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Daniel Anderson official

Victoire

Juniors
Messages
1,291
Worth reading this from a couple years ago


‘I was a distraction for Trent Robinson’: The humility of Daniel Anderson​

ByAndrew Webster

August 17, 2023 — 3.45pm

Whether he was coaching the Auckland Warriors or New Zealand, St Helens or Parramatta, or occupying the hot-seat as the NRL referees’ boss, Daniel Anderson was known for his humility in jobs that required large servings of ego and pride.
But that modesty elevates to another level altogether when he partly blames himself for the Roosters’ slow start to this NRL season, clinging to dear life to the thought of sneaking into the top eight.

Anderson, who is being celebrated this weekend with the NRL’s Unite for Daniel Round, suffered a serious neck injury last December while body surfing on the Central Coast.
He was left quadriplegic, although he’s returned to his job as Roosters head of recruitment in recent weeks and goes into the office twice a week.

“I was a distraction for the coach, my injury,” Anderson says of Trent Robinson. “There have been off-field distractions that have taken the focus away from our club. The World Cup had an influence, too. Players were getting back to training late. With a more settled environment and more training over summer, we can certainly play at a much higher level of football.”
So, no dramatic change to the roster? No dramatic clean-out as widely speculated?

“I don’t think so,” Anderson continues. “If we put the same roster we had this year around next year, do you think we could play as poorly as we did for the first half of the year? We don’t have much movement in our roster for 2024 — we never did — but in 2025 there are a lot more players off contract. But we’re trying to retain first. It’s not easy.”
Anderson tells me this sitting in a motorised chair in the sun outside the northern suburbs’ rehabilitation centre where he currently resides and exercises daily.


He’s made considerable progress in the past fortnight and can make a fist with his right hand. The left hand and arm, however, barely move.
As a young man, Anderson taught mathematics at St Gregory’s College Campbelltown and counted Robinson, and future NRL stars Trent Barrett and Russell Richardson among his pupils. “There’s a certainty to maths that I like,” Anderson says. “You get instant feedback. And it was easy to mark.”

As an “incomplete” quadriplegic, though, there’s no certainty about his immediate or long-term future; he doesn’t know how much movement he will regain.
A fundraiser at Randwick Racecourse last month provided a startling reminder of Anderson’s contribution to rugby league with players and officials from the clubs he coached, and even those he did not, in attendance.

There was a strong contingent from the Warriors, who Anderson coached from 2001-04, including the 2002 grand final loss to the Roosters.
“The best games the Warriors played were against the Broncos,” he recalls. “We loved playing them. I loved the match-ups with Wayne [Bennett]. He’s an icon who has been stupidly successful, but I fancied myself against his teams. I had a style of coaching and team that I felt could push a button on them. I didn’t have to throw a lot of burley in the water to get them aroused for Broncos games. We were big and mean and happy to take on bullies.”

Club politics chewed him up and spat him out at the Warriors, just as it did at Parramatta, who he coached to a grand final loss in 2009 before being inexplicably sacked a season later after getting caught in the crossfire following messy board elections.
How does he reflect on his time at the Eels, after almost taking them to the promised land off the back of fullback Jarryd Hayne’s run of performances?

“Lost opportunity if anything,” Anderson reflects. “It was turbulent. I went in there under [former chief executive] Denis Fitzgerald, and I was the last person
from that era. I didn’t see it [getting sacked] coming, but I knew I was on the outer. Most coaches who have been moved on before they finish, can sense it.
“I don’t miss head coaching; it’s a brutal lifestyle. The coaching’s always great, but then there’s the media, the personalities, the families good and bad. You have an enormous amount of power over people’s livelihoods.”

He had happier days at St Helens, who he coached from 2005-08, winning three Challenge Cups and a Super League grand final.
One of his charges was James Graham, who he sat down at the end of his first season. “I can close my eyes and take myself to that meeting,” Graham says. “He helped map out the path to take. I was 18, sleepwalking into my career. I was in limbo. I had goals but not like this. The way Daniel broke it down, he didn’t tell me what to do but asked the right questions. He put me on the trajectory for the way my career panned out.”

