What to do with players accused of criminal conduct: to play or not play … is that the question?

Jesse Stringer’s assault charge and subsequent suspension from all Senior AFL activities for the remainder of the year has pushed the Australian Rugby Union’s decision to select Kurtley Beale for this weekend’s test match against Wales to the forefront of the minds of most sports followers this week.

The conundrum of allowing a player of any code accused, but not convicted, of a crime to play at the highest level of their code is not a new one albeit it is one that in the digital age in which we live more focus than ever before is placed on.

This is not a problem that is going to go away: simply put the sportstars of today are becoming younger and, whilst all conduct can not be talked away as juvenile hijinks or just “boys being boys”, young men (and women) are the demographic most likely to end up in some form of trouble with the law when alcohol is involved. 

In recent times we have seen a variety of approaches from clubs and the administrators of those clubs to allegations of inappropriate conduct.   Variously across the codes and in no particular order, some examples are:

  • Neville Costigan being dismissed by the Brisbane Broncos after he was charged with drink driving (but before he was convicted).
  • Todd Carney having his contract terminated and being deregistered from the NRL (by the Canberra Raiders) for urinating on a patron at a Canberra nightclub amidst allegations of drunk and reckless driving (among other things).
  • St Kilda player Andrew Lovett having his contract terminated after being charged with rape, a charge he was ultimately acquitted of.
  • Brett Stewart being removed as the “face of rugby league” and stood down for a period following allegations (ultimately found to be fabricated) of sexual assault.
  • Robert Lui being released from his contract with the West Tigers after being charged with various counts of assault against his partner.
  • Robert Lui, again, being suspended from playing rugby league for a year after being found guilty of assault against his partner.
  • Isaac Gordan being suspended by the NRL for 9 matches as a result of being charged over a domestic violence incident.
  • Nick D’arcy being removed from the 2008 Olympic team after being charged (and before his guilty plea) with assault having being involved a brawl with a former male team-mate.
  • Jake Friend having his contract terminated after falling asleep whilst drunk in the back of a cab and failing to pay the fare (for which he was charged).
  • Brett Seymour being sacked by two separate clubs over uncharged alcohol fuelled misconduct.

This is a small sampler of the punishment meted out by clubs and administrators across a number of sports in recent years for questionable player behaviour.  I make no comment on the strength or weakness of the punishments given out above.  They are what they are.

In addition to the examples above, and I note that I do not purport to know all of the facts of either case, now Messrs Stringer and Beale find themselves before the Courts on assault charges.  In both cases alcohol was involved.  Indeed in the case of Stringer the drinking before the incident has consistently been described as a “marathon”.

When one traverses all of the cases noted above, the common element appears to be the involvement of alcohol.  Equally, it also must be noted that some of the “offenders” noted above are repeat “offenders”.  The travails of the likes of Messrs Carney, Friend, Seymour and Lui are not isolated incidents or one offs: the matters noted above are portions of ongoing conduct which, again, has been consistently alcohol fuelled.

Whilst sports fans lament the lack of a “punishment” for Beale’s alleged conduct, there seems to me to be two far greater concerns arising out of the Beale and Stringer cases.  They are:

  1. Why are the punishments previously meted out to players who have been charged with assault NOT (in addition to the usual deterrents) having a deterring effect?
  2. Is there an alcohol problem in sport?

For the latter question, the usual glib responses are “they are just young men having fun” and “the problem is not alcohol, it is people pestering the stars when they are just trying to have a quiet drink”.  I can not accept either premise: if you are not a sportstar you are not absolved from punishment if you are an idiot or abusive when you are drunk.  The alternate glib response is “but that is the way it has always been” also does not fly with me because community standards have changed since the days of listening to your sport of choice on the transistor radio.

My personal view (and I admit I have had my own problems with alcohol in the past) is that there is a problem with alcohol in sport.  Part of the problem is obvious and is that, unlike most 18-25 year olds going out for a night on the town who have to pull up when their funds run out, sportstars have an unlimited available spend when they go out.  Of course they, the sportstars, are going to get drunk: presented with an bottomless wallet wouldn’t you? 

