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Ben Cousins and an inconvenient truth

By Michael Gard - posted Friday, 3 September 2010


Recently I’ve been reading the life story of Vince Lombardi, the legendary American football coach credited with coining the phrase “winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing”. Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers won four NFL titles in the 1960s, including the first two Super Bowls, and produced a string of future Hall of Fame stars.

Lombardi was more than a football coach. During the Packers’ glory years and up until his early death, his name was so synonymous with success that both the Republicans and the Democrats considered wooing him to run for vice-President.

Known for his totally uncompromising thirst for success and demand for unflinching discipline, players both loved and hated him. Some readers will also know that Jack Gibson drew heavily on Lombardi’s methods and proceeded to revolutionise rugby league in the 1970s.

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But reading about the rituals and behaviour in Lombardi’s dressing rooms, you notice a funny thing: most of the players smoked. Lombardi smoked three packets a day. They smoked before the game, at half time and, win, lose or draw, after the game.

One of the heaviest smokers of the lot was Paul “the Horn” Hornung, Lombardi’s star halfback and celebrated drinker, playboy and all-round party animal. Despite - or perhaps partly because of - all this he was known as the “Golden Boy” and not even a year’s suspension from football for gambling on games dented the adoration of fans or stopped his Hall of Fame election.

Sports history is full of Paul Hornungs. In fact, the idea that you have to behave like a Cistercian monk in order to be a professional athlete is a pretty recent invention, probably first appearing in the 1980s.

But the idea that you must live clean in order to play well is not only new, it is also a lie.

Whatever else Ben Cousins’ trials and tribulations tell us, they show that sport and drug taking can mix. Don’t they? This is not to say that a person should take drugs or that drug taking is something we want to encourage, but it does show, quote spectacularly I think, that taking illegal drugs does not necessarily stop a person from being an elite athlete.

After all, Ben Cousins was the best in his sport, just like Andrew Johns, at the same time as being, well, a drug addict. And, as I say, Cousins and Johns are not, by any stretch, exceptions.

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Why is this important? So much of our drug education, particularly but not only in schools, is based on lies. We tell children that taking drugs will kill you, that it’s not much fun, that you’ll lose all your friends.

And we use elite athletes to tell children that drugs and sport don’t mix.

The trouble with this is that the world is full of people who seem to prove all of this wrong. Research in Australia consistently shows that the down-and-out junkie represents only a small minority of the country’s drug takers. Heroin and cannabis users, as well as the seriously alcoholic, often conduct lives that look, at least from the outside, just like yours and mine. They go to work. They go home. They look normal.

Drug taking is a problem. But it is vital that we are clear about what kind of problem it is. And telling aspiring athletes, and even young people who look up to athletes, that sports and drugs don’t mix does not work because it is a lie and young people know it is a lie.

There will be those who say that the demands of the modern athlete are greater than the past and so the example of Paul Hornung and others doesn’t count.

Actually, I think it’s the other way round. Hornung, like most pre-1980 footballers, worked a second job in the off season and, unlike the Ben Cousinses of the world, didn’t have dozens of support staff telling him what to eat, when to go to bed and generally organising his life for him.

Perhaps Ben Cousins was able to combine his off-field and on-field lives because of the “professionalism” of the modern athlete, not despite it.

Drug taking is a problem in modern sports because it tarnishes the image that sponsors want to project. Why don’t we just say this and leave it at that?

It seems that many of the people hoping for a clear anti-drugs message from the Cousins documentary were disappointed.

But there is a simple reason for their disappointment; Ben Cousins is still a footballing hero. He was cheered in his final match. He will no doubt end up running around with water bottles on the field or smashing the glass in the coach’s box one day. No, actually he’ll probably end up as a commentator.

Those who want to trumpet some simple and high-minded “just say no” message through football and footballers must understand this. Football players are human, not gods and certainly not role-models.

I doubt that Ben Cousins’ experience caused any young person to start taking drugs and doubt very much whether telling his story has discouraged any. Drug-taking is a much more complicated social problem. The idea that children copy the behaviour of footballers was always silly, invented by footballers with a rather over-developed sense of their own importance.

Football is a world full of simple problems and uncomplicated ideas. It doesn’t teach us how to live because living is more complicated than football. In fact, if the Cousins saga teaches us anything, it should be a clear reminder that professional football is, today more than ever, a place to hide from the real world, not a training ground for it.

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About the Author

Michael Gard is a senior lecturer in dance, physical and health education at Charles Sturt University's Bathurst campus. He is the author of two books, The Obesity Epidemic: Science, Morality and Ideology (with Jan Wright) and Men Who Dance: Aesthetics, Athletics and the Art of Masculinity.

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