Author Topic: Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl  (Read 2186 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl
« on: August 02, 2006, 01:10:59 PM »
Pie stars fined, may be dropped
Breaking News
August 02, 2006 12:00am
Article from: Herald-Sun

COLLINGWOOD has reacted swiftly to revelations that stars Chris Tarrant and Ben Johnson were present at a vicious brawl outside a pub early Sunday morning.

The pair have been fined $5000 each and Collingwood chief  executive Greg Swan would not rule out further sanctions.

Mr Swan said it was up to the match committe to determine if the pair lined up against Adelaide at AAMI stadium on Saturday night.

However he hinted at further punishments depending on a police investigation of the brawl which occured at a Port Melbourne nightspot, leaving a man in hospital with head and facial injuries.

The victim said he was bashed when he went to the aid of another man who was being kicked by a group of men.

Collingwood president Eddie McGuire confirmed Tarrant and Johnson had spoken to police and were continuing to help them with their inquiries.

In a statement, the club said the pair had voluntarily confirmed they were at the pub at the time of the alleged assault.

 ``The Club confirms that Chris Tarrant and Ben Johnson were involved in an incident in Port Melbourne early Sunday morning. Both players have voluntarily provided statements to the Police and are continuing to assist with their enquiries.

``The Club is extremely disappointed that both players were out late at night. In relation to the police investigation, it is Club policy not to make any comment concerning the matter pending the outcome of the Police investigations.'' It is unclear what role, if any, the pair had in the injuries suffered by the victim.

A police statement said the man was punched in the head from behind and knocked unconscious as he tried to intervene and separate the pair in the early hours of Sunday.

The police statement said the cowardly king-hit attack happened between 3.30am and 4am in the car park of Station Pier.

Detectives are still looking for others who may be able to help them piece together what happened.

The victim, 28, from Bayswater North, was treated at the Austin Hospital for cuts to the face.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,19990109-661,00.html

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl
« Reply #1 on: August 02, 2006, 01:16:02 PM »
And the TAC stuck with the Pies because of their community work as role models :wallywink.

Let's see if this gets a mention on TFS. Won't hold my breath  ::).
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Offline Fishfinger

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Re: Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl
« Reply #2 on: August 02, 2006, 08:29:34 PM »
On WLF tonight TW was asked if Richmond have a curfew like Collingwood's.
The answer was no. The reasoning was that curfews are bound to be broken and he'd rather treat the players as adults.  ;D

I love it when the skunks cop a well placed backhander.  :rollin
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Offline one-eyed

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Re: Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl
« Reply #3 on: August 03, 2006, 02:21:18 AM »
Footy stars outnumbered as abuse sparks brawl
Anthony Dowsley, Mark Buttler and Luke Dennehy
Herald-Sun
August 03, 2006 12:00am

COLLINGWOOD stars Chris Tarrant and Ben Johnson were heavily outnumbered in a street fight that has put them under police investigation.

The violent chain of events that left one man in hospital with head injuries began when abuse was hurled at Tarrant from a passing car, a source close to the pair told the Herald Sun.

The two Magpies have told the club they did not start the trouble as they left a Port Melbourne nightspot about 4am on Sunday.

Collingwood fined them $5000 each and refused to rule out sacking them -- but they are expected to play in the vital game against Adelaide on Saturday night.

Three men taunted Tarrant, 25, from the car then climbed out and took him on as others joined in, the source said.

Johnson, also 25, entered the fray to help his teammate with another friend.

Tarrant and Johnson are believed to have told the club they were eventually outnumbered in the fight, six to three.

Electrician Robert Howie, 28, of Bayswater North, was taken to hospital with head injuries after the brawl outside the trendy Ocean Blue nightclub at Station Pier.

Key evidence may come from a security camera in the area.

Tarrant's big night out started about 7.30pm on Saturday at a charity fashion parade in Southbank in support of teammate Brodie Holland.

Collingwood chiefs were furious that he was still partying more than eight hours later.

Asked if Tarrant and Johnson could be sacked, Collingwood chief executive Greg Swann said: "We haven't ruled anything out.

"The investigation will take its course.

"We don't expect all of our players to be monks. There is a group -- I am sure there is at every club -- who, you know, enjoy getting out and being a bit more social than others," he said.

"So we just have to make sure that that is done within the confines of, probably, common sense."

Mr Swann said the club was told of the incident on Sunday but had been unaware of all the circumstances at the time.

Angry Collingwood president Eddie McGuire was only told yesterday morning, after the Herald Sun revealed there had been a brawl involving high-profile footballers.

"There is certainly a level of anger," Mr Swann said. "Different people have different levels.

"There are two sides to the story, so the police, being the arbiter, will determine what actually has occurred.

"We have spoken to our major sponsors this morning about what's happened," he said.

"It is fair to say it is embarrassing. We don't like to do it."

Tarrant and Johnson suffered cuts and bruises in the confrontation, but managed to train with teammates yesterday.

Tarrant kicked off his Saturday night at the fashion parade at Eve nightclub with teammates Heath Shaw and Cameron Cloke.

"He was in a good mood, so I don't know what went wrong," one patron said.

After the parade, Tarrant told a friend he was leaving Eve to go to another party, and would return later.

He then moved on to the Ocean Blue on Station Pier, which has a strong following among footballers.

At some point during the night he met up with Johnson.

It is not the first time the pair have found trouble together.

The day after Collingwood's 2003 Grand Final loss to Brisbane, they clashed with patrons at the Lower Plenty Hotel after being taunted about their courage.

AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou said Collingwood had co-operated with the league over the latest incident.

"There wouldn't be anybody -- and I'm not privy to the information -- who wouldn't be disappointed, including Collingwood, with what has transpired," he said.

