Wednesday 1 October 2014

Grand Final Week


It’s THAT time of the year again. Usually this time of the year means that I have already moved onto cricket season. Its Grand Final week and for a South Sydney supporters there hasn’t been a reason to care for a very long time.

This week is different though, everything in life has taken a backseat to the Grand Final this week. On Tuesday I even forgot to eat although I could tell you all about Issac Luke’s judiciary hearing. I had big plans for a blog a day, hell I even planned to get some schoolwork done at stages this week, but the way things have panned out it just hasn’t happened. Now it’s Thursday and I find holidays creeping to a close and the big dance drawing nearer it really has become decision time - schoolwork or rebooting the blog for some incoherent musings

Alas A View from the Top is back in its very first Grand Final Special.

I wasn’t joking when I talked about incoherent musings either. Here they are;

Issac Luke. In the wake of Alex McKinnon’s injury it’s hard to argue with a week suspension for the Rabbitoh’s tyro and the way in which he threw SBW’s lower body by releasing control of the tackle certainly didn’t help. My only issue with the suspension is the inconsistency across the game in which Jackson and Moa were able to escape punishment for offences I expected to see them miss up to a month for. And don't get me started on 'allowing' him to join celebrations or commiserations after the game. This shouldn't even be an issue, it's bad enough he will miss the biggest game of his career for a Grade 1 offence.

George Piggins. Disappointing that he is used by the media for Souths stories in the same way that Tommy Raudonikis is for New South Wales. 

Michael Ennis. Canterbury are foxing. Ennis will play. Take it as fact, Ennis will needle up and give it a red hot crack. I don’t for a second believe that the injury is as bad as Canterbury have made out and have no doubt he will take the field. Just remember A View from the Top broke the big story first.

Battle of the Poms. Sam Burgess is the most talented forward to have played Rugby League. Unless he returns from Rugby Union for another 5 year stint he won’t have the longevity to be called the best forward of all time but make no mistake he has no peers on the field. 


James Graham is a super footballer. No doubt he is a tremendously gifted ball playing front rower but he has neither the work ethic, consistency or the quality in his game that Sam possesses. Graham’s biggest skill, his ball playing ability, is often the Dogs Achilles heel, triggering a propensity to go side to side rather than directly through sides. Styles make fights though and the ball playing ability in the Dogs forward pack means Souths will not be able to unleash the physical onslaught that was so devastating against the defending premiers last week. The concern for the Dogs is that they must remember to go forward as well as complete at close to 90% to stay in the game on Sunday. I have no doubt they will do both and cause plenty of problems for Souths.

In his final game for South Sydney I expect Sam Burgess to cap a superhuman season with another superhuman performance. I’m going to say he will finish the game with stats pretty close to 23 hit ups for 200m with 2 off loads, a try and a line break. Throw in 35 tackles for good measure and no matter which way the result goes I can’t see anybody but Sam walking away with Clive after 80 minutes (EDIT: Sam indeed did finish with 22 hit ups for 225m with 35 tackles and 3 offloads. Although he didn't score a try he was pulled up inches from the tryline and while he finished without a line break he did make two tackle busts and one line break assist. In what I call the greatest individual performance I have ever witnessed he walked away with the Clive Churchill Medal just as I predicted four years ago. All with a broken cheekbone and eye socket. Imagine what he could've done fully fit). I will be backing George for first try scorer and Thomas for last try scorer hoping for a repeat of the Glenn, Brett Stewart family double a few years back.

The media. Dead set, how boring is the Rugby League media? Seriously, I could have sat down Sunday morning and mapped out the week’s stories for you - so far we’ve had the inevitable George Piggins angle, we’ve rehashed a Luke Keary article from about a month ago in which we list all the sides that he didn’t make as a kid, along with Adam Reynolds ‘coming of age’ for the 14,000th time in his career. The Daily Telegraph even managed to exclusively reveal the ‘real’ reason Greg Inglis reneged on a Brisbane Broncos deal, which believe it or not has been exclusively revealed four different ways by the same paper over the last four years. Of course the Issac Luke and Mick Ennis sagas have been ongoing which has brought Campbelltown City Captain Coach Russ Aitken back into the spotlight and reminded everyone of the answer to a trivia question they are likely to get a few times over the next forty years.


All in all it’s a great time to be alive. I am thoroughly enjoying every moment up until 7pm Sunday night, but once the game starts there’s no denying that the words of Vince Lombardi will ring truer in my head than ever before.

‘If winning isn’t important, then why do we keep score?’





