Jul 212008
 

Again John returns in the off season alternative to the Hookers diary with the Brilliant piece which he was kind enough to send on to me in it’s entirety.

The PC brigade

I’VE finally been banished from the Leader offices, but not for any of the reasons that may first spring to mind, such as having to obey a restraining order taken out by a female member of staff.

No, I have been victimised by a much more sinister force than a lady who doesn’t know a good thing when she sees it, and that is the PC brigade.

You see, my adoring followers, I’m a soft sort and this softness was never so apparent as at my weekly Tag Rugby game last week, when my girly little ankle decided that it had had enough of supporting my impressive frame and promptly cracked.

Being a mildly moronic sort, I decided I had only suffered a slight sprain and proceeded to dance the night away on my faulty leg.

It first occurred to me that my self-diagnosis may have been a little off the mark next morning when I noticed that my ankle was now larger than my head.

After a predictably horrendous wait in A&E, I emerged with a big fat Wellington boot of a cast, which makes showering a nightmare and does absolutely nothing for my figure.

However, like the trooper that I am, I hobbled back into the office on Monday only to find company policy dictates that broken employees such as myself need a doctor’s cert to go back to work.

Now, for those who have just joined us, I am a journalist. I don’t operate any heavy machinery and I certainly don’t run anywhere. In fact I avoid all unnecessary movements as a matter of principle. So I can’t for the life of me figure out why a pair of crutches prevents me from sitting at my desk writing stuff (and nonsense).

As it stands, I am currently like a modern day James Stewart in Rear Window, trapped in my apartment with nobody but my two pet goldfish for company, rapidly losing my marbles from lack of human company.

I was a few hours into a conversation with the fish today regarding rugby’s new experimental laws – one was in favour of them, the other against – when I realised I may have crossed over on to the wrong side of that thin line they say exists between genius and insanity.

There will be zinc

BROKEN bones and not being allowed to work may become distant memories before long if a little excavation out Ballyneety direction goes my way.

Some strange characters turned up on our farm not so long ago saying they thought we may have zinc underneath our land. My father told them that he was almost certain he had cows on top of his land and as long as the zinc didn’t make them sick, he wasn’t too pushed about it.

But then the miners asked if we minded them having a little mine to see if indeed there was zinc underneath the Hogan turf.

If the ground did produce zinc, they said they would be willing to part with a few pennies in return for permission to extract the metal.

Now I understand this may sound a little like a scene from There Will Be Blood where the shady oil man comes out to the country and convinces the slack-jawed yokels to allow him drain their land for all its worth.

However my family’s jaws are well and truly taut and I for one will be demanding nothing less than top dollar for my share of the zinc should it turn up.

Already I have started dreaming about how I will spend the money, with a Lamborghini, an ignorantly large yacht and my own tropical island figuring pretty highly on the list of things to buy.

However, my number one spend would be on the construction of a stadium with a greater capacity than Lansdowne Road, Croke Park and Thomond Park put together, but situated in Bruff Rugby Club.

That’d really shock all the Dublin bigwigs when they come down to Kilballyowen. Who knows? It may even get me on to the starting team.

Feckin’ Galwegians
LOVERS of immaculately-crafted journalism and fart jokes alike will know that in a previous incarnation I penned a column entitled “The Hooker’s Diary”, a slightly off-centre weekly chronicle of events in Bruff RFC.
Although it had quite modest beginnings, I nourished “The Diary” with regular installments of double-entendrism, personal attacks and the occasional plea for a woman.
Before long I had literally tens of regular readers – some of them from outside my immediate family – and I grew to love the little corner of the paper reserved for my weekly trash talk.
Like all good things however, The Hooker’s Diary had to come to an end as the rugby season drew to a close. I accepted that an article advertising the daily goings-on in the life of a hooker may have been somewhat misleading outside of the regular rugby season and brought the diary to a finish.

But imagine my disgust, nay horror, to find this week that a rag in Galway has copied the style, format and even name of my beloved Hooker’s Diary for their own end of providing a “humorous” look at each week’s tag rugby fixtures.

This really isn’t on, there are probably legions of simpletons up West who think they are reading the original Hooker’s Diary.

I know they say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery but I would respond to that by saying, come up with your own ideas for a column you good-for-nothing, unoriginal Galwegians!

John Hogan – Hookers Diary, The Cardiff Trip.

