All league is local.

Metaphorically speaking only. Picture: Getty

That’s what was forgotten 15 years ago, when the Canterbury Bankstown Bulldogs dropped the local area from its name and from its playing and training schedule. 

In the last week we have seen the very best of how a local area can support a team, and even more importantly how a sporting team can uniquely support a local area. Before you accuse me of bias let me be clear, I am completely biased. It’s my local area and my local team. And I see both up close.

The Bulldogs are a multicultural team. And the suburbs that span through the Canterbury Bankstown area are some of the most multicultural parts of our nation. They are filled with ethnic, cultural, and religious differences which rarely cause division but also rarely unite the way they have this week.

If you were in Belmore on Sunday morning you might have mistakenly believed there were car hoons with cars decked out in blue and white blaring their horns and disrupting the peace.

I say mistakenly because I was driving one of the cars and enjoying the happiest traffic jams Belmore has ever seen.

The blue and white extended to family heritages across the globe. Greek families with colours matching the Greek flag, islander families in the jersey, women in blue and white hijabs, all celebrating.

As we walked down the main street you could hear a crowd clapping along to the Lebanese drum, the durbakke, while there was dancing in the streets. As we watched I heard one person remark with some trepidation, “Imagine how this street will be if we don’t win.”

On returning to our car the traffic jam was still moving at a snail’s pace. There in the car across the road was front rower Frank Pritchard with his family, in a jeep nearly as tough as himself, tooting the horn and celebrating with the community lining the streets.

The game was supported by a who’s who of Bulldogs greats: George Peponis with the League Club, Steve Mortimer welcoming the trophy, Hazem El Masri with his family in the stands, Terry Lamb straight to the players after the game, Andrew Ryan and Luke Patten with their old team mates at the club after.

And tens of thousands of loyal fans cheering and hanging on every word as Michael Ennis showed leadership and decency in his comments after the game, congratulating Storm and promising to return stronger next year.

After the game before returning to the club I walked back through Belmore to see the reaction. The drums were louder than ever. The place was packed. People were up on each other’s shoulders and dancing.

There was so much to celebrate.

The same community that television cameras rush to every time there’s a hint of ethnic tension was partying and dancing together.

After all this was the year the club turned full circle. With Ray Dibb as the new chair we began the season with a trial match at Belmore. The first time we had played there since a game 15 years earlier when I watched as a fan on the hill.

Returning to Belmore with a state of the art training facility meant the players were back in the local area every day. And of course, that facility had been among the positives that helped Todd Greenberg attract League’s best coach Des Hasler.

Returning the team to Belmore finally showed to the fans that the team was as proud of us as we are of them. Hopefully before too long we can play more than a trial match there.

Multicultural communities are at their strongest when there are events, colours and causes to unite behind and cheer on. The Bulldogs provide that for my community in a way government programs never could.  It doesn’t discount the value of those events when individual groups celebrate their heritage.  But there’s no replacing the days when everyone from every background, comes together and celebrates.

My strongest memory of Sunday remains watching one of the players tower over some young fans after the game and humbly say: “I’m sorry we didn’t win for you.”

The youngest of the fans, her face beaming, smiled back with the words: “It’s all right.  You’ll win even better next year.”

And while it hurts to say it: Congratulations Storm.

Most commented

41 comments

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    • TimB says:

      06:51am | 02/10/12

      Great post Tony. There’s so much more to the Bulldogs than the sh*t that used to get heaped on both team and fans a few years back. I’m glad that we finally seem to have put that chapter of our history to rest.

      This is the club of my hometown and it always will be.

      ...And yes congrats to the Storm, the stronger team on the day. Too many mistakes on Canterbury’s part and not enough conversion of opportunities to points. It wasn’t meant to be.
      I take solace though in that the margin was only ten points. With the amount of possession that Melbourne had, I reckon had they faced any team other than Canterbury, the scoreline would have been closer to 40-4.

      See you in 2013.

    • Knemon says:

      08:59am | 02/10/12

      @ TimB - Is that your place in the pic above?

