Some thoughts on how the Lions got terrible, and how they could stop being terrible

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Paul_D

Rookie
Aug 30, 2016
49
209
AFL Club
Brisbane Lions
It’s hard to describe the lonely existence of a Lions fan here in Brisbane - I suspect it’s rather what an endangered animal feels like, that sort of growing realisation you don’t see as many of you round anymore as you used to. That Lions mug on Jean’s desk disappeared a few years back, around the same time the Firebirds mug appeared, come to think about it. Adam never wears his guernsey in on casual Fridays anymore. And Rose retired and took her scarf with her.

There’s a sort of nod of acknowledgment when you do meet one in the wild, roaming the streets of Brisbane during the week. A sort of mutual wry, pained, expression passes between you and a sigh is exchanged that acknowledges, yes, you’re both still hanging in there. It wasn’t always like this of course. There was a time when the Lions were as rampant in Brisbane as their logo suggests. Huge crowds, ferocious atmosphere at the ‘Gabbatoir’, bumper stickers festooning cars the length and breadth of the city. Nowadays though the crowds are anaemic, the ground feels like a morgue and the bumper stickers have all been scratched off or replaced long ago. It’s just become sort of sad. No-one actually expects the Lions to win anymore. And usually they don’t.

I know it’s fashionable to bash Queensland fans for being fairweather and say that the crowds stopped coming once they weren’t winning premierships, but that view simply doesn’t hold up to closer scrutiny. Between 2004-2010 average home crowds were higher than they were in the premiership years, despite only appearing in finals in 2009. There was always a view during these years following the threepeat that the Lions had done something truly remarkable, and that it was only fair that we have our turn at the bottom again, before rebuilding and having another surge. Which would surely come in time. Michael Voss certainly thought so after our brief finals campaign in 2009, but 2010 was the critical year where events started to derail the dream. The signing of Fevola turned out to be a disaster and he was sacked early in 2011, one year into a lucrative 3 year contract, following a series of off-field incidents and ongoing issues with alcoholism. Good club men like Rischitelli, Brennan and Bradshaw were shipped out to bring to him in, with much rancour within the club’s supporter base, particularly over Bradshaw’s departure. The choice of Fevola was polarising as well - many female fans (including my dear mother) were outraged that the club would trash their reputation and supporter base for the cheap thrills and risky sugar hit Fevola might bring.

Voss improved on things after a dreadful 4-18 2011 season, winning ten games in both 2012 & 2013 but the board’s decision to sack him with 3 rounds to go in 2013, rather than risking him making the 8 and being forced to keep him on, was another fiasco. To bring down a club legend in such a manner, without ensuring their preferred replacement was already signed, sealed and delivered, speaks volumes to the amateur hour leadership of Angus Johnson, the then Chairman. This error was then compounded by hiring Justin Leppitsch, who turned out to be entirely the wrong candidate for the role, although it’s doubtful anyone could have succeeded given the circumstances he, a rookie coach was faced with - a player exodus that continues to this day, terrible facilities and off-field support and a player group that increasingly appeared shellshocked, mentally scarred and who had been numbed into senselessness by increasingly heavy losses.

Speaking of those losses, simple numbers are the best way to illustrate the gulf between us and the rest - recently sacked coaches always say that it’s a results based business after all. Since the start of 2010 to today, the Lions have played 163 games, and have finished on the losing side in 118 of them. From 2010 to 2013, we lost 57 games over 4 years, by an average margin of 38 points. Since 2014 we have lost 60 games in 3 years and a bit, and the average losing margin in that time has been 62 points. Average, mind you, Average of 62 points. This is a club that doesn’t even look like winning most games and almost never has the legs or effort to run them out against a committed opposition. Again, I know it’s fashionable to bag out Queenslanders as fair weather fans, but by any standards and given those results and on-field performances, I think we’re still doing well to even get 10,000 to the Gabba. No wonder season tickets have dried up - if you’d made an impressionable 5 year old sit through the last seven years of home games you’d be up in front of Child Safety for mental abuse.

Average crowds during Leppitsch’s tenure took the plunge below 20,000 for the first time too - 8 of our 10 lowest ever crowds all occurred in the last 3 years. The casual fans long ago stopped coming - the Lions are that bad now they’re starting to take out the members. And for this you need to look no further than the exodus of draftees - members can handle adversity so long as there is hope, but when the very source of that hope, the early draftees, the seed corn of rejuvenation are continually crushed up and blown in their faces to start lives at other clubs, it’s at that point when even members start to question the fairness of the system and the futility of continuing to pay their money to a club that has an immensely wealthy financial backer. When you start thinking the system is rigged against you and you’re being taken for granted, it’s not long until you make the connection that the best way to register your protest is to stop paying & stop showing up.

Where the Lions now find themselves is trapped in a death spiral, where they can't retain players because they keep getting flogged because they can't get any better because they can't retain players. There’s no foundation to fall back on. No real culture or connection with the city. Without wins there’s not much else to this club. The club exists here in Brisbane solely because Brisbane is Australia’s 3rd largest city and because the AFL aspires to be a national game. The lack of an AFL club in this city would be unthinkable, no matter how terrible they are, or how bad the hammerings from rival clubs become.

I think if I had to nominate rock bottom in recent years, it would be the round 20 game, away against a red-hot Adelaide in 2016 - the bleakest moment I can recall in the Lions history for two decades. Coming off a pasting by Port Adelaide the week previous, we knew we were going to get flogged before the game even started. We went in as if it was a funeral. You could see it in every player’s face in the warm-up. They were bracing themselves for it, trying to will themselves to endure it. Mitch Robinson kicked a goal in the first quarter to make it something like 38-6 to the Crows and had to yell at the boys to get around him. Throughout the game the cameras cut to bleak looking lone Lions fans in the crowd, the bravest souls I have ever met for going to that game, for Adelaide were merciless.

Final score was 177-39. We were crushed. Annihilated. The crowd felt sorry for us as our boys walked off - apologising with their soft, embarrassed applause for making us stand out there while their boys put on a show for them. Afterwards the coach spoke to the media and admitted that he had no answers. That it was boys against men. He was sacked a few weeks later when the season ended. And no-one in Brisbane really noticed or cared.

What this game and Leppa’s demise did though, was rouse the AFL into action. The evidence was indisputable and uncontestable. The Lions were absolutely bloody horrible, just awful, unequal and embarrassing and irrelevant, so terrible that a city of 3 million people were doing their best to pretend they didn’t exist - and it was long past time to step in and sort things out. Roused from their Docklands citadel and seeing a situation very similar to when Melbourne finally put Mark Neeld out of his misery, they determined on a similar course of action to repair the damage. With Paul Roos busy counting the money from his well-earned fellowship at the Demons, the AFL determined to cast a similar character in their recovery effort, and decided upon Chris Fagan, one of the chief brains behind the Hawks premiership juggernaut. Joining him on this difficult and extremely well-remunerated mission would be David Noble, former head of football at the Adelaide Crows.

Surely with a professional management team in place, and sensible proven men of grey hairs and football nous, the Lions would, in time, recover. To which I would say the AFL must think Chris Fagan is a bloody genius and the greatest coach since Jock McHale if they thought he alone was going to be able to halt this ongoing trainwreck. While Fagan might well have a better rapport with the players and enable them to better handle crushing defeats, he still has to face the problems that proved so insurmountable for Justin Leppitsch. The weights room is still a dungeon in the bowels of the Gabba, facilities are remain outdated and not up to required standards, key players are still getting injured, the team has too many passengers, the professionalism and attitude is better but still well off the pace, skills are still hideously inconsistent, decision making remains tentative and insecure, and unsurprisingly given all this - the crowds remain very very poor. Also, it turns out that Fagan & Noble being nice guys and good listeners isn’t enough to persuade Josh Schache to hang around. Not every player wants to spend their career on a psychiatrist’s couch developing coping techniques and mental toughness to endure repeated floggings. Some of them want to win as well.

You can see Fagan & Noble have tried to address this with the most recent draft - McLuggage, Berry & Cox are all from the same club in Ballarat - the belief is that if we can bring enough players in from the same country region, they will be less likely to leave due to reasons of homesickness and loneliness. While I don’t mind this approach, it’s certainly not foolproof. Many of the Lions players who left in recent years had friends at the club - while I shed no tears when we shipped Jack Redden out of the club, he and Rockliff were as close as brothers and yet that didn’t stop Jack from having a gutful of getting flogged every week and making tracks for the Eagles.

Additionally, such a strategy relies on keeping the players together. If they don’t develop at the same pace, you have a situation where some are playing in the 1’s, some in the 2’s - some might be injured. The club might also face the prospect of cutting one of them from the list if they don’t kick along and develop - do they get squeamish and retain them in the belief that if they cut them they might lose one of their better mates in the future? (also known as the Claye Beams principle)

My concern at this juncture is not with the talent of Fagan & Noble - I think they are the best people for the role - but with the strategy being pursued. It would appear as though the plan is to try and rebuild via the draft while modifying the approach slightly to allow for our regional difficulties - I feel that the problem with this approach is that if we keep trying to play by the rules of a big Melbourne club we will always lose, because we’re not a big Melbourne club. It also takes far too much time, time we simply don’t have. Rebuilding via the draft is pointless until we have an elite performance facility available for players, as we have shown we can’t retain or develop draftees at the club in recent years based on our current setup, squad & results.

Let’s focus on facilities for the moment. Before the Lions can look to attract anyone with genuine star power we have got to catch up with the 17 other clubs. Right now the Lions are still using 1990’s era facilities when every other club is in multi-million dollar built for purpose complexes. The 800 odd AFL players are a fairly tight knit group, even if they don’t know each other all personally, and the collective groupthink amongst them is, why would you go to the Lions, it’s a terrible place to work and the team gets flogged every weekend in front of bad crowds. Free agency has allowed this to occur - player veto over trades means no-one comes here who doesn’t want to, and the paucity of elite talent in the AFL has meant that anyone decent we draft or develop gets enticed out with an inflated salary from an interstate rival who can offer victory as well as money. For the last few years not even money has been able to convince players to come here - Josh Jenkins apparently thought it was worth $250,000/year to him not to play at Brisbane back in 2016, re-signing for that much less at the Crows, and it’s been a similar story when we’ve stuck our thumb out to try and get a lift from other players scoping out the joint. If the facilities were top notch it would be possible to attract people - bit like a stint in minimum security prison really, you can almost forget the confinement if the surrounds are pleasant enough. But when the gym and showers are more out of maximum security, and a prospective signee is contemplating pre-season training in a windowless weights room in the height of summer inhaling the aroma of 30 odd sweating blokes - well, not even money has been enough to get them across that threshold.

However, it does appear that the Lions are finally close to breaking ground on the long overdue Elite Performance Facility at Springfield. Located in the southwest of Brisbane in a rapidly growing region, this will be one of the best long-term decisions the Lions have made. There was talk of a base out near the Eagle Farm airport a year or two ago - this would have put them in the middle of a reclaimed wetlands surrounded by freeways, runways, constant jet noise 24/7 and no houses around for miles. It would have been disastrous. The move to Springfield and surrounding regions in SW Brisbane, an area heavily populated by families puts them right in the middle of their new heartland. Tens of thousands of potential new young fans of the club & code for the Lions to connect to out there, many of them first & second generation australians with no previous affiliation to rugby league to distract them. Space for football ovals. A training oval out at Springfield with a grandstand & plenty of open days will draw thousands of people to the club, particularly once it is used to play the AFL women’s games there. The new Crossrail link will be completed at some point within the next 6-8 years once Palaszczuk and the PM work out who’s paying for it, and the rail line from Springfield direct to underneath the Gabba will rival the Ipswich line after a Broncos Friday game for the size of the throng.

That’s the dream, anyway. Is it achievable? Long-term, yes, it is, but there’s a lot to do before we get there and the club needs to be outlining it’s plans now for the next five years to ensure that we sprint towards the finish line, not stumble over it. The focus for the club should be to try and survive the next few years in reasonable shape, finish the facility, and try and keep building towards future success - if the Lions can get through to end of 2020 and be getting back towards finals contention, there’s every chance the club will be able to capitalise on ease of access to the stadium & the new groundswell of local support and get back towards turning the Gabba into a place people want to be at on game day.

Realistically, a facility of the size the Lions are proposing is probably finished and ready to go at some stage before start of season 2019. Safe in that knowledge, we can go to market in trade week end of season 2018 and start looking around. We have tried twice in the past to make waves in the trade window - 2010 saw Fevola, and 2014 saw Beams/Christensen/Robinson - the first has already been covered and the latter is probably both pass & fail at this stage, given the injuries that all 3 have battled with at various stages. The Lions cannot afford to get this wrong again, and indeed, given the seasoned heads parachuted into the club by the AFL, should have no excuses if they do.

A good starting point for the Lions would be to observe what other clubs are doing, and what we are seeing with clubs in recent years is an emphasis on bringing in some senior heads to assist with development, and provide an injection of professionalism. Mitchell went to the Eagles. Barlow is now at the Suns. Lewis & Hibberd at the Dees. Cloke to the Dogs. Deledio at GWS. And so on. We have tried this, but the ones we attract tend to be fringe players and depth cover only, players such as Tom Bell. Ryan Bastinac. Josh Walker. Jarrad Jansen. Anyone who can get a gig elsewhere has generally done so. We are very much the last chance saloon and as such we do wind up with an awful lot of list cloggers who both and help and hinder the development of the club simultaneously - Bell & Bastinac have already been dropped by Fagan this season for example, and I doubt they will have their contracts renewed next time around.

My view is that the club needs to embark on an aggressive trading strategy to add more experience and culture to the squad while also trimming some of our passengers. I do not believe that the club will succeed solely via a draft rebuild without importing players from successful clubs. Brisbane’s history of developing players is execrable. Dayne Zorko & Tom Rockliff are about the only 2 homegrown players we have turned into stars in recent years. Plenty have gone on to much better things since departing the club though. What is needed is about 3-4 established players we can put into our starting 22 to provide a critical mass of professionalism and determination, and help eliminate the lacklustre efforts we regularly see from our shellshocked veterans of years and years of mediocrity. Additionally it would enable us to dispense with the services of some of our depth players who we know will never make the step beyond injury cover.