 Adult Rugby, Blog, Heineken Cup, Munster, Underage, Website  Comments Off on John Hogan – Hookers Diary, The Cardiff Trip.
Jun 032008
 

As it appeared in the Limerick Leader Last week, here is the latest instalment from our intrepid explorer cum hooker and sometimes reporter. He seems to have a penchant for travelling in strange fashion with a crew that could be classed as “Rough around the edges”……

The Cardiff Trip

TWENTY-two hours after Limerick welcomed home its Munster heroes, JOHN HOGAN and a crew of his fellow supporters returned from Cardiff following a four-day Odyssey spent living out of a car on the Heineken Cup trail.

With little in the way of money or foresight between us, my friends and I waited until a fortnight before this year’s Heineken Cup Final to book a trip to Cardiff.
Our intellectual and financial shortcomings meant that the best travel option left available to us at that late stage was a ferry crossing from Dublin to Holyhead early on Friday morning and returning in the wee hours of Monday morning.
The aforementioned shortcomings meant that we would also cross the Irish Sea without any accommodation arrangements for when we arrived on the other side.
Perhaps a little naively, we presumed that a kind-hearted soul would take pity on us upon hearing of our predicament and offer a place where we could lay our heads. It’d didn’t quite turn out as planned.

Friday
4:20AM: “Wake up. Johnny, wake up, we’re five minutes away and we’re not missing the boat because of you.”
Not the nicest way for anyone to be woken at such an ungodly hour, but the abruptness of my friend’s phone call was justified as, true to form, I had slept in and none of our travelling party knew the way to Dublin Port for our 8.30am sailing.

7.40AM: After a nervy period spent wandering through the capital, cursing the AA Roadwatch Route Planner and anxiously searching the sky for seagulls, we locate Dublin Port.
We have time for a round of breakfast rolls before joining the line of vehicles waiting to board, about a third of which are camper vans draped in Munster bunting and flags.
Nobody says so, but it’s obvious the five of us are wondering why we are sitting in a Toyota Corolla with a four-man tent in the boot, when we could have rented one of the far more spacious and comfortable campers purring beside us.

10AM: “Just make sure we don’t go by the Valleys to Cardiff when we get out of the boat, that’s what I was told. The motorway is a bit longer but it’s a much better road,” said our driver Mikey as we emerged from the ferry in Holyhead.
Ten minutes later we are driving through the depths of the Valleys, wondering where we’d gone wrong and how we had managed to give the slip to the hundreds of other supporters’ cars that had disembarked from the ferry with us.

4PM: After over five hours of wandering through mountains of flint and miles of mostly-abandoned mines, civilisation emerges on the horizon. We exhale a collective sigh of relief, assured for the first time since we left Holyhead that this trip would not involve working with the locals as a coal miner in exchange for petrol and directions to Cardiff.
Just opposite Cardiff University, we find a parking spot conveniently located next to a public park, where we plan to later set up our tent after returning from the night’s festivities.

Saturday
4AM: It turns out waiting until we returned from the night out to put up the tent wasn’t the brightest idea we ever had. The lashing rain does little to spur on our enthusiasm to set up camp in the adjacent park so we resign to piling into the car for the night, vowing to set up the tent before taking off for the match the next day.
After an hour of being sardined into the back seat, either the exhaustion of having not slept in 24 hours or the fumes emanating from my co-passengers lead me to drift off.

12.30PM: “The tent. O mother of God, we forgot to put up the tent again!”
This revelation comes over the first pre-match pint in Dempseys near the Millennium Stadium and we all know it means tonight will almost certainly be again spent in Chateau de Corolla.

5PM: Nobody is surprised that the majority of bums on seats in the stadium belong to members of the Red Army but the sheer volume of Munster fans that have come through the turnstiles leaves even the most windy of us breathless.
The drum-bearing fans from Toulouse do their best to rile their comparatively miniscule travelling support but each time they are drowned out by repeated choruses of The Fields of Athenry and Stand Up and Fight. We join the rest of Bruff on the front row of the top tier and set about roaring ourselves silly.

5.42PM: “‘Ey man, ‘urry up or I will ‘ave to pees in your pocket!”
The rucks and mauls of the first half may have been among the most intense of the rugby season so far but they are nothing compared to the scrum for wall space in the stadium toilets at half time.
The urinating Munster fan whips his head around to see if the threat from the French man was serious but is relieved to see he won’t be squelching back into his seat for the second half.

6.40PM: Flaunting the 40-foot drop at the other side of the railing, we grab one another and jump for joy when Nigel Owens gives three final toots to his whistle.
The stadium is turned pitch black as the lights are turned off for the presentation and the stand beneath our feet shakes with the roar when Paul O’Connell and Ronan O’Gara lift the trophy.
Impromptu scrums and lineouts, many involving the good-humoured local police, start almost immediately outside the ground as the Red Army re-floods the streets for the best party Cardiff will see in 2008.

