We can all agree on the team for next week and how ludicrous Noble's team selection was. Some saw it before we had even kicked a ball and then nearly everyone can see it now.
But we can rant about it till we're blue in the face but at the end of the day only one man can change that side around. Brian Noble.
Let's just see if he does, I predict he wont. I think he will drop Mathers and keep Coley in the side. I think we will line up like this:
Roberts
Phelps
Goulding
Carmont
Richards
Smith
Leuluai
Fielden
Riddell
Feka
Hock
Bailey
Lockers
Charlie Seeling wrote:You are equating coaching ability with winning trophies. The true measure of a coach is how much he gets out of the players available to him.
If I accept your premise then Ian Millward is a similarly outstanding coach and you would have to agree with that.
I think Brian Smith is a great coach. Neil Henry one of the top half dozen in the world but by your method of assessment both are abject failures.
IMO Brian Noble was in the right place at the right time and he was astute enough to not tamper with it but the groundwork of Brian Smith/Matthew Elliott and a then little known skills coach called Mick Potter laid the foundations. Without those foundations what would Noble have achieved? Carl Jennings the conditioner played a huge part too.
Something else we agree on. I'm getting worried.
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Joined: May 27 2003 Posts: 20426 Location: educating League Freak on all things rugby league
Charlie Seeling wrote:You are equating coaching ability with winning trophies. The true measure of a coach is how much he gets out of the players available to him.
If I accept your premise then Ian Millward is a similarly outstanding coach and you would have to agree with that.
I think Brian Smith is a great coach. Neil Henry one of the top half dozen in the world but by your method of assessment both are abject failures.
IMO Brian Noble was in the right place at the right time and he was astute enough to not tamper with it but the groundwork of Brian Smith/Matthew Elliott and a then little known skills coach called Mick Potter laid the foundations. Without those foundations what would Noble have achieved? Carl Jennings the conditioner played a huge part too
Agree with this, in his confort zone Noble was happy to pick up the ball and run with it, he changed nothing about the Bulls style of play and ethos. Lets not forgett Noble cut his teeth in this environment, and learned his trade through this ethos, i do not think personally if you want to be a polished rounded end product you can serve your aprentiship in one environmet, if you do you start to produce clones of your teachers who are only exposed to 1 set of methods.
When faced with a different team of different style players that do not necissarily fit this ethos and take him out of this comfort zone I feel at the moment it is being proven that he has some major limitations. Hopefully the next few weeks will disprove this theory,
Unofficially the most boring poster on Cherry and White.
Joined: Nov 20 2002 Posts: 3136 Location: Ashton,Wigan
Charlie Seeling wrote:You are equating coaching ability with winning trophies.
Where did i do that?
I said if Noble was as BAD a coach as people are making out he could not of won so many things year on year. Im not saying he is a coaching guru or another John Monie but he is not a bad coach either.
I said if Noble was as BAD a coach as people are making out he could not of won so many things year on year. Im not saying he is a coaching guru or another John Monie but he is not a bad coach either.
Yourself and AJ defended Noble on the basis of his trophy cabinet. Even now you mention winning things.
Many people who climb to the top of tree are extremely lucky rather than talented.
Joined: Nov 20 2002 Posts: 3136 Location: Ashton,Wigan
jonh wrote:Agree with this, in his confort zone Noble was happy to pick up the ball and run with it, he changed nothing about the Bulls style of play and ethos. Lets not forgett Noble cut his teeth in this environment, and learned his trade through this ethos, i do not think personally if you want to be a polished rounded end product you can serve your aprentiship in one environmet, if you do you start to produce clones of your teachers who are only exposed to 1 set of methods.
When faced with a different team of different style players that do not necissarily fit this ethos and take him out of this comfort zone I feel at the moment it is being proven that he has some major limitations. Hopefully the next few weeks will disprove this theory,
You are talking as though Noble inherited Elliots squad and just sat back and did nothing.
I would like a Bulls fan to come on here and list the players Noble signed for Bradford and the starting line up in Elliots last year and the starting line up in Nobles last full season. Noble signed and coached his own players,Elliots team was long gone when Bradford hit there peak.
Joined: Nov 20 2002 Posts: 3136 Location: Ashton,Wigan
Charlie Seeling wrote:Yourself and AJ defended Noble on the basis of his trophy cabinet. Even now you mention winning things.
Many people who climb to the top of tree are extremely lucky rather than talented.
I did not defend him solely on winning things. I said bad coaches dont win things year on year.
You compare Nobles time at Bradford to climbing a tree. Noble was not lucky was he? He did not sit back and let Elliots team win things. He built a very successful team that at its peak looked nothing like the team Elliot left him with.
I may be wrong but in a year or so McNamarra has virtually changed much of the Bulls line up around. I think Bradford will be very good in 2009 and will play a different style of RL to the past. So from what he was given to where he will take them that could Mcnamarra a very impressive coach.
Some coaches are player dependent to a much greater extent than others. As an example, 2 centres like Iro / Newlove were far more important to Ian Millward being successful than anything to do with his coaching.
Great coaches adapt to the players they hve and cange their tactics to get the maximum out of those players. I do not think Millward nor Noble fit that category.
Joined: May 27 2003 Posts: 20426 Location: educating League Freak on all things rugby league
Red Hot Jalapeno wrote:You are talking as though Noble inherited Elliots squad and just sat back and did nothing.
I would like a Bulls fan to come on here and list the players Noble signed for Bradford and the starting line up in Elliots last year and the starting line up in Nobles last full season. Noble signed and coached his own players,Elliots team was long gone when Bradford hit there peak.
But the system, ethos and style of play was not, and that is the crucial thing. Noble simply identified players who would fill the void left by the players leaving the club.
This is a fact Noble discussed at length every potential signing with Carl Jennings to see if they could be conditioned physically to suit the system in place. Now a coach may discuss a player with the conditioner, but would he give them the final say on if he should sign them or not? I doubt it.
Thankfully time as it always does caught up with this method players became quicker and a physical match for the Bulls and the legacy of this continues today.
Unofficially the most boring poster on Cherry and White.
Joined: May 27 2003 Posts: 20426 Location: educating League Freak on all things rugby league
Charlie Seeling wrote:I may be wrong but in a year or so McNamarra has virtually changed much of the Bulls line up around. I think Bradford will be very good in 2009 and will play a different style of RL to the past. So from what he was given to where he will take them that could Mcnamarra a very impressive coach.
Some coaches are player dependent to a much greater extent than others. As an example, 2 centres like Iro / Newlove were far more important to Ian Millward being successful than anything to do with his coaching.
Great coaches adapt to the players they hve and cange their tactics to get the maximum out of those players. I do not think Millward nor Noble fit that category.
I expect this year to be career defineing for both Noble and McNammra, both have had time to stamp there authority on there respective teams and make them there own.
McNammara as a player was a pretty skillfull forward and clever tactician, i think we may well see this transmit to his Bradford team in 09 and they could be a real force.
Unofficially the most boring poster on Cherry and White.
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