No Oppo Supporters OPPOSITION OBSERVATION XXXVIII

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Just heard the Pies BnF is actually being televised... * me drunk, this is way overboard now... they are the only team to win a premiership and milk it dry
Don’t Blame the -use on this , the blame rests on the Australian media/tv stations/AFL , do you reckon we would have said no if we were asked
 

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Click bait is non apologetic

Clayton Oliver may be on the move is the headline

In the article it says..

It is unclear if the brilliant midfielder would be open to any move and there has been no indication Melbourne would be willing to part with him.

Wonder how AFL players feel when reading made up shit like that.
 
Click bait is non apologetic

Clayton Oliver may be on the move is the headline

In the article it says..

It is unclear if the brilliant midfielder would be open to any move and there has been no indication Melbourne would be willing to part with him.

Wonder how AFL players feel when reading made up s**t like that.
but... but... but...

"Opposition Interest" is out there... FMD
 
I remember our last premiership like it was yesterday, thanks. It's actually, you're only as good as your last game. You waited how many years to post this and then you went and stuffed it up? :grinv1: No wonder the pies played in so many and won so few.

When they’ve won 3 in 4 years then he can get back to us. Until then he can bugger off.
 
Click bait is non apologetic

Clayton Oliver may be on the move is the headline

In the article it says..

It is unclear if the brilliant midfielder would be open to any move and there has been no indication Melbourne would be willing to part with him.

Wonder how AFL players feel when reading made up s**t like that.
Opposition interesting in bringing a good player to their team.
Shocking.
 
Yes the Cats beat us soundly for 10/11 years. They gave us many hidings in the 80’s and 90’s too. I thought they were a skilful kick/mark sort of team. Always seemed to have a team-mate nearby to pass to and a very solid defence. Last year they changed to a faster game style which paid dividends for them.

I don’t think we’ve ever played like Geelong. I think we adopted the Bulldogs game style with the manic pressure and non-stop running. Now just about everyone plays that way.
I remember we tried going to the kick mark game at some point in the 90s then again under Terry Wallace. Only issue was we couldn’t kick or mark
 
I remember we tried going to the kick mark game at some point in the 90s then again under Terry Wallace. Only issue was we couldn’t kick or mark
That the basketball game vs Adelaide. Bottom ish vs top. We won that lol
 

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That the basketball game vs Adelaide. Bottom ish vs top. We won that lol
Was great listening to Bowden on the podcast talk about that game and the plan they went in with, cause Adelaide at the time liked to fold back we decided to play kick to kick in our backline until they came back up the ground, crows too dumb to realise until the last qtr he said.
 
Was great listening to Bowden on the podcast talk about that game and the plan they went in with, cause Adelaide at the time liked to fold back we decided to play kick to kick in our backline until they came back up the ground, crows too dumb to realise until the last qtr he said.
funnily enough footy in the stand rule era is a worse spectacle than that game
 
Doesn’t it go back to when Joh Bjelke-Peterson was the premier up there? He reckoned the sun shone out of his own arse and he wasn’t getting up an hour earlier for anyone.
The late premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen insisted the “extra” hour’s daylight faded curtains while in an appeal to dairy farmers claimed their cows needed to be milked an hour earlier for the milk to be collected on time.



Daylight saving referendum​

After trialling daylight saving in Queensland for a total of three years, a referendum was held on 22 February 1992, with the question: "Are you in favour of daylight saving?"[1] It was defeated with a 54.5% 'no' vote.[3] The referendum result displayed the same distinct trend that the task force had recognised—that public opinion on daylight saving in Queensland is geographically divided, with the 'no' vote strongest in the north and west regional districts, while the 'yes' vote was strongest in the state's metropolitan south-east.

 
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