Certified Legendary Thread Alastair Clarksons.

Alistair to North in 2023?

  • Yes

    Votes: 257 77.4%
  • No

    Votes: 75 22.6%

  • Total voters
    332

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Nice draft Damian. I've marked it up for you.


BARRETT: If Clarko wants the Kangaroos job, it's his​


Damian Barrett

North Melbourne will deal exclusively with four-time premiership coach Alastair Clarkson as it begins its coach search, writes Damian Barrett



AT THE outset of its search for yet a nother (this is not an editorial) coach, a fourth in four years, North Melbourne will engage exclusively with Alastair Clarkson.

That process has effectively (superfluous) started. Kangaroos chair Sonja Hood spent 10 minutes with Clarkson's manager James Henderson in Hobart last Sunday – as the Roos were losing their 16th match of the 2022 season and 34th of the past 40 (why is this a metric?)– against Hawthorn at Blundstone Arena.

Henderson was there as a guest of Cricket Tasmania, and seated in the main function room alongside two former Australian cricket captains, Ricky Ponting and Tim Paine.

"I can confirm I had a conversation with North Melbourne in Hobart," Henderson told AFL.com.au on Wednesday.

It is expected Hood, within the next week, will meet with Clarkson
– who will have returned to Australia from yet another bucket-list attendance at an international sports event, the British Open won by Cam Smith at the iconic St Andrews – to gauge his 2023 football intents and interests.

No conversation with four-time premiership coach Clarkson is ever a simple one, but North Melbourne will be prepared to hear everything he wants to say about the club at which he began his extraordinary AFL journey as a player in 1987.

Only after the Roos have thrashed out that conversation will they contemplate their next move – to get even more serious with Clarkson, or to begin dialogue with other proven coaching options.

THE CONTENDERS Who's got the credentials to take on North role?

All other potential candidates for the North job will need to respect that process. If Clarkson is keen, and the Roos are prepared to meet his many and varied demands, then there is an understanding that the job would be his.

Getting to that point is certainly not a given, and it will not be smooth. In Clarkson's eyes, North may simply have too many problems – and may be too broken given it has churned through three coaches (Brad Scott, Rhyce Shaw, David Noble) in four years (this is misleading Damian remove it) – for him to take on at this stage of his 54-year-old life.

And Clarkson would, definitely, (you need to cite a source for this Damian) have people around him demanding that certain North people in current senior positions be removed to make way for people of either his own selection, or at least suggestion. That causes immediate complications on so many levels. (you shouldn't be drawing conclusion from your own hypotheticals Damian)

Clarkson churns through chief executive officers. At Hawthorn, he once put Ian Robson up against a wall, made it known to many he wasn't impressed with Tracey Gaudry and by the time the end came for him at Hawthorn late last season, he had had years of frostiness with Justin Reeves.

It would be fair to assume that Clarkson, before he may engage truly meaningfully in talk about a future with the Roos, would have people seek for a watertight commitment from the AFL that a priority NAB AFL Draft pick be granted.

NINE WINS, THREE YEARS Why North is applying for a priority pick

Having spent 2022 on Hawthorn's money, an overhang of the contracted $1 million he had to coach the Hawks this year, Clarkson is known to be even more edgy than normal. He has loved his time away from the game. But not that he needed evidence, the absence has convinced him he wants back in.


As it stands, albeit with some question marks still hovering over the senior coaching jobs at Port Adelaide and Essendon, there are only two jobs for him to consider.

And the alternative to North, GWS, has taken a very different approach since parting with nine-season coach Leon Cameron. The Giants have engaged in meaningful conversations about their job with at least a half-dozen candidates, who are both tried and untried senior coaches. To this point, Clarkson is merely one of those candidates. (who was the first candidate GWS contacted Damian? should you include that here to balance the narrative?)

Depending on who one talks to, there could be a form of "distance" between Clarkson and Giants' CEO Dave Matthews, and again depending on which version one chooses to focus on, there are varying takes on who is the driver of that "distance". And whether that actually means anything, anyway, is also debatable.

GWS will conduct a second round of conversations with its candidates from next week. Its process is moving into the formal stages and has, unfortunately for it, gleaned that one of the prominent options for the job has ruled himself out.

