Geelong fans now want to decide what nickname the club gets. The entitlement is strong.
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Geelong fans now want to decide what nickname the club gets. The entitlement is strong.
Lol you complain about the undertones of homophobia and then call someone gay you don't even know.I was under the impression that trollish nicknames were banned (i.e. Norf, Carltank, Essendope, etc..) on BF besides Bay 13. This rule was introduced years ago so maybe things have changed and mods are more lax and lenient about it now.
IMO handbagger has a sort of derisive sexual minority (gay, bi, etc…) undertones to it, mainly used back in the day to mock a man suspected of being gay/bi for not being a real man because he did not adhere to the stereotype of a straight male by choosing to sport a male handbag or some other attribute considered 'soft' and not manly.
Interestingly enough Don Scott, a former Hawthorn star, used to be a fan of male handbags and I'm reasonably sure he is gay even if he's never officially come out publicly. Don’t really recall a Geelong player ever having those proclivities though.
Surprised no one has kicked up a fuss about its popular use as a term to clearly denigrate someone for being less of a man because they are suspected of not being heterosexual. Similar how the word gay not long ago was used to denote something that was ‘lame’ and that was eventually phased out.
Come again?Lol you complain about the undertones of homophobia and then call someone gay you don't even know.
Probably came from Lou giving a bit of push back from the Colliwobbles that was really strong around the same time.
It is one of many enduring legacies from the late — and great — Lou Richards.
But why the ‘handbaggers’?
Back in the ‘70s, it was seen as good humour to use imagery that saw the football-playing men — hard, bloodied and ferocious — as women, dressed in skirts, sipping tea and colour co-ordinating their handbags with their cardigans.
And yeah, it still works in the modern day, but you run the risk of the new-age warrior penning a column, blog or Facebook rant about your approach.
Louie handed the Cats that title through their ‘pretty boy’ ways. Think a young Sam Newman, the handball-style that would see them now as revolutionaries or not implementing a game plan through fear of being physically hurt by other men.
They ran the ball and it was pretty to watch. Heck, Polly Farmer could put the ball through a car window from some 30m away — why wouldn’t you exploit that?
But back when the style of play was a ‘kick down the line in the hope of a pack mark’ and avoiding a broken jaw, the handball-style was viewed as bruise-free footy.
Wow, now the whole AFL have just copied Geelong. Stop believing your team song and hoarding all the tickets on yourself.Before my time but damn given that all current teams base their game plan on the style Geelong of the 70s pioneered, that means the entire league is full of ‘handbaggers’. lol
Difficult to ascertain tone from written words, but they were meant mostly tongue-in-cheek. Mostly. ;-)Wow, now the whole AFL have just copied Geelong. Stop believing your team song and hoarding all the tickets on yourself.
Why are you so interested if Don Scott was gay?Come again?
I wasn’t calling anyone gay. Just wondering why one homophobic usage has been more or less gradually phased out and deemed offensive. The example I gave was calling someone or something gay as in insult to mean ‘lame’, something that was fairly common in the 90s and 2000s.
Whereas ‘handbagger’, a term that from what I've read originated in the 60s, if not even earlier, to demean a male by alluding to him being a homosexual and therefore not a ‘real’ man, remains at least in the footy vernacular.
The game has evolved over the past 150 years. A lot of players, coaches, teams and administrators have influenced this evolution. Claiming your one link in the chain is more important than others isn’t how evolution or even chains work.Difficult to ascertain tone from written words, but they were meant mostly tongue-in-cheek. Mostly. ;-)
On a serious note hard to deny though that Geelong are the fathers of modern day football and pilloried for it at the time.