      Sydney won the Melbourne based league by 10 points and Melbourne won the Sydney based league by 10 points…and both our teams were the losers…spooky! wink

    • sunny says:

      09:00am | 02/10/12

      I’m not a fan of either side but will say that it was a good game. The intensity level was high for the entire game. The Bulldogs didn’t give up, they kept coming back at them but just couldn’t get around the rushing defense. Bellamy said it was probably the best defensive effort from his team that he’s seen and the Storm completion rate was unbelievable as well. The Bulldogs lifted the attacking standard this year with the way they spread the ball from one side of the park to the other, even their 130Kg props throw the ball around. It’s a good style of footy and it took a super human effort by the Storm to hold them out.  Goes to show what it takes to beat them, the most intense effort from the most intense and best drilled team in the comp. The benchmark is now higher as a result.

    • Scotchfinger says:

      09:18am | 02/10/12

      The Bulldogs clearly lost because they were deprived of protein, a situation from which a young member attempted to avail himself of by snacking on a rival’s cartilage. Munch! The poor team needs fuel to continue their off-field antics: rape, brawling and public nuisance. Go the Doggies!!! (although possibly they are taking their team name a bit too literally…)

    • Bill says:

      09:23am | 02/10/12

      Considering neither team even scored in the second half (sounds like soccer) and that DISGRACEFUL biting incident, it’s no wonder that the NRL was outrated by the AFL on the weekend, just like it has been outrated all year long.

    • Elphaba says:

      09:48am | 02/10/12

      Agreed, an excellent post.  I’m not a Dogs supporter, but my friend took me along to the Belmore Hotel, Punchbowl for food at Jasmin’s (by then I’d died and gone to heaven), and then to the street party afterwards.  I’ve never seen such an awesome celebration of footy before - from the team that lost!  I didn’t see one trouble maker, just plenty of people having a blast, and some good-natured joshing.

      A fantastic night, I thanked my friend at least 10 times for bringing me along to see it.  It’s something I never would have experienced if I didn’t know her.  It was a hoot! smile

    • TimB says:

      10:15am | 02/10/12

      Mods can you please do something about Bill’s constant trolling? It’s annoying everyone.

      @ Knemon, I just posted in the OT that I’d happily trade the AFL cup to Hawthorne if Melbourne gives us the NRL cup smile

    • sunny says:

      10:24am | 02/10/12

      Hey Bill I watched the Swans / Hawks game on Saturday and thought it was a really good game and it went right down to the wire. But I couldn’t help thinking how disappointing it is that it’s so rare in the AFL for games to be that evenly matched. Usually it’s a 158 -44 blowout and boring as batshit. I reckon the AFL needs to have a look at what the NRL is doing to even up their comp, because the AFL approach is obviously not working. And on the biting incident well the game was so intense it broke out into some argy bargy ..and lead to some itey bitey.. when’s the last time there was some blokes swinging punches at each other (or chomping away at each other) in the sterilised AFL?

    • TimB says:

      10:25am | 02/10/12

      PS. No Knemon, it’s not my place wink

    • simonfromlakemba says:

      11:03am | 02/10/12

      @Elphaba

      Hanging out in my hood!

      Jasmine’s is pretty good, cheap as well.

    • Elphaba says:

      11:18am | 02/10/12

      @TimB, stop reacting to it.  He’ll get bored and move on.  You’re giving him exactly what he wants when you react.

    • Bill says:

      11:58am | 02/10/12

      @Timmy - methinks you’re a little too thin-skinned. What’s wrong with showing my support for the AFL? What’s wrong with pointing out the fact that the AFL outrated the NRL on the weekend? The other Tim is always claiming that the NRL outrates the AFL during the season (something I don’t agree with), yet you don’t call for something to be done about him. Aren’t I entitled to hold an opinion different to you without being called a troll? Grow up pal. BTW - it’s ‘Hawthorn’, not ‘Hawthorne’...

      @Sunny - most games of Australian football are won by only a few goals, not the 114 point figure you made up. The team at the top of the ladder only won 2 more games than the team who finished sixth - sounds like a pretty even competition to me…

    • Elphaba says:

      12:17pm | 02/10/12

      @simon, yep!  It was out of this world.  I’m going back.  So much food, so cheap, and so delicious!  I ate about 6 breads filled with falafal/salad/hommous, I thought my tummy was going to pop! smile

    • TimB says:

      12:11pm | 02/10/12

      “Bill says:11:58am | 02/10/12

      @Timmy - methinks you’re a little too thin-skinned. What’s wrong with showing my support for the AFL?”

      Because this article isn’t about the AFL. Go away.

    • Greg says:

      09:01am | 02/10/12

      Maybe you could send this article to the rest of the lovely multicultural fans and the players while you’re at it.

