Bob Murphy - The Age - 21 July
IF THE Catholic Church took the unlikely step of canonising Barry Hall, he would be in the mould of Saint Nicholas, patron saint of children.
Hall is gifted, and not all his gifts are confined to a football field or boxing ring. Young people flock to him, in biblical proportions, from toddlers to draftees. They're drawn to the big man with the warmest of smiles. Which all makes sense; let's not forget, he started out as a Saint.
I first met Hall in the Gaelic hybrid series in 2003. I was just a kid in my fourth year of league footy. Big, Bustling Barry had dropped the ''Bad'' since he'd joined Sydney, and was a major force in the competition.
Article in full...
IF THE Catholic Church took the unlikely step of canonising Barry Hall, he would be in the mould of Saint Nicholas, patron saint of children.
Hall is gifted, and not all his gifts are confined to a football field or boxing ring. Young people flock to him, in biblical proportions, from toddlers to draftees. They're drawn to the big man with the warmest of smiles. Which all makes sense; let's not forget, he started out as a Saint.
I first met Hall in the Gaelic hybrid series in 2003. I was just a kid in my fourth year of league footy. Big, Bustling Barry had dropped the ''Bad'' since he'd joined Sydney, and was a major force in the competition.
Article in full...
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