Sunday
5AM: After several hours spent tasting the delights of Cardiff, and several truly disastrous attempts to charm the French ladies, we return to the Corolla, which has by now become aptly known as The Cradle of Filth. Winning a Heineken Cup proves to be a powerful sedative however, as sleep comes much easier tonight.

2PM: About ten minutes into our haul back to Holyhead, Mikey says that he can no longer keep his eyes open and someone else will have to take the wheel. I am selected as the replacement based on my inability to come with an excuse as quickly as the other passengers in the split second after Mikey announces his retirement.

4PM: I pull into the car park of a restaurant and tell my team of sleeping beauties that we’ll have dinner. I feel my own eyelids dropping as I try to shake them back to life.
An hour later I wake up and tell my bleary-eyed passengers that it’s now or never if we still want to avail of the early bird menu.

8PM: With several hours left to spare until our ferry departs, we decide to put down a few hours in Bangor.
We meet several other weary Munster supporters in the Black Bull Inn and I end my reign at the wheel of the Corolla by ordering my first and most certainly last ever pint of bitter.
After a few pints of my more regular tipples, we say goodbye to Bangor and join the convoy of flag-adorned cars heading for the port.

Monday
3AM: The Ulysses looks like the site of a carbon monoxide leak with the number of drained bodies strewn around the vessel. Exhausted supporters, who look like they’d sell their first-born for a bed, take up every couch and chair and available inch of floor space.

7AM: I wake up to the sound of cranes offloading cargo at Dublin Port and with the taste of last night’s revolting bitter still on my tongue. For the last time we wade through the piles of rubbish, which are now taking up more space in the Corolla than the actual passengers, and settle in for the last leg of our epic trip.

10AM: We are forced to stop the car as not one of us can guarantee that we will be able to stay awake long enough to drive. I can only wonder what the passing residents of Borris-in-Ossory must have made of our five unconscious bodies or the revolting smell coming from the car.

12.00PM: The drive home from Dublin turns out to be the longest single trip we make all weekend as we are again forced to stop in Roscrea to rest the eyelids. At this point, I would eat my own toes for a bed.

1.30PM: Limerick at last. No homecoming parties for the Heineken Cup stragglers just the remnants of yesterday’s celebrations on O’Connell Street for the Munster heroes.
Such is my exhaustion that the water from my first shower in four days almost knocks me over. I climb into bed and don’t even have the energy to pull the quilt over my shoulder.
I sleep like a cured insomniac, too tired to even dream, but safe in the knowledge that the memories of the weekend will contribute to many a happy night’s sleep for years to come.

Miss Limerick in His apartment, and Dublin 4 Slagging: This weeks Hookers Diary

 1st XV, 2008 Final, Adult Rugby, AIL 2007-08, Blog, Social, Underage  Comments Off on Miss Limerick in His apartment, and Dublin 4 Slagging: This weeks Hookers Diary
Apr 232008
 

Bring the Miss Limerick back to his apartment for tea, and Abusing a Ross-O- Carroll-Kelly-alike, nope we’re not gone mad, it’s just probably the last instalment of the season of :

A Hooker’s Diary . . . with John Hogan – Limerick Today

No more Scandalous Stories, Just a fattened pig – John Hogan, Hookers Diary

 1st XV, Adult Rugby, AIL 2007-08, Blog, Social, Underage, Website  Comments Off on No more Scandalous Stories, Just a fattened pig – John Hogan, Hookers Diary
Apr 112008
 

Johnny kindly sent me this brilliant article from last week’s Limerick Leader.

No more Scandalous Stories of Alcohol – over-indulgence- Just a fattened pig – John Hogan, Hookers Diary

UNFORTUNATELY for you the reader, my naming and shaming tactics in the Hooker’s Diary are going to have to come to an end, as they have not gone down well with the sensitive souls that I, perhaps inaccurately, call my teammates.
I have unknowingly committed several acts of bridge-burning by writing about the antics of my fellow Bruffians and after several threats, it has become apparent that the next time I write about some of the more colourful goings-on within the camp, I may find myself being served up as part of the post-match stew.
Therefore, with my own preservation in mind, I have decided upon a change in direction for the Hooker’s Diary. No more headline-grabbing, scandalous stories of alcohol over-indulgence, chicken curries for breakfast, bed-wetting, wind-breaking or mud-wrestling barmaids. Basically no more fun. Just rugby.

