Old school union

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swantastic

Well-Known Member
Jun 5, 2011
24,151
36,694
113
Excuse the profanity.




For the oldies amongst us great memories.

For the younger ones this is what it was all about.

Today we often hear ‘take one for the team’, in civilian context this is about as close as that gets.

Enjoy




The rugby balls in my day, lad, were made of bloody leather.

A bladder stitched, with laces in, to hold the bastard together.

The ones today have adverts on, in supersonic plastic;

They’ll reach the sticks from miles away, toe-poked by any spastic.



The boots we wore were leather, too – with toecaps like a brick.

We dubbin’d them to last for years, the leather was that thick.

But now they buy them twice a year, at sixty quid a throw,

like ballet-shoes, all soft and pink, with ****-all on the toe.


And we invented tie-ups. Our socks were made of wool.

Hung around your ankles, they’d hold a gallon each, half-full.

So we tied ‘em up. Or taped ‘em up. Either way, no fuss.

Bryan Habana in woolly socks? He couldn’t catch a bus.


We didn’t have post-protectors, like cushions in a pram.

What rugby-post can do you harm? An advertising scam.

And kicking tees. Kicking tees! With some so high, at that,

you could HEAD the ball between the posts, and that’s any ****ing twat.


And if the ref should send you off, he didn’t need a card.

We didn’t remonstrate at all – we’d make him drink a yard.

But now you get a yellow card – Ooh! naughty boy! smacked wrist!

Ten minutes off? Within the game? I’d come back on half-pissed!


And nowadays, if you should burst a pimple on your head,

you can have a blood-replacement – your mate comes on instead!

And half-a-Guinness later, or a few more, if you shout

Your mate comes off; you go on; what the ****’s that all about?


Gum shields. Body armour. Like that American football farce.

And passive scrums. Passive scrums? You can shove ‘em up your arse.

What we want is what we played – that’s eighty minutes’ worth

of rugby, Rugby Union – the greatest game on Earth.


At that, my son, I’ll take “Time out” (another innovation!)

And summon up my aches and pains to find some inspiration.

We weren’t allowed a substitute: we turned out fifteen men!

A ****ed up shoulder; a broken nose; blood everywhere, we went back on again!


And every time the cold wind blows, and crippled with arthritis,

We curse the wounds of long ago that come back now to bite us.

We made a try; we saved a try: we played on, through the pain

And crippled, cursing, bleeding – we loved the ****ing game.

Anon