Too many of our players haven’t gone on with their promise - Mayes, Lester, Bewick, Harwood, Taylor, Paparone, Close, Freeman, Rich - and those are just the players still on the list, I’d be here for a lot longer listing all the ones we’ve cut or lost. Jack Redden, Jordan Lisle, Mitch Golby, Andrew Raines, Xavier Clarke, Amon Buchanan, Travis Johnstone, Luke McGuane, Brent Moloney, Josh Green, Callum Bartlett, Todd Banfield, Tom Collier, James Polkinghorne, Matt Leuenberger, Mitch Clark, Albert Proud. Again, just a selection. The Lions draft & trade history for the last ten years makes for grim reading. We are never going to develop players without anyone to teach them how to play which is why new facilities that allow us to attract outside, experienced players are so critical to the recovery of the club.

So who do we go after? What follows is my best attempts observation and guesswork - I’m not a recruiter and have no idea as to players states of mind and personal circumstances. Think of them as the sort of player we should be chasing and these are the most suitable examples

With that said, the first club I’d be hitting up is Port Adelaide. It’s no secret their salary cap is under pressure - Hamish Hartlett was publicly hung out in the shop window with no takers only last year - one year into a five year deal. On top of this they’re behind in the draft, with their first rounder this year coming our way. Offloading a player and the possibility of getting a pick back is a no-brainer for them and one player I’d like to see us ask about from them is Brad Ebert.

27 years old, off contract at the end of 2017. Has already changed clubs once, having come from West Coast so he’s no stranger to relocating. Some say he’s a bit one dimensional - perhaps at Port he is, surrounded by razzle dazzle talent, but at the Lions he would be a priceless asset. A durable, hard-running midfielder, setting high standards in attack and defence. Just had a new baby. Surely a good offer from the Lions, job security and the prospect of raising the kid in the warm climes of Brisbane could be appealing as he approaches the latter half of his career. More to the point he looks like the sort of guy who wouldn’t mind training at the Lions next year while the new facilities are still being built. I reckon we could get him for 4 years at around $500,000/year + sweeteners and unlike Chris Mayne he wouldn’t have any problems holding down a spot in the starting 22.

Another one to look at around the end of 2018 is David Armitage. Former Queensland boy. Very valuable player to the Saints. Contracted until end of 2019. Understandably they probably don’t want to lose him, and it’d cost a bit to get him out of there. But let’s say in 2018 the Saints are kicking along quite nicely, players are developing well - Armitage will have turned 30 and probably has 2-3 years left in him. Maybe the Saints and he might want to talk if we came knocking with our first round pick & a sweetener. If that Saints premiership looks a bit elusive - or even better, has already been won - maybe he might be persuaded to come north. Certainly at that age and from that background he would be a perfect addition to our midfield, and would drive improvement and commitment from our young players. I’d consider this one unlikely but I think we’d be mad not to at least make enquiries if it looked possible. Let’s make the hometown lure work for us for a change.

David Mundy. Another player who’s contracted until the end of 2018 - triggered a one year extension with Freo. Bit of a wait and see this one - but if there’s any chance Freo decide to cut him while he’s still got a year left in him and he was keen to play on we’d be mad not to pick him up. I think he’s a tremendous professional and even 12 months of a fading Mundy would be worth a lot more than 2 years of Bastinac or Bell. On a similar note, albeit contracted to the end of 2019, Kieran Jack is another we should keep an eye on. A player from a successful club with a great ethos and culture. Would be a great addition for a couple of years.

They’re all old men I hear you say. Well, yes, they are (or will be). But I think Leppa got it right when he said it was boys against men, and realistically I think even with brand new facilities we’ll struggle to pick up marquee talent - we are much more likely to be able to pick up dispensable veterans by valuing them more than their current club, and we could appeal to their love for the game by emphasising the vitally important work Brisbane requires them for. But to I’d also like to see us go out and try to get a high-profile marquee player if we can, and try and create some hype back around the club again - and with that in mind, here’s a name from left field we should be after.

Jason Johannisen.

I know, the chances of him coming to the Lions are virtually nil, particularly before the facilities are constructed. But look at what he offers - the Lions achilles heel has always been transitioning out of our own 50 because of poor kicking and lack of pace. A player like Johannisen with his speed, booming kick and his run & carry would help solve a lot of those woes as well as take the heat of some of our lesser lights who have struggled to shed tags for years, particularly Daniel Rich.

He’s off contract at the end of 2017 for anyone who hasn’t been following the news. The dogs, with all their stars to juggle and a host of players coming out of contract, can probably offer him around $500,000/season. I think our recruiting strategy at this time and place can only be that of Kerry Packer’s legal recruitment strategy in Howzat! The Story of World Series Cricket...

“You give me the name of the top bloke, I call him, I offer him more ****ing money than anybody else, he drops everything and comes to work for me.”

If you’re yet to be convinced, look at him. Flair, athleticism, skill, dyes his hair blonde, unusual surname - first name Jason, hell - teach him to do a handstand after a win and he’d bring ten thousand through the gates for nostalgia reasons alone.

So there you have it. My grand design to make the Lions great again. Honestly, I’d settle for relevant and no longer terrible, really. But I do think regardless of what happens that 2017 is a key year for the Lions, where the club needs to grasp the nettle and actually admit to the people of Brisbane how bad they are - something they have never really acknowledged - and take steps to start rebuilding a once proud club that has fallen into ruin. The Lions have never wanted to publicly admit their plight because they’re worried about people not wanting to come along to games - but honestly, if anyone in Brisbane isn’t aware the Lions are garbage by now, they’re either a deaf mute or a member of the AFL commission. The club’s & AFL’s high-handedness and refusal to acknowledge reality has been typical of the lack of communication to their constituents in recent years. A big part of the reason why the people have Brisbane have turned their backs particularly in recent years has been the feeling that they’ve been taken for a ride by the AFL and ignored as a succession of players walked out, a club fell into debt and facilities lagged massively behind their rivals. The Lions relentlessly upbeat attitude on social media jars against the perpetually negative on field results and performance, and already I can see people querying why the Lions bothered to bring in Fagan if we’re already 1-8 after the start of the season and still being flogged by plenty. There is a very real risk of him being hung out to dry before he can do his work, if the powers-that-be don’t get together this season and announce what their plan is to address the problems that still stand between the Lions and a return to competitiveness.

I have done my best in this article to outline what I feel could be a possible path forward, in terms of broad strategy. Certainly steps have already been commenced that I agree with but as I have explained, there is a great deal of work left undone. If the Lions cannot yet show some fight on the field, at the very least they need to start showing some off the field and begin demonstrating to the people of Brisbane that they are in this for the long haul, and do have a strategy beyond crossing their fingers and hoping the AFL backs a dumptruck of money up to the front doors of the club and they start winning again. The move to Springfield needs to form the cornerstone of an integrated regional strategy to rebuild the fabric of the club and the supporter base, and this needs to be communicated to the people of Brisbane to show them that there is hope for the future with this club, because right now hope is something that is in very short supply at the Gabba.

Let’s put some pride back in the Lions. It’s been absent for far too long.
 
So Paul, which paper do you work for? I'd be happy to buy it and read the rest of your stuff.

Absolutely facilities have to bedded down this year. Sport science is at the point where it evens out the bulk of the field IF the athletes have access to the facilities and coaches that are they key ingredients. The coaches seem to be right but the facilities are a boat anchor to performance.


I'm hoping you are in the know and the article is a pre- announcement smooth the waters with the die-hard fans that don't like Springfield.

Personally I don't give a damn where it is. I just want to be able to go to the gabba with my extended family, enjoy a battle between 2 competitive teams and not leave feeling like I've been hit by a truck.
 
Gee, that was a long well thought out post Paul D , well done. This has been discussed a lot over the nearly 2 years I've been on BF and I can only imagine what it was like in the "old days" with the Angus, Vossy, Aker, Leppa etc. etc.. etc... situations.

Fagan, Noble and Swann are on the right track would be about all I could say. Time to forget but learn from the past and move on IMO.
 

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It’s hard to describe the lonely existence of a Lions fan here in Brisbane - I suspect it’s rather what an endangered animal feels like, that sort of growing realisation you don’t see as many of you round anymore as you used to. That Lions mug on Jean’s desk disappeared a few years back, around the same time the Firebirds mug appeared, come to think about it. Adam never wears his guernsey in on casual Fridays anymore. And Rose retired and took her scarf with her.

There’s a sort of nod of acknowledgment when you do meet one in the wild, roaming the streets of Brisbane during the week. A sort of mutual wry, pained, expression passes between you and a sigh is exchanged that acknowledges, yes, you’re both still hanging in there. It wasn’t always like this of course. There was a time when the Lions were as rampant in Brisbane as their logo suggests. Huge crowds, ferocious atmosphere at the ‘Gabbatoir’, bumper stickers festooning cars the length and breadth of the city. Nowadays though the crowds are anaemic, the ground feels like a morgue and the bumper stickers have all been scratched off or replaced long ago. It’s just become sort of sad. No-one actually expects the Lions to win anymore. And usually they don’t.

I know it’s fashionable to bash Queensland fans for being fairweather and say that the crowds stopped coming once they weren’t winning premierships, but that view simply doesn’t hold up to closer scrutiny. Between 2004-2010 average home crowds were higher than they were in the premiership years, despite only appearing in finals in 2009. There was always a view during these years following the threepeat that the Lions had done something truly remarkable, and that it was only fair that we have our turn at the bottom again, before rebuilding and having another surge. Which would surely come in time. Michael Voss certainly thought so after our brief finals campaign in 2009, but 2010 was the critical year where events started to derail the dream. The signing of Fevola turned out to be a disaster and he was sacked early in 2011, one year into a lucrative 3 year contract, following a series of off-field incidents and ongoing issues with alcoholism. Good club men like Rischitelli, Brennan and Bradshaw were shipped out to bring to him in, with much rancour within the club’s supporter base, particularly over Bradshaw’s departure. The choice of Fevola was polarising as well - many female fans (including my dear mother) were outraged that the club would trash their reputation and supporter base for the cheap thrills and risky sugar hit Fevola might bring.

Voss improved on things after a dreadful 4-18 2011 season, winning ten games in both 2012 & 2013 but the board’s decision to sack him with 3 rounds to go in 2013, rather than risking him making the 8 and being forced to keep him on, was another fiasco. To bring down a club legend in such a manner, without ensuring their preferred replacement was already signed, sealed and delivered, speaks volumes to the amateur hour leadership of Angus Johnson, the then Chairman. This error was then compounded by hiring Justin Leppitsch, who turned out to be entirely the wrong candidate for the role, although it’s doubtful anyone could have succeeded given the circumstances he, a rookie coach was faced with - a player exodus that continues to this day, terrible facilities and off-field support and a player group that increasingly appeared shellshocked, mentally scarred and who had been numbed into senselessness by increasingly heavy losses.

Speaking of those losses, simple numbers are the best way to illustrate the gulf between us and the rest - recently sacked coaches always say that it’s a results based business after all. Since the start of 2010 to today, the Lions have played 163 games, and have finished on the losing side in 118 of them. From 2010 to 2013, we lost 57 games over 4 years, by an average margin of 38 points. Since 2014 we have lost 60 games in 3 years and a bit, and the average losing margin in that time has been 62 points. Average, mind you, Average of 62 points. This is a club that doesn’t even look like winning most games and almost never has the legs or effort to run them out against a committed opposition. Again, I know it’s fashionable to bag out Queenslanders as fair weather fans, but by any standards and given those results and on-field performances, I think we’re still doing well to even get 10,000 to the Gabba. No wonder season tickets have dried up - if you’d made an impressionable 5 year old sit through the last seven years of home games you’d be up in front of Child Safety for mental abuse.

Average crowds during Leppitsch’s tenure took the plunge below 20,000 for the first time too - 8 of our 10 lowest ever crowds all occurred in the last 3 years. The casual fans long ago stopped coming - the Lions are that bad now they’re starting to take out the members. And for this you need to look no further than the exodus of draftees - members can handle adversity so long as there is hope, but when the very source of that hope, the early draftees, the seed corn of rejuvenation are continually crushed up and blown in their faces to start lives at other clubs, it’s at that point when even members start to question the fairness of the system and the futility of continuing to pay their money to a club that has an immensely wealthy financial backer. When you start thinking the system is rigged against you and you’re being taken for granted, it’s not long until you make the connection that the best way to register your protest is to stop paying & stop showing up.

Where the Lions now find themselves is trapped in a death spiral, where they can't retain players because they keep getting flogged because they can't get any better because they can't retain players. There’s no foundation to fall back on. No real culture or connection with the city. Without wins there’s not much else to this club. The club exists here in Brisbane solely because Brisbane is Australia’s 3rd largest city and because the AFL aspires to be a national game. The lack of an AFL club in this city would be unthinkable, no matter how terrible they are, or how bad the hammerings from rival clubs become.

I think if I had to nominate rock bottom in recent years, it would be the round 20 game, away against a red-hot Adelaide in 2016 - the bleakest moment I can recall in the Lions history for two decades. Coming off a pasting by Port Adelaide the week previous, we knew we were going to get flogged before the game even started. We went in as if it was a funeral. You could see it in every player’s face in the warm-up. They were bracing themselves for it, trying to will themselves to endure it. Mitch Robinson kicked a goal in the first quarter to make it something like 38-6 to the Crows and had to yell at the boys to get around him. Throughout the game the cameras cut to bleak looking lone Lions fans in the crowd, the bravest souls I have ever met for going to that game, for Adelaide were merciless.

Final score was 177-39. We were crushed. Annihilated. The crowd felt sorry for us as our boys walked off - apologising with their soft, embarrassed applause for making us stand out there while their boys put on a show for them. Afterwards the coach spoke to the media and admitted that he had no answers. That it was boys against men. He was sacked a few weeks later when the season ended. And no-one in Brisbane really noticed or cared.

What this game and Leppa’s demise did though, was rouse the AFL into action. The evidence was indisputable and uncontestable. The Lions were absolutely bloody horrible, just awful, unequal and embarrassing and irrelevant, so terrible that a city of 3 million people were doing their best to pretend they didn’t exist - and it was long past time to step in and sort things out. Roused from their Docklands citadel and seeing a situation very similar to when Melbourne finally put Mark Neeld out of his misery, they determined on a similar course of action to repair the damage. With Paul Roos busy counting the money from his well-earned fellowship at the Demons, the AFL determined to cast a similar character in their recovery effort, and decided upon Chris Fagan, one of the chief brains behind the Hawks premiership juggernaut. Joining him on this difficult and extremely well-remunerated mission would be David Noble, former head of football at the Adelaide Crows.

