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Carl Hayman

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Carl Hayman
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #17

    @kirwan said in Carl Hayman:

    @mn5 need to speed the game up and have less subs to get the size off players then.

    agreed, more tired players are also going to do less damage to each other

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  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    replied to Billy Tell on last edited by
    #18

    @billy-tell said in Carl Hayman:

    @antipodean said in Carl Hayman:

    “When I first started playing pro rugby I remember having a Players’ Association meeting and the conversation was all about having a global window and a shorter season. We’re still having the same conversations about rugby now. There’s a number of changes we can and have to make to help protect the players of the future.

    “I look at the NFL again and they have a 17-game season across four-to-five months with the possibility of a couple of playoff games. You compare that to rugby with a 10-month season.

    “There needs to be a discussion about what constitutes an acceptable volume of rugby.”

    It's sad but this may be the catalyst for the club calendar to be severely curtailed and a maximum number of tests permitted each year.

    He was so in favour of a global window and a shorter season that he went to play in France. A country where club rugby is famous for its short seasons, not flogging players and a carefully managed rest period.

    That's a strange rebuttal of the endorsement of a shorter playing calendar. Can you point to Hayman knowing the effects of playing as much as he did back then, or the realisation that it would be him who may pay the price? It may be the benefit of hindsight for affected players, but we're talking about what World Rugby knew and didn't do, and what can be done in the future.

    Billy TellB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #19

    @kirwan said in Carl Hayman:

    @mn5 need to speed the game up and have less subs to get the size off players then.

    Definitely. The point has been made often enough that world Rugby's law interpretations have had a deleterious effect on the play of the game. Policies designed to improve player safety have predictably had the opposite effect.

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  • SmudgeS Do not disturb
    SmudgeS Do not disturb
    Smudge
    replied to KiwiMurph on last edited by Smudge
    #20

    @kiwimurph said in Carl Hayman:

    Dylan Cleaver  /  Nov 2, 2021  /  Sports

    Carl Hayman doesn’t want to forget

    Carl Hayman doesn’t want to forget

    The former All Black great has been diagnosed with early-onset dementia at 41.

    Pleased you shared the original. Quality piece of journalism from Dylan Cleaver. No issues with NZ Herald and others writing "matchers" but nice to recognise the journo whose work on this issue no doubt contributed to Hayman sharing his story with him.

    EDIT: and I hasten to add, this isn't a dig at JC! It was good he got the convo going with the Herald story.

    KirwanK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    replied to Smudge on last edited by
    #21

    @smudge He's been writing some good stuff, been enjoying his site.

    SmudgeS 1 Reply Last reply
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  • boobooB Do not disturb
    boobooB Do not disturb
    booboo
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    Haven't read the Cleaver piece yet, but the cynic in me suggests that this is a bit of PR for the law suit. Or is that obvious?

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  • SmudgeS Do not disturb
    SmudgeS Do not disturb
    Smudge
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #23

    @kirwan said in Carl Hayman:

    @smudge He's been writing some good stuff, been enjoying his site.

    Yeah I became a paid subscriber straight away when he announced it. Ballsy move stepping away from the big sports outlet of NZ Herald to go it alone in a relatively new journalism sector in NZ, but his writing has always been a cut above.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
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  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to Chris B. on last edited by
    #24

    @chris-b Concussion caused dementia issues go back to the 60's (Mac Herewini, Waka Nathan) and surely before that.

    the increase in size must have made an enormous difference though. You can see collisions are happening at greater speed with more mass involved. When I played 2nd 5 at school I was 1.88 and 85 kgs and was considered big...

    As a slight mitigator much more is known about the dangers of head injuries these days and players welfare is far more important. I remember guys being knocked out cold and / or walking round in circles clearly in lala land and continuing on to finish the game. FFS injury substitutes weren't even allowed until the late 60's

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Chris B.C Online
    Chris B.C Online
    Chris B.
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #25

    @dogmeat Given my perception that you're a similar vintage to Bill Osborne, you would have been "huge". Bigger than the AB second-five. You would have been playing prop at my school! 🙂

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    Yeah - I can remember getting my nose broken and feeling pretty groggy. One of my teammates inquired whether I was alright - and I didn't even have the St. John's guys run on to have a look.

    dogmeatD 1 Reply Last reply
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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to Smudge on last edited by
    #26

    @smudge said in Carl Hayman:

    @kirwan said in Carl Hayman:

    @smudge He's been writing some good stuff, been enjoying his site.

    Yeah I became a paid subscriber straight away when he announced it. Ballsy move stepping away from the big sports outlet of NZ Herald to go it alone in a relatively new journalism sector in NZ, but his writing has always been a cut above.

    Same here. Satisfied so far - he's producing good stuff, I think it's value.

    NZH were the big sports outlet - now they don't even send people along to NPC games. Modern media is just Twitter/Reddit clickbait, frankly.