      You know the ones burning storm flags after the game those lovely guys, and the players up to their loveable antics yesterday gosh you gotta love those young scamps.

    • Ralph says:

      09:25am | 02/10/12

      Dogs have always been dirty. Biting and kneeing in the Gf and then acting like ferals yesterday telling women they want to punch them in the face. Charming bastards. I don’t know how you can defend those things. Would never get away with it in the AFL or any truly professional code.

    • Arnold Layne says:

      09:43am | 02/10/12

      I accept that most supporters were peaceful and that the idiots burning flags etc were a minority, I can’t help but wonder how it would have been reported had it been soccer/football ‘fans’ instead of league fans though.

      As for the players themselves, some of them appear to have revealed their true colours yesterday.

    • Dan says:

      10:05am | 02/10/12

      I was at the game as a neutral fan and thought the doggies fans were well behaved and polite. It was an awesome grand final. There might not have been any points in the second half but there were plenty of very close things to tries that were only stopped by desperate defence. There are one or two idiots in any group but the media make it sound like its everyone. I don’t have a problem with the dogs fans.

    • Stormland says:

      09:34am | 02/10/12

      The puerile doggies are back at their best with their supporters burning flags/ shirts and players hurling sexist abuse at female journos.
      Hopefully James Graham getting a taste of what its like to be a premiership winner is the closest these grubs get to winning a comp in the next 50 years.

    • AFR says:

      10:36am | 02/10/12

      So, you decide to do the right thing, and hold your end of season shenanigans on PRIVATE property to avoid the journos and relax, and the media decide to invite THEMSELVES.

      Who is in the wrong here again?

    • Zed says:

      12:01pm | 02/10/12

      So AFR, grubby abuse aimed at women is ok if it’s done on private property ?

    • AFR says:

      12:58pm | 02/10/12

      I tell you what Zed, this Friday night, please come over to my place. I will be at home unwinding with a few beers and a mate or two after an exhausting and at times stressful work week.

      When you arrive, I will politely tell you you are not welcome. When you then proceed to shit-stir by trying to climb over my back fence for no reason other then to try and get a reaction to create a story, you WILL get a reaction from me.

      The Dogs players probably should have thought better, and if they said nothing, the poor old media would have to focus their attention to something else, like, dunno, 3 guys burning a storm jersey, but Azzopardi was there to create as a story, as, lets face it, a bunch of guys getting drunk on private property is hardly newsworthy. Her anatomical make up is irrelevant.

      Nein have it in for the dogs, and always will when being influenced by germs like weedler.

      But back on topic… the Dogs are the second most supported team in the league (behind a side with all of Brisbane to support it), and we fans/members are proud of a great season. Keep slinging mud, but, as a family and community, we will prevail.

    • Zed says:

      03:37pm | 02/10/12

      No AFR, given the bulldogs ‘issues’ with women in the past, the anotomical make up of the person on the end of their abuse is very relevant.
      And your analogy is poor one also. The media were not on the premesis, but outside the venue and nowhere near the players. There is no excuse for the sort of filth that was directed at the female reporter. All the players had to do was ignore the media and carry on - not a big ask I would have thought.

    • AFR says:

      05:26pm | 02/10/12

      Zed, you also forgot the helicopter flying overhead…. how many teams have that sort of treatment for mad monday?

    • Zed says:

      10:40am | 03/10/12

      A helicopter you say ?
      Still not sure why that gives a player the right to tell a woman to ‘s*ck me off ’

    • AFR says:

      09:25am | 02/10/12

      Well, looks like the media is back to its usual position of Bulldogs bashing (see the Telegraph’s already guilty verdict on James Graham), after one-off week or fawning over them.

      Good article Tony. Channel Nein finds a few idiots burning a Storm flag. Wooptee do. Lets not worry about then tens of thousands of fans from Croydon to Chester Hill who united in blue and white for an amazing build up to Sunday.

      Why are fans of other clubs so jealous? Is it because we are Sydney’s only real powerhouse (Souths are only team that comes close).

    • Scotchfinger says:

      09:58am | 02/10/12

      once I watched a Discovery Channel doco on a group of baboons in Africa. Oh the things they got up to: no need to ‘ask’ the females… lots of biting and bashing… the strongest prevailing over the weakest. Was I jealous of these creatures? You bet I was! I see your point, AFR, clear as a bottle of vodka swilled straight from the bottle.

