The beer bottle (10 Viewers)

  • Thread starter Deleted member 2477
  • Start date

Covstu

Well-Known Member
Hardly. It's just more cap-doffing to the upper-classes. Funny that eye-gouging, attacking people and drinking puss is considered to be the behaviour of gentlemen when it suits.

not to mention the ear biting, stamping on heads etc. Total gentleman....
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
not to mention the ear biting, stamping on heads etc. Total gentleman....

They do respect the referee though. Footballers could learn alot from Rugby players on that score and likewise the FL and the FA could learn alot from Rugby on how the game could be refed (ref'd?).
 

letsallsingtogether

Well-Known Member
not to mention the ear biting, stamping on heads etc. Total gentleman....

Funny that after all those years as a prop never had anyone bite me or stamp on me.
Then again never used to roll around like I had been shot when some one got close to me......;)
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
You forgot the jaw breaking and...bloodgate!

not to mention the ear biting, stamping on heads etc. Total gentleman....
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
You forgot the jaw breaking and...bloodgate!

As apposed to rolling around on the floor clutching your face like you've just been punched by Mike Tyson when the reality is someone came within a few inches of you and you're play acting in the hope of gaining a penalty for nothing.
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
Yes, as opposed to that. One is feigning injury, one is real injury.

As apposed to rolling around on the floor clutching your face like you've just been punched by Mike Tyson when the reality is someone came within a few inches of you and you're play acting in the hope of gaining a penalty for nothing.
 

oscillatewildly

Well-Known Member
Puss vendors at the Puss tent. They're everywhere at Rugby games, apparently.

For the record I've been on plenty of Rugby tours and never once drank puss or witnessed anyone else doing it. Piss neither. It's a myth.
Sorry Tony, I'm going to have to shatter your belief of this particular myth. I've witnessed it - rugby player downing a pint of someone else's piss. Army rugby player admittedly. He did it faster than I could down a pint of water, let alone ale.
Then there were those marathon weekend NAAFI bar sessions in Germany in the 1980's. I'll never forget the time someone suggested we play 'freckles'. But that's another story.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Sorry Tony, I'm going to have to shatter your belief of this particular myth. I've witnessed it - rugby player downing a pint of someone else's piss. Army rugby player admittedly. He did it faster than I could down a pint of water, let alone ale.
Then there were those marathon weekend NAAFI bar sessions in Germany in the 1980's. I'll never forget the time someone suggested we play 'freckles'. But that's another story.

A heady combination of solider and a Rugby player. That explains it. As for the freckles game a couple of my cousin's that I grew up with were squaddies. I think I know that story already, yuk.
 

italiahorse

Well-Known Member
Have you been to a rugby game though? Atmosphere is absolutely pants (bar maybe england games at twickers) no banter between the fans, terrible chants, all in all a pishy experience in comparison to an away football game

The banter tends to be with the guy in the seat next to you rather than the mob a few hundred yards away.
 
The banter tends to be with the guy in the seat next to you rather than the mob a few hundred yards away.

Problem is if your not next to them there is very little banter at all. Having been to twickenham for eng v aus very little banter tho does generate an atmosphere - you would 90k people would- strange experience in all
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top