Surely with a professional management team in place, and sensible proven men of grey hairs and football nous, the Lions would, in time, recover. To which I would say the AFL must think Chris Fagan is a bloody genius and the greatest coach since Jock McHale if they thought he alone was going to be able to halt this ongoing trainwreck. While Fagan might well have a better rapport with the players and enable them to better handle crushing defeats, he still has to face the problems that proved so insurmountable for Justin Leppitsch. The weights room is still a dungeon in the bowels of the Gabba, facilities are remain outdated and not up to required standards, key players are still getting injured, the team has too many passengers, the professionalism and attitude is better but still well off the pace, skills are still hideously inconsistent, decision making remains tentative and insecure, and unsurprisingly given all this - the crowds remain very very poor. Also, it turns out that Fagan & Noble being nice guys and good listeners isn’t enough to persuade Josh Schache to hang around. Not every player wants to spend their career on a psychiatrist’s couch developing coping techniques and mental toughness to endure repeated floggings. Some of them want to win as well.

You can see Fagan & Noble have tried to address this with the most recent draft - McLuggage, Berry & Cox are all from the same club in Ballarat - the belief is that if we can bring enough players in from the same country region, they will be less likely to leave due to reasons of homesickness and loneliness. While I don’t mind this approach, it’s certainly not foolproof. Many of the Lions players who left in recent years had friends at the club - while I shed no tears when we shipped Jack Redden out of the club, he and Rockliff were as close as brothers and yet that didn’t stop Jack from having a gutful of getting flogged every week and making tracks for the Eagles.

Additionally, such a strategy relies on keeping the players together. If they don’t develop at the same pace, you have a situation where some are playing in the 1’s, some in the 2’s - some might be injured. The club might also face the prospect of cutting one of them from the list if they don’t kick along and develop - do they get squeamish and retain them in the belief that if they cut them they might lose one of their better mates in the future? (also known as the Claye Beams principle)

My concern at this juncture is not with the talent of Fagan & Noble - I think they are the best people for the role - but with the strategy being pursued. It would appear as though the plan is to try and rebuild via the draft while modifying the approach slightly to allow for our regional difficulties - I feel that the problem with this approach is that if we keep trying to play by the rules of a big Melbourne club we will always lose, because we’re not a big Melbourne club. It also takes far too much time, time we simply don’t have. Rebuilding via the draft is pointless until we have an elite performance facility available for players, as we have shown we can’t retain or develop draftees at the club in recent years based on our current setup, squad & results.

Let’s focus on facilities for the moment. Before the Lions can look to attract anyone with genuine star power we have got to catch up with the 17 other clubs. Right now the Lions are still using 1990’s era facilities when every other club is in multi-million dollar built for purpose complexes. The 800 odd AFL players are a fairly tight knit group, even if they don’t know each other all personally, and the collective groupthink amongst them is, why would you go to the Lions, it’s a terrible place to work and the team gets flogged every weekend in front of bad crowds. Free agency has allowed this to occur - player veto over trades means no-one comes here who doesn’t want to, and the paucity of elite talent in the AFL has meant that anyone decent we draft or develop gets enticed out with an inflated salary from an interstate rival who can offer victory as well as money. For the last few years not even money has been able to convince players to come here - Josh Jenkins apparently thought it was worth $250,000/year to him not to play at Brisbane back in 2016, re-signing for that much less at the Crows, and it’s been a similar story when we’ve stuck our thumb out to try and get a lift from other players scoping out the joint. If the facilities were top notch it would be possible to attract people - bit like a stint in minimum security prison really, you can almost forget the confinement if the surrounds are pleasant enough. But when the gym and showers are more out of maximum security, and a prospective signee is contemplating pre-season training in a windowless weights room in the height of summer inhaling the aroma of 30 odd sweating blokes - well, not even money has been enough to get them across that threshold.

However, it does appear that the Lions are finally close to breaking ground on the long overdue Elite Performance Facility at Springfield. Located in the southwest of Brisbane in a rapidly growing region, this will be one of the best long-term decisions the Lions have made. There was talk of a base out near the Eagle Farm airport a year or two ago - this would have put them in the middle of a reclaimed wetlands surrounded by freeways, runways, constant jet noise 24/7 and no houses around for miles. It would have been disastrous. The move to Springfield and surrounding regions in SW Brisbane, an area heavily populated by families puts them right in the middle of their new heartland. Tens of thousands of potential new young fans of the club & code for the Lions to connect to out there, many of them first & second generation australians with no previous affiliation to rugby league to distract them. Space for football ovals. A training oval out at Springfield with a grandstand & plenty of open days will draw thousands of people to the club, particularly once it is used to play the AFL women’s games there. The new Crossrail link will be completed at some point within the next 6-8 years once Palaszczuk and the PM work out who’s paying for it, and the rail line from Springfield direct to underneath the Gabba will rival the Ipswich line after a Broncos Friday game for the size of the throng.

That’s the dream, anyway. Is it achievable? Long-term, yes, it is, but there’s a lot to do before we get there and the club needs to be outlining it’s plans now for the next five years to ensure that we sprint towards the finish line, not stumble over it. The focus for the club should be to try and survive the next few years in reasonable shape, finish the facility, and try and keep building towards future success - if the Lions can get through to end of 2020 and be getting back towards finals contention, there’s every chance the club will be able to capitalise on ease of access to the stadium & the new groundswell of local support and get back towards turning the Gabba into a place people want to be at on game day.

Realistically, a facility of the size the Lions are proposing is probably finished and ready to go at some stage before start of season 2019. Safe in that knowledge, we can go to market in trade week end of season 2018 and start looking around. We have tried twice in the past to make waves in the trade window - 2010 saw Fevola, and 2014 saw Beams/Christensen/Robinson - the first has already been covered and the latter is probably both pass & fail at this stage, given the injuries that all 3 have battled with at various stages. The Lions cannot afford to get this wrong again, and indeed, given the seasoned heads parachuted into the club by the AFL, should have no excuses if they do.

A good starting point for the Lions would be to observe what other clubs are doing, and what we are seeing with clubs in recent years is an emphasis on bringing in some senior heads to assist with development, and provide an injection of professionalism. Mitchell went to the Eagles. Barlow is now at the Suns. Lewis & Hibberd at the Dees. Cloke to the Dogs. Deledio at GWS. And so on. We have tried this, but the ones we attract tend to be fringe players and depth cover only, players such as Tom Bell. Ryan Bastinac. Josh Walker. Jarrad Jansen. Anyone who can get a gig elsewhere has generally done so. We are very much the last chance saloon and as such we do wind up with an awful lot of list cloggers who both and help and hinder the development of the club simultaneously - Bell & Bastinac have already been dropped by Fagan this season for example, and I doubt they will have their contracts renewed next time around.

My view is that the club needs to embark on an aggressive trading strategy to add more experience and culture to the squad while also trimming some of our passengers. I do not believe that the club will succeed solely via a draft rebuild without importing players from successful clubs. Brisbane’s history of developing players is execrable. Dayne Zorko & Tom Rockliff are about the only 2 homegrown players we have turned into stars in recent years. Plenty have gone on to much better things since departing the club though. What is needed is about 3-4 established players we can put into our starting 22 to provide a critical mass of professionalism and determination, and help eliminate the lacklustre efforts we regularly see from our shellshocked veterans of years and years of mediocrity. Additionally it would enable us to dispense with the services of some of our depth players who we know will never make the step beyond injury cover.

Too many of our players haven’t gone on with their promise - Mayes, Lester, Bewick, Harwood, Taylor, Paparone, Close, Freeman, Rich - and those are just the players still on the list, I’d be here for a lot longer listing all the ones we’ve cut or lost. Jack Redden, Jordan Lisle, Mitch Golby, Andrew Raines, Xavier Clarke, Amon Buchanan, Travis Johnstone, Luke McGuane, Brent Moloney, Josh Green, Callum Bartlett, Todd Banfield, Tom Collier, James Polkinghorne, Matt Leuenberger, Mitch Clark, Albert Proud. Again, just a selection. The Lions draft & trade history for the last ten years makes for grim reading. We are never going to develop players without anyone to teach them how to play which is why new facilities that allow us to attract outside, experienced players are so critical to the recovery of the club.

So who do we go after? What follows is my best attempts observation and guesswork - I’m not a recruiter and have no idea as to players states of mind and personal circumstances. Think of them as the sort of player we should be chasing and these are the most suitable examples

With that said, the first club I’d be hitting up is Port Adelaide. It’s no secret their salary cap is under pressure - Hamish Hartlett was publicly hung out in the shop window with no takers only last year - one year into a five year deal. On top of this they’re behind in the draft, with their first rounder this year coming our way. Offloading a player and the possibility of getting a pick back is a no-brainer for them and one player I’d like to see us ask about from them is Brad Ebert.

27 years old, off contract at the end of 2017. Has already changed clubs once, having come from West Coast so he’s no stranger to relocating. Some say he’s a bit one dimensional - perhaps at Port he is, surrounded by razzle dazzle talent, but at the Lions he would be a priceless asset. A durable, hard-running midfielder, setting high standards in attack and defence. Just had a new baby. Surely a good offer from the Lions, job security and the prospect of raising the kid in the warm climes of Brisbane could be appealing as he approaches the latter half of his career. More to the point he looks like the sort of guy who wouldn’t mind training at the Lions next year while the new facilities are still being built. I reckon we could get him for 4 years at around $500,000/year + sweeteners and unlike Chris Mayne he wouldn’t have any problems holding down a spot in the starting 22.

Another one to look at around the end of 2018 is David Armitage. Former Queensland boy. Very valuable player to the Saints. Contracted until end of 2019. Understandably they probably don’t want to lose him, and it’d cost a bit to get him out of there. But let’s say in 2018 the Saints are kicking along quite nicely, players are developing well - Armitage will have turned 30 and probably has 2-3 years left in him. Maybe the Saints and he might want to talk if we came knocking with our first round pick & a sweetener. If that Saints premiership looks a bit elusive - or even better, has already been won - maybe he might be persuaded to come north. Certainly at that age and from that background he would be a perfect addition to our midfield, and would drive improvement and commitment from our young players. I’d consider this one unlikely but I think we’d be mad not to at least make enquiries if it looked possible. Let’s make the hometown lure work for us for a change.

David Mundy. Another player who’s contracted until the end of 2018 - triggered a one year extension with Freo. Bit of a wait and see this one - but if there’s any chance Freo decide to cut him while he’s still got a year left in him and he was keen to play on we’d be mad not to pick him up. I think he’s a tremendous professional and even 12 months of a fading Mundy would be worth a lot more than 2 years of Bastinac or Bell. On a similar note, albeit contracted to the end of 2019, Kieran Jack is another we should keep an eye on. A player from a successful club with a great ethos and culture. Would be a great addition for a couple of years.

They’re all old men I hear you say. Well, yes, they are (or will be). But I think Leppa got it right when he said it was boys against men, and realistically I think even with brand new facilities we’ll struggle to pick up marquee talent - we are much more likely to be able to pick up dispensable veterans by valuing them more than their current club, and we could appeal to their love for the game by emphasising the vitally important work Brisbane requires them for. But to I’d also like to see us go out and try to get a high-profile marquee player if we can, and try and create some hype back around the club again - and with that in mind, here’s a name from left field we should be after.

Jason Johannisen.

I know, the chances of him coming to the Lions are virtually nil, particularly before the facilities are constructed. But look at what he offers - the Lions achilles heel has always been transitioning out of our own 50 because of poor kicking and lack of pace. A player like Johannisen with his speed, booming kick and his run & carry would help solve a lot of those woes as well as take the heat of some of our lesser lights who have struggled to shed tags for years, particularly Daniel Rich.

He’s off contract at the end of 2017 for anyone who hasn’t been following the news. The dogs, with all their stars to juggle and a host of players coming out of contract, can probably offer him around $500,000/season. I think our recruiting strategy at this time and place can only be that of Kerry Packer’s legal recruitment strategy in Howzat! The Story of World Series Cricket...

“You give me the name of the top bloke, I call him, I offer him more ******* money than anybody else, he drops everything and comes to work for me.”

If you’re yet to be convinced, look at him. Flair, athleticism, skill, dyes his hair blonde, unusual surname - first name Jason, hell - teach him to do a handstand after a win and he’d bring ten thousand through the gates for nostalgia reasons alone.

So there you have it. My grand design to make the Lions great again. Honestly, I’d settle for relevant and no longer terrible, really. But I do think regardless of what happens that 2017 is a key year for the Lions, where the club needs to grasp the nettle and actually admit to the people of Brisbane how bad they are - something they have never really acknowledged - and take steps to start rebuilding a once proud club that has fallen into ruin. The Lions have never wanted to publicly admit their plight because they’re worried about people not wanting to come along to games - but honestly, if anyone in Brisbane isn’t aware the Lions are garbage by now, they’re either a deaf mute or a member of the AFL commission. The club’s & AFL’s high-handedness and refusal to acknowledge reality has been typical of the lack of communication to their constituents in recent years. A big part of the reason why the people have Brisbane have turned their backs particularly in recent years has been the feeling that they’ve been taken for a ride by the AFL and ignored as a succession of players walked out, a club fell into debt and facilities lagged massively behind their rivals. The Lions relentlessly upbeat attitude on social media jars against the perpetually negative on field results and performance, and already I can see people querying why the Lions bothered to bring in Fagan if we’re already 1-8 after the start of the season and still being flogged by plenty. There is a very real risk of him being hung out to dry before he can do his work, if the powers-that-be don’t get together this season and announce what their plan is to address the problems that still stand between the Lions and a return to competitiveness.

I have done my best in this article to outline what I feel could be a possible path forward, in terms of broad strategy. Certainly steps have already been commenced that I agree with but as I have explained, there is a great deal of work left undone. If the Lions cannot yet show some fight on the field, at the very least they need to start showing some off the field and begin demonstrating to the people of Brisbane that they are in this for the long haul, and do have a strategy beyond crossing their fingers and hoping the AFL backs a dumptruck of money up to the front doors of the club and they start winning again. The move to Springfield needs to form the cornerstone of an integrated regional strategy to rebuild the fabric of the club and the supporter base, and this needs to be communicated to the people of Brisbane to show them that there is hope for the future with this club, because right now hope is something that is in very short supply at the Gabba.