Anderson was, according to Graham, a man manager cast from the same mould as Bennett — not that he saw everything his players were up to.
In those days, St Helens were like the Broncos, usually playing on a Friday night, which gave them a full weekend off. It meant they did just two weight sessions per week.
So Anderson scheduled an additional session on a Sunday afternoon. Afterwards, Graham and a handful of others snuck away to a nearby pub to work on their biceps in another manner, lifting pints of delightful English beer.
Word spread and, soon enough, the whole team was skipping into training on a Sunday, knowing there would be a reward after it.

Then Anderson cancelled the Sunday session, ending the players’ own Sunday session.
“Keep it going, gaffer!” Graham told the coach. “It brings us all together.”
Now the game is coming together for Anderson when he needs it most. All 17 club captains will donate signed jumpers this weekend in support of Anderson, a feat that’s never happened before. Graham is donating all of his premiership medals and rings.​
 

Harry Bath

Juniors
Messages
397
Mmm I don't want to sound heartless however I hope dragons have not just hired a part timer into this crucial role ?!. It sounds like Rooster's were doing what they had to with this bloke regarding his return to work after such a horrible injury ? however a cynical person might think that the roosters wanted to unload him?
 

muzby

Village Idiot
Staff member
Messages
46,581
Mmm I don't want to sound heartless however I hope dragons have not just hired a part timer into this crucial role ?!. It sounds like Rooster's were doing what they had to with this bloke regarding his return to work after such a horrible injury ? however a cynical person might think that the roosters wanted to unload him?
There are many other words aside from heartless that I’d use to describe this post. Heartless is probably the nicest though.

I’d be curious to know what you think that he could do before his accident that he can’t do now……………
 

Harry Bath

Juniors
Messages
397
There are many other words aside from heartless that I’d use to describe this post. Heartless is probably the nicest though.

I’d be curious to know what you think that he could do before his accident that he can’t do now……………
The poor bloke is a quadriplegic he requires 24/7 care he cant feed himself he cant bathe himself and he cant go to the toilet by himself. How can he go to games and spot talent, how can he go to meetings with player agents how can he put in the many grueling hours that are required to fix the shit show at St George? He has only just come back to the roosters a day or 2 a week after his accident in December so he has not performed his job there this year!
He will require many hours of rehabilitation that will take how away from his job, I feel sorry for him however the dragons need a full time committed recruitment manager take a look at the last bloke he apparently was sick for months and as a result the props ,halves and outside backs this team desperately needs have not been secured and in fact young promising players like Tamale and Latu have been poached due to inactivity on the retention front.
 

jay mac

Juniors
Messages
192
The poor bloke is a quadriplegic he requires 24/7 care he cant feed himself he cant bathe himself and he cant go to the toilet by himself. How can he go to games and spot talent, how can he go to meetings with player agents how can he put in the many grueling hours that are required to fix the shit show at St George? He has only just come back to the roosters a day or 2 a week after his accident in December so he has not performed his job there this year!
He will require many hours of rehabilitation that will take how away from his job, I feel sorry for him however the dragons need a full time committed recruitment manager take a look at the last bloke he apparently was sick for months and as a result the props ,halves and outside backs this team desperately needs have not been secured and in fact young promising players like Tamale and Latu have been poached due to inactivity on the retention front.
The article was written in '23. The accident was December '22. Roosters felt he was doing an ok job for a few seasons since the injury. Since his injury, he has managed to oversee the recruitment of Leniu, Brandon Smith, Terrell May, Nawaqanitawase, Reece Robson et al, whilst ensuring the retention of a promising crop of juniors such as Robert Toia, Naufahu Whyte and Hugo Savala. Sure, he's had a few "misses" (Dom Young, Smith), but i don't think the Dragons could currently considered themselves in a position to choose to recruit any of those names. Anderson's a good get for mine.

