There have been a lot of opinions on players taking the brunt of RG sacking etc for playing with no heart. I believe that's absolute bollocks. Especially this season to hold these young players accountable is not right at all.
Well put.
This isn't even to mention what it's like being a player who is part of a team having a system forced on them that
clearly doesn't work.
Do you go against coach's plan and risk not getting selected because of this?.. Which in a professional sporting environment is one step away from risking your
job - the thing keeping a roof over your head and food on your table.
Or do you follow coach's orders regardless of how ineffective they might be because you'd rather not put your job on the line and risk not having a contract renewed?
Then consider how many times the board affirmed over a period of years through words and much more importantly their actions that no matter how poorly this coach performed, he was not going anywhere. Even in sports organizations where there are backroom staff who handle a large amount of player recruiting, scouting, and contracting (much of the NFL functions this way) the coach still has significant input in who is actually signed and who is let go when contracts come up.
Also consider the age composition of the squad that's been "built" since 2013. A considerable portion of the team are currently on their first or second professional contract, and with their first tier-one professional rugby franchise.
These young players have little/no stock/brand/reputation outside of Queensland and
maybe Australia if they were a particularly exceptional youngster. This is to say that these players can't just go out and expect to get offers from clubs domestically or overseas if they were to break rank at the Reds and not have their contract renewed.
Could they find a club if they absolutely had to? Probably. Would they have to take a pay cut, move away from their family and friends, and potentially rule themselves out of national selection (a decision that could have a massive impact on the rest of their career)? They'll almost definitely have to cope with two of the above, one if they are fortunate.
To top it off, it's not like these players aren't aware of how badly playing in a not only losing, but borderline dysfunctional team can damage your own chances of progressing in your personal athletic career.
Combine these factors and you've created a zero-sum game for these players that's never going to end in anything other than them slowly having their confidence squeezed out of them as they feel trapped between playing in a mess of a team (possibly damaging their personal stock in the process, not to mention the mental impact of playing in a team like this to begin with) or risking their career flat-out.
What I've heard about RG's personal approach to player management wouldn't have made any of this easier to deal with. He allegedly has a very Gatland-esque approach - play outside the game plan, or worse, make a mistake while playing outside the game plan and you're going to get the proverbial cane up your ass. It seemed to be Woody's way or the highway.
Does anyone on here honestly, actually believe that Sanchez, Horwill, and QC (Quade Cooper) (Hansen a bit of a different situation due to hookers we had on the books and the nature of their contracts when he left) left in the twilight of their careers? That we didn't miss out on 2-3+ years of quality rugby for all three?
Quade is 27.
Will is 28.
James is 30.
I seriously doubt the timing of their departures was some kind of funny coincidence. There were definitely other factors at play but it's no coincidence that three of our players with the highest market value in the rugby player market all bailed ship right around the same time. They had the ability to get away from the shit show at Ballymore before it impacted their own personal playing stock too severely, so they did.
The younger guys don't necessarily have those opportunities. Others likely don't want to give up on their dream of playing for Queensland or move away from their family and friends.
It's a perfect storm that's going to guarantee you nothing other than a group of players that's
never going to play anywhere near their potential. Confidence is an enormous factor in the performance of
any player - I'd question the personal playing history of anyone that argues otherwise. Nobody is going to have much confidence playing in a dysfunctional team with an authoritarian coach who has what seems to be the unfaltering support of the backroom management.
I'm sure many of you who played/still play the game know what it feels like when a coach is trying to force tactics or a system that just isn't working or couldn't ever possibly work anywhere other than inside their own mind. It's pretty shit.
Try doing it with the implication of your entire career (and the next 10+ years of your life) on the line, and in a scenario where you are being forced into what can only be described as a lose/lose.
So no, it's not on the fucking players. This entire scenario was created by RG's ineptitude as a coach and the board's ineptitude as a management group for the Reds franchise. Making the team bottom-heavy with youngsters and throwing guys into the deep end with no real prior indication that they know how to swim just amplified the mess when it came to game time.
Sorry for the biblically long post but I'm already tired of seeing posts trying to stick this on a playing group who has had the deck stacked against them like the Reds playing group has. You don't go to the mechanic to get your tires checked when the transmission is fucked.
TL;DR
The "system" installed by RG at the Reds does a lot to put individual players under pressure which is going to cause a deterioration in individual skills execution on it's own. Couple this with the pressures felt by a young squad trying to execute a losing game plan (either go against the tide and risk having a contract go without renewal before you're really enough of a commodity as a player to have many other options that don't require a great deal of personal sacrifice, or risk damaging your personal stock as a player by playing a rabble of a game plan in a losing team) under a coach with a bit of a dictatorship mentality regarding the players (who also has what seemed to be unwavering backing from the rest of the organization, no matter how bad the rot was getting) and you have a recipe for disaster.
It's not the first time that poor coaching has led to an otherwise good squad playing poorly both as a unit and as individuals, it won't be the last.