Let’s put some pride back in the Lions. It’s been absent for far too long.

I don't have the requisite IT skills, or other Club insider contacts, to ensure, no, to insist, that this post should be compulsory reading for all, ALL, Lions' coaching, strategy, resourcing, drafting and associated personnel. But if I did, this contribution would be on their desks, right now. Every single point is totally spot on.

Brilliant.

We need a solid core beyond Beams, Rockliff and Zorko, otherwise they'll grow old before their time. We ask far too much of far too few.
 
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I don't have the requisite IT skills, or other Club insider contacts, to ensure, no, to insist, that this post should be compulsory reading for all, ALL, Lions' coaching, strategy, resourcing, drafting and associated personnel. But if I did, this contribution would be on their desks, right now. Every single point is totally spot on.

Brilliant.

We need a solid core beyond Beams and Zorko, otherwise they'll grow old before their time. We ask far too much of far too few.
Yep, Paul was brilliant and certainly a lot better analysis of our situation than any MSM journalist I can recall.
Paul if you don't have a job in the media you should have, the way you constructed that post was highly impressive. It was compelling, humorous and considering its length concise, one of if not the best post I have read on BF.
 
It’s hard to describe the lonely existence of a Lions fan here in Brisbane - I suspect it’s rather what an endangered animal feels like, that sort of growing realisation you don’t see as many of you round anymore as you used to. That Lions mug on Jean’s desk disappeared a few years back, around the same time the Firebirds mug appeared, come to think about it. Adam never wears his guernsey in on casual Fridays anymore. And Rose retired and took her scarf with her.

There’s a sort of nod of acknowledgment when you do meet one in the wild, roaming the streets of Brisbane during the week. A sort of mutual wry, pained, expression passes between you and a sigh is exchanged that acknowledges, yes, you’re both still hanging in there. It wasn’t always like this of course. There was a time when the Lions were as rampant in Brisbane as their logo suggests. Huge crowds, ferocious atmosphere at the ‘Gabbatoir’, bumper stickers festooning cars the length and breadth of the city. Nowadays though the crowds are anaemic, the ground feels like a morgue and the bumper stickers have all been scratched off or replaced long ago. It’s just become sort of sad. No-one actually expects the Lions to win anymore. And usually they don’t.

I know it’s fashionable to bash Queensland fans for being fairweather and say that the crowds stopped coming once they weren’t winning premierships, but that view simply doesn’t hold up to closer scrutiny. Between 2004-2010 average home crowds were higher than they were in the premiership years, despite only appearing in finals in 2009. There was always a view during these years following the threepeat that the Lions had done something truly remarkable, and that it was only fair that we have our turn at the bottom again, before rebuilding and having another surge. Which would surely come in time. Michael Voss certainly thought so after our brief finals campaign in 2009, but 2010 was the critical year where events started to derail the dream. The signing of Fevola turned out to be a disaster and he was sacked early in 2011, one year into a lucrative 3 year contract, following a series of off-field incidents and ongoing issues with alcoholism. Good club men like Rischitelli, Brennan and Bradshaw were shipped out to bring to him in, with much rancour within the club’s supporter base, particularly over Bradshaw’s departure. The choice of Fevola was polarising as well - many female fans (including my dear mother) were outraged that the club would trash their reputation and supporter base for the cheap thrills and risky sugar hit Fevola might bring.

Voss improved on things after a dreadful 4-18 2011 season, winning ten games in both 2012 & 2013 but the board’s decision to sack him with 3 rounds to go in 2013, rather than risking him making the 8 and being forced to keep him on, was another fiasco. To bring down a club legend in such a manner, without ensuring their preferred replacement was already signed, sealed and delivered, speaks volumes to the amateur hour leadership of Angus Johnson, the then Chairman. This error was then compounded by hiring Justin Leppitsch, who turned out to be entirely the wrong candidate for the role, although it’s doubtful anyone could have succeeded given the circumstances he, a rookie coach was faced with - a player exodus that continues to this day, terrible facilities and off-field support and a player group that increasingly appeared shellshocked, mentally scarred and who had been numbed into senselessness by increasingly heavy losses.

Speaking of those losses, simple numbers are the best way to illustrate the gulf between us and the rest - recently sacked coaches always say that it’s a results based business after all. Since the start of 2010 to today, the Lions have played 163 games, and have finished on the losing side in 118 of them. From 2010 to 2013, we lost 57 games over 4 years, by an average margin of 38 points. Since 2014 we have lost 60 games in 3 years and a bit, and the average losing margin in that time has been 62 points. Average, mind you, Average of 62 points. This is a club that doesn’t even look like winning most games and almost never has the legs or effort to run them out against a committed opposition. Again, I know it’s fashionable to bag out Queenslanders as fair weather fans, but by any standards and given those results and on-field performances, I think we’re still doing well to even get 10,000 to the Gabba. No wonder season tickets have dried up - if you’d made an impressionable 5 year old sit through the last seven years of home games you’d be up in front of Child Safety for mental abuse.

Average crowds during Leppitsch’s tenure took the plunge below 20,000 for the first time too - 8 of our 10 lowest ever crowds all occurred in the last 3 years. The casual fans long ago stopped coming - the Lions are that bad now they’re starting to take out the members. And for this you need to look no further than the exodus of draftees - members can handle adversity so long as there is hope, but when the very source of that hope, the early draftees, the seed corn of rejuvenation are continually crushed up and blown in their faces to start lives at other clubs, it’s at that point when even members start to question the fairness of the system and the futility of continuing to pay their money to a club that has an immensely wealthy financial backer. When you start thinking the system is rigged against you and you’re being taken for granted, it’s not long until you make the connection that the best way to register your protest is to stop paying & stop showing up.

Where the Lions now find themselves is trapped in a death spiral, where they can't retain players because they keep getting flogged because they can't get any better because they can't retain players. There’s no foundation to fall back on. No real culture or connection with the city. Without wins there’s not much else to this club. The club exists here in Brisbane solely because Brisbane is Australia’s 3rd largest city and because the AFL aspires to be a national game. The lack of an AFL club in this city would be unthinkable, no matter how terrible they are, or how bad the hammerings from rival clubs become.

I think if I had to nominate rock bottom in recent years, it would be the round 20 game, away against a red-hot Adelaide in 2016 - the bleakest moment I can recall in the Lions history for two decades. Coming off a pasting by Port Adelaide the week previous, we knew we were going to get flogged before the game even started. We went in as if it was a funeral. You could see it in every player’s face in the warm-up. They were bracing themselves for it, trying to will themselves to endure it. Mitch Robinson kicked a goal in the first quarter to make it something like 38-6 to the Crows and had to yell at the boys to get around him. Throughout the game the cameras cut to bleak looking lone Lions fans in the crowd, the bravest souls I have ever met for going to that game, for Adelaide were merciless.

Final score was 177-39. We were crushed. Annihilated. The crowd felt sorry for us as our boys walked off - apologising with their soft, embarrassed applause for making us stand out there while their boys put on a show for them. Afterwards the coach spoke to the media and admitted that he had no answers. That it was boys against men. He was sacked a few weeks later when the season ended. And no-one in Brisbane really noticed or cared.

What this game and Leppa’s demise did though, was rouse the AFL into action. The evidence was indisputable and uncontestable. The Lions were absolutely bloody horrible, just awful, unequal and embarrassing and irrelevant, so terrible that a city of 3 million people were doing their best to pretend they didn’t exist - and it was long past time to step in and sort things out. Roused from their Docklands citadel and seeing a situation very similar to when Melbourne finally put Mark Neeld out of his misery, they determined on a similar course of action to repair the damage. With Paul Roos busy counting the money from his well-earned fellowship at the Demons, the AFL determined to cast a similar character in their recovery effort, and decided upon Chris Fagan, one of the chief brains behind the Hawks premiership juggernaut. Joining him on this difficult and extremely well-remunerated mission would be David Noble, former head of football at the Adelaide Crows.

Surely with a professional management team in place, and sensible proven men of grey hairs and football nous, the Lions would, in time, recover. To which I would say the AFL must think Chris Fagan is a bloody genius and the greatest coach since Jock McHale if they thought he alone was going to be able to halt this ongoing trainwreck. While Fagan might well have a better rapport with the players and enable them to better handle crushing defeats, he still has to face the problems that proved so insurmountable for Justin Leppitsch. The weights room is still a dungeon in the bowels of the Gabba, facilities are remain outdated and not up to required standards, key players are still getting injured, the team has too many passengers, the professionalism and attitude is better but still well off the pace, skills are still hideously inconsistent, decision making remains tentative and insecure, and unsurprisingly given all this - the crowds remain very very poor. Also, it turns out that Fagan & Noble being nice guys and good listeners isn’t enough to persuade Josh Schache to hang around. Not every player wants to spend their career on a psychiatrist’s couch developing coping techniques and mental toughness to endure repeated floggings. Some of them want to win as well.

You can see Fagan & Noble have tried to address this with the most recent draft - McLuggage, Berry & Cox are all from the same club in Ballarat - the belief is that if we can bring enough players in from the same country region, they will be less likely to leave due to reasons of homesickness and loneliness. While I don’t mind this approach, it’s certainly not foolproof. Many of the Lions players who left in recent years had friends at the club - while I shed no tears when we shipped Jack Redden out of the club, he and Rockliff were as close as brothers and yet that didn’t stop Jack from having a gutful of getting flogged every week and making tracks for the Eagles.

Additionally, such a strategy relies on keeping the players together. If they don’t develop at the same pace, you have a situation where some are playing in the 1’s, some in the 2’s - some might be injured. The club might also face the prospect of cutting one of them from the list if they don’t kick along and develop - do they get squeamish and retain them in the belief that if they cut them they might lose one of their better mates in the future? (also known as the Claye Beams principle)

My concern at this juncture is not with the talent of Fagan & Noble - I think they are the best people for the role - but with the strategy being pursued. It would appear as though the plan is to try and rebuild via the draft while modifying the approach slightly to allow for our regional difficulties - I feel that the problem with this approach is that if we keep trying to play by the rules of a big Melbourne club we will always lose, because we’re not a big Melbourne club. It also takes far too much time, time we simply don’t have. Rebuilding via the draft is pointless until we have an elite performance facility available for players, as we have shown we can’t retain or develop draftees at the club in recent years based on our current setup, squad & results.

Let’s focus on facilities for the moment. Before the Lions can look to attract anyone with genuine star power we have got to catch up with the 17 other clubs. Right now the Lions are still using 1990’s era facilities when every other club is in multi-million dollar built for purpose complexes. The 800 odd AFL players are a fairly tight knit group, even if they don’t know each other all personally, and the collective groupthink amongst them is, why would you go to the Lions, it’s a terrible place to work and the team gets flogged every weekend in front of bad crowds. Free agency has allowed this to occur - player veto over trades means no-one comes here who doesn’t want to, and the paucity of elite talent in the AFL has meant that anyone decent we draft or develop gets enticed out with an inflated salary from an interstate rival who can offer victory as well as money. For the last few years not even money has been able to convince players to come here - Josh Jenkins apparently thought it was worth $250,000/year to him not to play at Brisbane back in 2016, re-signing for that much less at the Crows, and it’s been a similar story when we’ve stuck our thumb out to try and get a lift from other players scoping out the joint. If the facilities were top notch it would be possible to attract people - bit like a stint in minimum security prison really, you can almost forget the confinement if the surrounds are pleasant enough. But when the gym and showers are more out of maximum security, and a prospective signee is contemplating pre-season training in a windowless weights room in the height of summer inhaling the aroma of 30 odd sweating blokes - well, not even money has been enough to get them across that threshold.

However, it does appear that the Lions are finally close to breaking ground on the long overdue Elite Performance Facility at Springfield. Located in the southwest of Brisbane in a rapidly growing region, this will be one of the best long-term decisions the Lions have made. There was talk of a base out near the Eagle Farm airport a year or two ago - this would have put them in the middle of a reclaimed wetlands surrounded by freeways, runways, constant jet noise 24/7 and no houses around for miles. It would have been disastrous. The move to Springfield and surrounding regions in SW Brisbane, an area heavily populated by families puts them right in the middle of their new heartland. Tens of thousands of potential new young fans of the club & code for the Lions to connect to out there, many of them first & second generation australians with no previous affiliation to rugby league to distract them. Space for football ovals. A training oval out at Springfield with a grandstand & plenty of open days will draw thousands of people to the club, particularly once it is used to play the AFL women’s games there. The new Crossrail link will be completed at some point within the next 6-8 years once Palaszczuk and the PM work out who’s paying for it, and the rail line from Springfield direct to underneath the Gabba will rival the Ipswich line after a Broncos Friday game for the size of the throng.

That’s the dream, anyway. Is it achievable? Long-term, yes, it is, but there’s a lot to do before we get there and the club needs to be outlining it’s plans now for the next five years to ensure that we sprint towards the finish line, not stumble over it. The focus for the club should be to try and survive the next few years in reasonable shape, finish the facility, and try and keep building towards future success - if the Lions can get through to end of 2020 and be getting back towards finals contention, there’s every chance the club will be able to capitalise on ease of access to the stadium & the new groundswell of local support and get back towards turning the Gabba into a place people want to be at on game day.

Realistically, a facility of the size the Lions are proposing is probably finished and ready to go at some stage before start of season 2019. Safe in that knowledge, we can go to market in trade week end of season 2018 and start looking around. We have tried twice in the past to make waves in the trade window - 2010 saw Fevola, and 2014 saw Beams/Christensen/Robinson - the first has already been covered and the latter is probably both pass & fail at this stage, given the injuries that all 3 have battled with at various stages. The Lions cannot afford to get this wrong again, and indeed, given the seasoned heads parachuted into the club by the AFL, should have no excuses if they do.

A good starting point for the Lions would be to observe what other clubs are doing, and what we are seeing with clubs in recent years is an emphasis on bringing in some senior heads to assist with development, and provide an injection of professionalism. Mitchell went to the Eagles. Barlow is now at the Suns. Lewis & Hibberd at the Dees. Cloke to the Dogs. Deledio at GWS. And so on. We have tried this, but the ones we attract tend to be fringe players and depth cover only, players such as Tom Bell. Ryan Bastinac. Josh Walker. Jarrad Jansen. Anyone who can get a gig elsewhere has generally done so. We are very much the last chance saloon and as such we do wind up with an awful lot of list cloggers who both and help and hinder the development of the club simultaneously - Bell & Bastinac have already been dropped by Fagan this season for example, and I doubt they will have their contracts renewed next time around.

