OFFICIAL *Behind The Roar Official Wests Tigers Podcast*

Tried to listen Joe to quiet, host too loud.

Simple things wests…the simple things.
Yep, had to put the headphones on the hear Joffa clearly. He seems like a great bloke who wants to make a difference. Based on his gentle giant personality I can see whay he stomps his feet and slaps his hammies to get his mind "into the groove" before he crosses the white line onto the field.
 
Does anyone else think that Joe didn't particularly like all the comments about the size of his family and the amount of "special" time him and his wife must have?
 
Does anyone else think that Joe didn't particularly like all the comments about the size of his family and the amount of "special" time him and his wife must have?
I got the same vibe .
I thought the host was good on the first two episodes,not so much on this one .
 

Skandalis: Good times will come

Wests Tigers - Wed 15 Mar 2023, 01:25 PM

This week’s guest on episode 4 of Behind The Roar, is Wests Tigers Life Member John Skandalis.
You can listen and watch this week’s episode of Behind The Roar, available on Apple, Spotify and also YouTube

‘Skando’ is Wests Tigers through and through, described by CEO Justin Pascoe as being ‘part of the furniture’.

He’s been with the club in various roles for about two decades as a premiership-winning prop, a strength and conditioning coach, and more recently as a corporate sales executive.

Episode 4 of BTR takes a deep dive into the world of a former professional rugby league player who has carved a career that he loves, with a club that he loves, long after hanging up the boots.

Skandalis scores against the Roosters in Wests Tigers inaugural season

Skandalis scores against the Roosters in Wests Tigers inaugural season

Skandalis talks openly about how, to this day, he still yearns to play rugby league but how the ‘body says no’.

He also talks about the challenges facing this year’s NRL team, after a disappointing start to the season, but is supremely confident success will come.

“Although we’ve lost our first two games, the team has put itself in a position to win those games, but it’s going to take time for them to gel,” he says.

The good times will come, we’ve just got to hang in and keep working hard.
John Skandalis
“We had a similar rebuild back in ’03 and ’04 with plenty of new faces and look what happened in 2005.

He talks about some of his most memorable moments in the game, like when Tommy Raudonikis handed him his first-grade debut against a Panthers team coached by Royce Simmons.

Another big moment of course was the ’05 premiership win under coach Tim Sheens, and 'that' try when Benji Marshall 'skipped away' to send Pat Richards in to score.

Skandalis and teammates side by side in 2005
Skandalis and teammates side by side in 2005

He also recounts the day he lined up against Newcastle enforcer, Paul Harragon, and ‘wanted to rip his head off’. Unfortunately, ‘Chief’ wanted to do exactly the same to Skando.

Skando with wife Jodie and daughters Olivia and Sophie after farewell game in 2006
Skando with wife Jodie and daughters Olivia and Sophie after farewell game in 2006

The NRL dream didn’t come easy for Skandalis. His family home burnt down when he was just out of nappies and his mother passed away when he was a teen.

He readily admits he ‘went off the rails a bit’ when being raised by his Greek father George, who was doing his best as a single parent.

It’s an inspiring story that should give hope to anyone travelling a bumpy road. He talks about how rugby league became a pillar of strength during some tough times, and how those close to him, helped him realise his dream.

On a lighter note, Skando tries to justify the many ‘business meetings’ he organises at Brisbane’s famed Caxton Hotel, which just happen to fall around Origin time each year.

And how his role in corporate ‘networking’ has improved his golf handicap. “Work smarter not harder,” he says. Yep, tough for some.

He also describes how much the club has transitioned from when he made his Magpies debut in 1996, to now.

“When I started out, we might have had about ten people on the staff,” he says.

These days, we have so many good people in specialist roles doing really good work.
John Skandalis
Reinforcing how much the game and the business has changed, is a story Skando tells about how Magpies home games were promoted in the late nineties.

“Tommy (Raudonikis) would drive up and down Queen Street in Campbelltown in a sponsor’s Cadillac spruiking our next home game on a megaphone."

