| Epilogue to a Tragedy
For good or ill, and probably good, the whole sordid drama
has reached its conclusion. The curtain has been drawn on
a modern day sporting tragedy, a sad parable of unquenchable
greed and the indifference of the modern athlete to notions
of history, loyalty, decency and gratitude. All that is left
to do now is to write the epilogue. This wordsmith shall
pen the final words and that will be that. The protagonist,
now dead to all those involved in rugby league, will never
again (for the foreseeable future, at any rate) be mentioned
by this author once these final words have dried.
It was, of course, money that ended this tale, just as it
was money that had began it. The circle appeared complete.
A feeling of hollowness, however, was felt by most in the
audience as we looked on with feelings of melancholy and
gloom at the insipid finale. It was not an unexpected last
act, however. Most tales finish with a whimper. That is reality.
Life, as they say. The high watermark of emotion usually
resides well before the finish and by the time the last page
of the script is reached, the stream is but a dribble.
There was no protracted court case or jail term, no international
man hunt or airport arrest, no seizure of assets or challenges
to the salary cap. In the end, the Bulldogs were paid off,
a simple and expensive purchase of freedom. It was the prudent
decision for the Bulldogs to make, though it left the vindictive
and zealous among us a little flat. We wanted blood and the
head of Sonny Bill Williams stuffed and mounted and hung
at NRL headquarters as a reminder of the consequences of
treason. It would be our Tower Hill and he would be our Robert
Devereux. That was the dream, at any rate.
Though the Bulldogs and the NRL held all the cards, they
realised that there was little to be gained from dragging
the saga out. Sonny Bill Williams was never going to pull
on a Bulldogs jersey again nor would he have ever been afforded
such an honour. Had the Bulldogs walked the road of bones
they would have claimed a larger moral victory but the cost
would have been great both financially and in terms of domestic
stability. Williams and his coterie of petty thugs could
have been stripped bare and left to rot in a prison cell
but the Bulldogs would have gained little from such an outcome.
By taking the cash, the Bulldogs leave victors both financially
and morally. They have taken upwards of $850,000 in cash
from a man whose only god is money, leaving them about $600,000
to the good after legal fees have been factored in. It also
allows the Bulldogs to start fresh in 2009, the last selfish
greedhead cast to the wind.
There is no doubt the loss of such serious coin will hurt
Williams and his camp considering how much adoration they
have for the almighty dollar. His camp thought they could
buy the Bulldogs off for a measly $200,000. They were sorely
mistaken. Todd Greenberg and George Peponis were so insulted
by the initial offer that they reportedly packed up and left
the negotiating table. The Williams camp, the seriousness
of the situation finally dawning on them, had little choice
but to jack up the number. When you have a pair of deuces
and you know your opponent as three ladies, you have very
little room to move.
The fact Williams has been explicitly prohibited from playing
in the NRL until at least 2013 combined with utterances from
David Gallop that he will never be welcomed back will hurt
him financially even further as he will no longer have rugby
league as leverage when negotiating future rugby contracts.
It is certainly hoped that now the legal proceedings have
finished that the NRL will enshrine its lifetime ban of Williams.
The prospect of the ill-feeling towards him dissipating and
him being allowed to play again is too awful to consider.
Williams’s last act of
employing former Labor Party numbers man and renowned upstanding
citizen Graham Richardson
as the middleman in negotiations with the Bulldogs only further
tarnished what little remained of his reputation. That is
the same Graham Richardson who was alleged to have played
a role in the Peter Baldwin assault (allegations, it should
be noted, that were never proven), the same Graham Richardson
who was embroiled in the Love Boat scandal, the same Graham
Richardson who was forced to resign from his ministry over
the Marshall Islands affair, the same Graham Richardson who
was implicated in the Cash For Comment scandal and the same
Graham Richardson who has become entangled in allegations
of tax evasion. It should probably come as no surprise that
Khoder Nasser would call on Richardson to act for Williams.
Birds of a feather, as they say, flock together. It was an
insulting final play by the Williams entourage, one of great
cheapness that merely sought to reinforce the pragmatic and
low-rent nature of the grubby entourage.
With the benefit of some perspective, there seem to be few
in rugby league who are upset that Williams is gone. If anything,
after watching the true nature of the man emerge for the
world to see, it appears to be a blessing that he is no longer
part of the noble game of rugby league.
The game, as a sport, will continue on in all its brutal
beauty. As a cultural institution, rugby league will remain
the dominant winter code of New South Wales and Queensland
and will do so for time immemorial. It will take a lot more
than the loss of one player to do even the slightest of damage
to the code.
In terms of talent, Williams will be replaced with some
ease, just as rugby league has consistently replenished its
talent throughout the years. Lewis, Kenny, Lamb and Lyons
handed over to Fittler and Daley who in turned passed the
baton onto Darren Lockyer. Sterling and Mortimer are the
direct descendants of Thurston and Prince, both of whom were
preceded by Johns and Stuart and Langer. It is the nature
of rugby league. The game is never starved for talent and
as such, no individual is bigger than the sport. There are
better players than Williams in rugby league, most of who
play with more courage and leave a more indelible impression
on the hearts and minds of rugby league diehards.
The Bulldogs, as an organisation, are no doubt pleased to
leave this sorry saga behind them and move forward knowing
the slate is clean. The Bulldogs have been in a constant
state of drama throughout this decade, no doubt a legacy
of poor recruitment decisions based too much on on-field
talent and not enough on the nature of the person. Players
like Williams and Willie Mason would never have made it when
Peter Moore ran the club and Chris Anderson called the shots.
They certainly would not have been kept at Belmore at the
expense of players like Steve Price.
To the credit of Todd Greenberg and new recruitment manager
Peter Mulholland, they have recognised that the problems
at Canterbury throughout the decade have been a direct result
of bringing in selfish individuals with little understanding
of the concept of the team and have sought to turn things
around by bringing in good people. One need only look at
the 2009 recruitment class to see that the previous statement
is a pure truism. Ben Hannant is a prop who plays with great
heart and jaw-dropping courage, a wonderful front row prospect
renowned for hard work. Brett Kimmorley is reaching the back-end
of his career but is a player with a sharp brain who has
always exemplified professionalism. Josh Morris is an exciting
prospect from a solid rugby league family. The same can be
said for Bryson Goodwin. Michael Ennis is an on-field niggler
but he plays the game hard and is adored by his teammates.
Darius Boyd and Shane Rodney, two hard-working and level-headed
players, are also likely to be playing in the blue and white
next season.
The likes of Ben Roberts and Reni Maitua remain but for
the first time since last century, the selfish and the weak-willed
have been outnumbered by the selfless and the strong. It
will only be a matter of time before the recidivists are
sent packing, allowed to run amok on their own time and with
their own coin.
And that is probably that.
All has been said, all has been done. Canterbury and rugby
league took the high road and
came out victors. They didn’t get the prize of Williams’ head
but they made a nice sum and they get the slate wiped clean.
Williams will now make a globetrotting journey, selling his
ass to the highest bidder until he is of no value, just another
junk ridden whore past their prime. He will now just be hoping
those knees hold firm. The going rate for cripples these
days is not real high, particularly cripples with the moral
rectitude of a rat king.
© 2008 Punting Ace.com
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