"In the main, we get it right. But from time to time one, two, three players transgress -- and you get a situation which has just transpired."

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,20000652-661,00.html

Offline Stephanie

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Re: Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl
« Reply #4 on: August 03, 2006, 10:22:19 PM »
And the TAC stuck with the Pies because of their community work as role models :wallywink.

Let's see if this gets a mention on TFS. Won't hold my breath  ::).

I'm surprised they spoke about if for quite a bit tonite  :-\
Also I know this is off topic, but who thinks James Brayshaw's new haircut makes him look like Browny?
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Offline mightytiges

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Re: Tarrant and Ben Johnson fined $5000 for late night brawl
« Reply #5 on: August 03, 2006, 11:09:18 PM »
Also I know this is off topic, but who thinks James Brayshaw's new haircut makes him look like Browny?

LOL. I wouldn't go that far  :o ;D

 
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Offline WilliamPowell

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Cut public a break rather than waste money on players
« Reply #6 on: August 04, 2006, 01:12:18 PM »
I am not usually a fan of Patrick Smith but I reckon he makes some really good points in this spray from today's Australian:
============================

Cut public a break rather than waste money on players
COMMENT
Patrick Smith
August 04, 2006

LET us deal with the excuses first. Get the nonsense out of the way. One, AFL footballers are wealthy young men with time on their hands. Two, the pressure to perform is great and sometimes suffocating. Three, the public likes nothing better than baiting a footballer. Four, they are not role models, just footballers.

We dismiss all that as bunkum. There are lots of 25-year-old men and women, working in jobs that draw intense responsibility and scrutiny, who don't go around belting other people outside pubs. Who don't go driving drunk, who don't go fleeing from police, who don't carry weapons, who don't assault supporters never mind police, don't go speeding, don't drive without a licence. All of those breaches of the law were detailed in The Australian last week. All of them the work of AFL footballers.

Then along came Chris Tarrant and Ben Johnson as if on cue. Footballers behaving badly? Cop this. AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou and AFL Players Association boss Brendon Gale have said player behaviour is a concern. And both have said it is no better or worse than it has been over the years. We think they are wrong.

Tables run in all papers this week show footballers have been persistently drawing headlines not for miskicks but misdemeanours. More than in 2005 and more than in 2004.

This same group of players will enjoy a split of nearly $800million over the next five years. Pay has gone up, marketing and promotional money has gone up, prizemoney has gone up, retirement funding has gone up, and welfare spending. Everything has gone up except the expectation of the AFL that their footballers behave themselves.

The league and the players' association bore us with details of all the education programs available to footballers. From draft camp to club, players are warned about drugs and alcohol. They are counselled on their lifestyle, on fame and fortune. They are warned of the increased expectation that falls on a sportsman's shoulders. For this they are rewarded handsomely. The average income for a footballer is about $200,000.

In truth, they are indulged. Spoilt brats. For example: the AFL introduced an illicit drug code that protects the players unnecessarily and lends the league to easy criticism that it is soft on drugs.

In the next five years the AFL will set aside $35m for the players' retirement fund. And $25m will be set aside to continue to fund players' education. That is $5m a year. As one listener on Melbourne talkback radio said, that's enough to fund 100 teachers at $50,000 per annum. That's a lot of education. For that sort of money you are entitled to think one of the players might come up with a cure for cancer.

Given that Gale and Demetriou maintain player behaviour gets neither better nor worse, the education programs in the past seem to be a waste of money. The more money clubs, the AFL and the players' association direct at educating the players the more behaviour deteriorates.

If the average earn available to players is $200,000 they should fund their own education. Set up their own self-help groups. If it is their money at work they might actually listen. Take something on board. Everybody has lined up for a slice of the $780m broadcast money. The players. The clubs want $2m a year. The AFL administration has - correctly - been rewarded for the successful manner it has run football. Money will be poured into the game's development up north, especially southeast Queensland where the AFL is locked in battle with rugby league.

Any suggestion some of that $780m might go to relieving the burden on spectators who must pay for admission, membership, reserved seats, parking and outrageously priced food is laughed at by the AFL.

Well, rather than spend $25m on players to explain the bleeding obvious to them - don't stay out in nightclubs to 4am - the money should be directed towards lowering the cost of football. Membership should be cheaper, seats cheaper, admission cheaper, merchandise cheaper. And you definitely should be able to buy two dim sims and get some change out of $50.


The public should be rewarded for their loyalty to the game. Their enthusiasm to follow the sport at venues and on television. It might be the players who put on the show but it is the fans who pay to watch it. They are the reason broadcasters shell out $780m.

The majority of footballers do the right thing by their clubs and their supporters. But all codes must now fight for a share of a marketplace that has become much more competitive and tight with the success of the Socceroos. And there are enough footballers behaving badly to damage the AFL brand.

Collingwood coach Mick Malthouse will select both Johnson and Tarrant for the match against Adelaide. That is his policy. Maybe that is why Sunday morning's incident was not the first in which these players have been involved.

Some players never learn. Not even if you throw $25m at them.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20010144-12270,00.html
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Offline Fishfinger

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Re: Cut public a break rather than waste money on players
« Reply #7 on: August 04, 2006, 01:55:51 PM »

For example: the AFL introduced an illicit drug code that protects the players unnecessarily and lends the league to easy criticism that it is soft on drugs.


Patrick makes good points but, as usual, spoils them by arrogantly using his own opinion (misguided on the drug code, in my view) as if it's a supporting fact. It's a false statement anyway because it should be past tense. The AFL was forced to adopt the WADA code through political pressure (read blackmail).
$50 for 2 dim sims. Yeah, right Patrick.
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