The former question is one to which there is no answer other than the punishments being meted out are not having a deterrent effect.  Equally, even if they were, I wonder if a player full of their chosen liquid refreshment would even think of the consequences before they step over the line like the players in the examples set out above.    

That being the case, I do not think the question of whether a player charged with a crime should play for their team after being so charged is the right question.  As fans we need to be asking of the sportstars and the people who coach and administer the games we all love whether enough is being done at all levels to seek to stop the cycle of alcohol fuelled violence that continues to pervade our daily sports fixes.  I, for one, do not think enough is being done: the evidence that this is the case is available for all to see above and in the sports pages every day.

In the end of course, after all of the hypothesising above, we are still left with the scenario where two elite sportsmen have been charged with assault and one is playing for his country on the weekend while the other is sitting on the sidelines.  I am left to wonder: how many more assault charges there needs to be before the question I raise in the preceding paragraph is seriously considered?

Once was a lawyer, always a law nerd … or am I?

For nearly two decades of my life I have been caught in the web that is the law.  For over a decade (if you include my articles of clerkship) I was a practitioner of the law and whilst I no longer am a practitioner to this day I love the law, or at least I think I do. 

My love of the law sees me continue to this day to read the transcripts of hearings in the High Court of Australia and the Supreme Court of the United States; it see me read every judgement word for word that these Courts hand down; and it sees me read everything I can about the history of these establishments and the Justices who grace their benches.  My love of the law has seen me, unilateral of my former work responsibilities as a litigator, visit the Supreme Court of the United States and the High Court of Australia just for the purposes of visiting and taking in the aura of each place.  

I have spent a long period of time reflecting on my time as a lawyer and my continued love of the law pondering why I still love something that, it could be said, has caused me no small amount of mental anguish.

Initially I thought that my love for the law had its nexus in the fact that I love an argument.  I recall my parents coming home from a Grade 11 parent teaching night to pose to me “what have you been doing to Ms Goldsworthy?”  Apparently my English teacher had exclaimed that she was frustrated with me because “every time I say something Stephen argues the opposite; sometimes I think he could argue that the sky is green and win”.  Equally I am prepared to declare that my happiest times in the practice of the law were when I was preparing for and arguing about issues at Court.  For me there was no greater experience than standing up in open court to argue my client’s case.  The fact is though, my love of arguing can not be at the root of my love the law because I loved arguing about anything and everything long before I discovered the law.

My thoughts then moved to whether I was in love with the traditions of the law.  By this I mean the history of the law combined with the conventions they create.  Such as calling the presiding judge “your honour” or “your worship”, bowing anytime you enter or leave a court room, the annual opening of the Court Year ecumenical service and the procedures around becoming admitted to practice.  However, as I pondered the law and its traditions it became abundantly obvious to me that over my time in practice the traditionalist nature of the law has dissipated over time.  No longer to Counsel where wigs (in most jurisdictions), disclosure and hearings can now be done electronically and training times for lawyers are becoming progressively shorter. As a traditionalist in most senses I can not confess to be enamoured with changes to the traditions of the law and thus conclude that it cannot be those traditions that keep my love strong.

Today, however, I had an epiphany.  As I sat over my lunchtime lasagna in the office reading the latest offering from the High Court of Australia, it struck that the basis of my ongoing obsession with the law rests not in being a pugnacious litigator or a staunch traditionalist but from the joy that reading the spoken word used to explain, and more particularly, craft that the laws that affect everyone on a daily basis has given, and continues to give, me. 

It struck me that my opening introduction to the law was in reading the judgements made by long gone judges in some of the seminal cases that structured our laws as we know them today.  Stories of snails in the bottom of bottles of ginger beer (Donoghue v Stevenson), a spectator being struck in the head while watching a cricket game (Bolton v Stone) and writing on the back of a train ticket leading to a contract (Parker v South Eastern Railway) entranced me as I hid away in the law section of Griffith University Library waiting for my next class or for the time to tick over for me to head home for a shift at Bundamba Tenpin Bowl.