Thursday 24 April 2014

Sporting GOATS


The storied histories of sports all around the world are built upon the exploits of outstanding players, both past and present. Every now and then an athlete emerges in sport that sits so comfortably above all others that we can unquestionably refer to them as The Greatest of All Time or The GOAT. 

More often than not however it is a small group of players rather than one individual that pulls away from the pack and bestowing such a title upon a single competitor becomes a more difficult task. Today A View From the Top returns to take on this task with a definitive list of sports GOATS from all around the world

Boxing

Muhammad Ali is the finest boxer of all time. In a sport that is just as much about the box office as it is the boxing ring, Ali has no peers. He is the prototype athlete from which seemingly all 21st Century sportsmen are cast. The style, the showboating and the unquestionable ability to bring it are the legacy of Ali’s career. Ali is elevated above all else for the number of great opponents he was able to overcome - Frazier, Foreman, Liston etc and for the fact that he did it all in the sports most popular weight division. Tyson burned bright at a young age but burnt out before he had given himself a fair chance at his own super fights. There are others like Floyd Mayweather, Sugar Ray Robinson, Rocky Marciano and Jack Dempsey but no one mounts a realistic challenge to Ali.

Cricket

Sir Donald Bradman is the clearest example of a GOAT in the sporting world. A statistical outlier whose record sits a comfortable 30% above his nearest rival, The Don was a run scoring phenomenon. His outstanding career spanning an incredible 20 years at the highest level left an incredible legacy on the sport of cricket. Bradman is unquestionably the greatest cricketer of all time but West Indian Sir Garfield Sobers gets closer than anyone else to matching him. Bradman, daylight, Sobers and more daylight.

Swimming

I want to say Ian Thorpe, mainly because he isn’t American but Michael Phelps Olympic record speaks for itself and even if it didn’t we’d be talking about Mark Spitz. 18 Olympic gold medals and 27 World Championship first places for a total of 45 first place finishes is made all the more impressive by the record of only eleven silver or bronze placements. Basically in excess of 75% of the time Phelps placed, which was most of the time, he emerged in the gold medal position. Incredible!

Baseball

I don’t pretend to know a lot about American sports except that they take too long and somehow find a way to make awe inspiring feats of athleticism boring, but one thing I do know is that Babe Ruth is the granddaddy of baseball. Was that American enough for y’all?  That bit of knowledge boils down to a few things that have nothing to do with me knowing anything about his ability to hit a ball out of the ballpark. One is whenever a reference is made in pop culture to a valuable piece of Baseball memorabilia it is usually some sort of Babe Ruth paraphernalia. I notice these things and I know it doesn't happen by accident. The second is how damn good Babe was in Triple Play Baseball 2001 which I played relentlessly in the summer holidays of 1999. Yeah Triple Play Baseball 2001 in 1999, it confused me at the time as well.

Basketball

Another sport in which we have an undisputed GOAT. Michael ‘Air’ Jordan did not only dominate the NBA in two three-peat stints for the Chicago Bulls but he also blew up the accepted notion of sports economics and transformed a sportswear company into one of the biggest international conglomerates of the 21st Century. Also the only basketballer to have ‘saved Earth’ on his CV after he defeated a group of alien invaders in Space Jam. Impressive!


Cycling

Until recently Lance Armstrong was the undisputed GOAT of cycling. In the wake of his doping revelations it is impossible not to question his achievements and legacy. However elevating a rival to his position proves just as hard. A sport whose entire history is tainted thanks to the doping culture that so dominates the podiums of its history. Cycling has for too long been less about the calibre of athlete and more about the quality of the chemist.

American Football

Apparently Tim Brady and Peyton Manning faced off in the Super Bowl playoff game last year in a showcase to once and for all determine American footballs greatest player. Someone forgot to tell Joe Montanna. Admittedly my judgement here is based on much the same method as Babe Ruth and baseball. In terms of Peyton and Brady however, it really isn’t even close. Peyton Manning, head and shoulders.

Tennis

Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal? Bjorn Borg or Jimmy Connors? Pete Sampras or Andre Agassi?  What about Rod Laver? Steffi Graf perhaps? The answer. Martina Navratilova. Navratilova is the only player in history to occupy the top spot in both singles and doubles tennis for over 200 weeks. She won 59 Grand Slam titles, 18 in women’s singles singles, 31 women’s doubles and 10 mixed doubles majors. She played in the Wimbledon final 9 years running, winning the event six times in a row and is one of only three players in history to accomplish a career ‘boxed set’ Grand Slam of all four majors in singles, doubles and mixed doubles events. Anyway it’s the 21st Century, AVFTT had to appease the feminists out there and find a female on this list somewhere.


