Skip to main content
#
 
 Rugby League 
Wednesday, April 17 2024
Mum invented the sin bin: Kevvie opens up on family, wild Alfie stories in emotional chat

Brisbane Broncos coach Kevin Walters has opened up in an compelling episode of Fox League’s Face to Face, speaking about family, his relationship with his idol and NSW great Tommy Raudonikis – and sharing some hilarious Alfie Langer stories.

Speaking to Yvonne Sampson, Walters spoke about his experience of his family sneaking into the very first State of Origin game to watch the great Arthur Beetson run riot at Laing Park.

Walters said: “We were no chance of getting tickets … (dad) brought a pair of pliers with him and he cut a hole in the fence … we all just climbed through, us and about ten thousand other Queenslanders. It was in broad daylight!”

“To be there when Arthur Beetson ran out is something that stayed with me as well. I can still see it, and hear the noise of the Queenslanders,” he added.

“I was only 13 years old. I just remember the passion he had for NSW. They all thought he was too old … He just destroyed New South Wales just with that Queensland passion that no-one had seen before.

“I remember from that moment forward, going home in the back seat of that yellow (Holden) Kingswood, just a happy family and wanting to do that one day myself.”

With his four brothers – and sometimes Alfie Langer in tow – he grew up playing plenty of rugby league in the backyard.

“We were competitive in the backyard! Mum actually invented the sin bin. If it got a bit heated, she used to get the hose out and hose us just to cool us down. She’d say ‘Right, time out here. You’re not playing until you’re playing normal and don’t be fighting each other.’”

And with his father a carpenter, Walters says he wanted to follow in his footsteps – only he wasn’t very good.

“I wanted to be a very good footballer. My carpentry skills weren’t that great. They used to call me ‘lightning’ around the job site … My hammer was like lightning: it never strikes in the same place twice,” he laughed.

Luckily he did commit to rugby league, going on to win six premierships as a player before moving into coaching.

But his playing days weren’t always easy. His first wife Kim died in 1998 after a two-year battle with breast cancer.

Walters revealed: “It was a terrible time in our lives. I guess there’s lots of people, since I’ve been through that myself and my family (that can relate).

“I was very thankful and grateful for my family support from my brothers, particularly mum and dad, they moved into the house when Kim got really crook. They were just a tower of strength for me and my kids.

“I guess I just wanted to be the best person I could for Kim and my kids. I just wanted to get on with life and block out what was actually happening and do my best for Kim and make her last period in this world as comfortable as this could be.

“Christmas Day we dragged her up to hospital and she never came home after that.”

The pair had three children together, and Walters still honours her memory on Christmas Day.

He added: “I always want to have nice Christmases now, where it’s fun, it’s exciting, it’s not the other side that we’ve been through as well.”

And Walters always said he had ‘help from above’ when it came to the miracle play that sealed the Game I State of Origin win just a few months later.

Posted by: AT 07:18 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Social Media
email usour twitterour facebook page