The highly respected Ashley Hansen – West Coast premiership player, nine-season assistant coach at Western Bulldogs – now at Carlton under Michael Voss, has made it known that right now for personal reasons he will not be in a position to leave Melbourne. James Hird, working closely with interim coach Mark McVeigh, is also not in the running.

Matthews, general manager of football Jason McCartney and football director Jimmy Bartel have been driving the Giants' coach-search program, and like Collingwood last year, they will be methodically wading through all scenarios with no time limit.

Where North's biggest negatives right now revolve around the degrees of brokenness (please translate this part into English or quote the country song it's a lyric from Damian) related to the past four years of poor decision-making, GWS's major problem is the bursting salary cap that is carrying massive contracts with players who may already be past their best, and which will also need to shed at least $800,000 of commitments in the very next trade period. (do you think you should mention GWS failing under their 2nd senior coach despite extensive AFL unconditional funding, again just to balance the narrative Damian?)

While Clarkson would seek a massive deal for his signature, there is a ceiling on the number. At North, that number would max out at $1.2 million a year (citation needed) (each club's soft cap will increase from $6.2 to $6.95 million in 2023), and possibly a whole lot less. For context, three-time premiership coach Damien Hardwick's deal sees him earning less than $800,000 in 2022 (before bonuses) (citation needed). Highly credentialled assistant coaches are always required in a successful team's hierarchy, and obviously senior coaches need to take less money in order to have access to high-end assistant coaching intel.


At GWS, Clarkson may get access to more dollars via an AFL ambassador role linked to promotion of the game in the northern states, but there has been no communication of that nature to this point.

At the end of all his discussions and deliberations, Clarkson may simply choose to say thanks but no thanks to both North and GWS, and wait for better (subjective - remove) options in 2023.

From a North perspective, only then would official approaches be made to Don Pyke, Ross Lyon and Mark Williams, and almost certainly (even though they are contracted for 2023 respectively to West Coast and Port Adelaide) Adam Simpson and Ken Hinkley. The Roos know that after the Shaw and Noble debacles (subjective - remove), they need a proven person in the role (assumption - state this or remove).

Back to this week. The North Melbourne job is not yet Clarkson's. But right now and for some weeks to come, it will be his to say "no" to.

------------------

Well done! It almost read like it was native English standard and your work is now approaching Grade 3 creative writing standard. You do need to be clearer where you are stating facts and should not be imposing your own emotive takes on things unless you clearly frame it as such. 3/10 for content but 10/10 for effort. Good work Damian!
 
Clarkson's manager has had conversations with the club, and following those conversations, Clarkson himself is going to meet with Sonja and the team.

If Clarkson wasn't interested, he wouldn't be meeting with us after we already spoke to his manager.

Get excited, folks.
To be fair, he'd have a listen to what the club has to say even if he had little intention to take on the role.
 
To be fair, he'd have a listen to what the club has to say even if he had little intention to take on the role.

That's generally what the first chat with his manager is for though.

"Is he interested? We'd be prepared to pay in X-Y range"

If he's interested, you have the further conversations about specifics (assistant coaches/football dept structure etc).
If he's not interested, he wouldn't waste time on those conversations.
 

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Nice draft Damian. I've marked it up for you.


BARRETT: If Clarko wants the Kangaroos job, it's his​


Damian Barrett

North Melbourne will deal exclusively with four-time premiership coach Alastair Clarkson as it begins its coach search, writes Damian Barrett



AT THE outset of its search for yet a nother (this is not an editorial) coach, a fourth in four years, North Melbourne will engage exclusively with Alastair Clarkson.

That process has effectively (superfluous) started. Kangaroos chair Sonja Hood spent 10 minutes with Clarkson's manager James Henderson in Hobart last Sunday – as the Roos were losing their 16th match of the 2022 season and 34th of the past 40 (why is this a metric?)– against Hawthorn at Blundstone Arena.

Henderson was there as a guest of Cricket Tasmania, and seated in the main function room alongside two former Australian cricket captains, Ricky Ponting and Tim Paine.

"I can confirm I had a conversation with North Melbourne in Hobart," Henderson told AFL.com.au on Wednesday.

It is expected Hood, within the next week, will meet with Clarkson
– who will have returned to Australia from yet another bucket-list attendance at an international sports event, the British Open won by Cam Smith at the iconic St Andrews – to gauge his 2023 football intents and interests.

