Dogaholic
First Grade
- Messages
- 5,075
u did?
Yeah, I've said my piece.
Apart from that it will just continue to go along the lines of "Yes you did", "No i didn't".
Pretty pointless tbh
u did?
your opinion is irrelevant.
You've admitted to deleting the post I had quoted which left mypost out of context.
As for taking your word on what I had quoted, no thanks. I don't reember what I was quoting but the fact that I had quoted it means that it was a huge part of what I had to say. Having administered forums before I know admin can edit posts without leaving much of a trace and I would not put that past you.
I am digging no holes. You and your buddies were hell bent on showing me up and did so by editing and mis representing my opinions.
I think I have pretty much cleared everything now though
Out of context. YaY, this is fun.Your reply, with or without the context of the original post, is clearly racist.
Yes, I do know that but edited by an admin is a different storyYou would know, having administered forums, that you can retrieve deleted posts.
Now you're accusing an Administrator of being disingenuous in respect of editing your posts.
Yeah, half my post was deleted. DUHMisrepresenting your opinions? Showing you up?
errr...noI think you've done a good job of that yourself.
I doI don't think so.
Cheers Willow - much appreciated champ.. doggies supporters, i encourage you to read this fine piece of work..and when you read it, read it again, and when you're done, read it one more time. :lol:And by popular demand from TheMightyRedV, and dedicated to Xplosive....
A history of canine pursuits
The unspoken beginnings
The Canterbury-Bankstown Rugby League Club joined the NSWRL first grade in 1935. The Country Bumpkins, as they were dubbed, must have been a miserable side to follow. To say they had a shocker first season is an understatement.
In an era of lower score lines, Canterbury copped numerous hidings. Wests mauled them by 65-11; Easts slaughtered them by 87-7 and again by 65-10. But the worst loss came when St George obliterated Canterbury by 91-6, a first grade premiership record which still stands to this day. If we had four point tries in 1935, the score line would have 110-6.
After 16 games, the Canterbury rabble managed just two wins over the luckless Sydney University. Incredibly, Canterbury conceded 660 points and leaked no less than 140 tries. In modern day scoring, this equates to a shocking defensive record of 800 points, or an average of 50 points per game!
In their history summary, the official Bulldogs website glosses over this information. They tend to head straight to 1938 and 1942; the clubs first premiership wins. The site then fast forwards to 1967. What happened in between? Well nothing really Canterbury failed to win another premiership until 1980. It was a drought of some 38 years, no doubt when Sutherland Shire local Juan Pharkall was residing in Belmore.
Re-invent for gods sake!
In an effort to stem the flow of failure, the Canterbury club decided to re-invent themselves. Their nickname, The Berries, was considered too soft it took them 50 years to work this out. The Canterbury-Bankstown name was long gone and moves were afoot to wipe away the Canterbury name forever. They went for the mongrel and became The Bulldogs.
Things started to look up in the 1980s as the club put together a sprinkling of premierships. They also had some sporadic success in 1995 and again in 2004, perhaps the most boring grand final in history. To some degree, they managed to interrupt the decades of failure.
Super Duper League
With the coming of Super League, and Canterburys subsequent fall from grace, we enter a bleak period of rugby league history which many Bulldogs supporters are not too keen to discuss.
During the prevailing winds of greed and overindulgence, the Bulldogs did their bit to split the game in two. While many clubs indulged themselves, the events of the mid-1990s would ultimately dump Canterbury into the deepest mire of all.
In 2002, the Bulldogs were caught rorting the cap. They ripped off the level playing field by at least $1million and essentially, they were cheating. Investigations concluded that the Bulldogs were rotten to the core. The saga cost Canterbury 37 competition points, and delivered them the wooden spoon for 2002.
At the heart of this was the infamous Oasis project, a showcase development in Liverpool. It was revealed the club was using the $800million project to illegally pay players outside the NRL's $3.25million cap. At first, the Bulldogs were in denial, they hid behind a web of deceit and dug themselves in deeper. Eventually, embarrassed Bulldogs CEO Bob Hagan resigned and publicly admitted that the club had been over the cap for years.
In fessing up about the undeclared player payments, Bob said, It's a long, long process and we've tried since Super League days to get our salary cap in order.
Since Super League? That was in 1997. This begs the question: how much long, long, longer would this process had gone on if they didnt get caught?
The water under the bridge defence
Its a sordid history but when dealing with the truth, many Bulldogs supporters play the water under the bridge card. This is followed by contradictions as the same fans death ride any other team which goes over the cap by miniscule amounts.
Meanwhile, the courageous bad-arsed rebels in the Bulldogs fan base do their bit to keep the police force employed. Damaging phone booths, vandalising trains and belting up on other supporters are a feature of Bulldogs post-match celebrations. Naturally, many fans say its just a minority and again, many of the same desperately look for similar incidents at other games when trying to justify their own rotten reputation.
Regretfully, an essay of limited words does not do justice to the subject matter. Indeed, volumes more could be written. Suffice to say, the Bulldogs have had a chequered history and at worst, they have been a pox on the greatest game of all.
http://forums.leagueunlimited.com/sh...32#post2401332
Out of context. YaY, this is fun.
You lot are a very special bunch
I've asked this question before - What was the context then?
Please take the opportunity to exonerate yourself - oh that's right, you can't remember - how convenient.
Willow posted the bit that was deleted and in my opinion it doesn't change the fact that your grubby post implies that muslims living in Arncliffe are criminals. There is nothing that you can do or say which changes that implication.
lol. Goodo, I'm glad we got that sorted then.your opinion is irrelevant.
Well well, you're hardly a credible witness then. But we already knew that.Dogaholic said:I don't remember what I was quoting
Holy f&*k, just thought I would come back and see how this thread was going... and jeeeeezus...
http://bulldogsarmy.weebly.com/st-george-chants.html
I see you tards finally got some chants together, great work!
Remember, if the noob from the Bulldogs Army decides to video tape on Friday night, make sure the camera is up the right way ok?
I don't want to turn my monitor around to see your pathetic excuse for an army chant half-hearted!
See you Friday night
St George Illawarra
They're the local footy franchise team
From the, town of dapto
They sold away their history
Records, are a thing of the past
Trophies, just sit gathering dust
St George, Illawarra
you sold away your history
Ouwet is Elvis Presley. ready to reinvent rock 'n' roll. he'll be singing hound dog to all the players at the end "you aint nothin but a hound dog, cryin all the time" they will be crying!
I am serious, this Ouwet is more than a great ambassador for the game of rugby league and a rock n roll icon. He is a god. This guy loves us. This week he has been on saints forum more than all of us combined. We have to send our returns, I shall establish the first Holy Church Of Ouwet, God Of Rugby League and Rock N Roll. There is no salvation outside this church! I am its first Pope!
very lame ouwet... very lame.
regardless, you won't be singing them on friday, as if all you dogz fans could remember the words
:lol::lol::lol: