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I was listening to Robbos press conference today and realized I don’t actually know what the “Roosters Way/Style “ of rugby is?
Has this ever been defined publicly?
I was listening to Robbos press conference today and realized I don’t actually know what the “Roosters Way/Style “ of rugby is?
Has this ever been defined publicly?
Used to be running through the front door Robbo once said, take the tough carriers, run direct through the middle, and ice your opportunities.
The Roosters Way is that the foundation of success is based on hard work.
It's representative of the local Eastern Suburbs area which at the turn of the century was very working class and hard work turned it into the area it is today.
It's respecting the history of the club, the area and the people that made it happen.
A few years ago Robbo did a members event at the SCG where he explained it in detail....with a powerpoint presentation. It was very interesting and and thoroughly worthwhile attending. You could see that he is the Roosters' Chairman in waiting.
The Roosters Way is that the foundation of success is based on hard work.
It's representative of the local Eastern Suburbs area which at the turn of the century was very working class and hard work turned it into the area it is today.
It's respecting the history of the club, the area and the people that made it happen.
A few years ago Robbo did a members event at the SCG where he explained it in detail....with a powerpoint presentation. It was very interesting and and thoroughly worthwhile attending. You could see that he is the Roosters' Chairman in waiting.
The Roosters Way is that the foundation of success is based on hard work.
It's representative of the local Eastern Suburbs area which at the turn of the century was very working class and hard work turned it into the area it is today.
It's respecting the history of the club, the area and the people that made it happen.
A few years ago Robbo did a members event at the SCG where he explained it in detail....with a powerpoint presentation. It was very interesting and and thoroughly worthwhile attending. You could see that he is the Roosters' Chairman in waiting.
[QUOTE=Tennessee Tornado;
It's representative of the local Eastern Suburbs area which at the turn of the century was very working class and hard work turned it into the area it is today.
It's respecting the history of the club, the area and the people that made it happen.
With respect Tennessee the eastern suburbs was never a thoroughgoing working class area. Vaucluse, Woollahra, Rose Bay, Dover Heights were all patrician from earliest times. Randwick, Paddington, Darlinghurst and Potts Point had also been bourgeois but the building of a suburban rail network by 1895 had seen a flight from close living by the upper class to the new, healthier garden suburbs and that vacuum was filled by working class renters. Of course Woolloomooloo and East Sydney had always been low rent. Double Bay, too, had a split personality. Messenger lived down there and one of the first games of League was played in Double Bay Park but it and neighbour Darling Point harboured wealth for the most part. There was a considerably sized working class renter enclave everywhere (Clovelly was called Poverty Point in the Depression years) but there were plenty of home owners in handsome 19 Century dwellings the further you went from the inner city.
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