Castleford hit with pretty big fine
#1
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:40
There should be no place for that kind of thing in our game, should there?
#2
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:45
#3
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:47
#4
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:50
hear hear
who think that life is but a joke
#5
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:52
Using the "N" word to describe someone of afro-caribbean origin, or blatant homophobic comments at the gay and lesbian community is, rightly becoming slowly more socially unacceptable! Each year I see less evidence of it though it is still there, and still needs addressing.
Now, Sunday v Widnes, "nar then ya big ginger 2@" was hurled in my direction. We all had a chortle in the lagoon and got about our business of enjoying the afternoon.
Difference??
You know the job I do Mark, and that my toleration for anyobody or any organisation negatively discriminating anyone for any reason is non-existant. But the ginger comment did make me think - tho not too seriously! Had I have been black and the word ginger substituted for "black" in the above sentence - there would have been an entirely different response don't ya think?
Back to your question - in the 21st century people ought to be able to live as they wish within the law without being subject to a barrage of abuse when doing their job. If their employers can't/won't protect them, then they deserve the wonga taking off them!
Ce message a été modifié par Robin Evans - 29 juin 2010 - 11:54 .
#6
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:53
C'MON! SERIOUSLY?
Cummins Out.
#7
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 11:54
Using the "N" word to describe someone of afro-caribbean origin, or blatant homophobic comments at the gay and lesbian community is, rightly being slowly more socially unacceptable! Each year I see less evidence of it though it is still there, and still needs addressing.
Now, Sunday v Widnes, "nar then ya big ginger 2@" was hurled in my direction. We all had a chortle in the lagoon and got about our business of enjoying the afternoon.
Difference??
You know the job I do Mark, and that my toleration for anyobody or any organisation negatively discriminating anyone for any reason is non-existant. But the ginger comment did make me think - tho not too seriously! Had I have been black and the word ginger substituted for "black" in the above sentence - there would have been an entirely different response don't ya think?
Back to your question - in the 21st century people ought to be able to live as they wish without being subject to a barrage of abuse when doing their job. If their employers can't/won't protect them, then they deserve the wonga taking off them!
Gingers are tough though.
It's a good, strong stance by the RFL but that fine seems mighty steep.
- Severus, July 2012
#8
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:03
#9
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:07
#10
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:12
I feel for all the genuine Castleford supporters as £60,000 worth of fines in a little under two years is going to hurt the club.
#11
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:14
I know, the big gay fool. How dare he want to go about his business without being abused by meatheads.
- Severus, July 2012
#12
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:16
RL is a mans sport at the end of the day. Not for public schooled pansies like RU.
#13
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:18
I had no idea that Gareth Thomas was a Gentleman of private means. I had assumed he was a grubby professional.
- Severus, July 2012
#14
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:31
"The club condemns any person who makes or chants obscene remarks towards players or officials. But the charges against the club are not that there was chanting, they are that the club failed to take its' best endeavours to prevent or stop any chanting.
"This the club refutes totally. The club has a well-established system for dealing with chanting and could not have done any more on the day."
Before the game on Sunday, Cas played the standard RFL tape/CD on abuse of players and officials but there was a constant chanted abuse of the referee throughout the game. Their only response was to play the tape again. I assume that this is their "well established system for dealing with chanting".
I know it happens elsewhere in response to individual incidents (including Bradford) but this was pretty incessant, particularly during the second half, and I can only wonder how much worse it might have been if Cas had lost the game.
I expect the usual suspects will suggest I should get a thicker skin and that it's just how people speak etc etc, but I should point out I'm not 'offended' by it at all, and can ignore any amount of foul mouthed chants (much as I would prefer not to) but it does show the club's earlier response to be nothing more than empty rhetoric.
#15
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:40
I'm not defending the Cas fans or what they were chanting because there is clearly no place for that in a modern sport environment (or indeed any environment).
However, I fail to see how the club can prevent it happening. You can put up all the posters you like, play endless messages over the tannoy, write it in your programme but the bottom line is if some imbeciles decide to chant then there's nothing you can do to prevent it.
You can take action after or during the chanting against the offenders but you can not prevent it from happening in the first place, so to charge a club for failing to do so is nonsense. You may as well charge them with failing to prevent it raining. Both are impossible.
#16
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:46
#17
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:46
I know it happens elsewhere in response to individual incidents (including Bradford) but this was pretty incessant, particularly during the second half, and I can only wonder how much worse it might have been if Cas had lost the game.
I expect the usual suspects will suggest I should get a thicker skin and that it's just how people speak etc etc, but I should point out I'm not 'offended' by it at all, and can ignore any amount of foul mouthed chants (much as I would prefer not to) but it does show the club's earlier response to be nothing more than empty rhetoric.
Arrrrrr yes the little girl who says "please respect our match officials and players, any foul and abusive lanuage will not be tolerated"
They played it four times twice after Bradford tries.
#18
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:46
#19
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:47
One yorkshire club, of course nothing ever happens in the "land that time forgot" west of the Pennines does it?
#20
Posté 29 juin 2010 - 12:49
I'm not defending the Cas fans or what they were chanting because there is clearly no place for that in a modern sport environment (or indeed any environment).
However, I fail to see how the club can prevent it happening. You can put up all the posters you like, play endless messages over the tannoy, write it in your programme but the bottom line is if some imbeciles decide to chant then there's nothing you can do to prevent it.
You can take action after or during the chanting against the offenders but you can not prevent it from happening in the first place, so to charge a club for failing to do so is nonsense. You may as well charge them with failing to prevent it raining. Both are impossible.
Did you read the article before typing? It's the club's inadequete response and efforts to stop the chanting that were punished.
Your rain analogy is just absurd.
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