paulbagzFC
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lol @ Sydney fans and big screens. -PB
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walnuts
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An interview with the great man has surfaced! Quote:[size=9]An interview with football cartoonist David Squires[/size]David Squires has an eye for the absurd. His laugh-out-loud cartoons for The Guardian have earned him a cult following and turned him into one of the A-League’s most astute analysts. You grew up supporting Swindon Town. What brought you to Australia? DS: My partner is Australian and we moved here from London in 2009. I grew up in Swindon and supported the local team. I was lucky that my teenage years witnessed the most successful period in the club’s history, culminating in promotion to the Premier League in 1993. We beat Leicester in the play-off final in a 4-3 thriller. Swindon went up and nothing was ever heard of Leicester again. What were your first impressions of the A-League? DS: The first match I saw was Sydney vs Adelaide in the second round of matches in 2009/10. In terms of the football, I remember being impressed by both teams’ desire to keep the ball on the ground and play a possession-based game. But it was the stuff off the pitch that really impressed me: the friendly, passionate crowd; the large, modern stadium (the SFS has its problems, but compared to most of the grounds I’d visited while following Swindon, it was a palace); and perhaps most importantly, the freedom to drink beer while watching a match. Your A-League cartoons for The Guardian have been widely read this season. How do you explain their popularity? DS: I don’t think the A-League gets the recognition or coverage it deserves. As we’ve seen in the last few weeks, most mainstream media outlets only give it attention when someone lets off a flare. Therefore, most A-League fans – myself included – devour anything that focuses on the competition, and I guess that includes my cartoons. Did England’s fanzine culture play a role in shaping you as a cartoonist? DS: Absolutely. Fanzine culture was at its peak when my young mind was just starting to think critically. I subscribed to ‘When Saturday Comes’ from the age of 15, and although it didn’t have many cartoons, it wrote about football in a way I hadn’t read in newspapers or magazines. The Swindon Town fanzine was called ‘Bring the Noise’ and ran a satirical cartoon featuring the exploits of a character called ‘McBag’ (a Scottish player-manager who wore a bag on his head). At the time, Swindon were embroiled in a financial scandal, and the storylines reflected those events. The first thing I ever got published, at the age of 16, was for a later Swindon Town fanzine, ‘The 69er’. It was some awful, bitter cartoon (sound familiar?) about a player called Duncan Shearer who had left us to join the newly-wealthy Blackburn Rovers. I sincerely hope there are no copies left in existence, as I’m fairly sure it was awful. You have a knack for illustrating the most comical aspects of the A-League. Is that something you put a lot of thought into, or do you find the A-League inherently funny? DS: Hah, no, I don’t find the A-League inherently funny and believe it or not, I try to not be too critical of the league, as it attracts enough criticism from other sources. I definitely try to avoid making jokes about the ability of individual players, as I’m aware that they are infinitely more talented at what they do than I am at what I do. When I started doing the A-League cartoons, I was concerned that there may not be enough material for a weekly cartoon, but thankfully it has been an eventful season. I have a weekly chat with the Guardian Australia sports editor, Mike Hytner about what’s in the news and the direction I might like to go in. It’s really helpful to have that conversation, as it helps me to think through ideas and Mike is also very gifted at tactfully telling me when an idea is too obscure or likely to get me sued. It’s usually events off-the-pitch that interest me. This season we’ve had the stuff with Wellington Phoenix, senior police officers describing fans as grubs, numerous tabloid moral panics about supporters and the recent FLAREGATE. None of it was particularly edifying for the game, but it was great for me, selfishly. Do you have a favourite A-League personality or team you particularly enjoy drawing? DS: I’m afraid that David Gallop and Damien de Bohun have become something of comedy stooges. Really though, it’s the shock jocks and tabloid columnists that I like to go for; people who know nothing about the sport or its culture but pontificate about it regardless. The sad thing is that their fear campaign has an impact; at the recent Sydney derby there were security guards scanning supporters with x-ray machines. My ego was only slightly wounded that a guard to scan a middle-aged couple rather than me. Do you ever worry about offending someone with your cartoons? DS: It really depends on who the offended party is. I have no compunction about offending certain people or attitudes, in fact, I’ll often set out to deliberately upset them. However, whenever I write anything I stop and ask myself: ‘Is this right? Is this fair?’ How does the A-League compare to the English lower leagues? DS: It’s hard to compare, and it’s been a while since I’ve been back to England to see much lower-league football, but when the A-League is good, it’s great. Ange Postecoglou’s Brisbane Roar side was, I think Championship level at least. Also, for the first couple of seasons, Western Sydney Wanderers were like a machine; their ability to just churn out results made would also put them at that level. I feel like the quality has dropped off a bit in the last couple of seasons, sadly. I’d love some of my friends from the UK to experience the Sydney or Melbourne derbies though. I suspect that many of them have the preconception that Australia isn’t a football country – as I did before I moved here – but the noise and passion generated at those games belies that myth and shows how much love there is for the game here. What sort of cartoon do you hope to draw ahead of the A-League grand final this season? DS: Right now I’m more concerned that I don’t have an idea for this week! It will largely depend on who’s in the final, so I haven’t really thought that far down the line yet. The Roar
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Burztur
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Quote:Squires does more to promote the Aussie game than the FFA. This.
