The Great Laurie Nash

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  • swantastic
    Veterans List
    • Jan 2006
    • 7275

    The Great Laurie Nash

    Herd the other day that when he died the sydney swans players wanted to wear a black arm band.But the club wouldnt let them,if thats the case the sydney swans administration suck big time.What happens when Bob Skilton dies the same treatment?
    Now this is a thread that i would expect on the ego -centric, wank session that is redandwhiteonline.com...

  • satchmopugdog
    Bandicoots ears
    • Apr 2004
    • 3691

    #2
    He died in 1986...that's really holding a grudge.
    "The Dog days are over, The Dog days are gone" Florence and the Machine

    Comment

    • swantastic
      Veterans List
      • Jan 2006
      • 7275

      #3
      Originally posted by satchmopugdog
      He died in 1986...that's really holding a grudge.
      I couldnt remember when but it still stinks just the same.
      Now this is a thread that i would expect on the ego -centric, wank session that is redandwhiteonline.com...

      Comment

      • reigning premier
        Suspended by the MRP
        • Sep 2006
        • 4335

        #4
        For those that have no idea who Laurie Nash is....

        I sure as hell didn't....

        Try this..... Laurie Nash

        Comment

        • rastus
          On the Rookie List
          • Nov 2005
          • 58

          #5
          Originally posted by Woodsy
          I agree, though apparently he was a world-class bell-end.....

          Even Jim Main in one of his many Swans books came close to bagging him.
          There never was a player with so much well deserved self confidence. He was an out an out champion and was well liked by all those that played with him. Contrary to what you might think from reading Jim Main's short comment from Pratt that he only ever received one pass from Nash...which was a mistake, Pratt and Nash were friends. For years they would sit next to each other in the old Sth Melbourne Grandstand watching the footy and would drink together in the bar below. Crowds would gather around Nash to hear him speak. He was a real raconteur.

          Comments by Nash about his ability were said in a light hearted way although if pressed I think he would say repeat them seriously.

          Nash was a freak of an athlete and excelled at everything he tried. Unfortunately for footy the money in the game at that time was so poor he had to coach to make a well deserved quid.

          Comment

          • robbieando
            The King
            • Jan 2003
            • 2750

            #6
            Re: The Great Laurie Nash

            Originally posted by swantastic
            Herd the other day that when he died the sydney swans players wanted to wear a black arm band.But the club wouldnt let them,if thats the case the sydney swans administration suck big time.
            That was back in the day of the first private ownership period and the "then" owners were doing their level best to a) cut all links from South Melbourne and b) Make themselves look more "Sydney" in the process. Hence when an ex South great died, in this case Nash, they refused to allow the players to wear black armbands in that persons honor because as far as the owners were concerned, Nash and any South great of old didn't have any sort of link to the club at that time.

            Nothing to do with Nash, @@@@ing of the club or any other ex-players. But just a case of the club trying to kill off the links to South Melbourne as best they could.

            What happens when Bob Skilton dies the same treatment?
            I would think black armbands would be the very least he'll get for the first game after his death and if his death happens in season then I wouldn't rule out the AFL permitting us the right to hold a minutes silence considering he is in the Hall of Fame as a Legend of the Game.
            Once was, now elsewhere

            Comment

            • Nico
              Veterans List
              • Jan 2003
              • 11337

              #7
              Re: Re: The Great Laurie Nash

              Originally posted by robbieando
              That was back in the day of the first private ownership period and the "then" owners were doing their level best to a) cut all links from South Melbourne and b) Make themselves look more "Sydney" in the process. Hence when an ex South great died, in this case Nash, they refused to allow the players to wear black armbands in that persons honor because as far as the owners were concerned, Nash and any South great of old didn't have any sort of link to the club at that time.

              Nothing to do with Nash, @@@@ing of the club or any other ex-players. But just a case of the club trying to kill off the links to South Melbourne as best they could.



              I would think black armbands would be the very least he'll get for the first game after his death and if his death happens in season then I wouldn't rule out the AFL permitting us the right to hold a minutes silence considering he is in the Hall of Fame as a Legend of the Game.
              And people still dont get it as to why we were so bitter about the move to Sydney.
              http://www.nostalgiamusic.co.uk/secu...res/srh806.jpg

              Comment

              • Nico
                Veterans List
                • Jan 2003
                • 11337

                #8
                On Laurie Nash. My now dear departed father said he was the best footballer he has ever seen, and he saw the lot, Skilton, Reynolds etc.

                He said the big, tough Jack Dyer never went near him. Absolutely petrified of him.

                Dad said he was the complete footballer. He couldn't recall him being beaten by an opponent.

                When asked who was the best footballer he had ever seen, Nash replied, " I look at him in the mirror every day".
                http://www.nostalgiamusic.co.uk/secu...res/srh806.jpg

                Comment

                • Cher
                  Born into the team
                  • Feb 2003
                  • 1474

                  #9
                  I didn't think there were any rules about wearing black armbands these days. some players like to wear them whenever anyone close to them dies. I don't agree with this wearing of them for a whole season etc.

