Indictment

Remove this Banner Ad

CJH

Norm Smith Medallist
Oct 20, 2000
6,149
80
Belgrave
AFL Club
Richmond
Other Teams
Richmond
This is a one I posted on Roar Power a while back. It is probably my single biggest bugbear about Richmond and I'll gove it a run here:

In the Herald Sun dated 25/9/2000 there appeared an article written by Geoff Poulter eulogising Essendon coach Kevin Sheedy. It reads in part:

"KEVIN Sheedy left Richmond in fine shape when he took over as coach of Essendon for the 1981 season.

The Tigers had just won the premiership by a then-record 81 points with Sheeds as one of their specialist coaches.

Twenty seasons later, we have seen 99 coaching changes at rival AFL clubs during Sheedy's unbroken stint with the Bombers. And, remarkably, the most have occurred at Punt Rd.

The Tigers have made 11 coaching changes while their favorite son has directed four Bomber flags, been twice runners-up and made three preliminary final appearances.

..."

It is my opinion that this statistic is the single biggest indictment that can be made at the club over the past two decades. Eleven coaches in 20 completed seasons. More than one every two years. That is far, far too many; there has never been the requisite stablility to create the foundation that enables success to be built upon.

I know that not all the coaches were sacked - Alan Jeans left because of health and strictly speaking Jeff Gieschen resigned, although I think his days were numbered anyway.

No matter which way I look at it, I feel that the reason for failure in so many coaches can fundamentally be traced back to poor management.

Too often we have seen the board take the 'tough' and 'ruthless' decision to axe the coach. Rubbish. There is nothing ruthless or tough about it. Given some more thought, I think it is actually quite jelly-kneed. When the team is travelling badly, I've no doubt that the board is placed under extreme pressure from various factions, including sponsors, coterie groups and the membership / supporters in general. It is my perception that too often, the board caves in under the pressure and pulls the trigger. Not very tough at all.

We have seen instances where the process for choosing a new coach has been very poor - or even non existent. It is not Robert Walls fault that we performed so badly, as he shouldn't have been there in the first place. The management acted with far too much haste and appointed him based on reputation alone without any proper consideration of whether he was right for Richmond. As it turns out, he wasn't.

Leon Daphne was quite public in his support of Jeff Gieschen, tying the fate of the coach to his own. He was also noble enough to make good on his word by falling on his sword. Very noble. Not very helpful though. A case of too little too late. Mouthing words of support do little, what was needed was support were it mattered - a strengthened coaching department. I get the feeling that the support staff were procured from the coaching bargain basement.

The past 12 months have shown that there is light at the end of the tunnel. Perhaps by good luck rather than good management all the obvious contenders were snapped up by other clubs - in most cases, seemingly in haste. This left the management with the time to go through the process thoroughly - to find someone who would fit the position at Richmond rather than fitting Richmond around the someone. (not withstanding that Danny is implementing changes to improve the culture).

The second ray of hope comes from the appointment of the support staff. It is probably as good as any going around. I'm sure I read an article where Craig Kelly was quoted as saying that the improvement in the coaching had changed Brad Ottens perception of the club and it's future and was one of the key factors in retaining Brad Ottens. (The article was from about mid season - after Brad had quenched his thirst)

I'm sure if we submitted our end of season reports, the coaching staff would get quite a good mark - maybe a B+?

The big test is still to come however. We know that a teams fortune is like a roller coaster - especially at Richmond! Have no doubt that sometime in the future times will get tough for Danny Frawley. The question is, how will we (all Richmond factions) react? Will the guilotine come out again? I hope not.

Let us have the collective strength to work our way through the problem. Then we can start challenging for greatness.



------------------
This is a hallucination and these faces are in a dream. A computer generated environment; a fantasy island you can do anything and not have to face the consequences.
 
greatness ? Rubbish - Richmond seems to be a long way from even challenging for the final eight judging by the last 5 or so years. (Fact is they only one 3 of their last 11 games so they were lucky enough to finish 9th) - Culture change and an possible relocation to Tasmania is what Richmond should be doing
 
BUMP

Interesting, in 2000 we were talking about how coaching instability was a factor in our performance, fast forward 10 years and we have had another 3 coaches in that time (including Jade 'The Blade' Rawlings) and then fast forward another 9 to now, we have stuck by one man Damian "Premiership" Hardwick.

