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Eels Next Coach

Who will be Eels Next Coach

  • Hannay

    Votes: 30 29.4%
  • Hollbrook

    Votes: 12 11.8%
  • Ryles

    Votes: 33 32.4%
  • Morris

    Votes: 5 4.9%
  • Cheika

    Votes: 22 21.6%

  • Total voters
    102
  • Poll closed .

Stevie

Bench
Messages
3,162
Trent Barrett believes he is ready to handle head coaching at the Parramatta Eels
In a revealing interview with DEAN RITCHIE, Trent Barrett talks about the errors he made as an up-and-coming NRL coach and why those lessons have prepared him to take over the Parramatta Eels.

Parramatta’s powerful senior playing group – led by stars Mitch Moses, Clint Gutherson and Shaun Lane – have publicly endorsed Trent Barrett to be appointed Eels head coach.
It is a significant development as Parramatta continue interviewing Barrett, Michael Cheika, Jason Demetriou, Jason Ryles and Josh Hannay for their long-term head coaching position.
But as the race heats up, Barrett has declared: “This feels like the right club for me now. I just feel like I’m ready to be successful.”
Parramatta could announce their new coach within the next three weeks. Since Brad Arthur was sacked, interim coach Barrett has won one from three games – a memorable win over frontrunners Cronulla, a late loss to Canterbury last weekend and a round 12 defeat to Souths.
Barrett believes previous coaching stints at Manly and Canterbury – where results were largely lamentable – has steeled him for future success his current players believe he can attain.

KING GUTHO’S PRAISE
That includes the Eels captain.
“It’s not going to be my decision, that’s up to the club, but he has my full support as a player and captain of the club,” Gutherson said.
“If he got the role, he would take it with both hands and do the club, himself and players proud. He would definitely have the playing group on his side if he was the man to take over.
“Everyone believes in what he is trying to do and where he wants to take the club and playing group. Trent would bring experience.
Gutherson praised Barrett’s calmness, football intelligence, and knowing first-hand how to handle the rollercoaster life of the NRL.
“He is direct, in a polite way, and has footy smarts,” he said.
“Baz pretty much had the buy-in from players straight away. He has been through a lot as a head coach and has had some challenging times.
“But over the past 18 months with us he’s proven to a lot of people how much he’s learned over those times.”

BAZ’S DESIRE
Barrett spoke passionately about why he wants to coach Parramatta.
“I just feel like I’m ready to be successful and it’s a club I really want to coach. This feels like the right club for me now. I feel I can help the club and players,” he said.
“The lessons I’ve learned, I think I can add value to the club.
“I know it will be different, it’s already different. I am a lot clearer in what’s needed to win, who I am and what I want out of the team.”
He’s adamant he’s emerged from his previous stops as a more patient and confident coach, vowing not to repeat the mistakes of his past.
“I love coaching and have had my time back as an assistant. I get on really well with the players but you don’t have to be liked to be respected. The squad is a little older,” he said.
“They are men and I don’t have to baby them, I can be upfront.”
Barrett compared the current Eels to the Panthers before their dynasty.
“We have a good team so I can get in the car confidently knowing that we can win every week. I haven’t had that feeling for a while,” he said.
“This team can beat anyone on their day.
“It’s a well set-up club, well resourced, good players, it has a lot going for it and I don’t think there’s a hell of a lot wrong with what they’re doing.”

MOSES SPEAKS
Star halfback Mitchell Moses also threw his support behind Barrett.
“I love him, he would be outstanding and I’d love him to get the job. I have learned that much off him, it’s not funny,” he said.
“The calming influence he has, how he addresses the boys and how he goes about his business, I think he’s ready to go and I think he would do a great job.
“Trent has helped my game immensely and knows how to get the best out of certain players.”

