Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
No that is not going to happen I am sorry.
Catfish Jazny
This post didn't age well Bottom 5, in your face, bottom 17er
I consulted a magic 8 ball already, as I do about all life’s big decisions.
It said “Outlook unfavourable”, and it wasn’t talking about the famous Microsoft cloud-based apps.
What in the piss and sh*t have I walked into......
Who thought giving the Infinity Stones to a Horse was a good idea?Well if it isn't Mr Toilet Selfie...
Whats this sh*t.
How’s the Tassie thread going?I cant sleep because I was bottom 5 in this thread. It has deeply upset me
Who thought giving the Infinity Stones to a Horse was a good idea?
A PROMISE made to her year 11 English teacher will see Suzanne Olsen bring up 800 games of umpiring football. Olsen will officiate her 800th and 801st game this weekend in a journey where she has seen some of Ballarat's, and in fact some of Victoria's, greatest ever footballers grace the field in front of her.
But it was a comment made from her teacher Graeme Young at Mount Clear Secondary College that she will always remember.
"I was quite close to my year 11 English teacher and he was dying of a brain tumour and I asked him 'what would you like me to do?' and he said 'to keep on umpiring'," she said.
And that's exactly what Olsen, now 43, has done. Starting her career as mostly a boundary umpire, and occasionally in the field, where she umpired 75 games, she has moved to the goals and has now officiated more than 700 in the middle of the big sticks, come sun, rain or the occasional hail.
"People think there are two teams out there, but there are really three," she said. "Our umpiring panel all works together as a team and you've got to fit together as a team."
Olsen was one of the very few female umpires when she started and she admits since the COVID outbreak, it has been difficult to maintain numbers, but not just because of the pandemic but also because of the words you hear over the boundary.
"You don't want to see a girl getting abused by someone on the sidelines who thinks it's all right to give you grief," she said. "I remember one game where the girl was umpiring with her dad and sister, after that both she and her sister gave it away."
Olsen said despite the occasional issue, she had loved her years as an umpire around Ballarat and the region. Seeing a 14-year-old Joel Selwood dominating an interleague match was a highlight, she recalls seeing Jordan Roughead kicking goals, twins Mitch and Nathan Brown and even recalls a match where Bachar Houli played in Ararat, saying he was the "nicest bloke ever".
"It's been great, I've had a lot of fun," she said. "I've seen so many spectacular marks, seen today's AFL players kick lots of goals when they were playing in Ballarat. I've seen people go through the ranks, get recruited. "Callum Leonard (who goal umpired his first ever AFL game this season), his first game was alongside me, he was so nervous and to see him and others go through the ranks gives me so much joy." Olsen said there might be another 200 games in her as she chases 1000 games.
I wish everyone could be nicer to each other around here. I think it is good that Sooz has umpired 800 games its a very good achievement and without umpires at all levels we would not have the AFL. It takes a lot of dedication for her to get ready and go to all the games and it is sucj a thankless thing to do! Thank you for your part in making the sport we all love better Sooz
I have had the pleasure of seeing Sooz goal umpire in a few Central Highland FL games.That's no way to talk about Ballarat's highest profile umpire and autism activist...
I have had the pleasure of seeing Sooz goal umpire in a few Central Highland FL games.