By SHAUNA ANDERSON
There were two acts of bravery that my seven-year old son lauded last week.
The first was a guy who had his arms ripped off by a shark on Thursday off the coast of Western Australia.
The other was Sam Burgess, the young bloke who played an entire NRL Grand Final with a fractured cheekbone and possible concussion.
A man now praised for being a “champion”, a “legend”, “gutsy”, and “courageous”.
A man who now says he “can’t actually remember” much of the game anyway – possibly, medical experts now say, due to concussion.
Sam Burgess (left) with Greg Inglis after the Grand Final
A man given the keys to the city of Sydney today and whose image will appear in full on posters tomorrow in major daily newspapers.
The shark attack victim had no choice but to swim to shore when the shark tore his limbs off.
Somewhere out there was a great white keen to eat the rest of him.
Sean Pollard lost his arms last week after a shark attack victim
But the other “hero”, Burgess, had a choice as to whether risk blindness, permanent double-vision or a lifetime head injury, and he chose to risk it.
He chose a ring, a shit-load of cash and the glory of a much-loved football team over his own health.
Top Comments
All of the people that are commenting on here about the riskiness of sports and the sport of Rugby League in general have no idea about what it means to be involved in a team that you would do anything for .
Soldiers fight for their country and their mates beside them because they're passionate about all of these things.
A Soccer player, League player, Union player, Cricket player, etc. Do what they do because they're extremely passionate about what they do.
The surfer that loses a limb whilst surfing is a hero for his fight or flight response. What if he then chooses to risk his life again by going back into the water to surf again?
Isn't that just as crazy as the footy player that continues to play on injured?
Life is too short live in a bubble and avoid risk your whole life. You're statistically more chance of being hit by a bus or killed by a cow.
Justin, it's one of those things that women just don't get, and unfortunately they try to train their boys not to be like that.
All they are doing is opening their sons up to extreme risk taking as young adults, women don't get that risk taking is part of a man's persona and it's almost a base instinct to do so.
That's why there's silly articles like this written.
What the hell? Women don't get it? What sexist garbage.
I'm a woman, and I understand perfectly the desire to risk it all for your team. I hope that my girls and boys both develop this desire, as it's fundamental to our society.
I don't however, necessarily want them to take unnecessary risks with long-term, irreversible consequences without being informed about them.
I hope Sean Pollard is alright and able to live a full life from here on in.
Sam Burgess is passionate and committed and played really well, but he really shouldn't have been allowed to continue to play. Not with a head injury. It doesn't happen in AFL, in fact they get sent off the ground when they're bleeding until they actually stop bleeding. I realise I may well cop it for the comparison.