There’s also the day Skando and his teammates copped an almighty spray from coach Tim Sheens on a cold and miserable day in Wellington. Skando says sprays from Sheens were few and far between but this one has stayed with him for a lifetime.
 
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Does anyone else think that Joe didn't particularly like all the comments about the size of his family and the amount of "special" time him and his wife must have?
Nothing like nepotism in this game. Rays son is a terrible interviewer. 52 year old trying to be 'hip with kids' just comes across cringe and hard to listen to.
 
Wheres the next episode.

Can u ask the attendee why the Tigers refuse to adopt a simple stile that applies pressure to the opposing team before the try to attack.

This typically what wins games based on decades of evidence
 

Behind The Roar: Paul Sironen

Wests Tigers - Wed 22 Mar 2023, 11:27 AM

On episode 5 of Behind The Roar, Balmain great Paul Sironen talks about a range of issues including John Bateman’s Wests Tigers debut, the perils of social media, the satisfaction that comes with his role in pathways, the larrikins he played with at the Tigers, and why our NRL team should feel confident ahead of Friday’s clash in Melbourne.

You can listen and watch this week’s episode of Behind The Roar, available on Apple, Spotify and also YouTube.

Paul Sironen is one of the true characters in rugby league. As one of the biggest men to have played the game, he was admired for his bruising carries for Balmain, the Kangaroos and the NSW Origin team through the 80’s and 90’s.

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Post retirement, ‘Sirro’ continued to garner affection in rugby league circles, trying his hand at ‘acting’ when picked up as a ‘male model’ in the Lowes Menswear commercials.

These days he remains firmly entrenched in rugby league and the Wests Tigers, heading up the Balmain side of the club’s pathways program.

It’s a job he says is highly rewarding, citing the recent NRL debut of Balmain junior Brandon Tumeth as a proud moment, not just for Brandon, but also for the club’s pathways team.

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Having played 246 first grade games for Balmain, as well as representing Australia and NSW, Sironen knows a thing or two about preparing to play at the highest level.

He talks openly about last weekend’s debut of star recruit John Bateman, and says in his opinion, the decision to hold the English forward back until Round 3, was 100% the right thing to do.

One week after NRL Multicultural Round, Sironen discusses his own heritage, recounting how his late father emigrated from Finland in the 50’s, learning to speak English on the long boat ride to Australia.

Much has changed in the game, and society, since when Sironen made his first grade debut in 1986. he says 'social media' in those days was a few of ‘the old blokes at the bar’ telling him where and how he needed to improve his game. These days, it’s open slather.

Sirro opens up about the perils of social media, and the potentially damaging effects ‘trolls’ can have on young players, and their families. He offers a word or two of advice for those who seemingly have scant regard for human decency.

Sirro was coached by some of the game’s best coachess, including the likes of Frank Stanton, Warren Ryan, Phil Gould and the late Jack Gibson. He talks about the different styles each brought to the game.

On a lighter note, he talks about short shorts and jockstraps, his giant-sized appetite, and how he’d take his
autograph book to the game when he played against the much revered Parramatta Eels in mid-80’s.

Sironen also talks about the highs and lows of the 1989 Grand Final loss to Canberra. And the irony of how his ‘best career moment’ and his ‘worst career moment’ were separated by about 60 minutes.

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All that and more in episode 5 of Behind the Roar.
 
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Just saw they’re doing this weeks before the game. Clever.

Don’t need to talk about a loss if the loss hasn’t happened yet.
 

Podcast: BTR Episode 8 with Chris Lawrence and Pat Richards​

Wests Tigers - Wed 12 Apr 2023, 03:33 PM

This week’s episode of Behind The Roar was recorded live at Accor Stadium before Easter Monday’s match against Parramatta Eels, featuring former Wests Tigers players Chris Lawrence and Pat Richards.

Behind The Roar drops every Wednesday afternoon, available on Apple, Spotify and YouTube.

Just as they did in their respective careers, the boys cover plenty of ground. With almost 600 first-grade games between them, they’ve seen a lot, learned a lot, and hurt a lot. Now retired but still heavily involved with the
club, both are very happy with their lot in life.