COACH LEARNINGS
Barrett is open and honest about what he learned from his tenures at Brookvale and Belmore.
“I was previously guilty of over-coaching and trying to get the whole squad to understand what was going on in my head when they didn’t need to know and letting them know how smart I thought I was. I was guilty of thinking all players were the same,” he said.
“I haven’t been flustered in the last three weeks (since replacing Arthur). I am a lot calmer and a more rounded person to handle the pressure of the job this time around.
“There were things at my last appointments that I could have done better. I could have been more patient and was too emotional in some of the decisions I made.”
He admits he initially wasn’t always open to outside advice.
“I probably didn’t listen to some of the people that I should have at certain times. That all comes with experience,” he said.
“Being emotional in this job doesn’t help you. You make emotional decisions and they’re generally wrong. I made emotional decisions, statements and looked emotional.
“All that does is drain you. I would overthink a lot of things.
Barrett had a very difficult time at the Bulldogs.
BATTLING BULLDOGS
Barrett endured a difficult period at Belmore, winning just five wins in 34 games in 2021-22 for a strike rate of 15 per cent.
“I didn’t listen. Gus (Gould, before he joined Canterbury) told me not to go there in the first place because it was a three-year rebuild,” Barrett said.
“He said it wasn’t the right job for me at the time.
“We were having a go, they were trying and it was a really good bunch of blokes, but that squad has been turned over. The 30 that I had there, none remain.
“We turned over 14 and then Gus and Cameron (Ciraldo) came and turned over another 14.”
He acknowledged the slow rebuild under Ciraldo’s watch.
“The results in my first year were the same as ‘Ciro’ got in the second year so it wasn’t going to improve in a hurry for me,” he said.
“I was probably impatient and unrealistic about how long that was going to take.
“The amount of losses certainly didn’t help. It was naive of me to think I could go and change it straight away.
“It wasn’t going to happen, it didn’t happen, and unfortunately I have to wear the win-losses on my record. History has shown it’s taken another 18 months for them to turn.
“I was guilty of trying to make them play a style of play that didn’t really suit them.
“Being a little pig-headed, I didn’t want to change my way of thinking quick enough and by the time I did, it was too late. You think you can solve the problems of the world.”

BROOKVALE BARRETT
Barrett experienced reasonable success when coaching Manly between 2016 and 2018, driving the Sea Eagles into the 2017 finals.
“We had some good times and good wins at Manly,” he said.
“In 2017, Blake Green ended up going back to the Warriors. There were a few things we could have handled better around keeping him because I think he was really good for ‘Cherry’ (Daly Cherry-Evans).
“We had some challenges from a club point of view that we could have handled better.
“I could have listened to ‘Bozo’ (then Manly director of football Bob Fulton) a bit more. He was always trying to help.
Some of our styles in how we approached things differed. ‘Bozo’ was a unique individual, a genius at recruiting and he could be really charming and funny.
“I learnt a hell of a lot from him. We had the nuts and bolts of a good side. I got a few things wrong. That comes with maturity. I was 36 at Manly, I’m 46 now.
“I am a lot more measured now and am very confident I can get the job done if given an opportunity.”

Do we drug test our players often?
 

Eelementary

Post Whore
Messages
57,213
I reckon you’re being a bit harsh on Moses mate. Agree he has and still fails to nail the big moments regularly and last week is the perfect example, but I do believe he is improving and it’s a part of his game he’s had to develop whereas the likes of Clearly seem to do it more naturally. And as good as Clearly has been he hasn’t done it in origin

I don’t agree with your last point, despite our current issues I do believe with Moses and the majority of this squad they are capable of winning us a comp. If they get the coach right and a few tweaks to the roster we could be back in genuine contention as early as next year

And despite his short comings the last few months have proven he’s our most important player

I hope you're right.

Moses is supremely talented, but I get so frustrated seeing be in a position to win a game, and seeing him do nothing to ice the game, which happens too often for a bloke on his salary, imo.

I agree that Cleary has not dominated at Origin, which is why - as good as he is at club level -, I can't have him in my personal GOAT discussion...yet.