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Davide82
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RedshirtWilly wrote:Anything with a Ricky Gervais cartoon is gold for me +1
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spfc
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lol do you know why I pulled you over
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Oblivious Troll
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walnuts wrote:An interview with the great man has surfaced! Quote:[size=9]An interview with football cartoonist David Squires[/size]The first thing I ever got published, at the age of 16, was for a later Swindon Town fanzine, ‘The 69er’. It was some awful, bitter cartoon (sound familiar?) about a player called Duncan Shearer who had left us to join the newly-wealthy Blackburn Rovers. I sincerely hope there are no copies left in existence, as I’m fairly sure it was awful. The Roar http://thetownend.com/index.php?topic=38344.0PS don't forget to click the link to The Roar. They need the numbers too. Edited by Oblivious Troll: 3/3/2016 03:33:36 PM
Its a game for everyone. Its not pale, male, or stale. It transcends race, gender, economic status. Its for everyone. - Tal Karp
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paladisious
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Oblivious Troll wrote:walnuts wrote:An interview with the great man has surfaced! Quote:[size=9]An interview with football cartoonist David Squires[/size]The first thing I ever got published, at the age of 16, was for a later Swindon Town fanzine, ‘The 69er’. It was some awful, bitter cartoon (sound familiar?) about a player called Duncan Shearer who had left us to join the newly-wealthy Blackburn Rovers. I sincerely hope there are no copies left in existence, as I’m fairly sure it was awful. The Roar http://thetownend.com/index.php?topic=38344.0PS don't forget to click the link to The Roar. They need the numbers too. Edited by Oblivious Troll: 3/3/2016 03:33:36 PM What a shock, the bloke with an avatar like that is a Roar writer. :-"
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paulbagzFC
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Yeah nah not clicking Roar links lol. -PB
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Oblivious Troll
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paladisious wrote:What a shock, the bloke with an avatar like that is a Roar writer. :-" I do post over there but I am not a writer. I find it hard to string more than 50 words together let alone something long and coherent enough to be published on the road. (And let's be frank the bar isn't set that high.) If you're interested PM me and I'll give you my Roar ID.
Its a game for everyone. Its not pale, male, or stale. It transcends race, gender, economic status. Its for everyone. - Tal Karp
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paladisious
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paladisious
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Volrath2002
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Oh man great A-League and EPL cartoons this week. That interview too was great to read. His first response about Swindon and the Foxes made me laugh very loudly here at work haha.
Canberra United - Member KSV Hessen Kassel - Supporter Lewes FC - Owner
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Oblivious Troll
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Breaking: Adelaide United have their own David Squires cartoon... http://www.theguardian.com/sport/picture/2016/mar/10/david-squires-on-adelaide-uniteds-remarkable-rise-to-the-top-of-the-a-league
Its a game for everyone. Its not pale, male, or stale. It transcends race, gender, economic status. Its for everyone. - Tal Karp
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RedshirtWilly
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People think Adelaide is windy? :/ Edited by redshirtwilly: 10/3/2016 08:52:27 AM
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paladisious
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Had me at St. Pissant's. :lol:
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paladisious
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RedshirtWilly wrote:People think Adelaide is windy? :/ Edited by redshirtwilly: 10/3/2016 08:52:27 AM People think about Adelaide?
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localstar
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Adelaide is the Burst Watermain Capital of the universe... Dave should have included a reference to that:lol:
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Eastern Glory
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mcjules
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paladisious wrote:RedshirtWilly wrote:People think Adelaide is windy? :/ Edited by redshirtwilly: 10/3/2016 08:52:27 AM People think about Adelaide? Adelaide isn't that windy compared to somewhere like Wellington but there's a reason why we have a lot of wind power in this state. Obviously this is my favourite comic :lol:
Insert Gertjan Verbeek gifs here
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Burztur
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"Only 25 in A League years"
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AzzaMarch
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As someone from Adelaide who lives in Melbourne now, this is very funny. Except, the wind bit doesn't make sense.
I work in the docklands - Adelaide cannot compete with the windiness of this white elephant hellhole!
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Davide82
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RedshirtWilly wrote:People think Adelaide is windy? :/ Edited by redshirtwilly: 10/3/2016 08:52:27 AM I'm confused too...we register so little on the eastern states' radar we were confused for Wellington!!! I forgot we actually had 2 of the 3 Griffiths play here!! Almost entirely forgot about Ryan's stint aha Edited by davide82: 10/3/2016 10:11:42 AM
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Hutch
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AzzaMarch wrote:As someone from Adelaide who lives in Melbourne now, this is very funny. Except, the wind bit doesn't make sense.
I work in the docklands - Adelaide cannot compete with the windiness of this white elephant hellhole! Yep, work in Docklands too and way windier here than whenever I've been in Radelaide. Rest of the comic, on point.
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hotrod
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RedshirtWilly wrote:People think Adelaide is windy? :/ Irony? :-k Dunno, is it windy there?
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mcjules
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Just realised the guy with the blown-off toupee/wig is Kossie :lol:
Insert Gertjan Verbeek gifs here
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Davide82
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The Gombau gag and the "25 in A-League years" had me laughing
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Nachoman
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love his reply here
Do you have a favourite A-League personality or team you particularly enjoy drawing?
DS: I’m afraid that David Gallop and Damien de Bohun have become something of comedy stooges. Really though, it’s the shock jocks and tabloid columnists that I like to go for; people who know nothing about the sport or its culture but pontificate about it regardless.
Edited by nachoman: 10/3/2016 08:22:54 PM
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Angus
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Typical Southern-Central seaboard bias by the established press
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paladisious
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Oblivious Troll
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Possibly the best ever?
Its a game for everyone. Its not pale, male, or stale. It transcends race, gender, economic status. Its for everyone. - Tal Karp
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