‘Like an under-11s team’: Rugby league veteran Kyle Amor manufacturers membership songs ‘childish’

English rugby league star Kyle Amor has slammed the custom of the membership track, calling it “childish”.

Amor has received 4 Super League Grand Finals with powerhouse membership St Helens, and has received over 160 Super League matches, however has no real interest in singing the membership track after video games, telling the Bench podcast he would put the custom “on the bench”.

“I hate it,” he instructed hosts Jenna Brooks and Jon Wilkin.

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“You’ve got a bunch of grown men and somebody bangs a metal container and they bang and sing like an under-11s team.

“I just hate it, I just sit there and tap something on the side as if you’re involved.

“I’ve hated it for years and not really mentioned (it) so I’m glad we’ve mentioned it.

“If any of my teammates at Widnes see my not joining in now, they know why.

“I like winning but I find the song very childish, and then they all go ‘wooo’ at the end of it.”

Amor’s remarks come after Dolphins coach Wayne Bennett revealed the that means of the Dolphins workforce track, with the growth membership singing it twice in two video games and gorgeous the NRL by getting up over the Roosters and Raiders.

Kyle Amor of St Helens is not a fan of team songs. (Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images)
Kyle Amor of St Helens just isn’t a fan of workforce songs. (Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Dolphins captain Jesse Bromwich and coach Wayne Bennett. Picture: Patrick Woods.Source: Supplied

“We went away on a pre-season camp for three or four days and I said to them, ‘We haven’t got a team song’,” Bennett instructed reporters after their win over the Roosters in spherical one.

“And a couple of hours later the senior players had a great song.

“We’ve sung it 10 or 12 times now at things we’ve done.

“It’s a tremendous theme song, it’s a real credit to them, it’s theirs and they own it, we had one today and we sung it. It was great.”

The Dolphins membership track seems to resemble the track utilized by the unique Redcliffe Dolphins, who now play within the second-tier Queensland Cup.

Amor’s feedback sparked an enormous debate on social media, with Manly first-grade cricketer Jake Carden remarking sarcastically that he “must be fun at parties”.

The Geelong Cats sing the workforce track after the 2022 Toyota AFL Grand Final. (Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos through Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Melbourne’s Cameron Smith, Cooper Cronk and Billy Slater sing the workforce track after the Storm’s premiership win in 2018. Picture: Brett CostelloSource: News Corp Australia

Another social media consumer agreed, saying trendy songs tended to be “devised by marketing teams for social clicks rather than a spontaneous outpouring of team pride.

“All a bit unoriginal and so defeats its purpose,” the individual wrote.

Another stated it relied on authenticity, saying “if it’s a bit manufactured like (simply) singing ‘ole, ole, ole’, than I agree with (Amor).”

Club songs, a long-time custom in Australian sport, grew to become the centre of web comedy for a quick interval in 2019 after expansion-club Greater Western Sydney Giants made their first AFL Grand Final.

The Giants’ rollicking brass-heavy track was composed by The Cat Empire’s Harry Angus, and went viral for its simply parodiable lyrics, and powerful brass line.

Source web site: www.foxsports.com.au

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