Vive Les Chats! Following Australian Football as an Expatriate
Vive Les Chats !
Paris is a truly wonderful city. There may be none more
beautiful or with more character in the world. However, as an
Aussie, one vital ingredient tragically lacking in the host of
entertainment this city has to offer, is real footy coverage,
which does not exist at all.
The "Frogs" don't know what they are missing! I'm not talking
about the world venerated soccer variety or those super-padded,
over-paid, U.S. gridiron heroes and especially not that "throw
yourself at the turf" game they call rugby. I'm talking real
footy here, the great Australian game which is without doubt the
best spectator sport in the world by a mile and a half.
I shouldn't have read Buddha's biography I suppose. It has only
made my thirst for footy and the Cats' brand of the great game
in particular, more intense. Though I was grateful when David
(one of my five brothers living in Geelong, who I keep annoying
for Cats replays) brought it over to me in Paris from "Sleepy
Hollow," along with some videos of recent Cats games. Buddha was
a Cat champ I had admired for years and he himself had signed
the book, which made it special.
While I was intent on watching the videos, our "free-loader"
visitors wanted to get out and see the sights of Paris:the
magnificence of the Eiffel Tower, the Champs Elysees, grandest
of all the worlds' Grand Avenues and Saint Chapel, where
glorious tall stained glass windows surround you. But hey, I had
my priorities sorted out; I just wanted to settle down with a
baguette, a bottle of French red and watch the footy.
I needed to update my memory banks with a "footy fix." I needed
to get to know the players again, catch up on all the
excitement, the skill and raw talent. Follow those super-fit and
dedicated sportsmen, playing "Aussie Rules". But no, Wendy ,
dedicated shopper and very dear sister-in-law that she is and
Denise, my supposedly Aussie (but footy-apathetic) wife wanted
to go shopping in Paris. Women! As someone once said, we sure do
love them, but who among the male species can ever understand
them?
Denise and I had been living in Paris for almost two years, and
while the experience had been fantastic and we were thoroughly
in love with the City of Light, enough is enough mate.
The videos David brought over were a blessing. French cable TV
carries endless, absolutely dead boring, English cooking shows
(ye olde BBC) plus a plethora of even more mind-numbing house
and garden decoration shows, news and...darn little else.
CNN repeats the same old, same old, hour after hour and on live
French TV they speak their exquisite language at a zillion miles
an hour and detest the English language with a passion. The
French would never understand the complexity of our footy
anyway.
My memories of growing up in Geelong with footy as the Welsh
family staple diet were triggered by Bhudda's writings. Like so
many other Southern Australian kids, we played footy every
chance we had. At school, for the local club, in the street and
the back lane, anywhere we could. Our six sisters often made the
backyard team as well - just, and only to make up the numbers,
mind you.
We lapped up all the footy culture we could and it will stay
with us all our lives, no matter where we are. It is something
that resides in my bloodstream along with a fair dose of
Bordeaux when we lived in Paris. Hey, it was France after all !
I was at the "G" (the legendary Melbourne Cricket Ground) with
dad and a hoard of other Welshes in '63 when the mighty Cats
beat Hawthorn. I was 12 years of age and I cried with sheer joy.
I was also at the Cat's home ground in Geelong, Kardinia Park,
on the following Sunday morning to bury the hawk. I cried again.
Great times for a lad with football heroes who had just won the
greatest of sporting trophies, to a lad anyway.
These fond memories came flooding back when I finally watched
those tapes in Paris and read Bhudda's story. I realized yet
again what a great tradition Australia has in the game which
originated from Irish immigrants playing Gealic football on the
goldfields of Ballarat in the 1800's. I also realized just how
much these traditions meant to me and what I had missed out on
over the years we lived overseas.
I wondered how many people in Geelong really appreciated what
they have. A lifestyle most people in the world would envy, in a
country still seen as at least a lucky country, if not THE
luckiest, and with a sporting tradition and sense of fair play
that reverberates around the world.
My career in the oil industry had led us to live overseas and we
wouldn't give back a minute of it, but I still miss my footy!
Singapore was our first exciting posting, but alas, Australian
football didn't stand a chance of making it onto Singapore TV
screens. Mr. Lee Kwan Yu didn't want his people corrupted by
such unhealthy western influences. Jakarta was much more
liberal. In the early 90's we received the "VFL Match of the
Day" live on TV Australia. It was great to lie by the pool with
a Bintang (Indonesian beer) in hand and an eager houseboy ready
to bring another when required as I watched the footy action.
The following year we couldn't pick up any footy on TV in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia. Dr. Mahitir was still peeved with the then
Australian Prime Minister Keating for his ill-considered
"recalcitrant" remarks directed (correctly) at the amazingly
smug and arrogant Malaysian Prime Minister.
We were living in New Orleans, Louisiana, in '95 when the Cats
made the Grand Final against Carlton. We were ecstatic to find a
live telecast on U.S. cable TV. broadcast late on a Friday
night. Denise even made small Aussie meat pies while I hunted
down adequate supplies of Fosters Lager and convinced some
(somewhat reluctant) American friends to view the spectacle with
us. We even dressed our apartment in blue and white and had
special t-shirts printed up for the occasion. Ah, what a party
it was to be.
It didn't take long to see the Cats were in for a thrashing and
our friends wilting from the power of real beer (Vs their
watered down variety). We all ended up drowning our sorrows, I
did in my case anyway, they simply enjoyed the beer. But at
least we saw the game (such as it was) live. The Yanks thought
the game was a free-for-all. All they remembered the next day
was the beer and pies.
Alas, as the French do not want their airwaves or cables fouled
by the dreaded "parley Anglaise" they do not allow the satellite
dishes needed to pick up the signal in Paris. In fact, we
couldn't even pick up audio BBC clearly, even though it is just
across the channel.
No doubt about it, Aussie TV is the best in the world. It must
be, it carries loads of footy. It used to be free to air to
placate fanatical fans, but these days pay TV is devouring more
and more of the spectacle.
Maybe the AFL will one day become the IAFL (the "I" being
International) with teams from perhaps, New Zealand, South
Africa, Ireland and The Pacific in the competition. Then we
might get to see truly international coverage. I'm dreaming
again. Or am I? I really do think the game has great
international potential.
Yes, there is a lot to be said for the excitement of living in
various parts of this wonderful world, but there are also great
advantages in staying where your roots are, growing up with
lifelong friends and enjoying the great lifestyle a city like
Geelong and "Gods' Country" Australia, offer.
If you intend to travel you should not miss Paris. It is a truly
wonderful city, with great architecture, character, colour,
love, life, audacity, vibrancy and charm, as well as the French,
who make Paris what it is.
As for my footy, I'll just have to try to be in Melbourne, at
the "G" on that special day in September. I will shout
encouragement until I'm hoarse again and hopefully watch the
mighty Cats bring home the flag. Then I will reluctantly board
yet another plane to return to expatriate life. A part of my
soul will stay behind in Geelong, as it always does.
The French have a much-revered saying, always stated with
heartfelt sincerity and patriotism, "Vive la France."
This may still be the year of the cat ("chat" in French) so I
say, with even greater reverence and lots more hope. ... Vive
les Chats!
Ron A. Welsh
RAW Power Writing http://www.rawpowerwriting.com/