Canberra Raiders: We deserve the wooden spoon and heads must roll

I have written previously this year about the position of Ricky Stuart at the Canberra Raiders. I am not going to rehash all of that: the fact is that I do not believe Ricky Stuart is the right man to be coaching Canberra and I will never be convinced otherwise. He is a team destroyer rather than a team builder and until he is no longer in charge of the team I expect no success for the green machine.

That rant about the coach had, I have to say that I had, until Sunday’s game, had hope that from the player group the Raiders possess at the moment the team could at least be competitive this season and avoid the dreaded wooden spoon having never been a recipient of that “prize” in 33 years in the competition.

Nothing I saw though in another Raider’s capitulation, this time against the Warriors, has done anything to suggest any other conclusion than that the Raiders really do not deserve any other result than to receive the wooden spoon. Unlike the Sharks, who have had significant disruption this year through the drugs saga, there is no real cogent excuse that can be made for just how bad the Raiders are in 2014.

Change is needed at the Raiders. That is plain. Ricky Stuart going is just the tip of the iceberg though. On the management side of the business Don Furner has presided over calamitous and embarrassing season in which the results on the field have been coupled with an inability to attract players to the club. He must be replaced.

On the player side, it is hard to see ornaments to the club come to the end of their careers but it is time for some such players including Campese and Tilse to be moved along or quietly retired. When those players go then the Raiders must trust in the U20s coming through rather than seek to replace like with like as Furner has done in previous years.

I have never supported a team other the Canberra Raiders and I never will. It hurts me to see my proud club at such a low ebb. Regardless of the end result of this season changes just have to be made in Canberra. If you need another reason for this, and I will leave this post at this, then have a look at the plethora of empty seats in the ground on Sunday. The fans are not coming to the games and for the fans to come back change must be made. It is the simple.

Postscript: I originally wrote this blog on Sunday afternoon after the Raiders terrible performance against the Warriors. My original draft was much more forceful in my condemnation: this is the calmer draft!

The Weekend Wager

Here is a four leg multi for sports fans out there interested in having a flutter this weekend:

Leg 1: Gold Coast Suns to defeat the Brisbane Lions by less than 40 points in the AFL.

Leg 2: Crusaders to cover the line (-7.5 points) against the Sharks in Super Rugby.

Leg 3: Canterbury Bulldogs to cover the line (-4.5 points) against the North Queensland Cowboys in the NRL.

Leg 4: New Zealand Warriors to defeat the Manly Sea Eagles in the NRL.

This multi will pay $16 for each dollar invested.

As always:

1. Please gamble responsibly.
2. All care has been taken with this tips but no responsibility vest in me for losses incurred.

The Weekend Multi

Here is this weekend’s sports multi:

Leg 1: South Sydney to cover the line (-6 points) against Parramatta in the NRL.

Leg 2: Penrith to cover the line (+ 10 points) against Sydney in the NRL.

Leg 3: Brumbies to defeat the Chiefs by 1-12 points in Super Rugby.

Leg 4: Essendon to defeat the Western Bulldogs by 1-39 points in the AFL.

Only 4 legs that I am keen on this weekend and, having learned from previous weeks, I am only going to include those games that I am keen about.  This multi should return around $19 for each dollar invested.

As always:

  1. Please gamble responsibly.
  2. All care is taken with these tips however no responsibility vests for losses incurred.

The Weekend Multi

It has been a while since I posted a weekend sports multi. I have been busy and just haven’t been in a punting mood. That said: I had a little bit of time on the golf course this afternoon to ponder the weekend’s sport and have come up with this multi:

Leg 1: San Francisco Giants to cover the line (-1.5 runs) against the San Diego Padres in the MLB.

Leg 2: Chicago White Sox to cover the line (-1.5 runs) against the Seattle Mariners in the MLB.

Leg 3: Gold Coast Suns to defeat Collingwood by 39 points or less in the AFL. 

Leg 4: Sydney Roosters to defeat Cronulla by 13 points or more in the NRL. 

Leg 5: Fremantle Dockers to defeat the Melbourne Demons by 39 points or less in the AFL.

Leg 6Argentina to defeat Belgium in the World Cup. 

Leg 7: Sharks to defeat the Cheetahs by 13 points or more in Super Rugby. 

This multi should pay around $200 per dollar invested. 

As always: 

  1. Please gamble responsibly.
  2. All care is taken with this tip however no responsibility for any losses incurred. 

Since when did calling a referee a cheat become “trivial”?

During the 60th minute of the Melbourne Storm v Parramatta Eels NRL game yesterday, Chris Sandow, the Parramatta Eels halfback, posed the following question to referee Ben Cummins:

“How much are they paying you?”

Sandow was rightly sin-binned.  Astonishingly, the coach of the Parramatta Eels has defended Sandow as follows:

“It was pretty trivial and we need to grow up a little bit and get on with refereeing the game.”

In one statement Arthur has not only called branding the refereeing a cheat but sought to allude that the blame for the sin-binning rested with the referee.

I have written before on this blog about the diminution in respect for the referee / umpire’s decision across a wide range of sports but the events of the weekend really take the metaphorical cake for me.

I know I come from an old school where the word of the referee was sacrosanct and the decisions of a referee of any game were to be respected and not complained about but calling the referee a cheat straight to his face is surely something, whether you are from an old or new school of thought, that MUST be eradicated from the game rather than lionised.

Sandow’s offence was bad enough but the support of him by his coach is, frankly, conduct not becoming of any coach let alone an NRL coach.

The media, too, has not helped.  References to “cheeky” Chris Sandow in by-lines and lead in paragraphs does the gravity of this appalling conduct no favours.

Referees are under scrutiny now than they ever have been before.  At the same time the respect for match officials is at an all time low.  The regular screaming at referees about innocuous decisions by the likes of Gallen and Bird has become acceptable it would seem.  I sincerely hope that conduct like Sandow, and his coach, does not become the next type of conduct that is acceptable.

The Weekend Multi

I am not having a punt on the races this weekend, but I have run the ruler over the sport on this weekend and have come up with the following five leg multi that I am feeling quite confident about:

Leg 1: Richmond to cover the line (+24.5 points) against Sydney in the AFL.

Leg 2: Canberra to cover the line (+3.5 points) against the Bulldogs in the NRL.

Leg 3: Total game score great than 2.5 goals in game between France and Switzerland in the Soccer World Cup.

Leg 4: Hawthorn to defeat Collingwood by 1-39 points in the AFL.

Leg 5: Cronulla to cover the line (+9.5 points) against Manly in the NRL.

This multi should return around the $26 mark for each dollar invested.

As always:

  1. Please gamble responsibly.
  2. All care is taken with this tips however no liability for losses incurred.