Squash

When I described Sir Donald Bradman as world sports clearest GOAT I was forgetting Jahangir Khan. Incredibly Khan was unbeaten for five years, seven months and one day between 1981 and 1986. He won 555 consecutive matches which Guinness World Records recognises as the longest winning streak in professional sport. Khan won the World Open six times and the British Open ten times and for over a decade was ranked in the world’s top two players. In that ten year period he never once failed to reach the semi finals of a tournament. Dominant!

Golf

Jack Nicklaus. For a long time it appeared inevitable that Tiger Woods would surpass Nicklaus’ record haul of golf majors and assume the GOAT mantle. But the reality is it just hasn’t happened yet. As Tiger’s life has lurched from one disaster to the next he has failed to add to his collection of majors and while he has managed to return to the sports number one ranking position he will need to find a way to add to his list of majors post divorce to challenge Nicklaus. Plus Jack Nicklaus Golf on  Nintendo was a much cooler game than any of the Tiger Woods incarnations.

Association football or Soccer

Association footballs’ GOAT is a man with the nerve to refer to the sport as ‘soccer’, Pele himself. Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi are in the midst of careers that one day might rival the Brazilian for this title but there lack of success at international level does them no favours. Diego Maradonna had a spectacular World Cup but also left his team a talisman down the next time around because he couldn’t keep his nose out of white powder. Meanwhile Pele’s exploits as a 17 year old at the World Cup says it all for me while his longevity in scoring over a thousand ‘unofficial’ goals in his senior career says some more. In terms of players I have seen I think he Brazilian Ronaldo was good enough, if not for an unfortunate bout of food poisoning and chronic knee injuries while the Frenchman Zinedine Zidane and Patrick Vieira are the best footballers I have seen.

Rugby League

I have left my most debated GOAT to last. Rugby League is a game built upon the principles of evolution. It is game born from a poorer sport that continues to embrace that heritage and maintains the same commitment to change in the present day. 

Rugby League is a fundamentally different game to that which was played 10 years ago and that is different to the decade before and so on. This, more than anything else, makes it extremely difficult to compare players from different eras because they effectively played different games.

In the history of the game a number of names stand out, Dally Messenger, Clive Churchill, Andrew Johns among a select group of fellow ‘Immortals’. Each has a legitimate claim to being Rugby League’s GOAT. If you read enough about Dally Messenger or Clive Churchill it is almost impossible to deny their claims while in more recent times Andrew Johns career has been eulogised again and again.

It is a different player however that I find it impossible to even imagine there ever was a better Rugby League player. In fact I find it impossible to imagine there ever could be a better player. That player is Cameron Smith.

What is there to say about Cameron Smith?

How many times has Matt Scott walked off the field for North Queensland as the best player on the field? If you said close to none you’d be right. For Queensland, on the game’s biggest stage he has often looked superhuman. The reason? Cameron Smith.

Ben Cross, Brett White, Antonio Kaufusi and Adam Blair were all world beating representative forwards at Melbourne and nobodies once they left. The reason? Cameron Smith. 

When is the last time a converted rugby union centre and rugby league backrower became the halfback for Australia? If you said Cooper Cronk you would be right. A big part of the reason is, you guessed it, Cameron Smith.

There isn’t a player that has played with Smith that he hasn’t improved with his peerless ability to control every aspect of a game of rugby league. His game management ability is second to none. He is the best hooker in the world in terms of controlling the tempo of the ruck in both attack in defence. In attack his ability to place front rowers into one on one contact for a quick play the ball is peerless, while in defence he is the best wrestler in the game. He is also the only player I have seen able to regularly force goal line dropouts from a side with Greg Inglis at fullback. 

The thing about Cameron Smith that sets him apart from other hookers, say Robbie Farah for example, is that it doesn’t have to be him who comes up with the match winning play. 

One Origin game in particular sticks in my mind. It was a few years ago and Queensland were chasing the game in the final moments. Smith held up the markers in mesmerising fashion to release Matt Scott for a barnstorming run and rapid play the ball. With New South Wales skittled and scrambling all over the place I guarantee  Farah or Luke run the ball from the ensuing play the ball. Not Smith, instead he quickly releases the ball to put Lockyer into a one on way situation with an isolated and backpedalling defender. He turns it on the inside and Slater scores. If Smith runs the ball here the defence on the negative ties in, Slater's gap is closed and Queensland will be forced to go wide with a passing sequence (risking dropping the ball, a knock down or even intercept) to try and score a game winning try. Instead we have a straightforward game set and later series Queensland. 

Essentially I believe that if Cameron Smith was born south of the Tweed New South Wales would be shooting for eleven straight series victories in 2014 instead of winning back the shield for the first time in 8 years.

