Tom Humphries Destroying Rugby Football

Humphries was untouchable when he was in form like this. I’ve bolded my two favourite parts of the article. Tremendous stuff:

Drive the buggers underground

Can’t live with them. Can’t shoot them. Mainly can’t live with them. Can’t afford to live with them. Haven’t the bloodlines to live with them. Haven’t the patience to live with them. Haven’t the language skills to live with them. Haven’t the desire even. Rugby people have always been college scarves and jutting jaws and silly songs I don’t know the words of.

C-A-N-N-O-T live with them.

Now, a quick word before we start. Every time I write one of my patented, bitter and twisted chip-on-the-shoulder social-cripple pieces about the rugby world, the same smug epistles hit the desk all the way from D4.

They tell me (surprise!) that I have a chip on my shoulder about rugby.

“You’re like a little boy with his nose pressed up against the window – come on in and have a pinty, for croying out loud.”

I know. I have a chip. Actually I like having a chip on my shoulder about rugby. It is my inalienable right. I will not have a pinty.

Thonks. I am happy as I am.

I don’t like rugby and I work for The Irish Times. It’s like being a day trader and working for Pravda.

Listen to this: I have tried. I have reached out to rugby. I have gone forth in a spirit of understanding and fellowship and attempted to break down the cultural barriers between rugby and myself.

For my troubles, I’ve had nothing but heartache and sorrow.

Let me tell you something I’ve never told anyone before. Once – and I am disappearing into a witness protection programme after the next full stop – I played half a season of under-19 rugby with Suttonians.

Next time, I’d choose to do my time in jail, as my co-accused did.

[b]Despite being a Gaelic player, and therefore able to do some things most rugby people cannot do – ie, catch a ball, kick a ball, run, etc – I was press-ganged into being a second-row forward. This is like choosing to do a heavy lifting job in your spare time.

For a few months, I spent my time with my shoulder pushing the buttocks of other men and my arm reached up between their legs. Even after a lifetime in the Christian Brothers, I wasn’t prepared for that.[/b]

My ears were always red and sore and my shoulders ached. Sometimes, to take my mind off all that, the opposing hooker would kindly give me a kick in the face.

That’s how rugby people run the game and it’s how they run the world.

I thrived only in lineouts, those strange masonic rituals wherein everybody uniformly mistimes their jump for some reason I couldn’t initially understand. Clarification wasn’t long in coming.

After two clean catches, the person opposing you in the lineout would just reach across and pull your hair. Beats gravity every time.

Hair-pulling wasn’t a very manly thing to do, but neither was weeping: “Ref! Ref! He’s pulling my hair.” I learned to mistime my jump like everyone else.

For a while, I tried to bring several different coloured pairs of shorts to games in the hope that having the same coloured shorts as the opposition might save my testicles from being squeezed and twisted as we lay in panting heaps somewhere on top of the ball.

The biting and hair-pulling I could take. Ball-handling was a no-no – even from teams we played regularly. (Note: In the GAA testicles don’t actually exist – except as a metaphor for guts. If a sliotar should whicker a tout vitesse into your testicular area, causing the 29 other players on the field to wince and you to double over squealing like a stuck pig, somebody will run on to the field, pour some water down your neck, slap your buttock and say: “C’mon son you’ll be grand in a minute.” This at a time when you need a general anaesthetic.)

Anyway it all finished between Suttonians and me one weekend when we played in a triangular tournament alongside the giants of the southside, Lansdowne and Blackrock.

Now most of the team I played with were actually quite good at rugby and had won the Harry Gale Cup (no less) the previous year. This didn’t save us from being treated like bumpkins on our venture across the river.

It started with our kits, which were the same colours as Eason’s bags, and it went on all afternoon, no matter who we played.

As luck would have it, on this Saturday morning we endured the sniggering of the Lansdowne chaps and then beat them on the back pitch – in Lansdowne. This rightly fouled up the tournament.

The plan had been that we would lose to Lansdowne in the morning and then obligingly lose to Blackrock in the afternoon, ensuring a Lansdowne versus Blackrock play-off in Stradbrook the next day. Now, we yoiks would be going to Stradbrook.

The story has a sad end. We met at noon the next day under the clock at Clerys.

Maybe two of us weren’t hungover. The others were pukey or giggly or both.

The thought of perhaps beating Blackrock hadn’t even kept them in for Saturday night.

Why would it? They didn’t hate Blackrock the way normal people do. They admired them. So we got pushed around Stradbrook for the afternoon and were beaten by a margin in the region of 60 points.

In the secondrow it felt as if we were going to have our scrawny necks snapped like royal pheasants.

For this, I had given up on a Junior B football match with St Vincents? I was deeply ashamed. I never went back. Never told anybody except my spiritual advisor. He quit instantly.

I gave rugby one more chance. Arriving in UCD and not knowing a soul, I put my name down when some jut-jawed, scarf-wearing, acne-free, pinty-type, lady-killing bastard announced that there was to be a class rugby league “to break the old ice, loike”.

I too would be an icebreaker! I filled out one of the little forms he gave out. I waited. The teams sheets went up on the lecture theatre wall. I skipped across like a happy little puppy. No T J Humphries listed. My eyes welled up. My heart welled down.

I sought out the jut-jawed, scarf-wearing, acne-free, gout-ridden, Dublin 4, bestiality-is-best-boys, pinty-type, lady-killing bastard and explained my position. Shome mishtake, shurley, I said.

