@cochise said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1327087) said:@newtown said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1327085) said:@cochise said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1327023) said:@rustycage said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1327022) said:@cochise said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1327020) said:@sleeve said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1327019) said:@papacito said in [Jarryd Hayne](/post/1326983) said:He's a few years younger than me and due to various circumstances. I saw him play footy since about the age of 15 or 16.
Around the same time I heard he was a freak in athletics and took out national titles without ever having a coach or proper training.
The first time I saw him play, there was never any doubt in my mind he would be a great player.
He was a big kid and scored four or five tries without breaking a sweat. He had a truckload of confidence (most would say arrogance) which told you he wouldn't be awed at the top level.
I never totally liked the guy but enjoyed seeing him do well over the years. Some of the stuff that he did single-handedly for Parramatta and NSW was like watching that 15 year old kid all over again.
It really blew my mind to then see him play for the 49ers and I was disappointed he didn't make it.
After that, he never seemed to me like the same person when he came back to play for the Titans. He'd lost the spark he had before.
Personally, the stuff that came out of the recent court case is absolutely sickening and I hope they throw the book at the bloke. For mine, this will now always define him rather than his on-field achievements.
I also hope the NRL will take a step back and think about the culture of the game, as I think there's a chance this case is symptomatic of deeper problems in the game.
Not just the game, but society in general i think. Violence on the screen, music, we have become de- sencorsised .
I believe that is a bit of a furphy, society is much less violent than it was even 40 years ago.
Not sure how you'd measure that, but I think personally that if anything, the level of violence is more intense. For instance, there was no stomping on heads of the already unconscious that I recall. There might have been a lot of bar brawls but they'd end without ambulances in the main. Nowadays it seems there's knives god knows what else brought to the party - and often an ambulance involved and then even those guys and girls are in the line of fire.
The place has gone mad.
Crime rates, including violent crimes, have dropped significantly over the last 20 years.
Those crime rates may be falling but crime rates associated with reported violence to women is escalating.
I addressed that as well, I believe that could possibly be because we are in a time, that while still horrible it is easier to report than in past.
When I was a young man in the 1980's I was having lunch with my boss and was approached by a couple of detectives to participate in a lineup for a rape case. After my boss stopped laughing he gave me the afternoon off so I could go, though I wasn't that keen.
The police took me back to the Canberra City Station and left me in the lunch room with a bunch of other guys. After about 20 minutes they walked in with the suspect and asked us to line up, and then asked him to to slot in wherever he wanted. They then went out to grab the girl, brought her in and asked if she could identify her attacker and if so to touch them on the shoulder. No one way mirror, no barrier between her and us, just a bunch of guys in a canteen and one of them possibly the guy who raped her.