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Dragons revival

possm

Coach
Messages
15,591
How an old-school bonding session fuelled Dragons revival
An old-fashioned bonding session organised by St George Illawarra coach Anthony Griffin after a frustrating training session is being credited by Dragons players with helping to spark their winning start to the season. Griffin was unhappy with a pre-season session so he cut training short and told the players they would repeat the session the following day – but this time they would get it right.

And then, he said, they would enjoy a few beers together. “There was a look of shock among the boys,” second-rower Josh Kerr said. “It was like, ‘wow. How good is that!’. “It sounds crazy but we haven’t had that here before and honestly it is refreshing. It makes you want to play for the coach and play for each other.” After a 48-16 humbling by South Sydney in the Charity Shield and an opening round 32-18 loss to Cronulla, the Dragons were widely written off.

However, they have now won three matches in a row for the first time in two years and are targeting a top eight berth, with Kerr saying: "We want to challenge a lot of people's opinions of us." Yet besides a new coaching staff headed by Griffin, not a lot appears to have changed this season.

Eels v Dragons - Round 5
“The talent has always been there and we have got pretty much the same squad but I think it is just the attention to detail and our attitude,” said former NSW Origin lock Trent Merrin, who will make his 150th appearance for the club against Parramatta on Sunday night.

“Different coaches have different ways to bring teams together and this group has really connected with what Hook is putting forward and the way he is building that connection within the playing group. You can tell on the field the last few weeks that we are all working hard for each other.”

With constant speculation over the future of former coach Paul McGregor since the Dragons fell away at the end of the 2018 season after leading the competition for the first 17 rounds, the mood at WIN Stadium gradually got heavier.

Many of the players were close to McGregor and felt burdened by the pressure which increased with every loss last season but they are now a tight-knit group under Griffin. However, nine players remain off contract, including star five-eighth Corey Norman, fullback Matt Dufty and Merrin. Griffin has made it clear that they are playing for their futures but he has also provided clear expectations about what they need to do to secure a new deal.

“It is a re-start,” Merrin said. “Everyone has got to put their best foot forward and buy into the system. If you don’t, then you are not in the system. “It is clarity, it gives us a good perspective of where we need to head to and what areas we need to work on.”

Which NRL player thinks they are the most famous?
The NRL’s strict biosecurity protocols had an impact last season as players were effectively only able to leave their home to train or play but the bubble restrictions have been lifted this year and Griffin has ensured his players socialise with each other.

“Last year was tough for all of us but it’s a crazy good vibe at the moment," centre Brayden Williame said. "Obviously winning helps but I think that is built off just everyone getting along." As he had done at Penrith, Griffin introduced a breakfast club, in which players were placed in different groups each week and told to find a Wollongong café to meet before training on a nominated day. The one rule was that the players were banned from talking about football so they learned about each other.


Defy impossible: The leap

The pre-season bonding session was similar.
“I think we have got a real sense of playing for each other,” Kerr said. “You always have a tough pre-season but the biggest thing Hook changed was that we did a lot of things away from the field together to build a strong culture and strong mateship throughout the team.

“A lot of it really is old school. There were even some days where it was a tough session and he said ‘we’ll cut it here early and we will go for some beers’. “The boys still talk about a Thursday session that we probably didn’t execute as well as we wanted and our Friday session is usually our tough session but on the Friday he just said ‘look, we are going to do what we did yesterday, we are going to do it better today and then we are going to go for some beers together.

“Something as simple as that starts to develop a bond and now you see some of us boys on our day off we will go and play golf or we will go out for breakfast, go get coffee or do other things together.”

Power of the group
Merrin, the lone survivor from St George Illawarra’s 2010 premiership-winning team, said Griffin had organised a BBQ after training. “It wasn’t just about the bonding, it was the theory behind it,” he said. “We work hard and we can enjoy each other’s company once we do it and we did. We had a feed and a few beers and sat around talking about life.

