Great article by Jake Niall in The Age this morning.
http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/ne...1183833599058.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1
Great article.
Why doesn't the AFL look outside itself for it's coaches?
Why does someone who coaches in the AFL have to have played the game at AFL/VFL level?
Sure, you've got to have an understanding of footy.
But other traits of successful coaches - as motivators, in weekday preparation, as leaders of men etc. - can be found more abundantly outside of people who have played AFL football.
http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/ne...1183833599058.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1
What is clear, however, is that the AFL industry remains collectively clueless on the issue of coaches, persisting, as it does, with the absurd tradition of selecting them on the basis of a) profile, and b) their playing record. John Buchanan didn't play Test cricket. He wasn't even close. Bart Cummings didn't ride a Melbourne Cup winner. Don Talbot and Charlie Walsh, worldbeating coaches in swimming and cycling, didn't swim or ride with great distinction. Yet, in the AFL, there is an illogical view that one's playing ability is relevant to coaching prowess, when there is no evidence of a link.
In the AFL's American counterpart, the National Football League, Bill Cowher defied the odds in 2006 when he coached the Pittsburgh Steelers to victory in the Super Bowl (over Seattle). Cowher, you see, was the first Super Bowl-winning coach in 20 years to have PLAYED that game at NFL level. The previous former player was Mike Ditka, of the Chicago Bears, in 1986.
In the US, there is a professional coaching culture. The better coaches are drawn from a much vaster and more qualified pool of people; most played college football, not necessarily well. Vince Lombardi, the NFL's answer to Ron Barassi, Norm Smith and Jock McHale, didn't play NFL
Great article.
Why doesn't the AFL look outside itself for it's coaches?
Why does someone who coaches in the AFL have to have played the game at AFL/VFL level?
Sure, you've got to have an understanding of footy.
But other traits of successful coaches - as motivators, in weekday preparation, as leaders of men etc. - can be found more abundantly outside of people who have played AFL football.