Footy Clubs as a wine | PUNT ROAD END | Richmond Tigers Forum
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Footy Clubs as a wine

TIGERARMY67

Tiger Matchwinner
Jul 22, 2003
523
0
Richmond as a wine

Richmond Hill Gold and Black label Shiraz:
A bold, high-alcohol variety that appears on shelves with a great fanfare every March, but tends to have completely sold out by September. Inconsistent texture that tantalises but always fails to deliver, although recent crops appear to have more potential. WARNING: This wine is associated with high rates of alcoholism and violence.

Adelaide as a wine

Queen Adelaide Crow Chardonnay: Successful straight off the vine but has aged poorly and lacks character. Popular in South Australia but, where more choice is offered, tends to be overlooked. Not likely to improve much in the near future. Give it to your Auntie!

Brisbane as a wine

Lion's Crest Cabernet Sauvignon:
Despite an unattractive maroon colouring, this strong Queensland variety is flavour of the month after winning a gold medal at the Australian wine festival. A blended wine where the AFL squeezed the last drop of life out of the Fitzroy Cabernet grape variety then mixed with the fruity but otherwise dreadful Carrara Bear Estate Sauvignon. Scary thing is this wine is not even fully mature yet and could even improve further.

Carlton as a wine

Carlton Blue Lanbrusca:
A fizzy Mediterranean-style that has a sickening taste. Rich and obnoxious, this wine suits those who favour a quick fix or they'll *smile* off to the soccer. Well aged, the Carlton Blue seems to always turn up at the end of season party even though no one else likes it.

Collingwood as a wine

Carringbush Magpie Moselle:
Cheap and nasty, with considerable bitterness. A disappointing and fruitless wine that for whatever reason still appears very popular with the peasantry. Never serve on important occasions for it will always disappoint.

Windy Peak Hill Pinot Noir:
Fine wine with a lot of character, always a crowd favourite due to its taste and longevity. Does very well at awards as it is a perennial finalist. Generates strong following by knowledgeable supporters, always a top seller. Wine maker is slightly eccentric.

Fremantle as a wine

Fremantle Hodgepodge Fruit Cider (Purple and Green label): Not a real wine at all and doesn't look like it ever will be. Management still believes that if you shove an under-ripe banana in with some leftover lemons, grapefruit and an eggplant, and stick it in a Bamix, eventually something tasty might eventually emerge.
Geelong as a wine

Old Geelong Sweet Sherry:
Popular with the oldies and fairly inoffensive, but a poor season at the Corio vineyard has meant a dramatic decline in quality recently. This wine could be appropriate for a Last Supper unless their Messiah comes back real soon.

Hawthorn as a wine

Hawksthorn Riesling:
If you can get past the awful colouring and that it is low alcohol, this is a reasonably satisfying drop that will please the whole family (and your pets too!). Bland and tasteless, this wine has a nutty flavour that appeals to those who belong to the Cardigan-set.

Nth Melbourne as a wine

Kangaroo Flat Spumante:
Trendy for a little while but doesn't have a lot of fans and, after a halting of imports to New South Wales and Canberra, this wine may disappear from shelves altogether. Always good value but increased costs leave this bargain-basement variety with nowhere to go.

Melbourne Demons as a wine

Old Melbourne Hermitage:
A classic variety that appears more appropriate to days-gone-by than today. Clashing flavours - fuddy-duddy indifference versus erratic opportunism - leaves a bad aftertaste for all but the most devoted. Still popular with old tossers, but living only on past glories now.

Port Power as a wine

Port Port:
A home grown whine...I mean wine...that has only recently appeared on shelves. Colourful label belies a vinegar flavour that will win few fans outside its home state. Fairly cheap and great for drinking out of brown paper bags, expect to see plenty of empty bottles of this in bus shelters from Alberton to Port Augusta.

St Kilda as a wine

All Saint Claret:
No wine has spent longer in the cellar than this one. You'd think by now it might have improved, but Nup! Still bloody terrible and not likely to improve given that newly-hired winemaker Thomas's last job was brewing backyard root beer in Warrnambool.

Sydney Swans as a wine

Sydney Swan Views Wooded Chardonnay:
Using recycled grapes appears to have worked reasonably well over the past decade without real success. Interesting fermentation process that involves flooding ripe grapes with midfielders of questionable disposal skills - this works because they use a half-sized bottle instead of a real one. Take a bottle of this to the theatre!

West Coast Eagles as a wine

West Coast House White:
Made for the mass market, brewed in sterile, clinical style with little to offend. In a word - boring!

Western Bulldogs as a wine

Dogbreath Grappa:
This bottle of wine is best used for belting someone over the head with while they are not looking. More a weapon than a wine.

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