Twiztid
NRL Player
- Apr 14, 2009
- 1,668
- 136
Ya piss off Roosters. No-one likes you!
lol we still have alot of fans i will be a roosters fan till the day i die ...even when they are losing im not ashamed to be a roosters supporter.. They seemed to be trying alittle last night they just came up against a really good defence...We had sooo many held up trys and plenty of optotunities just couldnt break their deffence ...I dont agree with anasta at the back he was hopeless..Get perret back there or tansey....I think Mason really tried tonight...We need Aubusson and minichiello n fitzgibon back... Mitchel Pierces kicks were atrocious....Twiztid said:Ya piss off Roosters. No-one likes you!
[icon_lol1. [icon_lol1.Blondie said:Please scott you really need to get over your roosters hate im sure there are lot more people that hate souths then Roosters [icon_wink i bet the only reason you hate the Roosters is coz most of the times they met they beat your boys lol...
The Rock said:Nah...everyone is totally over feeling sorry for Souths now. That was so 7 years ago.
Nashy said:A bunch of dickhead whinging pretty boys.
Nashy said:Alright.
Fittler is a shit coach, Braith Anasta is a shit 5/8th and Willie Mason is just shit.
Playboy Bunny said:I'm happy as long as the roosters are losing... :)
BRAD Fittler is fighting for his job.
He has fallen out with some of his senior players.
Willie Mason is drinking and partying in between squeezing in the odd hit-up.
Mark O'Meley is dropped to park football the same week he gets chosen for City.
Braith Anasta is a five-eighth playing fullback via lock, and less than happy about it.
The Roosters are running second last.
The players run out with each other but not for each other.
For such reasons, few rivals will sympathise with them as they battle their latest problems, all too aware that they inherited those very problems from other clubs.
The best example is Mason.
It wasn't that long ago that Mason wanted to be a boxer, remember. He was playing at the Bulldogs. They resisted the idea.
Mason pushed it until his boxing career became such an issue he could no longer work with the club. At the time there were rumours, certainly believed by those at the Bulldogs, that the Roosters were privately supporting his continual agitation.
They knew the best way to acquire Mason was for the Dogs to grow tired and release him, at a time when other clubs had finished recruiting, which is exactly what happened. He left and went to the Roosters, who gladly tolerated his boxing interests. Mason since had his fight. You might not know, because it was an extremely forgettable encounter that, if you were being mischievous, seemed to have served its purpose.
Yet the Roosters are now learning the hard lessons the Dogs could have told them; when Mason's agendas don't follow the club's agendas, trouble follows.
If the pandering to players was destroying only the Roosters, 15 other clubs and their supporters wouldn't care.
But its impact is NRL-wide.
For too long NRL clubs have pandered to their players - and the Roosters have often been the worst offenders.
Now learning their lesson with Mason, they are about to double it up when Carney arrives next year.