No conversation with four-time premiership coach Clarkson is ever a simple one, but North Melbourne will be prepared to hear everything he wants to say about the club at which he began his extraordinary AFL journey as a player in 1987.

Only after the Roos have thrashed out that conversation will they contemplate their next move – to get even more serious with Clarkson, or to begin dialogue with other proven coaching options.

THE CONTENDERS Who's got the credentials to take on North role?

All other potential candidates for the North job will need to respect that process. If Clarkson is keen, and the Roos are prepared to meet his many and varied demands, then there is an understanding that the job would be his.

Getting to that point is certainly not a given, and it will not be smooth. In Clarkson's eyes, North may simply have too many problems – and may be too broken given it has churned through three coaches (Brad Scott, Rhyce Shaw, David Noble) in four years (this is misleading Damian remove it) – for him to take on at this stage of his 54-year-old life.

And Clarkson would, definitely, (you need to cite a source for this Damian) have people around him demanding that certain North people in current senior positions be removed to make way for people of either his own selection, or at least suggestion. That causes immediate complications on so many levels. (you shouldn't be drawing conclusion from your own hypotheticals Damian)

Clarkson churns through chief executive officers. At Hawthorn, he once put Ian Robson up against a wall, made it known to many he wasn't impressed with Tracey Gaudry and by the time the end came for him at Hawthorn late last season, he had had years of frostiness with Justin Reeves.

It would be fair to assume that Clarkson, before he may engage truly meaningfully in talk about a future with the Roos, would have people seek for a watertight commitment from the AFL that a priority NAB AFL Draft pick be granted.

NINE WINS, THREE YEARS Why North is applying for a priority pick

Having spent 2022 on Hawthorn's money, an overhang of the contracted $1 million he had to coach the Hawks this year, Clarkson is known to be even more edgy than normal. He has loved his time away from the game. But not that he needed evidence, the absence has convinced him he wants back in.


As it stands, albeit with some question marks still hovering over the senior coaching jobs at Port Adelaide and Essendon, there are only two jobs for him to consider.

And the alternative to North, GWS, has taken a very different approach since parting with nine-season coach Leon Cameron. The Giants have engaged in meaningful conversations about their job with at least a half-dozen candidates, who are both tried and untried senior coaches. To this point, Clarkson is merely one of those candidates. (who was the first candidate GWS contacted Damian? should you include that here to balance the narrative?)

Depending on who one talks to, there could be a form of "distance" between Clarkson and Giants' CEO Dave Matthews, and again depending on which version one chooses to focus on, there are varying takes on who is the driver of that "distance". And whether that actually means anything, anyway, is also debatable.

GWS will conduct a second round of conversations with its candidates from next week. Its process is moving into the formal stages and has, unfortunately for it, gleaned that one of the prominent options for the job has ruled himself out.

The highly respected Ashley Hansen – West Coast premiership player, nine-season assistant coach at Western Bulldogs – now at Carlton under Michael Voss, has made it known that right now for personal reasons he will not be in a position to leave Melbourne. James Hird, working closely with interim coach Mark McVeigh, is also not in the running.

Matthews, general manager of football Jason McCartney and football director Jimmy Bartel have been driving the Giants' coach-search program, and like Collingwood last year, they will be methodically wading through all scenarios with no time limit.

Where North's biggest negatives right now revolve around the degrees of brokenness (please translate this part into English or quote the country song it's a lyric from Damian) related to the past four years of poor decision-making, GWS's major problem is the bursting salary cap that is carrying massive contracts with players who may already be past their best, and which will also need to shed at least $800,000 of commitments in the very next trade period. (do you think you should mention GWS failing under their 2nd senior coach despite extensive AFL unconditional funding, again just to balance the narrative Damian?)

While Clarkson would seek a massive deal for his signature, there is a ceiling on the number. At North, that number would max out at $1.2 million a year (citation needed) (each club's soft cap will increase from $6.2 to $6.95 million in 2023), and possibly a whole lot less. For context, three-time premiership coach Damien Hardwick's deal sees him earning less than $800,000 in 2022 (before bonuses) (citation needed). Highly credentialled assistant coaches are always required in a successful team's hierarchy, and obviously senior coaches need to take less money in order to have access to high-end assistant coaching intel.


At GWS, Clarkson may get access to more dollars via an AFL ambassador role linked to promotion of the game in the northern states, but there has been no communication of that nature to this point.