My view is that the club needs to embark on an aggressive trading strategy to add more experience and culture to the squad while also trimming some of our passengers. I do not believe that the club will succeed solely via a draft rebuild without importing players from successful clubs. Brisbane’s history of developing players is execrable. Dayne Zorko & Tom Rockliff are about the only 2 homegrown players we have turned into stars in recent years. Plenty have gone on to much better things since departing the club though. What is needed is about 3-4 established players we can put into our starting 22 to provide a critical mass of professionalism and determination, and help eliminate the lacklustre efforts we regularly see from our shellshocked veterans of years and years of mediocrity. Additionally it would enable us to dispense with the services of some of our depth players who we know will never make the step beyond injury cover.

Too many of our players haven’t gone on with their promise - Mayes, Lester, Bewick, Harwood, Taylor, Paparone, Close, Freeman, Rich - and those are just the players still on the list, I’d be here for a lot longer listing all the ones we’ve cut or lost. Jack Redden, Jordan Lisle, Mitch Golby, Andrew Raines, Xavier Clarke, Amon Buchanan, Travis Johnstone, Luke McGuane, Brent Moloney, Josh Green, Callum Bartlett, Todd Banfield, Tom Collier, James Polkinghorne, Matt Leuenberger, Mitch Clark, Albert Proud. Again, just a selection. The Lions draft & trade history for the last ten years makes for grim reading. We are never going to develop players without anyone to teach them how to play which is why new facilities that allow us to attract outside, experienced players are so critical to the recovery of the club.

So who do we go after? What follows is my best attempts observation and guesswork - I’m not a recruiter and have no idea as to players states of mind and personal circumstances. Think of them as the sort of player we should be chasing and these are the most suitable examples

With that said, the first club I’d be hitting up is Port Adelaide. It’s no secret their salary cap is under pressure - Hamish Hartlett was publicly hung out in the shop window with no takers only last year - one year into a five year deal. On top of this they’re behind in the draft, with their first rounder this year coming our way. Offloading a player and the possibility of getting a pick back is a no-brainer for them and one player I’d like to see us ask about from them is Brad Ebert.

27 years old, off contract at the end of 2017. Has already changed clubs once, having come from West Coast so he’s no stranger to relocating. Some say he’s a bit one dimensional - perhaps at Port he is, surrounded by razzle dazzle talent, but at the Lions he would be a priceless asset. A durable, hard-running midfielder, setting high standards in attack and defence. Just had a new baby. Surely a good offer from the Lions, job security and the prospect of raising the kid in the warm climes of Brisbane could be appealing as he approaches the latter half of his career. More to the point he looks like the sort of guy who wouldn’t mind training at the Lions next year while the new facilities are still being built. I reckon we could get him for 4 years at around $500,000/year + sweeteners and unlike Chris Mayne he wouldn’t have any problems holding down a spot in the starting 22.

Another one to look at around the end of 2018 is David Armitage. Former Queensland boy. Very valuable player to the Saints. Contracted until end of 2019. Understandably they probably don’t want to lose him, and it’d cost a bit to get him out of there. But let’s say in 2018 the Saints are kicking along quite nicely, players are developing well - Armitage will have turned 30 and probably has 2-3 years left in him. Maybe the Saints and he might want to talk if we came knocking with our first round pick & a sweetener. If that Saints premiership looks a bit elusive - or even better, has already been won - maybe he might be persuaded to come north. Certainly at that age and from that background he would be a perfect addition to our midfield, and would drive improvement and commitment from our young players. I’d consider this one unlikely but I think we’d be mad not to at least make enquiries if it looked possible. Let’s make the hometown lure work for us for a change.

David Mundy. Another player who’s contracted until the end of 2018 - triggered a one year extension with Freo. Bit of a wait and see this one - but if there’s any chance Freo decide to cut him while he’s still got a year left in him and he was keen to play on we’d be mad not to pick him up. I think he’s a tremendous professional and even 12 months of a fading Mundy would be worth a lot more than 2 years of Bastinac or Bell. On a similar note, albeit contracted to the end of 2019, Kieran Jack is another we should keep an eye on. A player from a successful club with a great ethos and culture. Would be a great addition for a couple of years.

They’re all old men I hear you say. Well, yes, they are (or will be). But I think Leppa got it right when he said it was boys against men, and realistically I think even with brand new facilities we’ll struggle to pick up marquee talent - we are much more likely to be able to pick up dispensable veterans by valuing them more than their current club, and we could appeal to their love for the game by emphasising the vitally important work Brisbane requires them for. But to I’d also like to see us go out and try to get a high-profile marquee player if we can, and try and create some hype back around the club again - and with that in mind, here’s a name from left field we should be after.

Jason Johannisen.

I know, the chances of him coming to the Lions are virtually nil, particularly before the facilities are constructed. But look at what he offers - the Lions achilles heel has always been transitioning out of our own 50 because of poor kicking and lack of pace. A player like Johannisen with his speed, booming kick and his run & carry would help solve a lot of those woes as well as take the heat of some of our lesser lights who have struggled to shed tags for years, particularly Daniel Rich.

He’s off contract at the end of 2017 for anyone who hasn’t been following the news. The dogs, with all their stars to juggle and a host of players coming out of contract, can probably offer him around $500,000/season. I think our recruiting strategy at this time and place can only be that of Kerry Packer’s legal recruitment strategy in Howzat! The Story of World Series Cricket...

“You give me the name of the top bloke, I call him, I offer him more ******* money than anybody else, he drops everything and comes to work for me.”

If you’re yet to be convinced, look at him. Flair, athleticism, skill, dyes his hair blonde, unusual surname - first name Jason, hell - teach him to do a handstand after a win and he’d bring ten thousand through the gates for nostalgia reasons alone.

So there you have it. My grand design to make the Lions great again. Honestly, I’d settle for relevant and no longer terrible, really. But I do think regardless of what happens that 2017 is a key year for the Lions, where the club needs to grasp the nettle and actually admit to the people of Brisbane how bad they are - something they have never really acknowledged - and take steps to start rebuilding a once proud club that has fallen into ruin. The Lions have never wanted to publicly admit their plight because they’re worried about people not wanting to come along to games - but honestly, if anyone in Brisbane isn’t aware the Lions are garbage by now, they’re either a deaf mute or a member of the AFL commission. The club’s & AFL’s high-handedness and refusal to acknowledge reality has been typical of the lack of communication to their constituents in recent years. A big part of the reason why the people have Brisbane have turned their backs particularly in recent years has been the feeling that they’ve been taken for a ride by the AFL and ignored as a succession of players walked out, a club fell into debt and facilities lagged massively behind their rivals. The Lions relentlessly upbeat attitude on social media jars against the perpetually negative on field results and performance, and already I can see people querying why the Lions bothered to bring in Fagan if we’re already 1-8 after the start of the season and still being flogged by plenty. There is a very real risk of him being hung out to dry before he can do his work, if the powers-that-be don’t get together this season and announce what their plan is to address the problems that still stand between the Lions and a return to competitiveness.

I have done my best in this article to outline what I feel could be a possible path forward, in terms of broad strategy. Certainly steps have already been commenced that I agree with but as I have explained, there is a great deal of work left undone. If the Lions cannot yet show some fight on the field, at the very least they need to start showing some off the field and begin demonstrating to the people of Brisbane that they are in this for the long haul, and do have a strategy beyond crossing their fingers and hoping the AFL backs a dumptruck of money up to the front doors of the club and they start winning again. The move to Springfield needs to form the cornerstone of an integrated regional strategy to rebuild the fabric of the club and the supporter base, and this needs to be communicated to the people of Brisbane to show them that there is hope for the future with this club, because right now hope is something that is in very short supply at the Gabba.

Let’s put some pride back in the Lions. It’s been absent for far too long.
Thanks Paul,bloody brilliant. I have contacted both Melbourne and Brisbane offices,and insisted it is distributed from the board down.I know Melbourne are now reading it.Again, appreciate what you have put into this.
 
It’s hard to describe the lonely existence of a Lions fan here in Brisbane - I suspect it’s rather what an endangered animal feels like, that sort of growing realisation you don’t see as many of you round anymore as you used to. That Lions mug on Jean’s desk disappeared a few years back, around the same time the Firebirds mug appeared, come to think about it. Adam never wears his guernsey in on casual Fridays anymore. And Rose retired and took her scarf with her.

There’s a sort of nod of acknowledgment when you do meet one in the wild, roaming the streets of Brisbane during the week. A sort of mutual wry, pained, expression passes between you and a sigh is exchanged that acknowledges, yes, you’re both still hanging in there. It wasn’t always like this of course. There was a time when the Lions were as rampant in Brisbane as their logo suggests. Huge crowds, ferocious atmosphere at the ‘Gabbatoir’, bumper stickers festooning cars the length and breadth of the city. Nowadays though the crowds are anaemic, the ground feels like a morgue and the bumper stickers have all been scratched off or replaced long ago. It’s just become sort of sad. No-one actually expects the Lions to win anymore. And usually they don’t.

I know it’s fashionable to bash Queensland fans for being fairweather and say that the crowds stopped coming once they weren’t winning premierships, but that view simply doesn’t hold up to closer scrutiny. Between 2004-2010 average home crowds were higher than they were in the premiership years, despite only appearing in finals in 2009. There was always a view during these years following the threepeat that the Lions had done something truly remarkable, and that it was only fair that we have our turn at the bottom again, before rebuilding and having another surge. Which would surely come in time. Michael Voss certainly thought so after our brief finals campaign in 2009, but 2010 was the critical year where events started to derail the dream. The signing of Fevola turned out to be a disaster and he was sacked early in 2011, one year into a lucrative 3 year contract, following a series of off-field incidents and ongoing issues with alcoholism. Good club men like Rischitelli, Brennan and Bradshaw were shipped out to bring to him in, with much rancour within the club’s supporter base, particularly over Bradshaw’s departure. The choice of Fevola was polarising as well - many female fans (including my dear mother) were outraged that the club would trash their reputation and supporter base for the cheap thrills and risky sugar hit Fevola might bring.

Voss improved on things after a dreadful 4-18 2011 season, winning ten games in both 2012 & 2013 but the board’s decision to sack him with 3 rounds to go in 2013, rather than risking him making the 8 and being forced to keep him on, was another fiasco. To bring down a club legend in such a manner, without ensuring their preferred replacement was already signed, sealed and delivered, speaks volumes to the amateur hour leadership of Angus Johnson, the then Chairman. This error was then compounded by hiring Justin Leppitsch, who turned out to be entirely the wrong candidate for the role, although it’s doubtful anyone could have succeeded given the circumstances he, a rookie coach was faced with - a player exodus that continues to this day, terrible facilities and off-field support and a player group that increasingly appeared shellshocked, mentally scarred and who had been numbed into senselessness by increasingly heavy losses.

Speaking of those losses, simple numbers are the best way to illustrate the gulf between us and the rest - recently sacked coaches always say that it’s a results based business after all. Since the start of 2010 to today, the Lions have played 163 games, and have finished on the losing side in 118 of them. From 2010 to 2013, we lost 57 games over 4 years, by an average margin of 38 points. Since 2014 we have lost 60 games in 3 years and a bit, and the average losing margin in that time has been 62 points. Average, mind you, Average of 62 points. This is a club that doesn’t even look like winning most games and almost never has the legs or effort to run them out against a committed opposition. Again, I know it’s fashionable to bag out Queenslanders as fair weather fans, but by any standards and given those results and on-field performances, I think we’re still doing well to even get 10,000 to the Gabba. No wonder season tickets have dried up - if you’d made an impressionable 5 year old sit through the last seven years of home games you’d be up in front of Child Safety for mental abuse.

Average crowds during Leppitsch’s tenure took the plunge below 20,000 for the first time too - 8 of our 10 lowest ever crowds all occurred in the last 3 years. The casual fans long ago stopped coming - the Lions are that bad now they’re starting to take out the members. And for this you need to look no further than the exodus of draftees - members can handle adversity so long as there is hope, but when the very source of that hope, the early draftees, the seed corn of rejuvenation are continually crushed up and blown in their faces to start lives at other clubs, it’s at that point when even members start to question the fairness of the system and the futility of continuing to pay their money to a club that has an immensely wealthy financial backer. When you start thinking the system is rigged against you and you’re being taken for granted, it’s not long until you make the connection that the best way to register your protest is to stop paying & stop showing up.

Where the Lions now find themselves is trapped in a death spiral, where they can't retain players because they keep getting flogged because they can't get any better because they can't retain players. There’s no foundation to fall back on. No real culture or connection with the city. Without wins there’s not much else to this club. The club exists here in Brisbane solely because Brisbane is Australia’s 3rd largest city and because the AFL aspires to be a national game. The lack of an AFL club in this city would be unthinkable, no matter how terrible they are, or how bad the hammerings from rival clubs become.

I think if I had to nominate rock bottom in recent years, it would be the round 20 game, away against a red-hot Adelaide in 2016 - the bleakest moment I can recall in the Lions history for two decades. Coming off a pasting by Port Adelaide the week previous, we knew we were going to get flogged before the game even started. We went in as if it was a funeral. You could see it in every player’s face in the warm-up. They were bracing themselves for it, trying to will themselves to endure it. Mitch Robinson kicked a goal in the first quarter to make it something like 38-6 to the Crows and had to yell at the boys to get around him. Throughout the game the cameras cut to bleak looking lone Lions fans in the crowd, the bravest souls I have ever met for going to that game, for Adelaide were merciless.

Final score was 177-39. We were crushed. Annihilated. The crowd felt sorry for us as our boys walked off - apologising with their soft, embarrassed applause for making us stand out there while their boys put on a show for them. Afterwards the coach spoke to the media and admitted that he had no answers. That it was boys against men. He was sacked a few weeks later when the season ended. And no-one in Brisbane really noticed or cared.

What this game and Leppa’s demise did though, was rouse the AFL into action. The evidence was indisputable and uncontestable. The Lions were absolutely bloody horrible, just awful, unequal and embarrassing and irrelevant, so terrible that a city of 3 million people were doing their best to pretend they didn’t exist - and it was long past time to step in and sort things out. Roused from their Docklands citadel and seeing a situation very similar to when Melbourne finally put Mark Neeld out of his misery, they determined on a similar course of action to repair the damage. With Paul Roos busy counting the money from his well-earned fellowship at the Demons, the AFL determined to cast a similar character in their recovery effort, and decided upon Chris Fagan, one of the chief brains behind the Hawks premiership juggernaut. Joining him on this difficult and extremely well-remunerated mission would be David Noble, former head of football at the Adelaide Crows.