The return of the set-piece scrum play
“The power of the group is sometimes better than the power of a session on the field. It’s not always beers, we go out for coffees and have a laugh, talk about things other than football, enjoy each other’s company and get to know each other on a personal basis. “When you are out on the field and you go into battle, if you know a bit more about the person next to you, you want to work a bit harder for them and that’s what we are doing.”

In previous seasons, the Dragons may have relied too heavily on inspirational captain Cameron McInnes or representative stars Ben Hunt and Tyson Frizell but the season-ending injury to Cronulla-bound McInnes and Frizell’s departure to Newcastle has meant other players needed to step up.

Every try from round 4
."We are all doing things together now, we are not really relying on Cam or Friz to do something," Kerr said. "On the field, I can definitely feel that there is a massive difference because we just want to play for each other.

"It feels like you are going into war with your brother, that is the only way I can describe it, and we talk all the time about how there is something different this year."

Top eight ambitions
Dragons players were stung by criticism aimed at them after the Charity Shield and are using predictions that they were destined for the wooden spoon as motivation to finish in the top eight after missing the finals for the past two seasons.

After beating the Cowboys, Sea Eagles and Knights, St George Illawarra are currently sixth and have a chance to climb higher up the Telstra Premiership ladder if they can overcome the Eels at Bankwest Stadium on Sunday night. “You could see all the critics writing us off, especially against the Knights," Kerr said.

"They had lost Mitch Pearce’s 300th game against the Tigers and everyone thought they’ll bounce back, 'it’s only the Dragons, hang with them for 80 minutes and they’ll go away'. “The Charity Shield was embarrassing but we spoke after that we don’t want that to happen again and we are doing our best to shut a lot of critics up,” Kerr said. “We want to make the top eight so that is what we are aiming for."

Defy Impossible: Iconic moments
Merrin admits Parramatta will be a genuine test for the Dragons and describes the unbeaten co-competition leaders as one of the NRL’s benchmark teams but he believes the team is building towards something special this season.

"Obviously it would be great to have a fairytale ending to this season, but having won a competition before, I know how much hard work goes into it," Merrin said. "But the feeling at the club is exceptional at the moment and all the boys are prepared to work for one another and execute those finer details for the greater good. "I'm confident, if we can continue to build, buy-in as a collective group and keep all our players on the field, there's no reason why this can't be a season we'll never forget."

NRL Magic Round Brisbane 2021

 
Last edited:

Dragonslayer

First Grade
Messages
7,693
Isn't it interesting we've basically gone from Dragons survival to Dragons revival, all in the space of a month.

We also shouldn't get ahead of ourselves. We've had some wins, played a better standard of football and scored some great tries both by individual and by team. But losses will come and of course the inevitable comments like 'Dragons on the predicted slide' will appear, especially after a bad loss.

For me our 'revival' = competing and competing for the full 80, win, lose or draw.

Will we play finals footy? After 4 rounds who knows, the pundits already saying Penrith will win the premiership already.....
A lot of water to go under the bridge before then and like us, it's a long season and still 20 rounds (after our game tomorrow) to play, lots can happen that can cruel a season in one game.
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
How an old-school bonding session fuelled Dragons revival
An old-fashioned bonding session organised by St George Illawarra coach Anthony Griffin after a frustrating training session is being credited by Dragons players with helping to spark their winning start to the season. Griffin was unhappy with a pre-season session so he cut training short and told the players they would repeat the session the following day – but this time they would get it right.

And then, he said, they would enjoy a few beers together. “There was a look of shock among the boys,” second-rower Josh Kerr said. “It was like, ‘wow. How good is that!’. “It sounds crazy but we haven’t had that here before and honestly it is refreshing. It makes you want to play for the coach and play for each other.” After a 48-16 humbling by South Sydney in the Charity Shield and an opening round 32-18 loss to Cronulla, the Dragons were widely written off.

However, they have now won three matches in a row for the first time in two years and are targeting a top eight berth, with Kerr saying: "We want to challenge a lot of people's opinions of us." Yet besides a new coaching staff headed by Griffin, not a lot appears to have changed this season.