The judges in those cases, beset with some fairly unique facts, where making the law as they wrote their judgements and wrote their judgments in such a way that they have stood the test of time.  Throughout my time as a student, I always enjoyed reading the cases of the Courts of England and Australia.  Often I was awestruck with how smart the judges must have been to be able to come up with the judgment they had and to be able to write in the way they did.   

As I became a practitioner of the law, I still found the judgments of the Courts entrancing now that I was reading them to try to find results for my clients and to have points to argue when I did appear as an advocate.  Equally I was still in awe of the writing of the judges: both in the cases I was reading and cases I was involved in in which judgments were written. 

These days I don’t read the judgments of the courts for meaning or to try to find an advantage for a client.  I simply have no reason to and yet I am still drawn to read them.  Reading a case from the Supreme Court of the United States about the status of the employees of a pharmaceutical company in the US (Christopher v SmithKline Beecham) or about a constitutional challenge to chaplaincy programs in Australian schools (Williams v Commonwealth of Australia) has nothing to do with what I am engaged with in my current career. 

So why do I read these judgments: it all comes back to the writing.  I do not agree with their views often but the judgements of Justice Antonin Scalia (Supreme Court of the United States) and Justice Dyson Heydon (High Court of Australia) are just so well crafted that they are a pleasure to read.  Often in dissent, both of these two judges have a writing style that means that you find yourself convinced that they just must be correct despite, often, no one agreeing with them.  Both judges also pull no punches when it comes to writing about the work of their colleagues which also makes their judgments enjoyable to read.

To quote Justice Scalia in Wabaunsee County v Umbehr:

The Court must be living in another world. Day by day, case by case, it is busy designing a Constitution for a country I do not recognize”

That is a fair statement of ones disdain for his colleagues if ever I saw one.

Reading Justice Heydon’s dissent today in Williams v Commonwealth of Australia it struck me that it is actually not really the law anymore that keeps me coming back to reading judgements.  It is in fact the use of the written word by the judges that does.  I know this tags me as a nerd (like you did not know that I was already) but I love reading good writing and judgments from the highest Courts in the land are some of the best writing around.

Does this mean I am not a law nerd anymore though? I am not reading the judgments for any other reason than I enjoy the writing.  On reflection though, the judgments of yesteryear and today still have as their nexus the laws that the judges are being asked to interpret, and sometimes create, on a daily basis.  So with that in mind I will continue to be self-proclaimed law nerd and state openly that I still love the law.

Wallabies side to play Wales named: I am scratching my head

Here is the Wallabies side named to play Wales this Saturday in an afternoon fixture at the Sydney Football Stadium:

15. Kurtley Beale
14. Adam Ashley-Cooper
13. Rob Horne
12. Pat McCabe
11. Digby Ioane
10. Berrick Barnes
9. Will Genia
8. Wycliff Palu
7. David Pocock
6. Scott Higginbotham
5. Nathan Sharpe
4. Sitaleki Timani
3. Sekope Kepu
2. Tatafu Polota Nau
1. Benn Robinson

Reserves

16. Stephen Moore
17. Ben Alexander
18. Dave Dennis
19. Michael Hooper
20. Rob Simmons
21. Nic White
22. Anthony Faingaa

The return of Kurtley Beale is a welcome one.  That said I am scratching my head at two other changes to the team and one of the continued selections:

  1. In moving Rob Simmons to the bench, the Wallabies have demoted one of the most consistent performers in their forward pack from the last two test matches.  I do not know what is gained by demoting the guy for a replacement who does not bring anything additional to the table in terms of skills or presence around the field.  Equally, keeping Simmons on the bench is a bit perplexing when Dave Dennis can play both at lock and in the back row.  This move makes the team look a bit “forward heavy” on the reserves bench for mine.
  2. I can not understand why you would drop Mike Harris off the bench for an afternoon game when your first choice fly half has already been struggling with cramp? As simplistic at this sounds, if Barnes were to be incapacitated again I would have thought the security of having Harris on the bench would be comforting.  I concede that if Barnes goes off the obvious move is Beale to fly half, Ashley-Cooper to full back and Faingaa onto the wing however I am not sure I would keen to put Beale under that sort of pressure in his first game back after injury.
  3. Palu has been more of a liability than a positive in this test series and looks seriously short of a gallop for mine.  I can not understand why the Wallabies brains trust would not switch Higginbotham to number 8 and give Michael Hooper a start at number 6 and send Palu off for some fitness work before the Super 15 season restarts.  

