Running off the gap Suttsburger created, MrCharisma supports the attacking play for the Warriors;
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bandwagoners: Win Or Lose, I Hate You!
(750 words including title)
Fact: When your team is losing more games than they are winning, people seem to go into hiding when it comes to continuing their support.
Fact: When your team is winning more games than it is losing, people seem to come out of the woodwork to support the team.
Rewind seven years ago and around this time was when the Bulldogs, after a tip off, were busted for rorting the NRL salary cap and stripped of all but their four bye points. Finishing a 17 game winning streak, we fans had been on an ultimate high, before being quickly brought down to the lowest of lows. I still have the newspaper clippings reporting the drama as it unfolded.
Back then I was at University in the small country town of Armidale, 700km away from the scandal and my fellow supporters. My three years at University were marked by three years of Bulldogs scandals with the above mentioned cap rort in 2002 and the Coffs Harbour rape scandal of 2004. Despite being a giant rugby league community, not one person offered support or condolence to myself the fan, but rather they hounded and ridiculed the club about being cheats and rapists.
Grand Final day 2004 was something special. Yes, I was a broke uni student and yes, I was 700km away from the action. But that wasnt enough to stop me painting the town blue and white, including colouring in the pavement of my entire block, and adding balloons, streamers and anything possible to show my support. If you dont remember, we went up against the Sydney Roosters and with that, I seemed to have the majority of the town on my side. Horns honked and people yelled Go the Bulldogs! We won that match 16-13 with great joy but I found myself with hundreds of newfound supporters. Was I in that television show Sliders and now found myself in a parallel universe?
In 2005, we became one of the first if not the first Premiers to miss the finals after taking the Premiership the previous year. Reni Maitua and Sonny Bill-Williams became the apple of many fans eyes with their rugged good looks and the fans kept hope. 2006 was no better; nor was 2007, and 2008 was rock bottom. Jonathan Thurston, Steve Price, Roy Asotasi, Willie Mason, Sonny-Bill Williams, Mark OMeley and Braith Anasta, among others, had all departed the club. Where I would normally see throngs of Bulldogs jerseys around the shopping centre and street, there were empty spaces. No one was a Bulldogs fan; instead, everyone was supporting Manly, Brisbane, Melbourne, and Parramatta .
My job changed from selling to training in my company in 2009, meaning I became office bound. The annual tipping competition came around and many people asked me who I thought would win the competition and in my heart I knew the Bulldogs would be there.
Youre mad.
Kimmorley is on a downward spiral.
You guys cant do it without Sonny Bill-Williams.
These were the typical responses, but my support never waned. I still wore the jersey, bought merchandise and even the coloured bands on my braces blue and white throughout 2009.
Just like Groundhog Day, the haters have mutated into my fellow peers.
You guys can take it out.
I hope you smash the Dragons in the Grand Final.
Kimmorley is having an awesome season, and he should play for Australia.
A parallel universe again? What happened to me being a cheater or a rapist? What happened to being the most hated club and all the negative back page articles in the Daily Telegraph?
Fact: I hate bandwagon supporters.
The people who caused the City Rail drama were not Bulldogs fans... they were idiots who happened to be wearing our jersey, just like the idiots who have given us bad press over the years, such as the ones involved in the massive brawl against the Roosters many years ago. The true fans are the ones who turn up to the matches, who can name our players from the 80 and beyond, and live in the spirit of the Bullfrog.
In the last round of 2008, I travelled with friends to Canberra when we knew we'd get belted. With little to play for other then Corey Hughes farewell we travelled down, gritted the cold, and gracefully accepted the wooden spoon because that is what true fans do: support their team win, lose or draw.