At the end of all his discussions and deliberations, Clarkson may simply choose to say thanks but no thanks to both North and GWS, and wait for better (subjective - remove) options in 2023.

From a North perspective, only then would official approaches be made to Don Pyke, Ross Lyon and Mark Williams, and almost certainly (even though they are contracted for 2023 respectively to West Coast and Port Adelaide) Adam Simpson and Ken Hinkley. The Roos know that after the Shaw and Noble debacles (subjective - remove), they need a proven person in the role (assumption - state this or remove).

Back to this week. The North Melbourne job is not yet Clarkson's. But right now and for some weeks to come, it will be his to say "no" to.

------------------

Well done! It almost read like it was native English standard and your work is now approaching Grade 3 creative writing standard. You do need to be clearer where you are stating facts and should not be imposing your own emotive takes on things unless you clearly frame it as such. 3/10 for content but 10/10 for effort. Good work Damian!
Art
 
To be fair, he'd have a listen to what the club has to say even if he had little intention to take on the role.
I assume he'd want some pretty transparent conversations with Sonja around what appears from the outside to be a fractured and dysfunctional football club on various levels. What's gone wrong, why it's gone wrong & what their plan is to change it.
 
Oh you best believe it has happened, we're just not telling anyone as yet.

Not even Al!!

How hush, hush is that? Jokes on Al he'll be going for other jobs and we've signed him lol Al

We are telling people who's media comprehension goes beyond swipe right or swipe left.
 

Nice draft Damian. I've marked it up for you.


BARRETT: If Clarko wants the Kangaroos job, it's his​


Damian Barrett

North Melbourne will deal exclusively with four-time premiership coach Alastair Clarkson as it begins its coach search, writes Damian Barrett



AT THE outset of its search for yet a nother (this is not an editorial) coach, a fourth in four years, North Melbourne will engage exclusively with Alastair Clarkson.

That process has effectively (superfluous) started. Kangaroos chair Sonja Hood spent 10 minutes with Clarkson's manager James Henderson in Hobart last Sunday – as the Roos were losing their 16th match of the 2022 season and 34th of the past 40 (why is this a metric?)– against Hawthorn at Blundstone Arena.

Henderson was there as a guest of Cricket Tasmania, and seated in the main function room alongside two former Australian cricket captains, Ricky Ponting and Tim Paine.

"I can confirm I had a conversation with North Melbourne in Hobart," Henderson told AFL.com.au on Wednesday.

It is expected Hood, within the next week, will meet with Clarkson
– who will have returned to Australia from yet another bucket-list attendance at an international sports event, the British Open won by Cam Smith at the iconic St Andrews – to gauge his 2023 football intents and interests.

No conversation with four-time premiership coach Clarkson is ever a simple one, but North Melbourne will be prepared to hear everything he wants to say about the club at which he began his extraordinary AFL journey as a player in 1987.

Only after the Roos have thrashed out that conversation will they contemplate their next move – to get even more serious with Clarkson, or to begin dialogue with other proven coaching options.

THE CONTENDERS Who's got the credentials to take on North role?

All other potential candidates for the North job will need to respect that process. If Clarkson is keen, and the Roos are prepared to meet his many and varied demands, then there is an understanding that the job would be his.

Getting to that point is certainly not a given, and it will not be smooth. In Clarkson's eyes, North may simply have too many problems – and may be too broken given it has churned through three coaches (Brad Scott, Rhyce Shaw, David Noble) in four years (this is misleading Damian remove it) – for him to take on at this stage of his 54-year-old life.

And Clarkson would, definitely, (you need to cite a source for this Damian) have people around him demanding that certain North people in current senior positions be removed to make way for people of either his own selection, or at least suggestion. That causes immediate complications on so many levels. (you shouldn't be drawing conclusion from your own hypotheticals Damian)

Clarkson churns through chief executive officers. At Hawthorn, he once put Ian Robson up against a wall, made it known to many he wasn't impressed with Tracey Gaudry and by the time the end came for him at Hawthorn late last season, he had had years of frostiness with Justin Reeves.

It would be fair to assume that Clarkson, before he may engage truly meaningfully in talk about a future with the Roos, would have people seek for a watertight commitment from the AFL that a priority NAB AFL Draft pick be granted.