                  But I do think they should be worn when someone notable to do with the club dies.
                  CHER - Who has two types of blood cells "RED ones and WHITE ones"

                  Comment

                  • swantastic
                    Veterans List
                    • Jan 2006
                    • 7275

                    #10
                    Re: Re: Re: The Great Laurie Nash

                    Originally posted by Nico
                    And people still dont get it as to why we were so bitter about the move to Sydney.
                    Its only the people from sydney who dont get it,it us old SMFC people who still remember.I'v had young people say to me"why do you follow the swans are you from sydney"and i say to them no they originaly come from melbourne,South Melbourne.They dont believe me.
                    Now this is a thread that i would expect on the ego -centric, wank session that is redandwhiteonline.com...

                    Comment

                    • SWANSBEST
                      On the Rookie List
                      • Jan 2003
                      • 868

                      #11
                      Some years ago I saw some old footage of Laurie Nash playing in the red and white. It ran only for a few minutes but Laurie was very ferocious as he was intent in cleaning up the opposition. My dad attended the 1933 Grand Final and was a very passionate Bloods supporter once told me the Captain Blood Jack Dyer was also very concerned about Basher Williams. Basher was a pug and Jack's concerns were very well placed.
                      WMP

                      Comment

                      • Plugger46
                        Senior Player
                        • Apr 2003
                        • 3674

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Nico
                        On Laurie Nash. My now dear departed father said he was the best footballer he has ever seen, and he saw the lot, Skilton, Reynolds etc.
                        Being your nephew, I can certainly verify that - his opinion never changed.
                        Bloods

                        "Lockett is the best of all time" - Robert Harvey, Darrel Baldock, Nathan Burke, Kevin Bartlett, Bob Skilton

                        Comment

                        • Benevolent Ert
                          Back
                          • Jan 2003
                          • 490

                          #13
                          I am re-typing this story straight out of a book, because it demands to be re-told.

                          It's from the book Just for Kicks II as told by Brian "The Whale" Roberts

                          Enjoy

                          You meet some unbelievable characters in football and none was bigger than the great Laurie Nash. We were mates for years and spent a lot of time together, not only in the pub, but most Tuesdays, too, when we'd go fishing on Western Port Bay.

                          Each Monday night, I'd organise the booze and the sandwiches and nominate a pick up time. Laurie was one of those blokes who just had to be organised. If you said you were going to pick him up at 5.15 a.m. and were five minutes late, you were the biggest bastard of all time. He'd pay out on you all the way from South Melbourne to Hastings. "I told you to be on time you so-and-so," he'd be saying.

                          Laurie knew every nook and cranny of Western Port from all the times he'd been out with another football legend, Jack Dyer. He used to like to get into the naval channel - which was strictly off limits - and get the naval cutter to come out and investigate us.

                          "Ahoy there," the navy bloke would say through his loud hailer. "Don't you know you're fishing on naval water?"

                          Laurie loved that one. He'd "Ahoy" them back, introduce himself as "L.J. Nash the Greatest" and tell them if they didn't p?ss off fast he'd report the lot of them to their commanding officer, who just happened to be a mate of his!

                          Laurie was a scream on these trips.

                          As a younger man, there was nothing he couldn't do. He was the best cricketer and footballer of all time (you only had to ask him). He also claimed to be the best fisherman, tomato chutney maker, cook and cleaner.

                          I was fishing one morning with Laurie, Jack Dyer, Don 'Chipper' Turner and a bank manager mate of mine, Darryl Gavin, and to our growing frustration, nothing much was happening.

                          Laurie was down in the galley making multiple rounds of his world-famous pickle onion sandwiches. "Can't you pr?cks catch any bloody fish?" he yelled. Jack replied that Laurie shouldn't talk like that, especially in front of Darryl, whom he'd just met.

                          Laurie came up on deck, cursing and swearing, because his bad hip made it difficult for him to get around. "I'll show you so-and-so's how it's done," he said as he grabbed his rod and cast it.

                          No one had caught anything for an hour, yet within a minute the great L.J. had a bite and a nice sized whiting.

                          "By Christ is there nothing I can't do?" he said as he unhooked the fish.

                          Comment

                          • reigning premier
                            Suspended by the MRP
                            • Sep 2006
                            • 4335

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Benevolent Ert
                            I am re-typing this story straight out of a book, because it demands to be re-told.

                            It's from the book Just for Kicks II as told by Brian "The Whale" Roberts

                            Enjoy
                            "By Christ is there nothing I can't do?" he said as he unhooked the fish.
                            Gold... dead set @@@@ing gold....

                            Comment

                            • swantastic
                              Veterans List
                              • Jan 2006
                              • 7275

                              #15
                              "By Christ is there nothing I can't do?" he said as he unhooked the fish.
                              The Original FIGJAM. But he could say that because he was bloody good.Not like pugdog from colinwood.
                              Now this is a thread that i would expect on the ego -centric, wank session that is redandwhiteonline.com...

                              Comment

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