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Lawrence is one of those rare one-club players who made his NRL debut under Tim Sheens as a 17-year-old while still at school. He played 253 games over 15 seasons at Wests Tigers and fought his way back from not one but two of the most horrific injuries imaginable.

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He talks about the ‘loneliness’ and ‘isolation’ he felt on his long road to recovery, offering sage advice to other injured athletes about the ‘little wins’ which soon add up.

Richards also knows a thing or two about rehab having undergone 17 surgeries in his 17 seasons in both the NRL and Super League. He holds Lawrence in high esteem and speaks admirably of his former teammate’s physical toughness and mental fortitude.

Both players talk about their pathways to the NRL, and the role their schooling played in reaching the top-flight. The schools they attended are still going strong and still providing a steady stream of young talent to the NRL, and to Wests Tigers.

Richards recounts a couple of iconic Easter Monday moments that unfolded at Accor Stadium back in 2014 and 2015.

He also talks about his yearning desire to return to Wests Tigers after walking away from the NRL following the club's maiden premiership in 2005.

We touch on each player’s nickname, why Lawrence is known as ‘Rowdy’ and why Richards answers to ‘Iceman’.

There’s also a couple of yarns Rowdy tells about his NRL debut. When coach Tim Sheens said, “Looks like you’re playing kid.”


And then the flight home after that win over the Broncos in Brisbane, after scoring a try on debut. Chris had a HSC exam the very next morning but when he pulled out the books to do a bit of mid-flight study, he was quickly pulled into line!

All that and more in this week’s edition of Behind The Roar.
 
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Podcast: BTR Episode 9 with Shannon Gallant​

Wests Tigers - Wed 19 Apr 2023, 10:00 AM

This week’s episode of Behind The Roar has a ‘south-west’ flavour ahead of our first home game of the season at Campbelltown.

We talk to former Wests Tigers fullback, Shannon Gallant, who these days is an integral part of Wests Tigers' pathways programs in the south-west and Macarthur regions.

Behind The Roar drops every Wednesday afternoon and is available on Apple, Spotify and YouTube.

Nicknamed ‘mighty mouse’ because he was small in stature, Gallant talks about his ‘giant-sized appetite’ to play just one NRL game.

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“There were others who might have been better than me, but because I was smaller than most I guess I had a bit of a chip on my shoulder and I just worked extra hard to make the NRL,” he said.

Having ‘lived the dream’ himself, and knowing South Western Sydney so well, Gallant is well credentialed to offer advice to parents of other youngsters with similar ambition.

He talks about the importance of our pathways programs and why strategically it is crucial for Wests Tigers to develop and retain the wealth of young talent coming through, identifying a few young guns who are on the cusp of reaching the NRL.

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At the ripe old age of 37, Gallant is still playing at a very high level, pulling on the number one jersey for his junior club, Campbelltown City Kangaroos.

He even throws out a ‘chook raffle offer’ to another 37-year-old who is also working at the club, whose name is Benji.

Gallant is quick to point out that his role is not just about fast-tracking the best young prospects, but also about maximising participation.

“It’s also about giving kids the opportunity to keep them in the game,’ he says.

You might see a 13-year-old who might not be as developed as others right now, but who could be among the best in years to come.
Shannon Gallant
He also touches on the rapid recent growth in the female space ahead of the club’s inaugural season in the NRLW, citing a spike in numbers in female participation in the south-west and beyond.

On a lighter note, Gallant talks about some of the former ‘jokers’ he played with, including Beau Ryan, who post-retirement has forged a successful career out of ‘being funny'.

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He also reflects on some of the great players he played with and against, including Queensland great Matty Bowen, who was both a Wests Tigers' opponent and later a Cowboys' teammate.

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And then there’s the day he ‘got burned’ by a Manly second rower named ‘Choc’. Wests Tigers won that game 19-18, but Gallant readily admits he was made to resemble a speedhump.

Shannon Gallant might not be a household name in rugby league, but if you want insight into how a young boy’s dreams became reality, about how a passion for rugby league became a way of life, and about the daily challenges of talent identification, then episode 9 of BTR is a must listen.
 
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