Surely with a professional management team in place, and sensible proven men of grey hairs and football nous, the Lions would, in time, recover. To which I would say the AFL must think Chris Fagan is a bloody genius and the greatest coach since Jock McHale if they thought he alone was going to be able to halt this ongoing trainwreck. While Fagan might well have a better rapport with the players and enable them to better handle crushing defeats, he still has to face the problems that proved so insurmountable for Justin Leppitsch. The weights room is still a dungeon in the bowels of the Gabba, facilities are remain outdated and not up to required standards, key players are still getting injured, the team has too many passengers, the professionalism and attitude is better but still well off the pace, skills are still hideously inconsistent, decision making remains tentative and insecure, and unsurprisingly given all this - the crowds remain very very poor. Also, it turns out that Fagan & Noble being nice guys and good listeners isn’t enough to persuade Josh Schache to hang around. Not every player wants to spend their career on a psychiatrist’s couch developing coping techniques and mental toughness to endure repeated floggings. Some of them want to win as well.

You can see Fagan & Noble have tried to address this with the most recent draft - McLuggage, Berry & Cox are all from the same club in Ballarat - the belief is that if we can bring enough players in from the same country region, they will be less likely to leave due to reasons of homesickness and loneliness. While I don’t mind this approach, it’s certainly not foolproof. Many of the Lions players who left in recent years had friends at the club - while I shed no tears when we shipped Jack Redden out of the club, he and Rockliff were as close as brothers and yet that didn’t stop Jack from having a gutful of getting flogged every week and making tracks for the Eagles.

Additionally, such a strategy relies on keeping the players together. If they don’t develop at the same pace, you have a situation where some are playing in the 1’s, some in the 2’s - some might be injured. The club might also face the prospect of cutting one of them from the list if they don’t kick along and develop - do they get squeamish and retain them in the belief that if they cut them they might lose one of their better mates in the future? (also known as the Claye Beams principle)

My concern at this juncture is not with the talent of Fagan & Noble - I think they are the best people for the role - but with the strategy being pursued. It would appear as though the plan is to try and rebuild via the draft while modifying the approach slightly to allow for our regional difficulties - I feel that the problem with this approach is that if we keep trying to play by the rules of a big Melbourne club we will always lose, because we’re not a big Melbourne club. It also takes far too much time, time we simply don’t have. Rebuilding via the draft is pointless until we have an elite performance facility available for players, as we have shown we can’t retain or develop draftees at the club in recent years based on our current setup, squad & results.

Let’s focus on facilities for the moment. Before the Lions can look to attract anyone with genuine star power we have got to catch up with the 17 other clubs. Right now the Lions are still using 1990’s era facilities when every other club is in multi-million dollar built for purpose complexes. The 800 odd AFL players are a fairly tight knit group, even if they don’t know each other all personally, and the collective groupthink amongst them is, why would you go to the Lions, it’s a terrible place to work and the team gets flogged every weekend in front of bad crowds. Free agency has allowed this to occur - player veto over trades means no-one comes here who doesn’t want to, and the paucity of elite talent in the AFL has meant that anyone decent we draft or develop gets enticed out with an inflated salary from an interstate rival who can offer victory as well as money. For the last few years not even money has been able to convince players to come here - Josh Jenkins apparently thought it was worth $250,000/year to him not to play at Brisbane back in 2016, re-signing for that much less at the Crows, and it’s been a similar story when we’ve stuck our thumb out to try and get a lift from other players scoping out the joint. If the facilities were top notch it would be possible to attract people - bit like a stint in minimum security prison really, you can almost forget the confinement if the surrounds are pleasant enough. But when the gym and showers are more out of maximum security, and a prospective signee is contemplating pre-season training in a windowless weights room in the height of summer inhaling the aroma of 30 odd sweating blokes - well, not even money has been enough to get them across that threshold.

However, it does appear that the Lions are finally close to breaking ground on the long overdue Elite Performance Facility at Springfield. Located in the southwest of Brisbane in a rapidly growing region, this will be one of the best long-term decisions the Lions have made. There was talk of a base out near the Eagle Farm airport a year or two ago - this would have put them in the middle of a reclaimed wetlands surrounded by freeways, runways, constant jet noise 24/7 and no houses around for miles. It would have been disastrous. The move to Springfield and surrounding regions in SW Brisbane, an area heavily populated by families puts them right in the middle of their new heartland. Tens of thousands of potential new young fans of the club & code for the Lions to connect to out there, many of them first & second generation australians with no previous affiliation to rugby league to distract them. Space for football ovals. A training oval out at Springfield with a grandstand & plenty of open days will draw thousands of people to the club, particularly once it is used to play the AFL women’s games there. The new Crossrail link will be completed at some point within the next 6-8 years once Palaszczuk and the PM work out who’s paying for it, and the rail line from Springfield direct to underneath the Gabba will rival the Ipswich line after a Broncos Friday game for the size of the throng.

That’s the dream, anyway. Is it achievable? Long-term, yes, it is, but there’s a lot to do before we get there and the club needs to be outlining it’s plans now for the next five years to ensure that we sprint towards the finish line, not stumble over it. The focus for the club should be to try and survive the next few years in reasonable shape, finish the facility, and try and keep building towards future success - if the Lions can get through to end of 2020 and be getting back towards finals contention, there’s every chance the club will be able to capitalise on ease of access to the stadium & the new groundswell of local support and get back towards turning the Gabba into a place people want to be at on game day.

Realistically, a facility of the size the Lions are proposing is probably finished and ready to go at some stage before start of season 2019. Safe in that knowledge, we can go to market in trade week end of season 2018 and start looking around. We have tried twice in the past to make waves in the trade window - 2010 saw Fevola, and 2014 saw Beams/Christensen/Robinson - the first has already been covered and the latter is probably both pass & fail at this stage, given the injuries that all 3 have battled with at various stages. The Lions cannot afford to get this wrong again, and indeed, given the seasoned heads parachuted into the club by the AFL, should have no excuses if they do.

A good starting point for the Lions would be to observe what other clubs are doing, and what we are seeing with clubs in recent years is an emphasis on bringing in some senior heads to assist with development, and provide an injection of professionalism. Mitchell went to the Eagles. Barlow is now at the Suns. Lewis & Hibberd at the Dees. Cloke to the Dogs. Deledio at GWS. And so on. We have tried this, but the ones we attract tend to be fringe players and depth cover only, players such as Tom Bell. Ryan Bastinac. Josh Walker. Jarrad Jansen. Anyone who can get a gig elsewhere has generally done so. We are very much the last chance saloon and as such we do wind up with an awful lot of list cloggers who both and help and hinder the development of the club simultaneously - Bell & Bastinac have already been dropped by Fagan this season for example, and I doubt they will have their contracts renewed next time around.

My view is that the club needs to embark on an aggressive trading strategy to add more experience and culture to the squad while also trimming some of our passengers. I do not believe that the club will succeed solely via a draft rebuild without importing players from successful clubs. Brisbane’s history of developing players is execrable. Dayne Zorko & Tom Rockliff are about the only 2 homegrown players we have turned into stars in recent years. Plenty have gone on to much better things since departing the club though. What is needed is about 3-4 established players we can put into our starting 22 to provide a critical mass of professionalism and determination, and help eliminate the lacklustre efforts we regularly see from our shellshocked veterans of years and years of mediocrity. Additionally it would enable us to dispense with the services of some of our depth players who we know will never make the step beyond injury cover.

Too many of our players haven’t gone on with their promise - Mayes, Lester, Bewick, Harwood, Taylor, Paparone, Close, Freeman, Rich - and those are just the players still on the list, I’d be here for a lot longer listing all the ones we’ve cut or lost. Jack Redden, Jordan Lisle, Mitch Golby, Andrew Raines, Xavier Clarke, Amon Buchanan, Travis Johnstone, Luke McGuane, Brent Moloney, Josh Green, Callum Bartlett, Todd Banfield, Tom Collier, James Polkinghorne, Matt Leuenberger, Mitch Clark, Albert Proud. Again, just a selection. The Lions draft & trade history for the last ten years makes for grim reading. We are never going to develop players without anyone to teach them how to play which is why new facilities that allow us to attract outside, experienced players are so critical to the recovery of the club.

So who do we go after? What follows is my best attempts observation and guesswork - I’m not a recruiter and have no idea as to players states of mind and personal circumstances. Think of them as the sort of player we should be chasing and these are the most suitable examples

With that said, the first club I’d be hitting up is Port Adelaide. It’s no secret their salary cap is under pressure - Hamish Hartlett was publicly hung out in the shop window with no takers only last year - one year into a five year deal. On top of this they’re behind in the draft, with their first rounder this year coming our way. Offloading a player and the possibility of getting a pick back is a no-brainer for them and one player I’d like to see us ask about from them is Brad Ebert.

27 years old, off contract at the end of 2017. Has already changed clubs once, having come from West Coast so he’s no stranger to relocating. Some say he’s a bit one dimensional - perhaps at Port he is, surrounded by razzle dazzle talent, but at the Lions he would be a priceless asset. A durable, hard-running midfielder, setting high standards in attack and defence. Just had a new baby. Surely a good offer from the Lions, job security and the prospect of raising the kid in the warm climes of Brisbane could be appealing as he approaches the latter half of his career. More to the point he looks like the sort of guy who wouldn’t mind training at the Lions next year while the new facilities are still being built. I reckon we could get him for 4 years at around $500,000/year + sweeteners and unlike Chris Mayne he wouldn’t have any problems holding down a spot in the starting 22.

Another one to look at around the end of 2018 is David Armitage. Former Queensland boy. Very valuable player to the Saints. Contracted until end of 2019. Understandably they probably don’t want to lose him, and it’d cost a bit to get him out of there. But let’s say in 2018 the Saints are kicking along quite nicely, players are developing well - Armitage will have turned 30 and probably has 2-3 years left in him. Maybe the Saints and he might want to talk if we came knocking with our first round pick & a sweetener. If that Saints premiership looks a bit elusive - or even better, has already been won - maybe he might be persuaded to come north. Certainly at that age and from that background he would be a perfect addition to our midfield, and would drive improvement and commitment from our young players. I’d consider this one unlikely but I think we’d be mad not to at least make enquiries if it looked possible. Let’s make the hometown lure work for us for a change.

David Mundy. Another player who’s contracted until the end of 2018 - triggered a one year extension with Freo. Bit of a wait and see this one - but if there’s any chance Freo decide to cut him while he’s still got a year left in him and he was keen to play on we’d be mad not to pick him up. I think he’s a tremendous professional and even 12 months of a fading Mundy would be worth a lot more than 2 years of Bastinac or Bell. On a similar note, albeit contracted to the end of 2019, Kieran Jack is another we should keep an eye on. A player from a successful club with a great ethos and culture. Would be a great addition for a couple of years.

They’re all old men I hear you say. Well, yes, they are (or will be). But I think Leppa got it right when he said it was boys against men, and realistically I think even with brand new facilities we’ll struggle to pick up marquee talent - we are much more likely to be able to pick up dispensable veterans by valuing them more than their current club, and we could appeal to their love for the game by emphasising the vitally important work Brisbane requires them for. But to I’d also like to see us go out and try to get a high-profile marquee player if we can, and try and create some hype back around the club again - and with that in mind, here’s a name from left field we should be after.

Jason Johannisen.

I know, the chances of him coming to the Lions are virtually nil, particularly before the facilities are constructed. But look at what he offers - the Lions achilles heel has always been transitioning out of our own 50 because of poor kicking and lack of pace. A player like Johannisen with his speed, booming kick and his run & carry would help solve a lot of those woes as well as take the heat of some of our lesser lights who have struggled to shed tags for years, particularly Daniel Rich.

He’s off contract at the end of 2017 for anyone who hasn’t been following the news. The dogs, with all their stars to juggle and a host of players coming out of contract, can probably offer him around $500,000/season. I think our recruiting strategy at this time and place can only be that of Kerry Packer’s legal recruitment strategy in Howzat! The Story of World Series Cricket...

“You give me the name of the top bloke, I call him, I offer him more ******* money than anybody else, he drops everything and comes to work for me.”

If you’re yet to be convinced, look at him. Flair, athleticism, skill, dyes his hair blonde, unusual surname - first name Jason, hell - teach him to do a handstand after a win and he’d bring ten thousand through the gates for nostalgia reasons alone.

So there you have it. My grand design to make the Lions great again. Honestly, I’d settle for relevant and no longer terrible, really. But I do think regardless of what happens that 2017 is a key year for the Lions, where the club needs to grasp the nettle and actually admit to the people of Brisbane how bad they are - something they have never really acknowledged - and take steps to start rebuilding a once proud club that has fallen into ruin. The Lions have never wanted to publicly admit their plight because they’re worried about people not wanting to come along to games - but honestly, if anyone in Brisbane isn’t aware the Lions are garbage by now, they’re either a deaf mute or a member of the AFL commission. The club’s & AFL’s high-handedness and refusal to acknowledge reality has been typical of the lack of communication to their constituents in recent years. A big part of the reason why the people have Brisbane have turned their backs particularly in recent years has been the feeling that they’ve been taken for a ride by the AFL and ignored as a succession of players walked out, a club fell into debt and facilities lagged massively behind their rivals. The Lions relentlessly upbeat attitude on social media jars against the perpetually negative on field results and performance, and already I can see people querying why the Lions bothered to bring in Fagan if we’re already 1-8 after the start of the season and still being flogged by plenty. There is a very real risk of him being hung out to dry before he can do his work, if the powers-that-be don’t get together this season and announce what their plan is to address the problems that still stand between the Lions and a return to competitiveness.

I have done my best in this article to outline what I feel could be a possible path forward, in terms of broad strategy. Certainly steps have already been commenced that I agree with but as I have explained, there is a great deal of work left undone. If the Lions cannot yet show some fight on the field, at the very least they need to start showing some off the field and begin demonstrating to the people of Brisbane that they are in this for the long haul, and do have a strategy beyond crossing their fingers and hoping the AFL backs a dumptruck of money up to the front doors of the club and they start winning again. The move to Springfield needs to form the cornerstone of an integrated regional strategy to rebuild the fabric of the club and the supporter base, and this needs to be communicated to the people of Brisbane to show them that there is hope for the future with this club, because right now hope is something that is in very short supply at the Gabba.

