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Football, Sport 3

Tom Rogic is…. A found poem to the man from the fan

By Athas Zafiris @ArtSapphire · On September 13, 2016

Midday in sunny Glasgow on September 10, 2016. Tom Rogic strolls on to the perfectly manicured pitch at Celtic Park. The occasion is the Old Firm derby. The ground is a cauldron of noise. The referee blows his whistle to start the game.

Over the course of the next hour, random people take to Twitter and attempt to describe watching Tom Rogic to their followers…to the world.

I notice that many of these tweets start with the same three words, “Tom Rogic is.”

I begin to copy and paste “Tom Rogic is” tweets in chronological order and it starts taking the shape of a poem.

At 1.10pm, in the 54th minute, Tom Rogic walked off the perfectly manicured pitch at Celtic Park.
The result. A found poem of football fan consciousness.

Tom Rogic is…

Tom Rogic is a baller
Tom Rogic is a superstar
Tom Rogic is an absolute beast
Tom Rogic is a class above the rest in this match
Tom Rogic is a class apart from everyone on that pitch
Tom Rogic is the new Jesus
Tom Rogic is a fucking dream
TOM ROGIC IS ACTUALLY SOMETHING ELSE
Tom Rogic is frighteningly good
Tom Rogic is fucking unreal

Tom Rogic is just too much
Tom Rogic is legit taking the piss here
Tom Rogic is different gravy
Tom Rogic is honestly phenomenal
Tom Rogic is so good
Tom Rogic is an unbelievable player
Tom Rogic is an absolute baller
Tom Rogic is my hero
FootballPoetryTom Rogic
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  • Roy Hay says: September 13, 2016 at 5:38 pm

    Wonderful stuff, Athas. The man could not have written better himself. Nearly as good as Tom Leonard’s Crack

    cutsiny thi box
    cross cumzthi centre hoff
    a right big animul
    crack
    doon goes Dalgleesh
    ref waves play on
    nay penalthi
    so McNeill complainzty im
    oot cumzthi book
    tipicl
    wan mair upfurthi luj

    One day I will translate it for you

    • Athas Zafiris says: September 14, 2016 at 1:04 pm

      Hi Roy, thanks for the complimentary feedback and for Tom Leonard’s Crack. I got down to the second last line “out comes the book typical” …but you’ll have to translate the last line for me. Cheers.

  • Roy Hay says: September 14, 2016 at 2:03 pm

    The last line reflects the widespread belief in referees being members of a Masonic conspiracy against the Celts, hence One more up for the (Orange) lodge.

    There is another story about refs being members of the legal profession. One such queried how supporters knew he was a lawyer, because every time he appeared they sang, ‘Who’s the barrister in the black?’

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