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Good Anasta article - Roosters 2010 Drinking Culture and more

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  • Good Anasta article - Roosters 2010 Drinking Culture and more

    A very interesting interview with the former Roosters captain. He offers some very telling insights into our 2010 squad amongst other things. Enjoy.

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    Braith Anasta talks Roosters booze culture, cash-strapped Wests Tigers and Souths snubbings

    • June 9, 2017 4:00am
    • by Patrick Stack
    • Source: FOX SPORTS




    BRAITH Anasta lets out a long sigh and buries his head in his hands.

    So begins a series of short stories on the Roosters at their loosest. The Wests Tigers at their most toothless — crippled by a stunningly amateur operation in the modern game.
    And the bitter Bunnies, brushed once by Anasta in his prime. Then returning the favour years later.
    These are the tales of one of Sydney rugby league’s most polarising, recognisable and enduring figures of the past decade.
    THE ONE-MAN BOOZE BUST


    Back to Braith, the 288-gamer across three clubs, with the weight of a past world on his shoulders.
    We’re talking about the 2010 Roosters side. A team laden with on field talent, off field they could be … wayward.
    Live stream every match of the NRL Premiership on FOX SPORTS. Get your free 2-week FOXTEL PLAY trial and start watching in minutes. SIGN UP NOW!


    Braith Anasta was more than just a player at the Roosters.Source: News Limited He and coach Brian Smith had their work cut out trying to control the playing list.
    “Brian Smith and I, everyday … I’m in there (Roosters headquarters) every day. I was Dr Phil by the end,” Anasta begins on Fox Sports’ podcast, The Stack Report.
    “I’d be driving around to houses and hearing there’s a few blokes on the piss here and there’s a few blokes on the piss there and I’d be out the front scoping like a detective.
    “We’re not talking like the day after a game. We’re talking the Thursday ahead of a Saturday game. They’re my mates too and they’re not even inviting me anymore!
    Braith Anasta also spoke to The Stack Report about the Bulldogs salary cap dramas, the Coffs Harbour scandal and how he dealt with the tag as the NRL’s most overrated player.


    To hear the full interview, click on the player above or subscribe to The Stack Report on iTunes.
    “That situation I had to stake out a house and see who was in there without causing a scene.
    “We were on an alcohol ban at the time! Behind the scenes you witness some amazing things. I think even an assistant coach was there.”
    That story isn’t in reference to Todd Carney, but Anasta is forthcoming when explaining how the tattoo clad playmaker came unstuck again and again.
    “You’ve got to pull yourself back and think of the reality and think: ‘What am I doing? Where am I? Why are they here?’
    “There’s a million questions you have to ask yourself. You’ve got to learn that lesson and most people do, Toddy (Carney) is one of those guys that it just didn’t click with him in the end.”
    As dysfunctional as that might sound it has nothing on Anasta’s experience at the Tigers.
    CHAOS AT CONCORD: BYO GATORADE, STRAPPING TAPE
    Fed up with the coaching style of Brian Smith he quit the Roosters to join Kangaroos boss and Wests Tigers coach Tim Sheens.
    “Then before I get there, there are two major plays that turn my frigging life upside down,” Anasta recalls.
    “Smithy gets sacked at the Roosters, Robbo (Trent Robinson) comes in, who I love. Sheensy gets sacked from the Tigers and Mick Potter gets brought in.
    “I’ve made my decision based on one thing, one thing on both sides of the fence and it all just gets thrown into chaos.
    “I rocked up there the first day and I’m thinking … it’s like the first day of school but even worse. I’ve gone ‘oh my god!’
    “First day I walk in and we go into a room and Chris Heighington stands up with Beau Ryan and they start crying and go: ‘Sorry guys we’re leaving the club’.
    At the Wests Tigers, Anasta struggled with the environment.Source: News Corp Australia “Now I’m just sitting there like the new dickhead that’s just signed on. I’ve walked in and their best mates are leaving. I’m sitting there going ‘this is not a good start’.
    “I didn’t step foot in the joint (before signing) which is another major regret for me, didn’t even step into the facilities to see what they were like.
    “I’m thinking they’ve got the same facilities, I’m thinking ‘it’s a first grade rugby league team, I’m not even questioning that’.
    “It’s not a shocking gym, but it’s not like … I just remember thinking ‘wow, this is so far behind the times’. Little things like availability to Gatorade and water.
    “You’d only have a certain amount of Gatorade. You’re talking about a team that trains three to four hours a day that has limits to their recovery.
    “A few times they didn’t pay the bill for strapping tape. Which is just a necessity. Guys scavenging for tape to try and tape themselves up before a training session.
    “This was in 2013, it was bizarre. It was a dark place I don’t know how anyone could be expected to play their best and that showed for a long period of time.
    “Pottsy (coach Mick Potter) did as much as he could, even he had his hands tied, because as I said, the joint was a debacle.”
    THE BUNNIES: REVENGE SERVED ICE COLD
    An interesting subplot was the fact that Anasta nearly joined South Sydney instead of the Tigers only for the deal to be scuttled at the last moment.
    Anasta believes that may have happened because he declined to join the Bunnies in 2005, instead picking the Roosters. Administrators in rugby league have long memories.
    “This was a heartbreaking decision because my uncle (George Piggins) was the president and he was ringing me, Nick Politis is ringing me, Ricky Stuart is ringing me.
    “My uncle is saying ‘please, come to Souths’. And I’m like ‘George, you know I’ll come but I need other players. I can’t go there by myself.’
    “I’m not going to change South Sydney. I’m not going to win them a premiership. I need a couple of forwards or another half or an outside back.’
    “At the time they were going for Orford and they missed him. Just one other player and I was there.
    “Do I go to my club, Souths, my blood, George (Piggins), but risk my whole career? They were going nowhere.
    Anasta twice almost ended up at the Rabbitohs.Source: News Limited “Everyone goes: ‘He was going to the Roosters for the money.’ I can tell you now, if I went to Souths I would have been set up for my whole life. I actually took a lot less to go to the Roosters. It wasn’t about money, it was about being the best player I could be.
    “I could hardly speak to him. He was upset, I was upset. It was really tough you know. I just said ‘mate, I’m not coming.’ It was shocking. That did test our relationship. Mum is his sister, it was tough, really, really tough.”
    The tables turned at the end of 2012 as he was looking for a new home after leaving the Roosters.
    “I nearly went back there (Souths). No one knows that, I nearly went back a few years later,” Anasta says.
    “My manager had said ‘Souths are coming, they could be interested.’ I said ‘I’m leaning towards Souths.’ Then at the last, last, very last second something happened. I would say someone has thought ‘stuff him, he didn’t come to us (when it was tough)’.”
    “When I didn’t go to Souths, and you can look back at who was in charge. There were some people there that were very, very, very bitter.
    “They’ve probably got a right to be upset. At the time their jobs were on the line, there was a lot of pressure. I didn’t go there, didn’t help because they didn’t have anyone to sign.
    “But then all those years later when there was a possibility of me going there and it was all hush, hush, it was all going to be under the radar, at the last, last, last … my manager rings me and goes ‘You’re not gonna believe this, they (Souths) are not there’.”
    I mention that Shane Richardson was the Bunnies chief executive at the time. Anasta doesn’t answer, he just laughs.

