Parki said:Dear Clint An Open letter, by a fan
The year was 2005. Shattered by a crippling injury toll, the knights lost thirteen games in a row. One man stood tall amongst the carnage. His name was Clint Newton. Come hell or high water, he would be there, leading his mighty red and blue forward into battle, searching for that one glorious win that took us four months of hell to endure. When the win finally came, he was there, slamming the ball down to make sure of it.
Those images will stay with me forever, as I stood jumping up and down on the rickety wooden bench at CUA stadium. It was one of those nights that you tell your grandkids about, up there with winning grand finals, and the magical comebacks that we as red and blue fans dare to dream about. Which is why, two years later, I simply cannot understand how, after one of the worst days in the clubs history, Mr Newcastle has decided to walk away, chuck it in? I just dont understand.
So you had a fight with the coach. So you were told you werent wanted. That would have broken lesser men than you, and I can understand that. But what about the rest of us? What about showing the club that nursed you through countless months of rehabilitation and suspension a bit of ticker, especially considering the young guys we have coming through? What about showing us, the fans, that some things are more important than personal pride?
I never got a chance to play for the knights. I was never good enough. But one thing I was always led to believe was that the jersey was worth more than personal accolades. Playing for Newcastle was a privilege only a few noble men got to undertake. You were one of those men. And now, you have let me down.
So take your personal pride and shove it. Maybe the club is better off without you, who knows. All I do know is Newcastle will go on. We will still be there week after week cheering on the ones you have left behind. So have a think about that when you are in England or in Manly or Melbourne or wherever. Dont ever forget it. Because I wont.
Signed
One very angry fan
Well Said!Parki said:Dear Clint An Open letter, by a fan
The year was 2005. Shattered by a crippling injury toll, the knights lost thirteen games in a row. One man stood tall amongst the carnage. His name was Clint Newton. Come hell or high water, he would be there, leading his mighty red and blue forward into battle, searching for that one glorious win that took us four months of hell to endure. When the win finally came, he was there, slamming the ball down to make sure of it.
Those images will stay with me forever, as I stood jumping up and down on the rickety wooden bench at CUA stadium. It was one of those nights that you tell your grandkids about, up there with winning grand finals, and the magical comebacks that we as red and blue fans dare to dream about. Which is why, two years later, I simply cannot understand how, after one of the worst days in the clubs history, Mr Newcastle has decided to walk away, chuck it in? I just dont understand.
So you had a fight with the coach. So you were told you werent wanted. That would have broken lesser men than you, and I can understand that. But what about the rest of us? What about showing the club that nursed you through countless months of rehabilitation and suspension a bit of ticker, especially considering the young guys we have coming through? What about showing us, the fans, that some things are more important than personal pride?
I never got a chance to play for the knights. I was never good enough. But one thing I was always led to believe was that the jersey was worth more than personal accolades. Playing for Newcastle was a privilege only a few noble men got to undertake. You were one of those men. And now, you have let me down.
So take your personal pride and shove it. Maybe the club is better off without you, who knows. All I do know is Newcastle will go on. We will still be there week after week cheering on the ones you have left behind. So have a think about that when you are in England or in Manly or Melbourne or wherever. Dont ever forget it. Because I wont.
Signed
One very angry fan
Nuffy said:2005 was the high water mark for his career but time moves on and you need to keep performing and developing, he has done neither.
Yes he was a good clubman, but if that was the only criteria for a contract, then most on this forum would get a start.
I'm disappointed with his soft option, what happened to digging in and proving the coach wrong. He feels hes out of favour and therefore throws in the towel.
Not exactly the fitting exit of a proud clubman?
Big Tim said:Blah blah blah blah blah.
If Clint didnt do the right thing then why dod the club let him go???
They didnt want him and he didnt need them.... whats the problem.
if the score was Kinghts 71 Broncos 6 would you all be crucifying him???
He has now scored a job at the Storm, who by current standards are front runners to take the title.
Clint was a great club man who will be missed by me and many other fans.
Big Tim said:Many of you say that about one A. Johns
Put it this way, if my boss told me I wasnt needed next year I would look for another job now, and if I found one I would tell him to stick it.
Clint hadnt found another job, but he had a serious offer on the table from London and he chose to take far less money and have a shot at an NRL title.
lets not even mention the commitment to your teammates that you don't get in your average workplace.. or the fact that he chose to stick around to reach a personal milestone.. or any of the rest of it..Gene Krupa said:Unless of course you were on a term contract, in which case, you'd have to fulfil your contract. Which is what happens in the NRL. There is an imense difference between a regular job and playing a sport for a living.
Not by me mate. He reminds me of Nicolas Anelka, the french soccer striker, in so far as he whinges everytime things at a club don't go his way and he then jumps ship to a more prosperous club because he wants to win a title. Sadly Anelka's natural brilliance doesn't remotely translate to clint.Big Tim said:Clint was a great club man who will be missed by me and many other fans.
Big Tim said:Clint hadnt found another job, but he had a serious offer on the table from London and he chose to take far less money and have a shot at an NRL title.