Eels v Dragons - Round 5
“The talent has always been there and we have got pretty much the same squad but I think it is just the attention to detail and our attitude,” said former NSW Origin lock Trent Merrin, who will make his 150th appearance for the club against Parramatta on Sunday night.

“Different coaches have different ways to bring teams together and this group has really connected with what Hook is putting forward and the way he is building that connection within the playing group. You can tell on the field the last few weeks that we are all working hard for each other.”

With constant speculation over the future of former coach Paul McGregor since the Dragons fell away at the end of the 2018 season after leading the competition for the first 17 rounds, the mood at WIN Stadium gradually got heavier.

Many of the players were close to McGregor and felt burdened by the pressure which increased with every loss last season but they are now a tight-knit group under Griffin. However, nine players remain off contract, including star five-eighth Corey Norman, fullback Matt Dufty and Merrin. Griffin has made it clear that they are playing for their futures but he has also provided clear expectations about what they need to do to secure a new deal.

“It is a re-start,” Merrin said. “Everyone has got to put their best foot forward and buy into the system. If you don’t, then you are not in the system. “It is clarity, it gives us a good perspective of where we need to head to and what areas we need to work on.”

Which NRL player thinks they are the most famous?
The NRL’s strict biosecurity protocols had an impact last season as players were effectively only able to leave their home to train or play but the bubble restrictions have been lifted this year and Griffin has ensured his players socialise with each other.

“Last year was tough for all of us but it’s a crazy good vibe at the moment," centre Brayden Williame said. "Obviously winning helps but I think that is built off just everyone getting along." As he had done at Penrith, Griffin introduced a breakfast club, in which players were placed in different groups each week and told to find a Wollongong café to meet before training on a nominated day. The one rule was that the players were banned from talking about football so they learned about each other.


Defy impossible: The leap

The pre-season bonding session was similar.
“I think we have got a real sense of playing for each other,” Kerr said. “You always have a tough pre-season but the biggest thing Hook changed was that we did a lot of things away from the field together to build a strong culture and strong mateship throughout the team.

“A lot of it really is old school. There were even some days where it was a tough session and he said ‘we’ll cut it here early and we will go for some beers’. “The boys still talk about a Thursday session that we probably didn’t execute as well as we wanted and our Friday session is usually our tough session but on the Friday he just said ‘look, we are going to do what we did yesterday, we are going to do it better today and then we are going to go for some beers together.

“Something as simple as that starts to develop a bond and now you see some of us boys on our day off we will go and play golf or we will go out for breakfast, go get coffee or do other things together.”

Power of the group
Merrin, the lone survivor from St George Illawarra’s 2010 premiership-winning team, said Griffin had organised a BBQ after training. “It wasn’t just about the bonding, it was the theory behind it,” he said. “We work hard and we can enjoy each other’s company once we do it and we did. We had a feed and a few beers and sat around talking about life.

The return of the set-piece scrum play
“The power of the group is sometimes better than the power of a session on the field. It’s not always beers, we go out for coffees and have a laugh, talk about things other than football, enjoy each other’s company and get to know each other on a personal basis. “When you are out on the field and you go into battle, if you know a bit more about the person next to you, you want to work a bit harder for them and that’s what we are doing.”

In previous seasons, the Dragons may have relied too heavily on inspirational captain Cameron McInnes or representative stars Ben Hunt and Tyson Frizell but the season-ending injury to Cronulla-bound McInnes and Frizell’s departure to Newcastle has meant other players needed to step up.

Every try from round 4
."We are all doing things together now, we are not really relying on Cam or Friz to do something," Kerr said. "On the field, I can definitely feel that there is a massive difference because we just want to play for each other.

"It feels like you are going into war with your brother, that is the only way I can describe it, and we talk all the time about how there is something different this year."

Top eight ambitions
Dragons players were stung by criticism aimed at them after the Charity Shield and are using predictions that they were destined for the wooden spoon as motivation to finish in the top eight after missing the finals for the past two seasons.

After beating the Cowboys, Sea Eagles and Knights, St George Illawarra are currently sixth and have a chance to climb higher up the Telstra Premiership ladder if they can overcome the Eels at Bankwest Stadium on Sunday night. “You could see all the critics writing us off, especially against the Knights," Kerr said.

