Israel Folau is the only man in the history of Australian
sport who has featured at the top level in each of rugby league, rugby union
and AFL, whilst this is quite a feat and something which some would feel is
commendable, it calls into question the value of loyalty in sport and also
showcases the fact that sports clubs and codes are now businesses.
Folau, now 24, has already featured for the Melbourne Storm,
the Brisbane Broncos as well as the Kangaroos in league, for Greater Western
Sydney in the AFL as well as for the waratahs and is on the verge of making his
wallabies debut in the coming weeks. This
impressive résumé reflects to his brilliant skills on a football field whilst
also alluding to a certain lack of loyalty and commitment. Folau debuted in the
NRL in 2007 and was an instant hit, securing himself as one of the league’s
most dangerous backs in the following years until his decision to quit league
at the end of the 2010 season. He was lured to GWS with a huge pay packet and
lasted only one season in the NEAFL and one in the AFL before he decided to
change codes once more. His AFL stint can only be considered a failure, whilst
he drew increased publicity for the giants; he can only be considered a substandard
AFL footballer, a testament to the fact that rugby league and AFL players need
very different skills to excel in their respective sports.
Folau joined the NSW Waratahs at the beginning of the 2013
season and has been an unmitigated success in rugby union, forcing his way into
the wallabies squad for the upcoming game against the British and Irish Lions
on 22 June in Brisbane. Folau was the
tied top try scorer in this year’s super rugby competition with 8 tries, which
is a testament to just how well he found his feet in his first season in the
competition. However, this rise to union stardom has not led to him committing to
another season with the tahs; reports coming out of Canterbury suggest that
Folau has been in discussions over a contract starting next season at the
bulldogs, which would make him the only player ever to play three different
codes in three seasons.
Code hopping is not a new thing between rugby league and
rugby union, and vice versa, with quite a few players becoming dual
internationals in recent years, the likes of Matt Rogers, Lote Tuqiri and
Wendell Sailor spring to mind. However, Folau’s swiftness in code change and
the enormity of the pay packets he is picking up and the marketing he is
generating suggest that sport has simply become another money making venture
rather than something filled with passion and loyalty. This can be seen as a
very bad thing for Australian sport as Folau could well pave the way for more
and more players making the switch between codes, cheapening the image of the
game, and suggesting that players do not care about fans or clubs rather just
about driving around in sports cars and banking their multi-million dollar
cheques.
Big money transfers to rival clubs are not rare in many
other sports, including NFL, MLB and world football, and when these things do
happen, it breeds an image of selfishness and a lack of loyalty for the player
in question. A recent example of such a thing is Robin Van Persie’s £24 million
move to Manchester United from Arsenal in August 2012, a move which saddened
Arsenal fans and even led to the burning of Van Persie jerseys outside the
Emirates Stadium. Sporting fans are not a hard bunch to please, they simply ask
for tactfulness, honesty and loyalty, all traits that code hopping does not
breed. As an overarching statement, code hopping is a terrible thing for
Australian sport as well as fans of Australian sport who wish to see players
who love and respect the clubs which they feel the same way for.
Thats the rosey wrap on code hopping in Australian sport,
Thanks for reading,
By Jake Rosengarten
well done rosey! a good read!
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