His brow furrowed. “What’s your name?” he asked. “Tom Humphries,” I replied frankly. “Where’d you go to school?” he asked. “Fairview,” I said. “Where’s that?” he asked. (I should point out that his geographical ignorance was no worse than mine. I got off the bus at RT on my first day in UCD.) “Where the park is,” I said helpfully. The park was in the news regularly then for gay-bashing incidents. “Well that’s it,” he said breezily.

“The teams have all the ’Rock guys together, the ‘Nure guys with the Belvo’ boys, ‘Zaga in with Clongowes, Mero with ’Knock and and so on. Roight? So sorry, but you lose out Humpho.”

“Oh,” I said. I’d scarcely understood a word, but realised I had come within an ace of being saddled with a dumb rugger nickname all my life.

I went forth and never sinned against my class or my people again.

There were other sad days in rugby’s spiteful jihad against me.

I lied about rugby to get into sports journalism, pretended I loved it, but soon got found out. I misidentified Brendan Foley as Moss Keane at a charity game of old farts and didn’t work again for three months.

I described King’s Hospital, who haven’t once won a small in-bred provincial competition like the Leinster Senior Cup, as the “whipping boys” of the event and the switchboards were jammed for a week by people who wanted to twist my testicles and pull my hair.

I was invited to a pre-match dinner for a fixture I was covering involving Lansdowne, but when I turned up and they realised I wasn’t quite what they’d been expecting, I was banished to a broom cupboard and given a hot beef roll.

I know these stories may be very upsetting for some sensitive readers, and perhaps there should have been an appropriate warning at the top of the piece, but I can only hope that any distress caused will serve as a warning to others.

There has been enough hurt already. Stay away from rugby. It is a plague, sent to us – like the potato famine – to undermine the fabric of our society.

The depression-era justification for allowing rugby to prosper (ie, it’s the only way most of these oafs will ever get jobs) is no longer sustainable.

The sport should be banned and driven underground.

you have issues Bandage

Soooooperb article

It is a little OTT but gas in fairness. When was it written? It must have caused a right stir amongst Irish Times readers.

Says the scarve wearer…

Think it’s from around 2001 Phil. But it’s a bit like Home Alone 2…a timeless classic.

Saw this in the IT yesterday.

I am a big Humphreys fan, but this describes a rugby scene that I have never ever come across. Now I am a muldoon but if this is the kind of shite that goes on in Dublin its no wonder Leinster havent made the breakthorugh they deserve.

Rocko, can you shed any light on this scene?

For the record
I have never been kicked in the face
I have never been bitten
I have never had my ‘bag snatched’

My mate was texting me excitedly about this article yesterday evening, but I was out of the gaff so didn’t get a chance to look it up. Super super stuff from fatty.

Is that not an old article? Recall reading that a good while ago. Certainly not the first mention of his playing for Suttonians ever.

Pretty funny throughout and even for people who like rugby there are plenty of things in there that can’t be denied and need to be addressed. I, for one, was lost to the game partly due to elitism. I was the greatest rugby international Ireland never had.

the article was from 2001, was your mate not a bit late in texting you yesterday?

calm down- dont take it personally

it was in the Irish times yesterday

It was “one from the archives”, I think it must have been in yesterday’s paper or something.

it was in yesterdays alright, probably originally written in 2001

HBV is still stewing though 8 years later

Ross?

Fantastic stuff Bandage. Humphries at his best, you have to love it.

[quote=“dancarter”]Saw this in the IT yesterday.

I am a big Humphreys fan, but this describes a rugby scene that I have never ever come across. Now I am a muldoon but if this is the kind of shite that goes on in Dublin its no wonder Leinster havent made the breakthorugh they deserve.

Rocko, can you shed any light on this scene?

For the record
I have never been kicked in the face
I have never been bitten
I have never had my ‘bag snatched’[/quote]

have experienced both South Dublin and Cork …there’s fcuk all difference…whether it be the gick,marys or pres and christains…I can really relate to what Humphries is saying…

Limerick is similar too. The same goes for rugby throughout the 6 Nations and probably further. My housemate played for London Irish as a kid up until he was about 20 but he never really enjoyed it because he couldn’t establish himself within the inner circle of the private school boys so he packed it in.

Don’t get me wrong, I really like rugby as a game but it conforms to the social stereotype in a lot of ways.

For the record also
I have never been kicked in the face
I have never been bitten
I have never had my ‘bag snatched’

Fair enough lads, I must be moving in the wrong circles completely.

Saying that I never played schools rugby and played mainly for a country club.

Have trained with several Dublin clubs and didnt think they were in any way elitist, they hated me coz I was from Cork but thats the same on here sure :smiley:

Played 6 years of underage rugby in limerick from the age of 10 to 16 and never encountered any of this craic, maybe it is worse once you get to adult level, the only major grievence I had at with it was that the schools got preferenece of the players and we often went a few months without a game depending on how the schools were going…

[quote=“dancarter”]Fair enough lads, I must be moving in the wrong circles completely.

Saying that I never played schools rugby and played mainly for a country club.

Have trained with several Dublin clubs and didnt think they were in any way elitist, they hated me coz I was from Cork but thats the same on here sure :D[/quote]

i dont hate you cause your from Cork - thats just one ingredient as to why I hate you so much