"They had lost Mitch Pearce’s 300th game against the Tigers and everyone thought they’ll bounce back, 'it’s only the Dragons, hang with them for 80 minutes and they’ll go away'. “The Charity Shield was embarrassing but we spoke after that we don’t want that to happen again and we are doing our best to shut a lot of critics up,” Kerr said. “We want to make the top eight so that is what we are aiming for."

Defy Impossible: Iconic moments
Merrin admits Parramatta will be a genuine test for the Dragons and describes the unbeaten co-competition leaders as one of the NRL’s benchmark teams but he believes the team is building towards something special this season.

"Obviously it would be great to have a fairytale ending to this season, but having won a competition before, I know how much hard work goes into it," Merrin said. "But the feeling at the club is exceptional at the moment and all the boys are prepared to work for one another and execute those finer details for the greater good. "I'm confident, if we can continue to build, buy-in as a collective group and keep all our players on the field, there's no reason why this can't be a season we'll never forget."

NRL Magic Round Brisbane 2021

https://www.dragons.com.au/news/202...hool-bonding-session-fuelled-dragons-revival/

Thanks for posting @possm
 

Gareth67

First Grade
Messages
8,407
Yes great post possum . On a side note , I have been wondering about Jamie Sowards input into the 2021 Dragons outfit .

I wonder if he has been giving tips to the Dragons halves as to kicking in general play . The two dropouts by Norman last week were quite ordinary and merely placed pressure on our defense once again.

In saying that Norman’s game has improved compared to the last couple of seasons , but he still has a long way to go to truly worry the opposition .
 

mickeylane

Bench
Messages
4,916
Yes great post possum . On a side note , I have been wondering about Jamie Sowards input into the 2021 Dragons outfit .

I wonder if he has been giving tips to the Dragons halves as to kicking in general play . The two dropouts by Norman last week were quite ordinary and merely placed pressure on our defense once again.

In saying that Norman’s game has improved compared to the last couple of seasons , but he still has a long way to go to truly worry the opposition.
They were executed purposefully because as Norman said it was easier to defend from 20 meters out than chasing up the field and risking them gaining some width in attack...we were defending strongly at the time - so obviously the boys nacked themselves....#goodtimes
 

Gareth67

First Grade
Messages
8,407
They were executed purposefully because as Norman said it was easier to defend from 20 meters out than chasing up the field and risking them gaining some width in attack...we were defending strongly at the time - so obviously the boys nacked themselves....#goodtimes

Thanks mickey I didn’t realize that .
 
Messages
15,559
Thanks posters @possm and @getsmarty this was good and fascinating.

If a bonding session over a few lagers worked so well for you, Madge should get our boys totally smashed and at passing out level every other day!

Kerr said the coach inspired social drinks had never happened before and it helped with the friendships and gave them some avenues into Hooks psychology.

Marys idea of “ mixing it up” - fans will remember that he had them Morris Dancing once, ring a rosy or whatever, and he seemed to enjoy it. Players participating looked a bit confused and lost, but he was into it!

Probably this year, instead of just talking about being “ rookies again” the re-boot is real and actual. Some material and meaningful change, players responding accordingly.

Probably Hook and co aren’t filling the players heads up with corporate banking psycho babble, meditating and mind f**king.

Hook is courageous, ripped Gus a new one in the media after his sacking. Inspiring. I’m sure the review made for wonderful paper aeroplanes at the pub with the boys.
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
Yes it is a great story. Thanks for posting the correct link Getsmarty. I did include a link but obviously the wrong one. Too many tabs open at the same time.l

No problem possm..have a good afternoon and go the Saints.
 

TruSaint

Referee
Messages
20,219
Enjoyed that article, and it makes a lot of sense.

I actually can see the players enjoying their football at the minute. Be it man management, the bonding as a collective ( not 2 camps ), competing for spots etc, its seems to be working.

Long way to go before we can talk of September footy, but a "w" tonight would make that task doable.
 
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