NINE WINS, THREE YEARS Why North is applying for a priority pick

Having spent 2022 on Hawthorn's money, an overhang of the contracted $1 million he had to coach the Hawks this year, Clarkson is known to be even more edgy than normal. He has loved his time away from the game. But not that he needed evidence, the absence has convinced him he wants back in.


As it stands, albeit with some question marks still hovering over the senior coaching jobs at Port Adelaide and Essendon, there are only two jobs for him to consider.

And the alternative to North, GWS, has taken a very different approach since parting with nine-season coach Leon Cameron. The Giants have engaged in meaningful conversations about their job with at least a half-dozen candidates, who are both tried and untried senior coaches. To this point, Clarkson is merely one of those candidates. (who was the first candidate GWS contacted Damian? should you include that here to balance the narrative?)

Depending on who one talks to, there could be a form of "distance" between Clarkson and Giants' CEO Dave Matthews, and again depending on which version one chooses to focus on, there are varying takes on who is the driver of that "distance". And whether that actually means anything, anyway, is also debatable.

GWS will conduct a second round of conversations with its candidates from next week. Its process is moving into the formal stages and has, unfortunately for it, gleaned that one of the prominent options for the job has ruled himself out.

The highly respected Ashley Hansen – West Coast premiership player, nine-season assistant coach at Western Bulldogs – now at Carlton under Michael Voss, has made it known that right now for personal reasons he will not be in a position to leave Melbourne. James Hird, working closely with interim coach Mark McVeigh, is also not in the running.

Matthews, general manager of football Jason McCartney and football director Jimmy Bartel have been driving the Giants' coach-search program, and like Collingwood last year, they will be methodically wading through all scenarios with no time limit.

Where North's biggest negatives right now revolve around the degrees of brokenness (please translate this part into English or quote the country song it's a lyric from Damian) related to the past four years of poor decision-making, GWS's major problem is the bursting salary cap that is carrying massive contracts with players who may already be past their best, and which will also need to shed at least $800,000 of commitments in the very next trade period. (do you think you should mention GWS failing under their 2nd senior coach despite extensive AFL unconditional funding, again just to balance the narrative Damian?)

While Clarkson would seek a massive deal for his signature, there is a ceiling on the number. At North, that number would max out at $1.2 million a year (citation needed) (each club's soft cap will increase from $6.2 to $6.95 million in 2023), and possibly a whole lot less. For context, three-time premiership coach Damien Hardwick's deal sees him earning less than $800,000 in 2022 (before bonuses) (citation needed). Highly credentialled assistant coaches are always required in a successful team's hierarchy, and obviously senior coaches need to take less money in order to have access to high-end assistant coaching intel.


At GWS, Clarkson may get access to more dollars via an AFL ambassador role linked to promotion of the game in the northern states, but there has been no communication of that nature to this point.

At the end of all his discussions and deliberations, Clarkson may simply choose to say thanks but no thanks to both North and GWS, and wait for better (subjective - remove) options in 2023.

From a North perspective, only then would official approaches be made to Don Pyke, Ross Lyon and Mark Williams, and almost certainly (even though they are contracted for 2023 respectively to West Coast and Port Adelaide) Adam Simpson and Ken Hinkley. The Roos know that after the Shaw and Noble debacles (subjective - remove), they need a proven person in the role (assumption - state this or remove).

Back to this week. The North Melbourne job is not yet Clarkson's. But right now and for some weeks to come, it will be his to say "no" to.

------------------

Well done! It almost read like it was native English standard and your work is now approaching Grade 3 creative writing standard. You do need to be clearer where you are stating facts and should not be imposing your own emotive takes on things unless you clearly frame it as such. 3/10 for content but 10/10 for effort. Good work Damian!
Please email this to the HUN :praying:

Elite work
 
I assume he'd want some pretty transparent conversations with Sonja around what appears from the outside to be a fractured and dysfunctional football club on various levels. What's gone wrong, why it's gone wrong & what their plan is to change it.
I'd also add to this - Clarko comes acrosss as a very much "no nosense" kind of bloke who doesn't hold back and calls things as they are. He'd see a relatively new club president without a huge footy background, and a CEO with questionable track record and no footy background. He'd want to gauge not just the fact that Sonja won't be Jeff Kennett like and will stay out of his way, but that there is enough expertise around him to bounce ideas of etc.