 

17thPlaceLifer

Juniors
Messages
1
The poor bloke is a quadriplegic he requires 24/7 care he cant feed himself he cant bathe himself and he cant go to the toilet by himself. How can he go to games and spot talent, how can he go to meetings with player agents how can he put in the many grueling hours that are required to fix the shit show at St George? He has only just come back to the roosters a day or 2 a week after his accident in December so he has not performed his job there this year!
He will require many hours of rehabilitation that will take how away from his job, I feel sorry for him however the dragons need a full time committed recruitment manager take a look at the last bloke he apparently was sick for months and as a result the props ,halves and outside backs this team desperately needs have not been secured and in fact young promising players like Tamale and Latu have been poached due to inactivity on the retention front.
I was at the NSW Cup game on the weekend against the Jets. (Side note the Beer, Footy, Food festival is a fantastic day) Daniel Anderson was at the game watching in his new Dragon's jacket! He was taking notes. He also had a carer with him who was assisting in taking notes, calling over players to chat etc etc. He looked well-equipped to take on the role. I also saw Shane Flanagan at the game walking in with the team at half time, which I thought was a good sign. Say what you want about Flanno, but flying back from North Queensland and heading straight to watch the NSW side shows he is dedicated to the club.
 

Harry Bath

Juniors
Messages
397
I was at the NSW Cup game on the weekend against the Jets. (Side note the Beer, Footy, Food festival is a fantastic day) Daniel Anderson was at the game watching in his new Dragon's jacket! He was taking notes. He also had a carer with him who was assisting in taking notes, calling over players to chat etc etc. He looked well-equipped to take on the role. I also saw Shane Flanagan at the game walking in with the team at half time, which I thought was a good sign. Say what you want about Flanno, but flying back from North Queensland and heading straight to watch the NSW side shows he is dedicated to the club.
Ok I hope you are right, its a huge stressful job that he has I hope his body and mind can cope
 

TheRev

Coach
Messages
13,014
I was at the NSW Cup game on the weekend against the Jets. (Side note the Beer, Footy, Food festival is a fantastic day) Daniel Anderson was at the game watching in his new Dragon's jacket! He was taking notes. He also had a carer with him who was assisting in taking notes, calling over players to chat etc etc. He looked well-equipped to take on the role. I also saw Shane Flanagan at the game walking in with the team at half time, which I thought was a good sign. Say what you want about Flanno, but flying back from North Queensland and heading straight to watch the NSW side shows he is dedicated to the club.
Great post mate! It was probably our worst game of the year also.. so not a great first watch for Anderson, but in the same way.. whats the point of seeing us roll over an opposition either.. doesnt really give you an indication of how the player will handle the reality of first grade.

Def were better in the 2nd half.. but we let the Jets get away to big a start.
 

Woody90

Bench
Messages
3,879
The poor bloke is a quadriplegic he requires 24/7 care he cant feed himself he cant bathe himself and he cant go to the toilet by himself. How can he go to games and spot talent, how can he go to meetings with player agents how can he put in the many grueling hours that are required to fix the shit show at St George? He has only just come back to the roosters a day or 2 a week after his accident in December so he has not performed his job there this year!
He will require many hours of rehabilitation that will take how away from his job, I feel sorry for him however the dragons need a full time committed recruitment manager take a look at the last bloke he apparently was sick for months and as a result the props ,halves and outside backs this team desperately needs have not been secured and in fact young promising players like Tamale and Latu have been poached due to inactivity on the retention front.

Knights fan here. Alex McKinnon worked in our recruitment team for a while and was good in the role. He was responsible for discovering Dom Young for example who’d barely played a game in the ESL, signed him and drove him home from the airport. Being quadriplegic doesn’t mean you can’t work. Anderson has a great understanding and respect in the game. He’ll do a good job for you guys IMO.
 

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