After all of this if you need further evidence do yourself a favour and watch the way in which Smith masterminded the Melbourne victory over Manly in Round 1 of 2014 against the newly appointed king of the rugby league world and prince of halfbacks Daly Cherry Evans.

If Joey’s career wasn’t affected by injury so often there’s no doubt he had more than enough ability to challenge Smith and from all the reports I have read Messenger and Churchill revolutionised and dominated Rugby League in their careers. But Cameron Smith is Rugby League’s GOAT.



Agree or disagree? Did I miss any sports? Tell me what you think below..

Wednesday 5 February 2014

Sam Burgess


Rumors abound that Sam Burgess is seeking a release from his South Sydney Rabbitohs contract to return to the UK to play Rugby Union. As a result he has been mercilessly attacked by the Rugby League community for being a 'dog' and 'stabbing Souths in the back'.

Essentially the (source-less) reports without quote or fact suggest that a deal has been agreed with Rugby club Bath and all that is left is for a transfer fee to be negotiated.Despite denials I believe the old saying 'where there is smoke there is fire' rings true in this case and 2014 will be Burgess' last at the club.

The first point I want to make is that Sam Burgess arrived at South Sydney in exactly these circumstances via a release from his Bradford Bulls contract. Furthermore South Sydney also secured the games premier player Greg Inglis via a release from TWO contracts - from the Melbourne Storm and Brisbane Broncos, while brother Luke Burgess was contracted to Leeds when he made his mid season move. What's more is that in this time Souths have released local juniors such as Shannon McPherson, Nathan Peats and Beau Champion from contracts often against the players first preference. Other contracted first graders to be moved on by mutual agreement in this period include Jeff Lima and Jamie Simpson while a number of others have been moved into retirement. 

Lets get this clear. Sam Burgess is not leaving South Sydney high and dry. He is not stabbing the club in the back. And he is not fleeing the club in the dead of the night to play Rugby Union in France. I have always argued that what Sonny Bill Williams did all those years ago was not wrong. The problem was how he did it and if the story is true (which I believe it to be, despite denials) Sam has gone about everything in the correct manner. Just as he did all those years ago when he sought a release from Bradford.

For fans to log onto social media and attack, abuse and bag a person out that has done so much for the club is the true disgrace in this story. It is disgusting the ways fans harp on about loyalty while they are mercilessly kicking one of their own square in the guts. Loyalty as with contracts is a two way street and you can't expect players to be unconditionally loyal to a football club without reciprocation from either fans or the club itself. 

 A number of years ago Sam Burgess took a paycut for an opportunity to travel half way across the world and test himself in the worlds strongest Rugby competition. In that time he has cemented himself as the game's premier forward, contributed immensely to South Sydney's most successful era in forty years, played through the pain barrier of countless injuries and become A View From the Top's favorite ever footballer. To see him leave South Sydney would shatter me. Anyone that knows me knows how much I love the bloke. But the truth is he doesn't owe me, or South Sydney, anything.

Unfortunately Sam Burgess can't live his life to fulfill my dreams - I have referred to him as South Sydney's next Clive Churchill medalist since he arrived in Australia and will back him in again for 2014 - no matter how much I want him too. If he feels that he cant pass up the opportunity to test himself as a dual international in two World Cups then I implore him to chase that dream rather then risk a lifetime of regret.

Sam Burgess is a South Sydney legend. He is the greatest forward to pull on the Cardinal and Myrtle in my lifetime and I'm told he has the potential to challenge our best ever. Whether he stays or goes I won't ever say a bad word about him or his time at the club and I would expect the door at Redfern is always open for him.

For I am told to preach loyalty you should first practice it.

The future is bright at Redfern with our without Sam Burgess. The culture and influence of ‘Slammin Sam’ will remain at the club long after he has departed and for that I will be forever grateful.
 

Monday 20 January 2014

Australia Sick of Winning Test Cricket?


Australia Picks its Test Squad to Tour South Africa
In light of Australia’s Ashes success I’ve hardly written a thing in the last four months. Instead of whingeing and whining I have been able to sit back and bathe in the glory of the most amazing series whitewash of my lifetime. Occasionally I have indulged the odd celebratory Facebook status but really there hasn’t been anything to disagree with or write about. Until now…. 

Today Australia picked their touring squad to face South Africa and A View From the Top is not happy. In fact not happy would be a gross understatement. I would describe my reaction to the selections of Shaun Marsh and Alex Doolan as somewhere between disillusioned and disheartened. Usually I waffle of for pages and pages about this or that and while I’ve probably started to do that already this article is going to be as blunt and straight to the point as I can be.