    I've also subscribed to Jarrod Kimber - I'll pay for people whose writing I think is good

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  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to Chris B. on last edited by
    #27

    @chris-b Osbourne is a bit older than me but he was incumbent AB at the time.

    My second position was back up lock so a strange mixture.

    We had two decent locks though and I was nowhere good enough for the loosies so I was a slowish, limited 2nd five who could only pass in one direction but could run through a lot of back lines if they could get the ball to me ahead of the opposition flankers.

    TBF we weren't very good but that wasn't just due to my inadequacies. We were also allowed injury subs. Our record was 5 in one game playing one of the big South Auckland schools where I was a midget my comparison to their backline who were all Lomu precursors. We got fucking hammered - physically and on the scoreboard. Beers tasted even better than normal post game 🙂

    MN5M Chris B.C 2 Replies Last reply
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  • Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid Schnitzel
    wrote on last edited by
    #28

    I've said it a number of times before and will say it again: Rugby is a ridiculous and brutal game that would never be allowed if invented now. I love it but it's dangerous and serious injuries are inevitable. I have always found the length of the season and amount of rugby to be ridiculous. There were some noises about it at the advent of professionalism but they were soon ignored in the pursuit of TV content and dollars. Guys like Hayman and Thomson may just be the tip of the iceberg.

    I really don't see how they can mitigate the harmful consequences without shortening the seasons but I can't see that happening. In terms of changing up the game or rules, I'm not sure what they can do. The suggestion of fewer replacements is good, but teams will probably then take the piss with injury subs.

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  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #29

    @dogmeat said in Carl Hayman:

    @chris-b Osbourne is a bit older than me but he was incumbent AB at the time.

    My second position was back up lock so a strange mixture.

    We had two decent locks though and I was nowhere good enough for the loosies so I was a slowish, limited 2nd five who could only pass in one direction but could run through a lot of back lines if they could get the ball to me ahead of the opposition flankers.

    TBF we weren't very good but that wasn't just due to my inadequacies. We were also allowed injury subs. Our record was 5 in one game playing one of the big South Auckland schools where I was a midget my comparison to their backline who were all Lomu precursors. We got fucking hammered - physically and on the scoreboard. Beers tasted even better than normal post game 🙂

    Great to have you on the fern Alama Ieremia.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
    11
  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #30

    @mn5 said in Carl Hayman:

    @dogmeat said in Carl Hayman:

    @chris-b Osbourne is a bit older than me but he was incumbent AB at the time.

    My second position was back up lock so a strange mixture.

    We had two decent locks though and I was nowhere good enough for the loosies so I was a slowish, limited 2nd five who could only pass in one direction but could run through a lot of back lines if they could get the ball to me ahead of the opposition flankers.

    TBF we weren't very good but that wasn't just due to my inadequacies. We were also allowed injury subs. Our record was 5 in one game playing one of the big South Auckland schools where I was a midget my comparison to their backline who were all Lomu precursors. We got fucking hammered - physically and on the scoreboard. Beers tasted even better than normal post game 🙂

    Great to have you on the fern Alama Ieremia.

    his short pass was a thing of beauty

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #31

    @nzzp said in Carl Hayman:

    @mn5 said in Carl Hayman:

    @dogmeat said in Carl Hayman:

    @chris-b Osbourne is a bit older than me but he was incumbent AB at the time.

    My second position was back up lock so a strange mixture.

    We had two decent locks though and I was nowhere good enough for the loosies so I was a slowish, limited 2nd five who could only pass in one direction but could run through a lot of back lines if they could get the ball to me ahead of the opposition flankers.

    TBF we weren't very good but that wasn't just due to my inadequacies. We were also allowed injury subs. Our record was 5 in one game playing one of the big South Auckland schools where I was a midget my comparison to their backline who were all Lomu precursors. We got fucking hammered - physically and on the scoreboard. Beers tasted even better than normal post game 🙂

    Great to have you on the fern Alama Ieremia.

    his short pass was a thing of beauty

    Only one way though.

    A pretty tongue in cheek comment. I loved Alama but the ABs didn’t use him as well as they could have.

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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    I am surprised we havent had more about guys from the 60s-80s with these kinds of issues, it was a different game back then, you just played on.

    Things started to make a change for the bette rin the 90s, but with the money involved, there was a trade off

    Number 10N DonsteppaD 2 Replies Last reply
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  • Number 10N Offline
    Number 10N Offline
    Number 10
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #33

    @taniwharugby

    In March 2016 Dylan Cleaver did a series of articles in the NZ Herald called The Longest Goodbye on five members of the 1964 Taranaki team who had dementia.

    Rugby, Sport

    Dylan Cleaver: This is not an anti-rugby story

    Dylan Cleaver: This is not an anti-rugby story

    Latest breaking news articles, photos, video, blogs, reviews, analysis, opinion and reader comment from New Zealand and around the World - NZ Herald

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  • DonsteppaD Offline
    DonsteppaD Offline
    Donsteppa
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by Donsteppa
    #34

    @taniwharugby said in Carl Hayman:

    I am surprised we havent had more about guys from the 60s-80s with these kinds of issues, it was a different game back then, you just played on.