Just goes to show, had we caved after 2016 we could be back at the bottom and the cycle continues...
 

Log in to remove this ad.

Bit difficult to compare the eras. One era was coach dominated, the other is a coaching team. From what I read and listened to we were still holding on to the old era a little too much. Dimma to his great credit put up his hand and said he was part of the problem and that he very much wanted to be part of the solution still. Old Richmond would have sacked him. We had the management that understood that. Enter a better coaching team! Build on the strengths already there.
 
Bit difficult to compare the eras. One era was coach dominated, the other is a coaching team. From what I read and listened to we were still holding on to the old era a little too much. Dimma to his great credit put up his hand and said he was part of the problem and that he very much wanted to be part of the solution still. Old Richmond would have sacked him. We had the management that understood that. Enter a better coaching team! Build on the strengths already there.
With the runners now being severely restricted delivering messages, this player responsibly of onfield coaching has gone up another 10 levels.
 
With the runners now being severely restricted delivering messages, this player responsibly of onfield coaching has gone up another 10 levels.

The roles for players like Hodge and what Mitchell did at West Coast are being refined as we speak. Luke Shuey, Brendan Goddard, Jordan Lewis, Jarred McVeigh all appear to be coaches of some sort out there already, without the tiltles of Captain next to their names.
 
Coaching was only the window dressing for an ineptly run club. We failed to embrace professionalism, which had big flow on effects to development and a complete lack of understanding of what the draft was and what it could do for a club. Coaching changes were the net result of a bad back of house.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Like many, I lived through those dark dark years.
Graeme Richmond's ruthless win at all costs mentality sent the club bankrupt.
Amateurish and primitive attitude.
Use to come home bloody upset and angry hoping things might one day change.

However, when you see the club committing to new training facilities, ground resurfacing & expansion,
international sponsors jumping on board, 100k members, you can confidently say the club is finally on the way up.
Success should now be demanded, not hoped for.
Go Tigers!!
 

(Log in to remove this ad.)

It was a pr0n site back then, there was a few Richmond supporters on it so they thought why not talk footy and call it Big Boy Footy

They dropped the boy not to be sexist
Yeah but he came back though to give us updates about TLynch...
 
BUMP

Interesting, in 2000 we were talking about how coaching instability was a factor in our performance, fast forward 10 years and we have had another 3 coaches in that time (including Jade 'The Blade' Rawlings) and then fast forward another 9 to now, we have stuck by one man Damian "Premiership" Hardwick.

Just goes to show, had we caved after 2016 we could be back at the bottom and the cycle continues...

WTF are you doing trawling posts from 2000 mofo? Are you the OP?
 
WTF are you doing trawling posts from 2000 mofo? Are you the OP?
Honestly?
I was just looking for an obscure thread to bump to be a dickhead and then actually saw some merit in the thread
 
At the end of 2016 no Richmond supporter in their right mind could imagine that we would be in this position right now.No club ever sets out to fail,but whatever RFC tried to achieve during this dark period of our club it was a monumental failure.We had good players/teams during this period that gave us hope something might develop.Disappointment after disappointment lead to utter despair.
After 2016 I thought we were heading back into this cycle of despair.
So many things came together to change this cycle prior to the beginning of the 2017 season that it’s almost impossible to detail specifics.
During 2017 I kept waiting for the wheels to fall off.Even last year after winning the Premiership I was cautious because of the Western Bulldogs.
I’m heading into 2019 full of confidence.
The RFC is now run by a professional group of people and is followed by an outstanding group of loyal supporters.
I’m now confident this success will be sustained over a long period of time.
 
Honestly?
I was just looking for an obscure thread to bump to be a dickhead and then actually saw some merit in the thread

you are a cunning little lizard aren't you..... Now we don't know if you really are still trying to be dickhead or some sort of self-proclaimed genius - fine line isn't it?!;):D
 

Remove this Banner Ad

Back
Top