As for being our most important player...well, I mean, his return to the side also coincided with the King's return to the side.

The King has a bigger influence on our defence, but Moses has a bigger influence on our attack.

I think the two are absolutely crucial to this team.

I do have concerns that Moses does not have a killer instinct in him.
 

Soto

Bench
Messages
4,222
He’d be easily my most disappointing player of the season. The others like Paulo, Lane etc I don’t really rate in the first place but Brown I do. Brown has been very inconsistent and one dimensional. Him playing at 7 when Moses went down also didn’t help. He never should have been there. In the end BA paid for that mistake with his job.
And cost him dinner when he overstayed his welcome
 

Soto

Bench
Messages
4,222
"I've learned that much off him, it's not funny."

Except how to ice a game when you domimate field position, and possession, right, Mitch?

FFS these guys are princesses.
Same blokes who would die for BA...🤦🏻
I think the real test is tonight...have we learnt anything last 3 games or this just rinse repeat?
 

hineyrulz

Post Whore
Messages
153,812
Well they're killing it this year. Are the Dolphins really such a shit club? I reckon they're closer to a premiership than plenty of clubs. They are f**king minted. It's why they were given a license ffs
They weren’t expected to win more than 6 games and red hot favourites to win the spoon. Before injuries struck they were in the top 8. This year they have more quality and depth, we’ll see how they overcome the supposed Bennett curse.
 

Sensei Cobra

Juniors
Messages
1,757
He’d be easily my most disappointing player of the season. The others like Paulo, Lane etc I don’t really rate in the first place but Brown I do. Brown has been very inconsistent and one dimensional. Him playing at 7 when Moses went down also didn’t help. He never should have been there. In the end BA paid for that mistake with his job.
Paulo for me. I’ve been his biggest fan and was gutted when he went to Canberra but his form and contribution has been way down for a season and half and I think he simply past his best. Not sure if he’s much of a leader either and he is on big money. Sadly I’d be thinking through a way to move him on, I think our pack needs a re-fresh starting with him.

Brown for me just hasn’t gone to that next level, his form has flat lined. IMO he has the potential to be one of the best players in the game but is not kicking on … maybe the coach can help him find his best form
 

Eelectrica

Referee
Messages
21,134
Can’t wait to be back here in 2 or 3 years when Hannah is coaching Cowboys perhaps. Ryles is either crashing and burning or hold the trophy aloft in Melbourne. Could go either way with Ryles I think.

Cheika also will have moved on.
 

Poupou Escobar

Post Whore
Messages
91,398
They weren’t expected to win more than 6 games and red hot favourites to win the spoon.
That just means the expectations were wrong. They were still spending the salary cap. Whatever other advantages they had were already there. On top of that they weren't hampered by back ended contracts. That will come in future.
 

Incorrect

Coach
Messages
12,707
Paulo for me. I’ve been his biggest fan and was gutted when he went to Canberra but his form and contribution has been way down for a season and half and I think he simply past his best. Not sure if he’s much of a leader either and he is on big money. Sadly I’d be thinking through a way to move him on, I think our pack needs a re-fresh starting with him.

Brown for me just hasn’t gone to that next level, his form has flat lined. IMO he has the potential to be one of the best players in the game but is not kicking on … maybe the coach can help him find his best form
I think the defence number up on him way too easily and I think he's a secondary victim of Lane's regression where he's no longer a threat on that edge and we also haven't got a strike centre on the left. The defence are able focus a bit more on Brown because he's the only threat... Some good recruiting could make all the difference
 

Johnny88

Juniors
Messages
1,335

SHOOSH
Which former State of Origin forward could be up for grabs at the end of the season. He hasn’t played a lot of NRL this year and rival clubs are beginning to ask about his future.


SHOOSH
Trent Barrett’s media campaign for the Parramatta Eels’ head coaching job may not be helping his cause. The club prefers the softly, softly approach of Josh Hannay and Jason Ryles.
 

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