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Be going to the Test as a Wallaby Supporter in Gold & Green
Be going to the Test as a Wallaby Supporter in Blue
Be going to the Test as a Springbok Supporter in Green & Gold
Be going to the Test as a Springbok Supporter in Blue
Be outside protesting
Be watching at a pub or clubhouse
Be watching at home or friends house
Not be able to watch (ie not protest related)
Be meh...
What Test?
Anthems are sacrosanct! We are not bogans!
May the FORCE be with you!
Bound to be one or two that slip through the net! 😃
May the FORCE be with you!
Hi all,
The Save the Force FB group are organising a march to NIB tomorrow. Rough details as follows:
Meet at the Brisbane hotel at 5pm and then walk to the stadium chanting "FORCE, FORCE, FORCE!!" and then start a Mexican wave at some point."
Hope to see you all there dressed from head to toe in FORCE blue!
https://www.facebook.com/events/115403369181545/?ti=icl
Proudly Western Australian; Proudly supporting Western Australian rugby
WALLABIES great John Eales believes a Senate inquiry into rugby is needless while skipper Michael Hooper is adamant the remedy to ease the code’s pain is simple ... win.
Both leading figures were at final training in Perth on Friday focused on a fascinating Test against the Springboks but spent much of their time fielding more questions on the Western Force saga.
For Saturday night’s Test to be cathartic in any way to deal with the pain and anger in Western Australia, the Wallabies have to win well.
The non-performing South African side of last year carried the unwanted tag as the Boks responsible for “the end of an aura” such was the decline in results (eight losses), kicking standards and even their renowned physical presence.
They have done much to repair that sorry state with a five-win run and Hooper is well aware the Wallabies are in for a classic stoush that can ease some of the pain felt by Force fans.
“We represent Australia and we have the control to change and help people’s moods and feelings towards everything,” Hooper said of forging a victory.
“(We want fans to) wake up on Sunday morning just stoked to be Australian and we’re fully aware of that.”
Eales is a director on the Australian Rugby Union board that made the tough decision to cut the Force from Super Rugby and volunteered to put himself in the firing line of questions at a Friday rugby lunch for the University of WA.
He openly questioned the Senate inquiry that has been ticked to examine the state of the code in Australia with focus on the transparency or lack of it around the ARU’s decision to cut the Force.
“I would seriously question whether there is a need for that (but) it’s not me making that decision,” said Eales, a two-time World Cup winner.
“I know that there is nothing the ARU or the ARU board has got to hide.”
Eales said a detailed timeline of events and financial modelling published on the ARU’s website since late Tuesday provided answers.
“We’ve published everything. Go through that timeline and there’s detail,” Eales said.
Eales said the Force issue and the Wallabies playing in Perth were separate and he encouraged the right backing for the national side.
“It’s important that people can express themselves and if they come out in their Western Force blue, that’s a great thing too because it’s a strong community here in Perth,” Eales said.
“The Wallabies will know, whether they’re out there in the blue or gold, they’ll be supporting Australia.”
Animosity towards ARU heads Bill Pulver and Cameron Clyne when they attend the Test is likely.
“It’s hard to anticipate what things will be like. Everyone involved in this, on every side of the issue, you’ve got people who have put their heart and soul into the game and that’s the tough thing,” Eales said.
“Everyone is doing what they think is right and, yes, you have issues where there are going to be conflicting views.”
Flanker Hooper said the Wallabies had not been distracted by the Force drama this week when fixing key on-field issues like restarts and making 20-year-old reserve hooker Jordan Uelese feel at home before his Test debut.
“It hasn’t been swept under the rug by any means. It impacted all of us, but those directly impacted we offered our support to,” Hooper said.
“Despite the tough times over here in WA, we’ve had some great support this week when going out to schools or around training.”
After his fine performance against the All Blacks in Dunedin, backrower Sean McMahon can help set the standard again for the influence and second-efforts of the forwards.
McMahon had been on for only a few minutes as a replacement in Perth last year when he made a leg-pumping surge through five Argentinian defenders to set up a key try for Will Genia.
“Here last year that was one of the best runs I’ve seen from a Wallaby player ... he beat like 10 defenders on a charge coming off the bench,” Hooper said.
“Seany’s strong in the tackle, strong making his tackles and he’s good over the ball as well. That’s nothing new and he can have a massive influence when he gets that right.”
http://www.news.com.au/sport/rugby/j...094c51e5f515e4
Rumour has it that Clyne is in town? Question: at the end of the game, if he presents the MOTM award or whatever, do we turn our back on him?
All well and good wallabies great John Eales but it wasn't your team that was cut was it!
“I know that there is nothing the ARU or the ARU board has got to hide.”
Bet that got loads of laughs at the brekky yesterday. So what's been on going since April. You lot been playing hide n seek from each other in St. Leonard's.
Real leader: This has been an unfortunate time and the ARU has made mistakes in its handling of this situation. Even though I feel we have nothing to hide, I welcome the opportunity for reflection and objective feedback.
Poor excuse for a leader: I don't think that's necessary.
Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast.
Someone with something to hide: move along, nothing to see here
Hi at the lunch yesterday I asked Nick McArdle about no open training session and a missed opportunity for the kids in WA to have a signing autographs session....answer...."it must have been an over sight"......another question I asked was why the tickets in Sydney were reduced by 50% and nothing like that here, because the tickets to the game tonight are outrageous... answer - "They needed to sell more tickets in Sydney to recover costs and to fill the bigger ground...." It is just is beyond words.. I'm sure our lovely Alison can think of a few
Hi all,
Ch 10 are wanting to do a preview story before today's game. I've arranged to meet them at the Ch 10 studios in Subi for 1pm. If any of you are free and want to come and show your passion for the Western Force, please come down!! We need as many as poss and as much noise as poss!
All in blue please!!
Alison
Proudly Western Australian; Proudly supporting Western Australian rugby