I have full trust that Sonja can put his mind at ease on most of those issues. She's a very smart woman who knows where her strengths and weaknesses are and she won't be pushed over either.

The sooner that meeting takes place the better. If Clarko is still in discussions after the meeting, we can rest easy - it would indeed be happening.
 
Imo what we are watching is a soft launch of Clarko as North coach.

It is a very common practice in contemporary media.

If Clarko was still iffy, no chance Ponting's manager advises him to damage his brand by doing this.

It's theatre.

I’m liking your rationale S…. Just to quieten my beating heart - what was your stance during the “Dusty coming to North” timeframe? I’m hoping you thought it was never going to happen?


On iPhone using BigFooty.com mobile app
 
Clarko coaching us would turn our skills on its head.

It's actually scary how much better we can play with emphasis on improving how we move the ball.

It's been said by other before but I'll say it again. He would bring credibility and professionalism to the club. The standard required to win flags. All this talk of his requirements and demands is actually a good thing. He would probably to a better job of reviewing the footy dept. than Walsh! He demands success!

It would, as you said, raise the players skills and ball movement capabilities. Any self respecting player wanting to be the best version of themselves would lap this up. Anyone not buying in can self select their way out the door.
 

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Clarko coaching us would turn our skills on its head.

It's actually scary how much better we can play with emphasis on improving how we move the ball.
Not sure about that but by not picking players who are t/o merchants we would improve.
Our decision making with ball in hand is poor as well to exacerbate the shit kicking.
 
He's such a ****ing idiot.

He should set an arbitrary timeline from July 2019 to December 2020 and he can say we had 3 coaches in 15 months.

I challenge any club to beat our a new senior coach every 5 months average.

It's like Carlton saying supporters saying we don't deserve a high end PP because they haven't got one since (insert arbitrary date after they got one a year for a decade).
 
To be fair, he'd have a listen to what the club has to say even if he had little intention to take on the role.

Wow, you seem really across what Clarko is thinking, and how to run the process to get him.

If only you'd had the balls to run for the board at some point, we'd be set!
 

Nice draft Damian. I've marked it up for you.

That's some solid work Sub. Reckon you went a bit easy on his repeated failures to meet impartiality, but I can't blame you.

But the trope that grates me the most in his writing are the variations on the "it is expected" / "it is known" conjecture.


It is expected Hood, within the next week, will meet with Clarkson – who will have returned to Australia from yet another bucket-list attendance at an international sports event, the British Open won by Cam Smith at the iconic St Andrews – to gauge his 2023 football intents and interests.
Having spent 2022 on Hawthorn's money, an overhang of the contracted $1 million he had to coach the Hawks this year, Clarkson is known to be even more edgy than normal.

One can only conclude he uses it to feign universality of a particular perspective in an attempt to cover the flimsiness of his sources.

Otherwise, why would you write like that?


Perhaps Damo should attempt a little bit of journalistic transparency and try doing away with the jargon, and explaining why his sources have declined to be identified for this story.

Oh well.
 
I’m liking your rationale S…. Just to quieten my beating heart - what was your stance during the “Dusty coming to North” timeframe? I’m hoping you thought it was never going to happen?


On iPhone using BigFooty.com mobile app

I was I'll believe it when he's signed on Dusty.

Josh Kelly I was sure would come though.
 
Not really. It's Barrett FFS, so you have to read between the lines.
He has no idea, and he knows we have issues (which we all know) so he assumes Clarko might be put off by them. The only bit of actual news in this text is that the meeting with Henderson took place in Hobart as expected and apparently lasted only 10 minutes, and that apparently Sonja will be meeting with Clarko this week. That's it. The rest is pure Barrett dribble.
The actual news in that is that the meeting was courtesy of Cricket Tasmania and that former Australian Cricket Captain and prominent North Melbourne Supporter (Member?) Ricky Ponting was at the meeting and he has close ties to Henderson. The meeting seems to have been very quick - 10 minutes. Enough time for pleasantries and a quick:

"Are we doing this?"

"Yep"

"Cool, we'll get on it."

A few pleasantries about the footy or something and back to it.

So how long has this thing been going on for with Ponting? Seems pretty obvious with hindsight that if he shared a manager with Clarko then they might have a good relationship and that might be a good way to approach him. Marfia Ben and Ponting were both involved with CA over the years too so may have a relationship there as well.

