Steve_C7 wrote:
camelboy wrote:
As a caller he was passable, it was as host of White Line Fever and other similar shows that his hatred for Carlton was clear. The were plenty of times I almost put a fist through the telly as his anti-Carlton bias shone through.
I'm sorry that his life ended so tragically and way too early, but when it comes to Carlton and the shit he put on us he can go and get flower.
I think that the pain of what Carlton was going through at the time and the embarrasment of how the club was performing both in admin and on the ground had many of us on the defensive to anybody who was pointing it out or reporting on it. Grybas as a media commentator was just calling it as he saw it and I felt that every one that was giving me the sh1ts and making fun of our great club had a deep seated hatred/jealosy of our club. With the benefit of hindsite, I see that I was over reacting to the comments made, and in reallity our club deserved what we were recieveing from the media and from other supporters. Guys like Grybas made all of us faithful Carlton supporters aware of just how badly our admin was performing and that immediate change was desperatly needed to get the club back to where it belongs, I thank him for that, not hate him.
That's quite amusing really, especially the part where we need to thank Grybas for making us realise what a joke our club was. The worrying thing is, I think you actually believe what you wrote.
But, you're right. Patrick Smith and his ilk are just doing their jobs, none of those guys ever hold a grudge, how silly of me. A Collingwood supporter could never hate Carlton, that would never happen.
I'm not sure which Clinton Grybas you guys were watching, but the one I saw seemed to be getting a bit too much pleasure from pointing out how shit we were. I'm not going to forget that simply because he died in tragic circumstances. He probably was a great guy, too, just that, far as I can tell, he rather enjoyed kicking us while we were down.
I quite liked him back in his ABC radio days when, perhaps, he was unable to express his apparent feelings with the freedom commercial outlets accept.