No, it's not been clear Reg.
You’re not my target market in these comments to be fair.
No, it's not been clear Reg.
Ironically FP I would’ve thought Connolly would’ve genuinely appealed to you as a coach.I appreciate the pickings a bare, but for clarity, just no
I think the key difference is that Thorn got the Qld Board to get 100% on board with his vision and back him.Reg, I appreciate as a Red you're standing up for a favourite son, but I think by any measure Knuckles is yesterday's man. And while you belittle Cheika's record (as is the popular position on GAGR), a record of two Shute Shield titles, taking Leinster from relegation to European Cup champions, a Super Rugby title and a World Cup final is a long way ahead of any of our current Super coaches and anyone likely to be in the running for the Tahs job. Yes, he stayed too long at the Wallabies, but still has a pretty exceptional record and the Tahs could do a lot worse.
No, we may not attract anyone good, but to me it doesn't look like a bad gig for an up and coming young coach with talent. You are taking a team who are at the bottom, but just starting to show a few green shoots, and full of talented 20 and 21 year olds whose only way is up. Very similar to the Reds when Thorn took them on I would suggest.
I am not qualified to know all the ins and outs of whether Daren Coleman is right man for the job but have to trust those who do make the decision are. Yes normally (it appears)the apprenticeship after coaching shute shield is to get an assistant coaching gig at pro side before moving to head coach. But on paper Coleman has great record at shute shield and now at mlr side so certaintlu appears reasonable candidate to do due diligence on. if we look at thorn it is not as if he has an amazing coaching record or indeed anywhere near the coaching experience of Coleman yet he got appointed head coach and turned out alright. On that basis Coleman would seem a better bet then selecting Thorn all those years ago...just saying...In all honesty, I don't think most people's perceptions about who is good are necessarily that meaningful.
I wouldn't be excited to sign Darren Coleman for example. He's done well at Shute Shield level and he's coaching by far the best squad in MLR but he's totally untested at this level. He may do well but he also might not.
I do think the Waratahs job is pretty enticing. If there is firm agreement that the salary budget will go back up then it should be easy for a new coach to improve things substantially.
I'd certainly lean towards a current coach like Coleman or Manenti than a veteran who everyone has heard of but has no recent experience like Connolly.
Ironically FP I would’ve thought Connolly would’ve genuinely appealed to you as a coach.
No doubt, he’s had good results at club level.Right here is the main problem with coaching pathways in Australia, in that there aren't any.
What else is Coleman supposed to do but excel at club in the hopes of moving up? We have a system that pretty much necessitates all our potential coaches going offshore. Which is pretty mental really.
Not saying Coleman is good enough. I have NFI who is. But not having a basic development pathway is dumbo.
No doubt, he’s had good results at club level.
most can see that’s a result of being a good recruiter, first and foremost.
No doubt, he’s had good results at club level.
most can see that’s a result of being a good recruiter, first and foremost.
Ironically FP I would’ve thought Connolly would’ve genuinely appealed to you as a coach.
no I get that. Top level coaches must be falling over themselves to come and be a part of your organisation...
I was being a bit facetious and having a light hearted dig at your apparent aversion to offloads and tight forwards who aren’t just set piece specialists - but that exactly why I said I thought you’d like Connolly.Interested why?
My shopping list is a coach that focusses on all the basic skills
Good scrummaging
Effective lineout work
Aggressive defence
Working hard off the ball in attack and defence
Support play from depth
And focussing on getting the basic skills up to scratch first; like being able to catch & pass consistently well (and being always the first option) before even considering the hero stuff (cut outs and one handed passes in contact)
I don't see a 70yro who hasn't coached for years being the answer, I want someone who a new board will back for multiple years
I am not qualified to know all the ins and outs of whether Daren Coleman is right man for the job but have to trust those who do make the decision are. Yes normally (it appears)the apprenticeship after coaching shute shield is to get an assistant coaching gig at pro side before moving to head coach. But on paper Coleman has great record at shute shield and now at mlr side so certaintlu appears reasonable candidate to do due diligence on. if we look at thorn it is not as if he has an amazing coaching record or indeed anywhere near the coaching experience of Coleman yet he got appointed head coach and turned out alright. On that basis Coleman would seem a better bet then selecting Thorn all those years ago.just saying.
No doubt.It's a different story when you don't have the most cash to throw around though.
For mine, the 'tahs should be looking at a coach who has experience and success in developing players over time with an emphasis on systems.
Could Coleman expect the same runway with the Waratahs?
Few of names I haven't seen yet are Andy Friend, Scott Wisemantel or John Mulvihill??
Scott Wisemantel is in the Wallabies Coaching team