southampton. And god bless Ten Hag's spawniness that keeps him in a job wasting this lot's money. 

Nice to see the Spitfire cunts get fuck all again. 

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Forest in a decent position to cross a ball over gets pulled back as MacAlister feigned injury for a free kick, didn't get it so stayed down so the ref stops play. :lol: (obviously Liverpool have more men back when the ref restarts it with forest in possession).

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10 minutes ago, wykikitoon said:

Palace doing well with their generational talent 😂

 

Remember the time we were after Solako but got Ginola instead? Getting those vibes tbh. See also Jeffers and Bellamy.

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