A lot of commentary inside the footy media bubble these days along the lines of how the game is not the same anymore, it used to be better and the heyday has passed.
It's worth watching some old games to not just look at the game style and the big names but also to note the commentary methods of the main players from back in previous eras. Sandy Roberts, Drew Morphett, Ian Robertson, Bruce McAvaney, Dennis Commetti etc.
Note how they called free kicks. They generally called them after they were paid. They called them for what was paid and they moved on. They didn't play armchair umpire like most of their flashier contemporaries. They didn't inflict their poor interpretation of the rules on the audience like most of their contemporaries. AND the broadcast was so much better for it.
The special comments folk discussed the play, they discussed where one team was exploiting and advantage. They did not sit there and dedicate 15 mins of gametime every Friday night to lamenting the deliberate out of bounds rule like a special comments guru like Richardson does. They gave the audience insight. They did not dwell on a 50/50 call and have a round table vote on whether it was deserved or not.
I find modern calling is essentially ripping us off as an audience by constantly going to these cheap hypothetical type discussions when there is a game of footy begging to be called like old.
It's worth watching some old games to not just look at the game style and the big names but also to note the commentary methods of the main players from back in previous eras. Sandy Roberts, Drew Morphett, Ian Robertson, Bruce McAvaney, Dennis Commetti etc.
Note how they called free kicks. They generally called them after they were paid. They called them for what was paid and they moved on. They didn't play armchair umpire like most of their flashier contemporaries. They didn't inflict their poor interpretation of the rules on the audience like most of their contemporaries. AND the broadcast was so much better for it.
The special comments folk discussed the play, they discussed where one team was exploiting and advantage. They did not sit there and dedicate 15 mins of gametime every Friday night to lamenting the deliberate out of bounds rule like a special comments guru like Richardson does. They gave the audience insight. They did not dwell on a 50/50 call and have a round table vote on whether it was deserved or not.
I find modern calling is essentially ripping us off as an audience by constantly going to these cheap hypothetical type discussions when there is a game of footy begging to be called like old.



