STUNNING BENNETT REVELATION.
South Sydney Rabbits have privately confided they are facing one of their toughest ever pre-seasons with Wayne Bennett their incoming coach.
Bennett’s famed speed over long distance with his daily running routine, even at age 70 privately has several Rabbits players concerned over their ability to perform to Bennett’s high expectations.
Recent speculation from a number of sources has confirmed that Bennett has grown a third leg from a nodule on his hip, which while un-wieldy, has seen him achieve speeds un-heard of in NRL circles.
With global warming already having an ever increasingly debilitating effect on the NRL pre-season, this news has Souths players grumbling privately whether this ‘swap’ deal was a good idea.
Weildy
It wouldn't surprise if he does have to kick a few bad habits down there though. They swing in some mediocre performances as much as us, but with a far more experienced team
… in the modern era, football is less and less tribal and more a business pure, where allegiances are never more than short-term arrangements and very few truly care for the jersey they are most associated with.
And overall, I say it is bad for rugby league, as for fans – the paymasters – loyalty is the life-blood of the game. And when you have a situation where coaches are signing for other clubs a year in advance and in all likelihood won’t see out their current contracts, why the hell should the fans care who wins or loses?
When leaders grandfather themselves, little good follows. Closer to the action, Steve Waugh and Johnathan Thurston are two examples of all-time greats whose resignation announcements, many months before their actual departures, had an adverse effect on their teams. Waugh’s Australian teammates grew exhausted by his 2003-04 victory lap; this year’s North Queensland Cowboys showed similar symptoms.
This is why all those NRL clubs who can afford it are not letting their coaches grandfather their resignations: if Wayne Bennett says he’ll happily resign from the Broncos – in a year or two – a mood of uncertainty settles over an organisation, and soon it’s not just the coach who’s looking like a lame duck. The moment a leader announces their resignation, even if it’s many tomorrows away, they become part of yesterday. Interesting that rugby league clubs are ahead of the game on this one.
His whole article is worth a read. Clubs need to be building towards something or achieving something (ie winning).There’s an old saying in footy: if you’re not part of the future, you cannot be part of the present. Better to rip of the bandaid fast to ease the pain.
Fair enough, too, but this coaching madness that’s presently at play reveals how weak some clubs can be.
If we don't have a global product in 20 years we won't have a product. Sport is changing that quickly and kids are growing up with all the sports around the world. I want to be in a market place where we can take rugby league people know about and they come and see it and want to play it.
If you think the NRL is in a healthy shape and on the up and up - can I please have some of what you’re smoking?
He has book called Man in he Mirror. Get it and read it. He answers your question.Does that sound like a bloke who is just in it for himself?
Correct. Our club unfortunately is a prime example. Corporately orientated to a point where both shareholders and sponsors are appeased at expense of Mum and Dad supporters. Both Cowboys and Storm were smart enough to flick News. Big end of town run our club and until we become our own entity nothing much will change. Anyone who got our supporters pack couple years ago that was cryovaced (cap and all) with the postie trying to stick it through the slot in the letterbox while we were trying to stick it up the posties arse will testify.It's a boys club at the top, and it will not change.
I’ve already celebrated his last game with a thrashing at Lang Park.I highly doubt the Broncos would be willing to pay anything for Bennett if the swap occured. They would want an actual swap and not need to pay anything. That's if they even agree. From a financial standpoint the Broncos will make a lot of money celebrating Bennett's final season. They would see increased crowds at some games (particularly the last home game of the season) And would benefit financially from that.
Think they've turned the Penrith:Tigers Ringling Bros circus into the Broncos: Souths Cirque du Soleil.I think the media do a great job at creating hysteria about any situation.
Correct. Our club unfortunately is a prime example. Corporately orientated to a point where both shareholders and sponsors are appeased at expense of Mum and Dad supporters. Both Cowboys and Storm were smart enough to flick News. Big end of town run our club and until we become our own entity nothing much will change. Anyone who got our supporters pack couple years ago that was cryovaced (cap and all) with the postie trying to stick it through the slot in the letterbox while we were trying to stick it up the posties arse will testify.
I am sure if we were our own entity with a CEO with balls Bennett would have been fucked off as soon as he signed with another club and so would the players who have not yet signed.
I think the media do a great job at creating hysteria about any situation.
Is Bennett's position at the Broncos in 2019 really untenable??
They (media) are acting like the circus around Bennett's last year will destabilise the broncos title run... when in fact there is very little evidence to support this. It is more likely to have the opposite effect where the players have an emotional pool to draw from.
Yet the media will often tell you that "many pundits" think the situation is untenable and the coaches MUST swap now... Of course the opinions they use are from parties external to the broncos organisation.
The media simply choose an agenda (literally any agenda) and ram it down the collective throat of Joe public until they blindly follow it as fact... and then all of a sudden it builds to a wave of support to whatever agenda is being pushed.
Without realizing it the public have allowed the media to have an unprecedented amount of power over them and they have no qualms in manipulating them to achieve what they want... which in most cases simply appears to be distabilisation and chaos
I think that Wayne is a professional and could do 2019 with the Broncos with dignity. But if this is the way we go I fully expect next season to be a nothing year and the fans and media to continually question whether his mind is on the job or looking toward the following season with the Bunnies.Yes, it is absolutely 100% untenable. I really don't see a world where it's not. I've been using Telstra as my example, if the CEO there took another job as the CEO of Optus, starting in a year, the moment Telstra were aware, the board would walk him out and say cya later. It's a MASSIVE conflict of interest.
The weekend’s developments that Souths want the Broncos to foot the bill for the contractual costs of the clubs swapping coaches for 2019 beggar one question: why?
One Sydney report said $600,000 would free the coaches up. Another put the figure at $500,000.
Since Souths announced on October 25 that Bennett would coach them from 2020 on a two-year deal, two things have changed.
The people convinced the two clubs can’t proceed in 2019 with Bennett in Brisbane and Seibold at Redfern are even more voluble that it can’t happen.
And there have been media reports that Souths players are unhappy with Seibold for wanting to leave them.
I would have thought it was South Sydney’s responsibility to keep Rabbitohs players motivated and content, not Brisbane’s.
He will be getting a million bucks. He can do it with dignity at Souths. In case you forget we got beat by 30 pts 48-18 in front of 45k+ in the last game he was head coach of the Brisbane Broncos. No dignity in that.could do 2019 with the Broncos with dignity.