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Seething Silvertails' hard luck history

Parra Guru

Coach
Messages
14,645
Oh please, cry me a river Joshy.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sp...ard-luck-history/story-e6frexnr-1225844967358

IT was for times like last Sunday afternoon that Manly co-owner Max Delmege bought himself a Fuji bicycle last Christmas. "Whenever I need to let off some steam from work or football, I hop on the bike until I'm relaxed again," Delmege says.
In the humid aftermath of Manly's cruel loss to Parramatta on Sunday, Delmege needed 45 minutes worth of pedalling around Mona Vale until he was able to function normally again, let alone speak to another soul.
"After seeing that forward pass let go, I was so upset that I just grabbed the bike and rode and rode and rode," he says.
And as the sweat poured from beneath Delmege's helmet, so did the memories. Like many other Sea Eagles fans, he couldn't escape a sense of deja vu.
That an injustice like this had been perpetuated before, many times before, and not so long ago.


Less then 12 months earlier, hadn't Manly coach Des Hasler also addressed a post-match press conference in a voice trembling with a disturbing rage that could precede unspeakable violence? He had. It was at Skilled Park, after last year's round 11 loss to Gold Coast - a game decided by an awful penalty in favour of the Titans.
On that afternoon, Hasler read from a prepared script and concluded: "The game is professional, the referees are not."
They were powerful words, but not overdue if you're from the Northern Beaches and possess a footballing memory that hasn't been damaged by too many big nights at the Surf Rock Hotel.
Hasler, you see, has suffered more outrageous wrongs in his time as a player and coach at Brookvale than his full head of mostly-brown hair suggests. It all started way back at Caltex Field in 1987, when he was sin-binned for a one-off scrum infringement late in a tense match against Cronulla. Without their halfback, the visitors conceded their narrow lead, prompting then-coach Bob Fulton to publicly plead for a cement truck to end the life of referee Bill Harrigan.
In 1990, Hasler was on the crime scene again when Manly were robbed in broad daylight at Lang Park.
On that occasion, Broncos hooker Kerrod Walters was awarded the game-breaker, despite bouncing the Steeden with more force than the demolition ball that would reduce the Cauldron to rubble just two years later.
Then there was the 1995 Grand Final and two of Canterbury's tries, from a forward pass and seventh-tackle play respectively. And most perhaps most excruciating, Adam MacDougall's stud marks on Geoff Toovey's face in 1997 that saw the Newcastle centre escape with a premiership ring but no suspension.
Like tax evasion and election day no-shows, these are blatant crimes that people don't want punished. Because like the ATO and voting, everyone hates Manly.
Manly: the very word conjures images of smug silvertails insulated in their own slice of supposed-God's Country. From the time former Sea Eagles supremo Ken Arthurson pillaged Wests until the time he ran an ARL competition that Manly co-incidentally dominated, it's an unlikable perception the Sea Eagles have done precious little to combat. "Because although the whole silvertail thing started off as rubbish," Arthurson explains. "It's something that works in our favour. If everyone hates Manly, then it's Manly against the world."
And now Sea Eagles fans are entitled to think that world of hate includes referees. History does not lie. There's not another single team that has lost so many games in the past generation on the balance of so many indefensible, ludicrous, and plain wrong refereeing stuff-ups.
But no one says anything because everyone hates Manly, and hence Manly have invited such rotten luck for being so damned proud of being so damned arrogant and successful.
Now living on the Gold Coast, Arthurson knows it will always be the way no matter how many more games are lost in the same disgracefully unfair circumstances. The beauty and foundation of rugby league's tribalism is that every club has its own persona, and Manly's just happens to be easy hate.
"And to tell you the truth, most of us wouldn't have it any other way," Arthurson laughs.



987705-dt-gallery-manly.jpg
 

hineyrulz

Post Whore
Messages
154,500
Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!


No mention of the game last year when the Sharks were robbed :?
 

Eelementary

Post Whore
Messages
57,288
I find it curious - Reddy's try was not the match-winning try. We were still behind on the score board. They could have muscled up and, theoretically, stopped Grothe from scoring and won the game.

But no - apparently Keating's pass and Reddy's try is the reason they lost. :roll:
 

Snoochies

First Grade
Messages
5,634
And to make things worse.

Knee injury rules Manly fullback Brett Stewart out of 2010 NRL season
136685-dtstory-brett-stewart.jpg

Out for the season...Manly fullback Brett Stewart. Source: Getty Images



MANLY fullback Brett Stewart has been ruled out for the season after surgery yesterday revealed his knee injury was worse than initially believed.


In a major blow to the Sea Eagles finals hopes, Stewart was told he will make a full recovery but has no chance of returning to the field in 2010.



The 25-year-old Origin fullback was hopeful of returning in round 20 to help push the Eagles into the finals, but was told after surgery that time frame was now out of the question.
Stewart injured his left knee tackling Wests Tigers winger Lote Tuqiri in round one.
``It was a shock to Brett and to the entire club but he is a fighter and he will be back as good as ever,'' Manly coach Des Hasler said.
Hasler told Stewart's team mates the extent of the injury before training this morning.
Stewart suffered a similar injury to his right knee in round six of the premiership last season and returned in round 25.
Doctors quickly informed Manly after the operation yesterday that there would be no return this season.
"The operation went well and Brett will make a full recovery but it won't be this season - that's certain and we now have to get on with the rest of the season without him.
"The players accept that and will respond to the challenge as they did without him last year,'' Hasler said.
 

Mickyd39

Juniors
Messages
1,569
i think poor old Dessie needs to worry about how his team in the last 2 weeks have blown big leads.

and yes i'm laughing very hard at manly.:lol:

screw'em
 

^b0ss^

Juniors
Messages
1,369
m8 they were leading 20 nil ....wtf if parra were given 20 nil againest manly i wouldnt be blaming 1 try and losing the match on one forward pass.
 

EelsFan05

Bench
Messages
2,961
Six bad calls in twenty years. Thats a fairly low strike rate if you ask me. BOOHOOOO WAHHWAHHH. Every team has their hard luck stories.
 
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born an eel

Bench
Messages
3,882
if the referees get it right there is no way that manly go to the break 14-0 up. The first try was obstruction, if I remember correctly there was a blatant forward pass a couple of rucks before there second. Then in the second half at least one player should have been sin binned for professional fouls and time wasting
 

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