Tuesday
Some of us arrived to training today still laughing from the night before after the appearance of Eoin Cahill, our player/coach – and therefore not subject to the same newfound immunity of the other players – on Against the Head. To the average viewer, Eoin’s post-match interview, in which he discussed our peak levels of conditioning, would have looked fairly innocuous.
But to those of us who knew that just off camera he was holding a can of Budweiser, the interview held somewhat more of a comic element.
Back to the old bump and grind of rucking and mauling in Kilballyowen this evening. Some of the lads, who of course I can’t name but they know who they are, were still showing the stiffness from a whole weekend of bumping and grinding after our promotion the previous Saturday.

Thursday
On behalf of the entire Bruff playing and coaching staff, thank you to Aidan Corr, my esteemed colleague who, without my even asking, gave us the perfect motivation by predicting in the sports pages today that Banbridge would be the first team this year to turn us over.
While this was obviously a poorly-veiled ploy by Aidan to ensure we wouldn’t go complacent before our final game, it was nonetheless appreciated.

EDIT: BLOGGER, He has predicted a ten point win this week 🙂

Friday
While making the first leg of our journey north this evening, some not so discerning film fans insisted that we watch the truly vomitous sports film, Coach Carter, starring Samuel L Jackson. As the film went on, comparisons were inevitably drawn between Jackson and our own bald, bellowing, ball-breaker physio Derry, who seemed to have no problem with the likeness being pointed out.
We arrived to the hotel in Dundalk earlier than usual on Friday evening and a few of us decided to play a game of cards before the Late Late started. One of those playing was Dessie, our fearless bagman who hasn’t allowed breaking two bones in his hand stop him from carrying our water bottles to every corner of the country.
“Do you know what the latest thing in America is now?” Dessie asked us while the cards were being dealt.
“What’s that Dessie?” we innocently replied in unison.
“Well you know the way you’d see those women with the silicone breasts? Well I heard the other day that now they can give a man a silicone tool, I wouldn’t have any interest in getting one though,” he pointed out.
I can see why Dessie would have no need for the silicone tool he was talking about. You see he works as a stonemason and the good old fashioned mallet and chisel is still your only man for putting up a wall.

Saturday
The first sight that greeted us when we arrived at Banbridge was two gargantuan, sizzling pigs on spit roasts dripping in their own fat, just inside the door. For a few seconds we forgot about the game and just stared in awe at the hooved feast pirouetting in front of us just asking to be eaten.
There are many examples in sport, war, business and politics of sultry women being used to distract opposing sides into complacency but this may have been the first time that food was used as the stupefying force.
The hypnotic effect of the spinning hogs, however, was broken by Eugene, our coach, who told us to mop up the puddle of drool on the clubhouse floor and get into the changing rooms before one of us started interfering with the enticing pigs.
Despite being in fourth place this morning, Banbridge were still in with a distant shot of getting promoted but it would require a bonus point victory against us. However, despite the temptation of the sizzling pigs -which, come to think of it, sounds like a tale from the old testament-, we were determined to maintain our unbeaten run and finish the league with a flourish.
And flourish we did, managing to claim our seventh clean sheet of the year and put paid to any of the Banbridge’s hopes of promotion.
After the game, I discovered that I had left my Bruff shirt and tie in the hotel in Dundalk. So while everyone else on the panel walked out in their best shirts and ties, I emerged from the dressing room looking quite fetching in the same Sunderland jersey that I had slept in the night before.
To make matters worse, I would go on to discover on the way home that a member of a wedding party had accidentally taken my shirt from the hotel lobby that morning by accident, leaving his own, far more fancy clobber behind.
Now, there’s no doubt but that we look smart in our respectable clothes after a game but wedding-appropriate they’re not. I had to smile at the idea of the poor misfortune who’d to sit in the middle of the congregation in his stripy shirt with Bruff RFC emblazoned across the short sleeves.
As I took my place at the post-match dinner, looking like a lost soccer hooligan, a Banbridge alickadoo informed me that word of my prowess as a slanderer of opposition teams had spread north of the border.
“We get the Limerick Leader up here you know,” said the blazer, “so you better not go slagging us off ‘cos we’ll be down playing ye again in two weeks.”
My first thought was that I should surely be in line for a raise if I’m generating sales of a Limerick newspaper in Northern Ireland. But I also realised that he was right, we play Banbridge on Saturday week in the semi-final of the Division Three play-offs so there was no point in giving them extra cannon fodder for the return leg in Bruff.
So instead of words of provocation, I’ll depart today by saying to the Banbridge boys that there’ll be a friendly welcome waiting for them in Bruff next week, particularly if they bring down one or two of those distractingly delectable pigs.