Rooster Booster wrote:I could flip that question around and ask how many coaches in the NRL SHOULD be head coaches in SL?
Probably more than the other way around.
Rooster Booster wrote:Ironically, Kearney has done no better.
I wasn't aware that Kearney had a track record of coaching prior to getting his jobs.
Rooster Booster wrote:As for the recruitment. That is based on the myth that everyone believes. A bit like in Football. Why doesn't every national team have a Brazilian coach? Their players are brilliant and win so much, so often.
Well that's football where there are multiple competitions, different ways of playing and coaching opportunities. Completely different in comparison to the scenario in RL i.e. there's a wealth of coaches out there plying trades in many competitions so it stands to reason there is unlikely to be a singular power base of coaching excellence. Why don't you compare the sport to something similar like NFL, MLB, NBA, which share similar demographic traits to our sport?
Rooster Booster wrote:Maybe get more and more footy people over here to study an ARL Level 1, 2 or 3 coach’s certificate? Or get a chance to work at a club.
Agree with that and I don't think it's any coincidence that Mike Rush (Saints), who previously spent considerable amounts of time in Australia before he was appointed, has produced one of the most successful academy systems in the UK.
Rooster Booster wrote:Finally. Consider the nationality of the coach that won Super League in 2011.
Consider that he was the first British coach to win the title in x years and that the top four spots in Super League have been dominated by overseas coached teams for several years. Not all overseas coaches are infallible but the ones that have had significant impact upon our sport over the past thirty years have all been from overseas i.e. Lowe, Monie, McRae, Millward, Smith, Anderson, Maguire. Of the most recent ones only Anderson had actually coached a NRL first grade side before coming here. What does that say?