You asked earlier "What have we got to hide?" Well ... what if Noble was a dead man walking for ages and then the chance to get Clarko came up, maybe a week or two before the bye or even later. Sonja said there were ongoing conversations with Noble about the teams performance. That might have been her saying "get it sorted or we'll sack you." Seems that way from the presser. Maybe not in as many words/as bluntly.

Opportunity for Clarko comes up. Handshake agreement. Walsh called in. Noble gone anyway so give Patch some experience and try and get some life back into the season. Noble might know all this but publicly it protects his reputation to have all this bullshit theatre and hide all that other stuff from the public record.

I'm only speculating mind you. I dunno who is gonna coach next year and I'm trying very hard not to take this Clarko stuff seriously.
 

Nice draft Damian. I've marked it up for you.


BARRETT: If Clarko wants the Kangaroos job, it's his​


Damian Barrett

North Melbourne will deal exclusively with four-time premiership coach Alastair Clarkson as it begins its coach search, writes Damian Barrett



AT THE outset of its search for yet a nother (this is not an editorial) coach, a fourth in four years, North Melbourne will engage exclusively with Alastair Clarkson.

That process has effectively (superfluous) started. Kangaroos chair Sonja Hood spent 10 minutes with Clarkson's manager James Henderson in Hobart last Sunday – as the Roos were losing their 16th match of the 2022 season and 34th of the past 40 (why is this a metric?)– against Hawthorn at Blundstone Arena.

Henderson was there as a guest of Cricket Tasmania, and seated in the main function room alongside two former Australian cricket captains, Ricky Ponting and Tim Paine.

"I can confirm I had a conversation with North Melbourne in Hobart," Henderson told AFL.com.au on Wednesday.

It is expected Hood, within the next week, will meet with Clarkson
– who will have returned to Australia from yet another bucket-list attendance at an international sports event, the British Open won by Cam Smith at the iconic St Andrews – to gauge his 2023 football intents and interests.

No conversation with four-time premiership coach Clarkson is ever a simple one, but North Melbourne will be prepared to hear everything he wants to say about the club at which he began his extraordinary AFL journey as a player in 1987.

Only after the Roos have thrashed out that conversation will they contemplate their next move – to get even more serious with Clarkson, or to begin dialogue with other proven coaching options.

THE CONTENDERS Who's got the credentials to take on North role?

All other potential candidates for the North job will need to respect that process. If Clarkson is keen, and the Roos are prepared to meet his many and varied demands, then there is an understanding that the job would be his.

Getting to that point is certainly not a given, and it will not be smooth. In Clarkson's eyes, North may simply have too many problems – and may be too broken given it has churned through three coaches (Brad Scott, Rhyce Shaw, David Noble) in four years (this is misleading Damian remove it) – for him to take on at this stage of his 54-year-old life.

And Clarkson would, definitely, (you need to cite a source for this Damian) have people around him demanding that certain North people in current senior positions be removed to make way for people of either his own selection, or at least suggestion. That causes immediate complications on so many levels. (you shouldn't be drawing conclusion from your own hypotheticals Damian)

Clarkson churns through chief executive officers. At Hawthorn, he once put Ian Robson up against a wall, made it known to many he wasn't impressed with Tracey Gaudry and by the time the end came for him at Hawthorn late last season, he had had years of frostiness with Justin Reeves.

It would be fair to assume that Clarkson, before he may engage truly meaningfully in talk about a future with the Roos, would have people seek for a watertight commitment from the AFL that a priority NAB AFL Draft pick be granted.

NINE WINS, THREE YEARS Why North is applying for a priority pick

Having spent 2022 on Hawthorn's money, an overhang of the contracted $1 million he had to coach the Hawks this year, Clarkson is known to be even more edgy than normal. He has loved his time away from the game. But not that he needed evidence, the absence has convinced him he wants back in.


As it stands, albeit with some question marks still hovering over the senior coaching jobs at Port Adelaide and Essendon, there are only two jobs for him to consider.

And the alternative to North, GWS, has taken a very different approach since parting with nine-season coach Leon Cameron. The Giants have engaged in meaningful conversations about their job with at least a half-dozen candidates, who are both tried and untried senior coaches. To this point, Clarkson is merely one of those candidates. (who was the first candidate GWS contacted Damian? should you include that here to balance the narrative?)

