Australian News Today

Sports talk

Sports talk

I admire the way top sports people speak calm commonsense. Pop star turned Olympic aspirant Cody Simpson remained clear-eyed and grateful after he fell short in the recent men’s 100m butterfly trials: “I gave it everything I had. I’ve been able to satisfy the fire that was burning inside me to compete.”

As Ian Thorpe remarked on drawing an outside pool lane in an earlier Olympics: “It’s OK, there’s water in every lane.”

And Olympic long-jumper Jai Taurima, musing on his unexpected silver medal: “I’m just a normal Aussie guy who likes a smoke and a drink. If they’d held the final between 2 and 4am, I would’ve won.”

But I enjoy it even more when they talk AFL footyspeak. For this I turn to some historic examples. And not only because of his obvious self-regard and sculpted hair a special place is reserved here for Dermott Brereton.

Some prime Dermie examples: “That kick was absolutely unique, except for the one before it which was identical”; “Strangely, in slow motion replay, the ball seemed to hang in the air for even longer”; “Well, either side could win it, or it could be a draw”; “I wouldn’t say Chris Judd is the best centreman in the AFL, but there are none better.”

Some other favourite football-isms: “Nobody in football should be called a genius. A genius is a guy like Norman Einstein.” (Mick Malthouse)