As you will see below there is absolutely no logical explanation for the selections of either Doolan or Marsh.


Alex Doolan


  • 28 years old
  • 6 centuries in 94 first class innings
  • 3 centuries in his last 3 Shield seasons
  • Averages 38 runs this season and 37 for his career.



      Oh but you say he scored 161 against the very same side we are about to play? Well indeed he did. But… 
  • In that ‘tour’ game Morne Morkel did not play and Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander combined for 40 overs out of 135 bowled.
  • Doolan batted at 6 after Steyn and Philander had bowled at least their first and probably their second spells. So we can assume he had to face one possibly two spells from each of South Africa’s spearheads.
  • The remaining 95 overs were shared between Rory Kleinveldt, ImranTahir, JP Duminy, Faf De Plessis and Hashim Amla.
  • Tahir, Duminy and Kleinveldt bowled 80 overs in that innings. The performance of this group of bowlers on the rest of that tour would see them struggle for a spot under the captaincy of Jack Cahill in Blacktown’s highly lauded 3rd Grade outfit 

Basically Alex Doolan is a 28 year old without even a single outstanding Sheffield Shield season too his name. At first class level over a sustained period of time he has proven to be consistently mediocre, with his only performance of note coming against a side in which Imran Tahir (worst Test match bowling figures ever) bowled one third of the overs.


Shaun Marsh

  • 30 years old
  • 9 centuries in 165 first class innings
  • 1 century in his last three full FC seasons
  • Averages 35 over his first class career
  • Averages 34, 19 and 16 over his last 3 FC seasons



The justification for the selection of Marsh has bounced from being a class player, playing pace better then Bailey or his recent limited overs form. Let’s debunk these straight away…
  • 'He’s a class player’. See above for averages in last three Shield seasons. See above for century too innings ratio.
  • 'He plays pace well’. Shaun Marsh had one of the most spectacularly horrendous series in recent memory against quite possibly the worst pace attack to ever tour Australia. Marsh struggled to reach a double figure aggregate FOR THE SERIES against an Indian side flogged 4 nil.
  • He has done well in limited overs cricket recently’ or ‘he looked good against England the other night’. Firstly, in his favoured coloured clothes formats he isn’t even first choice and only came into the side as a ‘resting’ replacement. Secondly, only 5 Tests ago George Bailey was selected on the basis of his One Day form and is by the length of the Hume highway a better One Day batsman then Marsh, averaging over 70 for the calendar year. On the basis on one ODI for Australia and a failed SS campaign how can the selectors now consider Marsh a better prospect? Thirdly, LOOK AT THE ABOVE STATS FOR HIS RED BALL FORM OVER THE PAST THREE SEASONS. 

Basically Shaun Marsh has done absolutely NOTHING in any of the last THREE seasons (or his career) to justify Test selection. He has been tried at Test level on the back of his ‘class’ and ‘talent’ before and despite a century on debut he replicated his mediocre Sheffield Shield career at Test level. 

George Bailey was considered the best man for the job only a month or two ago and I fail to see what has changed in that time. He has played a number of decent innings at Test level and has an outstanding international limited overs record. From the outside looking in he played a significant role in the Ashes series whitewash despite underwhelming returns with the bat. 

Basically if the selectors considered George Bailey the best fit 5 Tests ago and in light of the reality I have outlined above, what has changed in that time that he is now not the answer?


The only thing I can say with any certainty to that question is that Doolan and Marsh have not changed at all. They are still posting mediocre first class scores in line with their mediocre careers to date.
If the selectors have decided to go away from Bailey (which for the record, I wouldn’t) surely a player such as Phil Hughes has done enough to earn a recall. 


If you’re of the school of thought that Hughes has had enough chances perhaps the outstanding Shield season of Marcus North proves more worthy then either Doolan or Marsh. In fact there is a list of batsman both tried and untried at international level, think Chris Lynn, Cameron White, Jordan Silk and Nic Maddinson that you could at least mount some sort of reasoned argument for inclusion.

Perhaps the best illustration of what I think of today’s squad is that I hope Australia go into the first Test against the world beating South Africans with Brad Haddin batting at 6 and James Faulkner at 7. As of today a wicketkeeper at 6 and bowler that bats a bit at 7 is the best side I could pick from the 15 man squad.

Better then that I’m complaining about this rather than the selection of Shane Watson!



Australian Test Squad to face South Africa
Clarke (c), Haddin (vc), Rogers, Warner, Watson, Smith, Faulkner, Johnson, Siddle, Harris, Lyon, Doolan, S Marsh, Pattinson, Bird