Let’s put some pride back in the Lions. It’s been absent for far too long.
Hmmm, could you expand on this?





;)
 
Cheers all - I don't work in the media, but I've always enjoyed writing. Given I'm on a week's holiday atm thought I'd put some of my spare time to getting down in words what has been on my mind for a while with one of my great passions, the Lions. I am really concerned about this season and feel that if the club doesn't get on the front foot soon and start outlining a path forward we're at risk of burning this new coaching team and further cementing our reputation as the basket case of the AFL. The board needs to find a way to demonstrate leadership and talk the club up in the absence of on-field results - something that has been sadly lacking in recent years.

Re: Springfield, no, I don't have insider knowledge on this but I know Pisasale at Ipswich/Springfield is very very keen to make this happen. And it should happen, this season. Long past time to start on a facility and I can't see any reason to delay.

the main issue with Springfield back in 2013 was that Sharpless wanted to play the regular season games out there. That was never going to happen. but as a training base, and location for pre-season games and AFLW's games I think it'd be an excellent choice.
 
Love the post. True all around.

Only points I would make:
- We have already overpaid for players in the past. Why would we offer a first round pick for Armitage aged 30. I'd argue a Sam Mitchell deal of a 4th or 5th round pick would be far more appropriate. We have a shortage of first round picks, and I'm not keen to give one up for a 30 year old.
- No analysis of GC/GWS concessions harm to our club
- No analysis of the drafted talent on the list, and just how far behind we actually are in that area. This is a key one for me, as when we've been down this long, and still are in the bottom tier of talent based on draft position, it is very concerning for our prospects of rising up the ladder.
 
Love the post. True all around.

Only points I would make:
- We have already overpaid for players in the past. Why would we offer a first round pick for Armitage aged 30. I'd argue a Sam Mitchell deal of a 4th or 5th round pick would be far more appropriate. We have a shortage of first round picks, and I'm not keen to give one up for a 30 year old.
- No analysis of GC/GWS concessions harm to our club
- No analysis of the drafted talent on the list, and just how far behind we actually are in that area. This is a key one for me, as when we've been down this long, and still are in the bottom tier of talent based on draft position, it is very concerning for our prospects of rising up the ladder.

More that's what I think the Saints would ask. I'd like to see us get Armitage regardless, we can deal with price if it happens.

I think it's hard to quantify the damage solely to our club and the compromised draft affected a number of other clubs in a similar position to us. I thought about it, but it's hard to put into words what might have been had we drafted some of those GWS players, you wind up very quickly heading into fantasyland once you start doing that. I'm a historian, I prefer to stick what did happen. I know it's a factor but again, it's quite hard to quantify it.

I don't think there's much wrong with the players we have drafted. Yeo is a gun. Docherty, Polec and Karnezis have all been serviceable. Longer was a mistake. Burning picks 4 and 8 on two ruckmen in Leuey and Longer is about the only thing I can say we did that was particularly boneheaded, we missed the boat on the trend of just getting rookie rucks and developing them on the cheap.

I think the issue is far more the players we have for the draftees to learn and develop from, rather than the draftees themselves, hence my insistence that we need to get this facility built so we can actually start attracting in some good teachers and role models
 
Re Springfield: doing my little bit.

At our last Board meeting, 2 weeks ago, the Chair of the biggest netball [a huge growth sport for those who aren't aware] group in the Western suburbs gave a presentation about what they were delivering in return for our rather large sponsorship. While the participation levels were through the roof, she was lamenting her club's inability to secure ongoing access to training courts.

I very strongly encouraged her to immediately get on her bike and make an appointment with Anastasia about the benefits of a multi-discipline sports facility at Springfield.

The combination of two popular womens' sports- AFL and netball- surely has to have some attraction for a female politician. That's my thinking anyway.
 

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One point though Redden didn't leave because of the losses and wasn't more likely to stay because of Rocky
 
Good stuff, but with the experienced players we don't trade anything for them. We pick them up for nothing so they can extend their career & transitioning them into a coaching role. So just need to keep an eye out for clubs rebuilding and any experience with coaching ambitions happy to relocate.

I would have thought the best chance would be through Fagan/ noble connections.

Hawthorn have many players they will want to see the back of this season but dunno if any of them feel the need to keep playing they've been so successful maybe they want to just jump into coaching. But it's worth exploring.

Adelaide has Scott Thompson not getting a game this year. But he is getting on & not sure if he wants to coach.

It's a good idea but not sure the list will be very long of potential targets. New FA rules will help us in future endeavours re this.
 
Shit administration and governance -> loss of retention bonus -> inherent disadvantages of operating in QLD -> afl left us out to dry -> poor culture = we bad.
 
1) Ask the AFL, rather than a Priority Pick, we need two veteran picks.
Lions can choose two players over 30 who have interests in coaching and the AFL will pay their salary as a player/assistant coach at Brisbane for 2 years. Obviously requires two blokes over 30 to want to come to Brisbane. Exempt from senior or rookie list but can play 10 senior games, and any NEAFL games in each year. Even if they were only allowed to play NEAFL. Or they were given some odd rookie list classification?

2) AFL to pay for a full time sports psychologist for the lions.

3) Actual state of the art training facilities built. Genuinely state of the art, not 5 years ago stuff.

4) Bring Voss back as an assistant, after finishing this year at Port, and then 2018 at GWS or Western Bulldogs.

5) Some retention mechanism that isn't money: I dunno what? Maybe every lions player gets 1 million Velocity points to use on flights or something haha. Then they can fly home, fly their family home, ?

6) Hawaiian airlines as a sponsor, and a game each year in Hawaii. Subsidised for Lions members to attend.

7) a hell of a lot of money spent on leadership and teamwork programs: I mean the best programs in the world: intense stuff, during the off season.
 
Welcome to Big Footy RWFFFPT.:thumbsu:

thanks Jason, been lurking since 2006...but finally bothered to create an account! let's hope this turns our clubs fortune around!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Been thinking for awhile we need to not put all our eggs in the fragile basket of 18-year-olds every year. They take time, which we don't have, and resources, which we also don't have, to develop. And then there's still a risk they could bust or fly the coup. Instead, we should be looking to draft one or two guys in their early twenties from the second tier leagues each year. The benefits are many:
  • Mature bodies with several seasons competing against men already on the clock.
  • Mature minds less concerned with issues like homesickness.
  • A hunger to not waste the opportunity that they thought had long ago passed them by.
  • Loyalty to the club that was prepared to take a chance on them.
In short, we should be trying to unearth more nuggets like Zorko.
 
It’s hard to describe the lonely existence of a Lions fan here in Brisbane - I suspect it’s rather what an endangered animal feels like, that sort of growing realisation you don’t see as many of you round anymore as you used to. That Lions mug on Jean’s desk disappeared a few years back, around the same time the Firebirds mug appeared, come to think about it. Adam never wears his guernsey in on casual Fridays anymore. And Rose retired and took her scarf with her.

There’s a sort of nod of acknowledgment when you do meet one in the wild, roaming the streets of Brisbane during the week. A sort of mutual wry, pained, expression passes between you and a sigh is exchanged that acknowledges, yes, you’re both still hanging in there. It wasn’t always like this of course. There was a time when the Lions were as rampant in Brisbane as their logo suggests. Huge crowds, ferocious atmosphere at the ‘Gabbatoir’, bumper stickers festooning cars the length and breadth of the city. Nowadays though the crowds are anaemic, the ground feels like a morgue and the bumper stickers have all been scratched off or replaced long ago. It’s just become sort of sad. No-one actually expects the Lions to win anymore. And usually they don’t.

I know it’s fashionable to bash Queensland fans for being fairweather and say that the crowds stopped coming once they weren’t winning premierships, but that view simply doesn’t hold up to closer scrutiny. Between 2004-2010 average home crowds were higher than they were in the premiership years, despite only appearing in finals in 2009. There was always a view during these years following the threepeat that the Lions had done something truly remarkable, and that it was only fair that we have our turn at the bottom again, before rebuilding and having another surge. Which would surely come in time. Michael Voss certainly thought so after our brief finals campaign in 2009, but 2010 was the critical year where events started to derail the dream. The signing of Fevola turned out to be a disaster and he was sacked early in 2011, one year into a lucrative 3 year contract, following a series of off-field incidents and ongoing issues with alcoholism. Good club men like Rischitelli, Brennan and Bradshaw were shipped out to bring to him in, with much rancour within the club’s supporter base, particularly over Bradshaw’s departure. The choice of Fevola was polarising as well - many female fans (including my dear mother) were outraged that the club would trash their reputation and supporter base for the cheap thrills and risky sugar hit Fevola might bring.

Voss improved on things after a dreadful 4-18 2011 season, winning ten games in both 2012 & 2013 but the board’s decision to sack him with 3 rounds to go in 2013, rather than risking him making the 8 and being forced to keep him on, was another fiasco. To bring down a club legend in such a manner, without ensuring their preferred replacement was already signed, sealed and delivered, speaks volumes to the amateur hour leadership of Angus Johnson, the then Chairman. This error was then compounded by hiring Justin Leppitsch, who turned out to be entirely the wrong candidate for the role, although it’s doubtful anyone could have succeeded given the circumstances he, a rookie coach was faced with - a player exodus that continues to this day, terrible facilities and off-field support and a player group that increasingly appeared shellshocked, mentally scarred and who had been numbed into senselessness by increasingly heavy losses.

Speaking of those losses, simple numbers are the best way to illustrate the gulf between us and the rest - recently sacked coaches always say that it’s a results based business after all. Since the start of 2010 to today, the Lions have played 163 games, and have finished on the losing side in 118 of them. From 2010 to 2013, we lost 57 games over 4 years, by an average margin of 38 points. Since 2014 we have lost 60 games in 3 years and a bit, and the average losing margin in that time has been 62 points. Average, mind you, Average of 62 points. This is a club that doesn’t even look like winning most games and almost never has the legs or effort to run them out against a committed opposition. Again, I know it’s fashionable to bag out Queenslanders as fair weather fans, but by any standards and given those results and on-field performances, I think we’re still doing well to even get 10,000 to the Gabba. No wonder season tickets have dried up - if you’d made an impressionable 5 year old sit through the last seven years of home games you’d be up in front of Child Safety for mental abuse.

Average crowds during Leppitsch’s tenure took the plunge below 20,000 for the first time too - 8 of our 10 lowest ever crowds all occurred in the last 3 years. The casual fans long ago stopped coming - the Lions are that bad now they’re starting to take out the members. And for this you need to look no further than the exodus of draftees - members can handle adversity so long as there is hope, but when the very source of that hope, the early draftees, the seed corn of rejuvenation are continually crushed up and blown in their faces to start lives at other clubs, it’s at that point when even members start to question the fairness of the system and the futility of continuing to pay their money to a club that has an immensely wealthy financial backer. When you start thinking the system is rigged against you and you’re being taken for granted, it’s not long until you make the connection that the best way to register your protest is to stop paying & stop showing up.

Where the Lions now find themselves is trapped in a death spiral, where they can't retain players because they keep getting flogged because they can't get any better because they can't retain players. There’s no foundation to fall back on. No real culture or connection with the city. Without wins there’s not much else to this club. The club exists here in Brisbane solely because Brisbane is Australia’s 3rd largest city and because the AFL aspires to be a national game. The lack of an AFL club in this city would be unthinkable, no matter how terrible they are, or how bad the hammerings from rival clubs become.

I think if I had to nominate rock bottom in recent years, it would be the round 20 game, away against a red-hot Adelaide in 2016 - the bleakest moment I can recall in the Lions history for two decades. Coming off a pasting by Port Adelaide the week previous, we knew we were going to get flogged before the game even started. We went in as if it was a funeral. You could see it in every player’s face in the warm-up. They were bracing themselves for it, trying to will themselves to endure it. Mitch Robinson kicked a goal in the first quarter to make it something like 38-6 to the Crows and had to yell at the boys to get around him. Throughout the game the cameras cut to bleak looking lone Lions fans in the crowd, the bravest souls I have ever met for going to that game, for Adelaide were merciless.

Final score was 177-39. We were crushed. Annihilated. The crowd felt sorry for us as our boys walked off - apologising with their soft, embarrassed applause for making us stand out there while their boys put on a show for them. Afterwards the coach spoke to the media and admitted that he had no answers. That it was boys against men. He was sacked a few weeks later when the season ended. And no-one in Brisbane really noticed or cared.

What this game and Leppa’s demise did though, was rouse the AFL into action. The evidence was indisputable and uncontestable. The Lions were absolutely bloody horrible, just awful, unequal and embarrassing and irrelevant, so terrible that a city of 3 million people were doing their best to pretend they didn’t exist - and it was long past time to step in and sort things out. Roused from their Docklands citadel and seeing a situation very similar to when Melbourne finally put Mark Neeld out of his misery, they determined on a similar course of action to repair the damage. With Paul Roos busy counting the money from his well-earned fellowship at the Demons, the AFL determined to cast a similar character in their recovery effort, and decided upon Chris Fagan, one of the chief brains behind the Hawks premiership juggernaut. Joining him on this difficult and extremely well-remunerated mission would be David Noble, former head of football at the Adelaide Crows.

Surely with a professional management team in place, and sensible proven men of grey hairs and football nous, the Lions would, in time, recover. To which I would say the AFL must think Chris Fagan is a bloody genius and the greatest coach since Jock McHale if they thought he alone was going to be able to halt this ongoing trainwreck. While Fagan might well have a better rapport with the players and enable them to better handle crushing defeats, he still has to face the problems that proved so insurmountable for Justin Leppitsch. The weights room is still a dungeon in the bowels of the Gabba, facilities are remain outdated and not up to required standards, key players are still getting injured, the team has too many passengers, the professionalism and attitude is better but still well off the pace, skills are still hideously inconsistent, decision making remains tentative and insecure, and unsurprisingly given all this - the crowds remain very very poor. Also, it turns out that Fagan & Noble being nice guys and good listeners isn’t enough to persuade Josh Schache to hang around. Not every player wants to spend their career on a psychiatrist’s couch developing coping techniques and mental toughness to endure repeated floggings. Some of them want to win as well.

