Thursday 12 November 2009

Girls, angst, danger, death…

But first, let’s start with rugby, the game not the school. I played it for years at Lord Bill’s. Well you had to, it was compulsory, and Lord Bill’s didn’t do football – thank God. By the time I was thirteen I was a hardened, head down, ball under arm, ear ripping, mud covered, scrumming machine of a loose head prop - pushing, pushing, pushing, kicking, grunting, swearing… and growing up.

I was in the school under 15’s first team, we always won. Half the team (me included) played for the County. We could beat them all - Dragon’s, Abingdon, Rose Hill, Cowley – we were unstoppable, I was unstoppable.

We each had a nickname – Everest, Brick, Hammerhead, Brigadier, Gloria, Wings, Tonto, Boy Wonder, Bog Brush - they called me Tankman, the Tank, as I said - I was unstoppable. Compare these two pictures. There’s a year between them and most of the boys in the first picture are still around in the second. Just look at the changes a single year made to some of us, not least of all to my hair – 1971… what was I thinking of!

1971 was also the last year I played rugby in any serious sort of way because a number of things happened.

Happening 1. It was the year that I discovered that girls could be almost as much fun as running around in the mud and rain for eighty minutes dragging other boys to the ground getting kicked and punched whilst trying to catch a silly shape ball as I shoved my other hand into somebody else’s face.

Happening 2. I began to rebel. Not about anything in particular, just about things generally, and everything that had gone before had to be undone. By the end of the year I’d changed everything that I thought, did, said, and I’d developed a new look, way of acting, attitude to things and I was working really hard at trying to be a cynic.

Happening 3. It was that year that Bruiser ran into one of the posts with his head down and fractured his skull, Gloria and Wings both broke a leg after bad tackles in two different matches, and I ended up in hospital for six weeks after emerging from a particularly heavy scrum with a smashed collarbone which complicated, brushed my heart, and bruised it quite badly. As I lay flat in my hospital bed it dawned on me that rugby could be dangerous.

Happening 4. Lastly, team morale took a huge knock when one of the boys in the photos went to sleep one night and didn’t wake up the next morning. He played second row.

Girls, angst, danger, death – a heady and complicated cocktail to down – suddenly rugby didn’t seem quite so important any more.

I still played, but I didn’t train. I was dropped from the firsts, went down to the seconds, then the thirds and a year or so later I stopped playing rugby altogether.

10 comments:

  1. I knew you would Bradboy.

    The explorer tweeted:

    'There's a connection between the finishing of your rugby career and your daughter putting horse on ice.'

    And she's right - I think it is called growing up, or moving on, or some such nonsense. I still wish I kept up the Rugby and left the girls alone though.

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  2. You never did get that cynic thing quite right. Just like Rick, the good shines through the cracks. Good thing too.

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  3. Back row, on the right you've not changed a bit. I noticed Sacha called you Tank the other night when I read your halloween blog and realised it must have been your school nickname. It suits you! Haha. I've never really thought of you as a sporty person though. More the rebel. Who is the really tall fella on the back row in the middle, in the first picture. Is he bogbrush?

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  4. Liz - he wouldn't agree. I've known him years and he doesn't see it.

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  5. Glynne, the really tall fella is Everest.

    He played second row. He's not in the second picture, he wasn't around any more.

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  6. Della Jayne Roberts commented on facebook:

    "I bet I can.....
    I remember visiting you in hospital..."

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  7. Tricia Kitt commented on Facebook.

    "crikey - better not let my flanker/occasional second row-er see this - and the hair..... (funnily enough, mine was v similar at that time)"

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  8. Are you the last boy on the back row righthand side? I didn't realise you were once so sporty - very impressed. You've made my fears for my nephew who's just been picked for the team even worse now.

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  9. Yep - that is me and before my accident I was waiting to see in I hade a trial for the south East England team. Oh well.

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