    • HappyG says:

      10:26am | 02/10/12

      Fully sick mate !!!

    • Economist says:

      12:50pm | 02/10/12

      No the bulldogs get what they deserve as do Collingwood supporters.

    • simonfromlakemba says:

      11:27am | 02/10/12

      It went off! good to see everyone coming together for a good cause.

      Bad luck to the Dogs, Melbourne just had too much big game experience and we didn’t capitalise on the opportunities we had.

      Maybe next year.

    • Scotchfinger says:

      12:26pm | 02/10/12

      I’m sure by next year enough players will be out on bail or on parole to make up some sort of team.

    • Darren says:

      12:28pm | 02/10/12

      What a load. Rugby leagues backbone is bigotry, it runs through the whole sport. Racism, homophobia, parochialism and insularity are all deeply embedded in NRL culture. This is a league that primarily sells itself through paranoia and hate of other people and sports.

    • Scotchfinger says:

      12:47pm | 02/10/12

      <Like>
      You sound like a learned anthropologist discussing his findings of a distasteful ethnographic study.

    • Tim says:

      01:25pm | 02/10/12

      Scotchfinger,
      How was the Tiddlywinks competition on the weekend?

      I’m sure a bit of fun and a few lemonades was had by all?

    • Scotchfinger says:

      01:46pm | 02/10/12

      he he Tim, <Like>
      actually my weekend was spent listening to my 6 month old daughter coughing from croup <not like> so GF definitely low on my priorities.

    • Ben C says:

      01:11pm | 02/10/12

      I’m a Storm fan living in Bulldogs territory.

      Driving down Canterbury Road to my fiance’s place, every car around me was decked out in Bulldogs livery. Of course, I was in my Storm jersey. Had a few comments ranging from “You better get out of here quickly”, “Get that shirt off and join the real party!”, to the standard “DOGGIES!” scream. All of it was in good fun and in good spirit, and said with a laugh and a smile.

      What was even better was driving with my fiance back to her place after dropping something off at my place. She decided she wanted to drive through Bankstown to see if the Asian grocery stores were still open. No problems. Still, there were car loads of Bulldgos fans celebrating, despite losing the game. When we hit Punchbowl, the Bulldogs cars were more frequent, and getting more so until we hit Belmore, where it was mayhem (in the good sense). The main strip of Belmore was closed, people were still celebrating in their cars, walking down the street waving their flags, wearing their colours. My fiance was getting scared, while I was enjoying every moment of it.

      Todd Greenberg and his team need to be congratulated for not only bringing the Bulldogs back to the community, but showing leadership and setting an example for the fans in terms of spirit and sportsmanship. As die-hard and parochial as the Bulldogs fans are, not once did I feel threatened as a Storm fan. The worst I copped was people screaming “MELBOURNE SUCK!” while walking back to my car yesterday after lunch at Bankstown.

    • AFR says:

      01:22pm | 02/10/12

      BenC….ssshhhh…... stop it with the sensible comments, this doesn’t make a story now, does it?

      BTW: “MELBOURNE SUCK!”

    • Ben C says:

      02:09pm | 02/10/12

      @ AFR

      “stop it with the sensible comments, this doesn’t make a story now, does it?”

      Haha, that’s true, it would make much better reading if I embellished it a little and said that I was dragged out of my car, bashed to within an inch of my life, had my Storm jersey burnt while I was still wearing it, and my car torched.

    • simonfromlakemba says:

      02:32pm | 02/10/12

      The area isn’t as half bad as what people make it out to be. Id rather live somewhere that has a bit of passion and energy about it than some sterile white bread place.

      I’ve lived in the area for 4 years and no problems what so ever and before that I was in Homebush.

    • Anthony says:

      08:41am | 03/10/12

      ALL YOU BULLDOGS HATERS Need to shut the hell up and back the F**K up. The Bulldogs club and fans don’t need your stereotypical views published. we are not all morons like those very few that burnt storm flags and so on. AS USUAL what the media DIDN’T report was that there were also STORM fans burning BULLDOGS flags after the game. Heaven forbid that the useless piece of sh*t, God forsaken reporters have something to report that would make an AUSTRALIAN, Melbourne Storm supporter bass look bad. Even though the majority of Bulldogs fans I’ve met are proud true blue Aussies, the media, particularly CH9 like to make it about the Lebanese Bulldogs supporters and never have anything good to say about us.

 

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