You can see Fagan & Noble have tried to address this with the most recent draft - McLuggage, Berry & Cox are all from the same club in Ballarat - the belief is that if we can bring enough players in from the same country region, they will be less likely to leave due to reasons of homesickness and loneliness. While I don’t mind this approach, it’s certainly not foolproof. Many of the Lions players who left in recent years had friends at the club - while I shed no tears when we shipped Jack Redden out of the club, he and Rockliff were as close as brothers and yet that didn’t stop Jack from having a gutful of getting flogged every week and making tracks for the Eagles.

Additionally, such a strategy relies on keeping the players together. If they don’t develop at the same pace, you have a situation where some are playing in the 1’s, some in the 2’s - some might be injured. The club might also face the prospect of cutting one of them from the list if they don’t kick along and develop - do they get squeamish and retain them in the belief that if they cut them they might lose one of their better mates in the future? (also known as the Claye Beams principle)

My concern at this juncture is not with the talent of Fagan & Noble - I think they are the best people for the role - but with the strategy being pursued. It would appear as though the plan is to try and rebuild via the draft while modifying the approach slightly to allow for our regional difficulties - I feel that the problem with this approach is that if we keep trying to play by the rules of a big Melbourne club we will always lose, because we’re not a big Melbourne club. It also takes far too much time, time we simply don’t have. Rebuilding via the draft is pointless until we have an elite performance facility available for players, as we have shown we can’t retain or develop draftees at the club in recent years based on our current setup, squad & results.

Let’s focus on facilities for the moment. Before the Lions can look to attract anyone with genuine star power we have got to catch up with the 17 other clubs. Right now the Lions are still using 1990’s era facilities when every other club is in multi-million dollar built for purpose complexes. The 800 odd AFL players are a fairly tight knit group, even if they don’t know each other all personally, and the collective groupthink amongst them is, why would you go to the Lions, it’s a terrible place to work and the team gets flogged every weekend in front of bad crowds. Free agency has allowed this to occur - player veto over trades means no-one comes here who doesn’t want to, and the paucity of elite talent in the AFL has meant that anyone decent we draft or develop gets enticed out with an inflated salary from an interstate rival who can offer victory as well as money. For the last few years not even money has been able to convince players to come here - Josh Jenkins apparently thought it was worth $250,000/year to him not to play at Brisbane back in 2016, re-signing for that much less at the Crows, and it’s been a similar story when we’ve stuck our thumb out to try and get a lift from other players scoping out the joint. If the facilities were top notch it would be possible to attract people - bit like a stint in minimum security prison really, you can almost forget the confinement if the surrounds are pleasant enough. But when the gym and showers are more out of maximum security, and a prospective signee is contemplating pre-season training in a windowless weights room in the height of summer inhaling the aroma of 30 odd sweating blokes - well, not even money has been enough to get them across that threshold.

However, it does appear that the Lions are finally close to breaking ground on the long overdue Elite Performance Facility at Springfield. Located in the southwest of Brisbane in a rapidly growing region, this will be one of the best long-term decisions the Lions have made. There was talk of a base out near the Eagle Farm airport a year or two ago - this would have put them in the middle of a reclaimed wetlands surrounded by freeways, runways, constant jet noise 24/7 and no houses around for miles. It would have been disastrous. The move to Springfield and surrounding regions in SW Brisbane, an area heavily populated by families puts them right in the middle of their new heartland. Tens of thousands of potential new young fans of the club & code for the Lions to connect to out there, many of them first & second generation australians with no previous affiliation to rugby league to distract them. Space for football ovals. A training oval out at Springfield with a grandstand & plenty of open days will draw thousands of people to the club, particularly once it is used to play the AFL women’s games there. The new Crossrail link will be completed at some point within the next 6-8 years once Palaszczuk and the PM work out who’s paying for it, and the rail line from Springfield direct to underneath the Gabba will rival the Ipswich line after a Broncos Friday game for the size of the throng.

That’s the dream, anyway. Is it achievable? Long-term, yes, it is, but there’s a lot to do before we get there and the club needs to be outlining it’s plans now for the next five years to ensure that we sprint towards the finish line, not stumble over it. The focus for the club should be to try and survive the next few years in reasonable shape, finish the facility, and try and keep building towards future success - if the Lions can get through to end of 2020 and be getting back towards finals contention, there’s every chance the club will be able to capitalise on ease of access to the stadium & the new groundswell of local support and get back towards turning the Gabba into a place people want to be at on game day.

Realistically, a facility of the size the Lions are proposing is probably finished and ready to go at some stage before start of season 2019. Safe in that knowledge, we can go to market in trade week end of season 2018 and start looking around. We have tried twice in the past to make waves in the trade window - 2010 saw Fevola, and 2014 saw Beams/Christensen/Robinson - the first has already been covered and the latter is probably both pass & fail at this stage, given the injuries that all 3 have battled with at various stages. The Lions cannot afford to get this wrong again, and indeed, given the seasoned heads parachuted into the club by the AFL, should have no excuses if they do.

A good starting point for the Lions would be to observe what other clubs are doing, and what we are seeing with clubs in recent years is an emphasis on bringing in some senior heads to assist with development, and provide an injection of professionalism. Mitchell went to the Eagles. Barlow is now at the Suns. Lewis & Hibberd at the Dees. Cloke to the Dogs. Deledio at GWS. And so on. We have tried this, but the ones we attract tend to be fringe players and depth cover only, players such as Tom Bell. Ryan Bastinac. Josh Walker. Jarrad Jansen. Anyone who can get a gig elsewhere has generally done so. We are very much the last chance saloon and as such we do wind up with an awful lot of list cloggers who both and help and hinder the development of the club simultaneously - Bell & Bastinac have already been dropped by Fagan this season for example, and I doubt they will have their contracts renewed next time around.

My view is that the club needs to embark on an aggressive trading strategy to add more experience and culture to the squad while also trimming some of our passengers. I do not believe that the club will succeed solely via a draft rebuild without importing players from successful clubs. Brisbane’s history of developing players is execrable. Dayne Zorko & Tom Rockliff are about the only 2 homegrown players we have turned into stars in recent years. Plenty have gone on to much better things since departing the club though. What is needed is about 3-4 established players we can put into our starting 22 to provide a critical mass of professionalism and determination, and help eliminate the lacklustre efforts we regularly see from our shellshocked veterans of years and years of mediocrity. Additionally it would enable us to dispense with the services of some of our depth players who we know will never make the step beyond injury cover.

Too many of our players haven’t gone on with their promise - Mayes, Lester, Bewick, Harwood, Taylor, Paparone, Close, Freeman, Rich - and those are just the players still on the list, I’d be here for a lot longer listing all the ones we’ve cut or lost. Jack Redden, Jordan Lisle, Mitch Golby, Andrew Raines, Xavier Clarke, Amon Buchanan, Travis Johnstone, Luke McGuane, Brent Moloney, Josh Green, Callum Bartlett, Todd Banfield, Tom Collier, James Polkinghorne, Matt Leuenberger, Mitch Clark, Albert Proud. Again, just a selection. The Lions draft & trade history for the last ten years makes for grim reading. We are never going to develop players without anyone to teach them how to play which is why new facilities that allow us to attract outside, experienced players are so critical to the recovery of the club.

So who do we go after? What follows is my best attempts observation and guesswork - I’m not a recruiter and have no idea as to players states of mind and personal circumstances. Think of them as the sort of player we should be chasing and these are the most suitable examples

With that said, the first club I’d be hitting up is Port Adelaide. It’s no secret their salary cap is under pressure - Hamish Hartlett was publicly hung out in the shop window with no takers only last year - one year into a five year deal. On top of this they’re behind in the draft, with their first rounder this year coming our way. Offloading a player and the possibility of getting a pick back is a no-brainer for them and one player I’d like to see us ask about from them is Brad Ebert.

27 years old, off contract at the end of 2017. Has already changed clubs once, having come from West Coast so he’s no stranger to relocating. Some say he’s a bit one dimensional - perhaps at Port he is, surrounded by razzle dazzle talent, but at the Lions he would be a priceless asset. A durable, hard-running midfielder, setting high standards in attack and defence. Just had a new baby. Surely a good offer from the Lions, job security and the prospect of raising the kid in the warm climes of Brisbane could be appealing as he approaches the latter half of his career. More to the point he looks like the sort of guy who wouldn’t mind training at the Lions next year while the new facilities are still being built. I reckon we could get him for 4 years at around $500,000/year + sweeteners and unlike Chris Mayne he wouldn’t have any problems holding down a spot in the starting 22.

Another one to look at around the end of 2018 is David Armitage. Former Queensland boy. Very valuable player to the Saints. Contracted until end of 2019. Understandably they probably don’t want to lose him, and it’d cost a bit to get him out of there. But let’s say in 2018 the Saints are kicking along quite nicely, players are developing well - Armitage will have turned 30 and probably has 2-3 years left in him. Maybe the Saints and he might want to talk if we came knocking with our first round pick & a sweetener. If that Saints premiership looks a bit elusive - or even better, has already been won - maybe he might be persuaded to come north. Certainly at that age and from that background he would be a perfect addition to our midfield, and would drive improvement and commitment from our young players. I’d consider this one unlikely but I think we’d be mad not to at least make enquiries if it looked possible. Let’s make the hometown lure work for us for a change.

David Mundy. Another player who’s contracted until the end of 2018 - triggered a one year extension with Freo. Bit of a wait and see this one - but if there’s any chance Freo decide to cut him while he’s still got a year left in him and he was keen to play on we’d be mad not to pick him up. I think he’s a tremendous professional and even 12 months of a fading Mundy would be worth a lot more than 2 years of Bastinac or Bell. On a similar note, albeit contracted to the end of 2019, Kieran Jack is another we should keep an eye on. A player from a successful club with a great ethos and culture. Would be a great addition for a couple of years.

They’re all old men I hear you say. Well, yes, they are (or will be). But I think Leppa got it right when he said it was boys against men, and realistically I think even with brand new facilities we’ll struggle to pick up marquee talent - we are much more likely to be able to pick up dispensable veterans by valuing them more than their current club, and we could appeal to their love for the game by emphasising the vitally important work Brisbane requires them for. But to I’d also like to see us go out and try to get a high-profile marquee player if we can, and try and create some hype back around the club again - and with that in mind, here’s a name from left field we should be after.

Jason Johannisen.

I know, the chances of him coming to the Lions are virtually nil, particularly before the facilities are constructed. But look at what he offers - the Lions achilles heel has always been transitioning out of our own 50 because of poor kicking and lack of pace. A player like Johannisen with his speed, booming kick and his run & carry would help solve a lot of those woes as well as take the heat of some of our lesser lights who have struggled to shed tags for years, particularly Daniel Rich.

He’s off contract at the end of 2017 for anyone who hasn’t been following the news. The dogs, with all their stars to juggle and a host of players coming out of contract, can probably offer him around $500,000/season. I think our recruiting strategy at this time and place can only be that of Kerry Packer’s legal recruitment strategy in Howzat! The Story of World Series Cricket...

“You give me the name of the top bloke, I call him, I offer him more ******* money than anybody else, he drops everything and comes to work for me.”

If you’re yet to be convinced, look at him. Flair, athleticism, skill, dyes his hair blonde, unusual surname - first name Jason, hell - teach him to do a handstand after a win and he’d bring ten thousand through the gates for nostalgia reasons alone.

So there you have it. My grand design to make the Lions great again. Honestly, I’d settle for relevant and no longer terrible, really. But I do think regardless of what happens that 2017 is a key year for the Lions, where the club needs to grasp the nettle and actually admit to the people of Brisbane how bad they are - something they have never really acknowledged - and take steps to start rebuilding a once proud club that has fallen into ruin. The Lions have never wanted to publicly admit their plight because they’re worried about people not wanting to come along to games - but honestly, if anyone in Brisbane isn’t aware the Lions are garbage by now, they’re either a deaf mute or a member of the AFL commission. The club’s & AFL’s high-handedness and refusal to acknowledge reality has been typical of the lack of communication to their constituents in recent years. A big part of the reason why the people have Brisbane have turned their backs particularly in recent years has been the feeling that they’ve been taken for a ride by the AFL and ignored as a succession of players walked out, a club fell into debt and facilities lagged massively behind their rivals. The Lions relentlessly upbeat attitude on social media jars against the perpetually negative on field results and performance, and already I can see people querying why the Lions bothered to bring in Fagan if we’re already 1-8 after the start of the season and still being flogged by plenty. There is a very real risk of him being hung out to dry before he can do his work, if the powers-that-be don’t get together this season and announce what their plan is to address the problems that still stand between the Lions and a return to competitiveness.

I have done my best in this article to outline what I feel could be a possible path forward, in terms of broad strategy. Certainly steps have already been commenced that I agree with but as I have explained, there is a great deal of work left undone. If the Lions cannot yet show some fight on the field, at the very least they need to start showing some off the field and begin demonstrating to the people of Brisbane that they are in this for the long haul, and do have a strategy beyond crossing their fingers and hoping the AFL backs a dumptruck of money up to the front doors of the club and they start winning again. The move to Springfield needs to form the cornerstone of an integrated regional strategy to rebuild the fabric of the club and the supporter base, and this needs to be communicated to the people of Brisbane to show them that there is hope for the future with this club, because right now hope is something that is in very short supply at the Gabba.

Let’s put some pride back in the Lions. It’s been absent for far too long.

Completely agree we need to look to experienced players to accelerate our rise of being competitive. I think 2 more core players with 150+ games experience would help greatly. I would target Andrew Swallow who should cost to much trade wise. Maybe even similar to Sam Mitchell last year. He would also add much needed extra leadership being an ex captain. The other I would target would be David Zaharakis. Free agent so would cost us nothing trade wise. Would provide much need outside run to our midfield.

After these 2 we should look at attracting 20-24 year talents as trade targets with our high picks this year. Moving away from the draft outside of our academy guys mainly. Targets of Parish, Hopper, z.jones, Greene and Kennedy right at the top of the list.
 
If you’re yet to be convinced, look at him. Flair, athleticism, skill, dyes his hair blonde, unusual surname - first name Jason, hell - teach him to do a handstand after a win and he’d bring ten thousand through the gates for nostalgia reasons alone.


Let’s put some pride back in the Lions. It’s been absent for far too long.

Brilliant post, can sense the emotion of a long suffering Lions supporter.

.....but the bit about Jason Johannisen is what I loved and made me smile. Spot on!:D
 

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