    Yep, I wonder to what extent it's the tip of an iceberg. I'm reminded of the story of Greg Rowlands: Rugby and dementia: Frustrating lapses warned loved ones all was not well from 2016. He passed away earlier this year.

    The first time it happened, Brent Rowlands was a little confused and more than a little peeved. The second and third times, though still only in his early teens, he recognised there might be something wrong.

    There he'd be, dirty and sweating after rugby practice, waiting for his dad to pick him up. There was dad, Bay of Plenty rugby legend Greg Rowlands, pulling up the driveway of their Te Puna home, alone.

    "Mum would be like, 'Where's the kids?'" Brent, now 36, says. "I've got two sons ... and you don't forget to pick your kids up unless something's wrong. There was multiple instances of that."

    How old was dad at the time?

    "He would have been 50 at the most."

    Edit: it is also a Dylan Cleaver article.

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  • Billy TellB Offline
    Billy TellB Offline
    Billy Tell
    replied to antipodean on last edited by Billy Tell
    #35

    @antipodean said in Carl Hayman:

    @billy-tell said in Carl Hayman:

    @antipodean said in Carl Hayman:

    “When I first started playing pro rugby I remember having a Players’ Association meeting and the conversation was all about having a global window and a shorter season. We’re still having the same conversations about rugby now. There’s a number of changes we can and have to make to help protect the players of the future.

    “I look at the NFL again and they have a 17-game season across four-to-five months with the possibility of a couple of playoff games. You compare that to rugby with a 10-month season.

    “There needs to be a discussion about what constitutes an acceptable volume of rugby.”

    It's sad but this may be the catalyst for the club calendar to be severely curtailed and a maximum number of tests permitted each year.

    He was so in favour of a global window and a shorter season that he went to play in France. A country where club rugby is famous for its short seasons, not flogging players and a carefully managed rest period.

    That's a strange rebuttal of the endorsement of a shorter playing calendar. Can you point to Hayman knowing the effects of playing as much as he did back then, or the realisation that it would be him who may pay the price? It may be the benefit of hindsight for affected players, but we're talking about what World Rugby knew and didn't do, and what can be done in the future.

    It wasn’t any sort of rebuttal at all. But on that point I doubt it will be proved that world rugby knew all about concussion and yet did nothing about it.

    As for hayman, to all appearances money was a big driver in his career decisions. As a reminder he quit NZ rugby before the peak of his career to take up an offer with glamour club Newcastle falcons. Before joining the foreign legion at Toulon.

    On a lighter note, one of the girls at my hall of residence hooked up with hayman after a night out in Dunedin in 98. He was just coming onto the scene then, so she got teased for scoring the fat prop.

    Still remains the best TH prop I’ve seen from NZ, would have easily reached 100 caps.

    MN5M antipodeanA nzzpN 3 Replies Last reply
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  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to Billy Tell on last edited by MN5
    #36

    @billy-tell said in Carl Hayman:

    @antipodean said in Carl Hayman:

    @billy-tell said in Carl Hayman:

    @antipodean said in Carl Hayman:

    “When I first started playing pro rugby I remember having a Players’ Association meeting and the conversation was all about having a global window and a shorter season. We’re still having the same conversations about rugby now. There’s a number of changes we can and have to make to help protect the players of the future.

    “I look at the NFL again and they have a 17-game season across four-to-five months with the possibility of a couple of playoff games. You compare that to rugby with a 10-month season.

    “There needs to be a discussion about what constitutes an acceptable volume of rugby.”

    It's sad but this may be the catalyst for the club calendar to be severely curtailed and a maximum number of tests permitted each year.

    He was so in favour of a global window and a shorter season that he went to play in France. A country where club rugby is famous for its short seasons, not flogging players and a carefully managed rest period.

    That's a strange rebuttal of the endorsement of a shorter playing calendar. Can you point to Hayman knowing the effects of playing as much as he did back then, or the realisation that it would be him who may pay the price? It may be the benefit of hindsight for affected players, but we're talking about what World Rugby knew and didn't do, and what can be done in the future.

    It wasn’t any sort of rebuttal at all. But on that point I doubt it will be proved that world rugby knew all about concussion and yet did nothing about it.

    As for hayman, to all appearances money was a big driver in his career decisions. As a reminder he quit NZ rugby before the peak of his career to take up an offer with glamour club Newcastle falcons. Before joining the foreign legion at Toulon.

    On a lighter note, one of the girls at my hall of residence hooked up with hayman after a night out in Dunedin in 98. He was just coming onto the scene then, so she got teased for scoring the fat prop.

    Still remains the best TH prop I’ve seen from NZ, would have easily reached 100 caps.

    Based on what ? I’m not being smart, I genuinely don’t know why he’d rank above guys like Olo Brown or Owen Franks given Red Beard and Bart don’t come here anymore.

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