Rugby league has always been a working man’s sport ever
since it was born after the Northern Union split from their southern
counterparts and this commentary defines everything that is great about the
game.
During the Regal Trophy Final in 1994, Mick Morgan sounds
like any other fan packed inside Headingley rather than a commentator
broadcasting to thousands of people when the Wigan player swings a stiff arm in
the direction of his Castleford opponent consequently causing Morgan to lose
his cool. He can't help but show his West Yorkshire roots as he orders the
referee to 'walk him if he's got any bottle'.
The reason I chose this commentary is because it shows what
is great about rugby league, it sticks to its heritage of being an M62 corridor
sport rather than be made into some fancy corporate event in which 'prawn
sandwich eaters' want to attend. The lack of professionalism makes it something
to behold, phrases such as 'gerrim off t' field', ‘I can’t speyk’ and ‘you bottless
get Campbell’ have made him a cult hero in the town of Castleford and even has
Antipodean fans.
I’ve been lucky enough to meet the man behind the voice in
2015 when England opened the test series against New Zealand with a comfortable
26-16 victory and he is a credit to the game, he could sit there for hours
telling stories from the all-time greats he’s battled against to the big
matches he’s commentated on.
Mick Morgan is an inspiration to anyone who comes from a
background with a strong accent which wouldn’t be classed as proper English who
wants to work in sports broadcasting because instead of losing his origin as being
a working class man from an industrial background he has embraced it in a rebellious way against the big media outlets who would cut their ears off if
anyone like this ever covered one of their games. His unique style of
commentating represents how everyone should approach their life; being
themselves instead of pretending to be someone they’re not just to impress
people.
Here's a video of Mick Morgan explaining his antics in the commentary box.