Finally, to state the obvious the Waratahs are disproportionately represented in the team with 8 representatives which continues to show that Super 15 form seems to count for nothing.  Equally I am not all that displeased that the two contending teams in the Australian Super 15 conference (Reds and Brumbies) are not as at risk as they might have been to injury for the final 3 rounds of that competition as they would have been if form was a selection criteria.

Selection imbroglios aside, it will be a fascinating third test on Saturday.

Shumpty Eats: Amazing Thai at Gaythorne

Last night, uninspired by the thought of cooking on a Monday but not wanting to hit up a burger shop Thai was on the menu.  Instead of going to my normal Thai restaurant I decided to head to a small Thai restaurant I had heard good things about in Gaythorne called “Amazing Thai”.

Unfortunately, I have to say straight up that the only thing about the place that was amazing was the word in its title.  The reasons why will become apparent in fairly short order.

First impressions count for much, always have and always will, and the first impression I got of the restaurant was not a good one.  There is no reason on a Monday night with only 1 other table occupied for new patrons to have to wait five minutes before being seated.  I could have accepted it if the restaurant was particularly busy or if there were a heap of people waiting to make takeaway order.  I cannot accept it when the wait is as a result of wait staff sitting in the kitchen having a chat and not hearing the front counter bell.

Unfortunately, this tardiness continued (keep in mind the restaurant only had one other table in use during my sojourn there) when it came to taking orders: twenty minutes before asking if drinks were needed was moderately ordinary.

In any event, as regular readers will know, I can always be swayed by the food of an establishment when it comes to how much I enjoy the dining experience.  Last night I ordered the steamed dim sims for entrée and the red curry done with chicken for main.  As is now becoming custom I had to order my rice separately (this really irritates me).

The dim sims were a disappointment: simply put, they were cold.  I am sure that even luke warm I would have enjoyed them because from a flavour perspective they tasted pretty good but I just couldn’t get past them being cold.  The entrée being bad was unfortunate because the red curry was spot on.  It ticked all the boxes on meat content, thickness of sauce and level of spice that one would expect in a red curry.

Ultimately, as a dining experience I was left disappointed: poor service coupled with a bad entrée experience could not be redeemed by an excellent main.  That said, the excellence of the main has kept me from completely jettisoning Amazing Thai from my restaurant rotation.  I am prepared to go back again sometime soon, if nothing else to see what the dim sims are like when they are warm.

Nalbandian: player behaviour in the spotlight again

Well it did not take long for another incident of player behaviour to be plastered across the airwaves and YouTube.  The David Nalbandian kick at the Queens Club Tournament on Monday (Australian time) was nothing short of woeful.  I do not wish to recount the events that lead to Nalbandian’s default: they have been dealt with enough in the media, both the mainstream and the blogosphere.

There are two things that I do want to comment on:

  1. Nalbandian’s “apology”; and
  2. Whether the likely penalty both fits the crime and is a big enough deterrent.

“Apology”

I use the word “apology” here loosely because, as seems to be the case with many sports people having been caught doing something wrong, the apology that followed the event is generally actually not one.  I have re-watched Nalbandian’s comments during the presentation at Queens and in the presser after and throughout it struck me that the occasions at which an apology was sought to be made by Nalbandian those attempts just looked insincere and, frankly, staged.

More to the point however, even if the “apology” was a genuine one, it was tarnished by Nalbandian’s vociferous attack on officials.  Unfortunately, this approach seems have become par for the course for sports people faced with an enquiry into their own conduct.  At a time when showing some humility and accepting ones fault, sports people now just seem to deflect fault.

The Penalty

Setting aside the police investigation that is presently underway, it looks likely that the penalties that Nalbandian is likely to suffer as a result of his misconduct will be limited to a pecuniary penalty of $72,000 made up of the prize money he has forfeited and a fine. 