  • #2
    Interesting take on events. Reckons it was his decision to leave the roosters. Dubious....

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    • #3
      Great article. Really enjoyed that read.

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      • #4
        It's all pretty tame stuff compared to what used to happen at the House of Grouse.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Maxy Walker View Post
          Interesting take on events. Reckons it was his decision to leave the roosters. Dubious....
          Yeah that's pretty funny, we signed Maloney in 2011 and the writing was on the wall for Anasta from that point. He signed with the Tigers early in 2012. He wasn't told to leave he just wasn't offered anything to stay.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Maxy Walker View Post
            Interesting take on events. Reckons it was his decision to leave the roosters. Dubious....
            Yeah, seems to be rewriting history there. The Tigers fans don't have fond memories of him either. Whilst I believe there is a fair amount of truth in the article, Anasta always comes off as if everything is about him.
            ...

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            • #7
              As a player Braith makes a superb commentator lol. Actually, I do think he is doing very well on Fox. Good luck to him.

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              • #8
                Braith strikes me as a pretty straight talking sort of bloke. I believe him when he says he wanted to leave. He's not the only one who has been turned off by Brian Smith.

                Great article, thanks for posting.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Johnny Tobin View Post
                  Great article. Really enjoyed that read.

                  Listening to the podcast in the car. Good stuff

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                  • #10
                    Great read and I enjoy his commentary. Has a good head on his shoulders. Although he left coz he wasn't offered a contract.
                    Embrace the Hate! JC

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                    • #11
                      Good read Elvis Rooster & good to see ya back.
                      Let me know when you will be attending a game & I will buy you a hot dog & a beer.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Horry View Post


                        Listening to the podcast in the car. Good stuff
                        I'll subscribe.

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                        • #13
                          It sounds like in 2010 the relationships between Smith, Anasta and everyone else concerned may not have been optimal. Thats some bizzaro shennanigins for a team that made the GF that year.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by zac View Post
                            Braith strikes me as a pretty straight talking sort of bloke. I believe him when he says he wanted to leave. He's not the only one who has been turned off by Brian Smith.

                            Great article, thanks for posting.
                            Yeah for context he was playing in the back row a lot for Smith then moved to the Tigpies as a back rower. He was nothing amazing, but I reckon he coulda stayed on a lower salary if he wanted. Might have bagged a premiership too...

                            Not saying he was an amazing player, but he did get us to a grand final before he left. It wasn't his fault that a heap of players then ran amok, forcing him to look like the tool who is struggling for power and busting up all their fun. I see his perspective... I also see why others would disagree. None the less, I appreciate his no BS/nuance approach, I reckon he's done his best to say it as it is.

                            Who was right/wrong during those days though? I dunno if I care enough, but I think Smith legitimately did the job of going in, telling a bunch of salary cap wasters to get farked, fell out with the group for doing so then bailed in time for Robbo to take over with a bunch of highly motivated, gun players (who helped lift the team).

                            Paints a picture though! Professional footy at many clubs must be just like a schoolyard! People running amok, doing immature shyte, rocking up drunk, doing drugs, being @-holes to coaches...etc. Guessing teams like the Knights are just like that!

                            A few points:
                            - Who was the partyboy assistant coach Braith mentions?
                            - Was it his job to go driving around and investigating? Sounds like the club made him act like some d!ckhead prefect instead of setting a bog standard code of conduct and hiring a couple of welfare/compliance officers to enforce it.
                            - Tape and gatorade... surely people coulda brought their own supplies if this was an ongoing issue? Not saying it's ideal, but IMO as a pro you rock up with the gear you need for the game (including your preferred tape...etc if there's even the slightest possibility that you're gonna run out).
                            Last edited by ism22; 06-09-2017, 10:09 PM.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I defense of Braith, I'd like to say the following:
























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