Depending on who one talks to, there could be a form of "distance" between Clarkson and Giants' CEO Dave Matthews, and again depending on which version one chooses to focus on, there are varying takes on who is the driver of that "distance". And whether that actually means anything, anyway, is also debatable.

GWS will conduct a second round of conversations with its candidates from next week. Its process is moving into the formal stages and has, unfortunately for it, gleaned that one of the prominent options for the job has ruled himself out.

The highly respected Ashley Hansen – West Coast premiership player, nine-season assistant coach at Western Bulldogs – now at Carlton under Michael Voss, has made it known that right now for personal reasons he will not be in a position to leave Melbourne. James Hird, working closely with interim coach Mark McVeigh, is also not in the running.

Matthews, general manager of football Jason McCartney and football director Jimmy Bartel have been driving the Giants' coach-search program, and like Collingwood last year, they will be methodically wading through all scenarios with no time limit.

Where North's biggest negatives right now revolve around the degrees of brokenness (please translate this part into English or quote the country song it's a lyric from Damian) related to the past four years of poor decision-making, GWS's major problem is the bursting salary cap that is carrying massive contracts with players who may already be past their best, and which will also need to shed at least $800,000 of commitments in the very next trade period. (do you think you should mention GWS failing under their 2nd senior coach despite extensive AFL unconditional funding, again just to balance the narrative Damian?)

While Clarkson would seek a massive deal for his signature, there is a ceiling on the number. At North, that number would max out at $1.2 million a year (citation needed) (each club's soft cap will increase from $6.2 to $6.95 million in 2023), and possibly a whole lot less. For context, three-time premiership coach Damien Hardwick's deal sees him earning less than $800,000 in 2022 (before bonuses) (citation needed). Highly credentialled assistant coaches are always required in a successful team's hierarchy, and obviously senior coaches need to take less money in order to have access to high-end assistant coaching intel.


At GWS, Clarkson may get access to more dollars via an AFL ambassador role linked to promotion of the game in the northern states, but there has been no communication of that nature to this point.

At the end of all his discussions and deliberations, Clarkson may simply choose to say thanks but no thanks to both North and GWS, and wait for better (subjective - remove) options in 2023.

From a North perspective, only then would official approaches be made to Don Pyke, Ross Lyon and Mark Williams, and almost certainly (even though they are contracted for 2023 respectively to West Coast and Port Adelaide) Adam Simpson and Ken Hinkley. The Roos know that after the Shaw and Noble debacles (subjective - remove), they need a proven person in the role (assumption - state this or remove).

Back to this week. The North Melbourne job is not yet Clarkson's. But right now and for some weeks to come, it will be his to say "no" to.

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Well done! It almost read like it was native English standard and your work is now approaching Grade 3 creative writing standard. You do need to be clearer where you are stating facts and should not be imposing your own emotive takes on things unless you clearly frame it as such. 3/10 for content but 10/10 for effort. Good work Damian!
Absolutely brilliant ( KC not DB! )

I just made a similar point to the one I'm about to make here in the Media thread, but the blatant bias in the paragraph comparing our issues to GWS's is insane. Our "four years of poor decision making" all our own fault, we're terrible deserve nothing. GWS's "bursting salary cap" almost reads as if it isn't their fault! How can a club currently sitting 4th last on the ladder need to lose $800K from its salary cap and not cop any "years of poor decision making" heat too!
 
Absolutely brilliant ( KC not DB! )

I just made a similar point to the one I'm about to make here in the Media thread, but the blatant bias in the paragraph comparing our issues to GWS's is insane. Our "four years of poor decision making" all our own fault, we're terrible deserve nothing. GWS's "bursting salary cap" almost reads as if it isn't their fault! How can a club currently sitting 4th last on the ladder need to lose $800K from its salary cap and not cop any "years of poor decision making" heat too!
Wait until GWS say it was NM poor decision making that blew our cap…
Triple H Yes GIF by DAZN
 
Clarkson's manager has had conversations with the club, and following those conversations, Clarkson himself is going to meet with Sonja and the team.

If Clarkson wasn't interested, he wouldn't be meeting with us after we already spoke to his manager.

Get excited, folks.
Was this not already a given?

Have you just repackaged already known information as your own to make it look like you have inside sources?

Come on Chad.
 
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