How is that possibly a deterrent? He has won over $10 million in prize money on the tour and he gets a $12,000 fine? Much like the penalty imposed on Serena Williams after her tirade at the US Open last year, the toothlessness of the punishment able to be imposed on Nalbandian just astonishes.

The question that raises its head here then is: what penalty would be imposed by the other sports around the world for similar conduct? Lets first call Nalbanian’s act what it was: simply it was conduct that brought the game into disrepute of the worst order.  If one considers the worst category of offences of this type and the punishments for same across others sports one is left with the unmistakable notion that the penalty likely to be meted out here is not a deterrent at all.  Indeed faced with such a likely penalty there is a strong argument that reverse effect arises. 

In rugby league, rugby union or AFL a player would find himself on the sidelines for a hefty period of not less than 4 weeks for similar conduct.  In cricket, a player would lose his or her match fee and be suspended for a series of games. In baseball, a penalty of the order of 10 games would likely be dispensed.

Player behaviour will remain as the lead stories of sport’s casts while the deterrent from behaving in such a fashion remains lax.  Tennis it seems sits fair behind what many would consider an acceptable standard for dealing with player behaviour but even so, as I have stated in earlier posts, this is a problem that needs to be dealt with across the board and sooner rather than later.

I leave you with this question: has anyone thought about who will be the next generation of officials? Why would one become an official when the reward for doing ones job (often as a volunteer) is petulance and abuse by players?

Shumpty Eats: Orient at Twin Towns

As with my post yesterday, I find myself reviewing a restaurant I know well here: Orient at Twin Towns.

Since it opened I would probably have eaten at Orient at least 25 times.  On level 1 of the Twin Towns RSL campus on the Queensland / New South Wales border, Orient is wedged down a corrider between an entrance to the main gaming room and another restuarant called Flames.  The first thing that strikes one as you cross the threshold into the restaurant is how busy it is.  The first hint is you generally have to queue for a table.  The second hint is the seamingly constant “ding” of the “order’s up” bell.

The decor is fairly rudimentary and the staff swift to seat you to the point of being abrupt so that once seated you find yourself encased the conversations around you which bounce off the walls with a menu under your nose to peruse.

The menu is basically what you would expect from a Chinese restaurant and, as is my usual practice, I have come to order the same dishes every time I attend.  My standard order is the chicken and sweet corn soup for entree and the sizzling szechaun beef with a side of steamed rice for my main.

The food is excellent: the chicken and sweet corn soup is piping hot and loaded with chicken (often missed in some of your dodgier establishments).  The serving size is just right: more than a taste but not so much so as to not leave enough room for ones main.

The sizzling szechaun beef does come out sizzling and is easily the best dish on the menu with the beef being supple rather the tough “boot leather” one often gets in such a dish and just the right mix of vegetables and spices to give the dish some real bite.

The food, by regular and general consensus, at Orient is nothing short of excellent.  I have never had a bad meal there.  In saying that I know of a number of my friends who often decline to eat there.  The rationale for this position is fairly plain to see and, indeed, was apparant again on my visit there last night.  The service side of the place has clear issues, being:

  • the service, despite getting you to your table swiftly is often not so swift to actually take your order;
  • the order taking of the wait staff often leaves a bit to be desired.  Better put, it is a rare meal when there is not one part of the order that is forgotten.  Tonight, it was an entree order of dim sims;
  • there is no table service for drinks: one has to attend at a bar just inside the front door of the restaurant which often gets quite crowded and can be problematic to get to if you are sitting against the opposing wall of the restaurant; and
  • it is not possible to order enough rice for everyone at the table, rather you have to order individual portions of rice.

If any of these quirks in the dining experience are likely to make your experience less than enjoyable then you either have to decline to attend this establishment or get over it (and to be honest perhaps yourself) because the food is definitely worth it.

A final note, and whilst it is not the test of whether a restaurant is a good one or not it must be said that from the perspective of value for money Orient is very hard to go past.  Tonight a table of seven (all eating an entree and a main) ate for the princely sum of $142.50.  I for one will wear some quirky service for food and value like that presented EVERY time I have dined at Orient.

This is simply a restaurant that should be on the must visit list for anyone coming down to the tweed border.