Yeah Laundy plays the role of business backer but the $10m sugar daddy allowance from the leagues club is the biggest leg up they have over most clubs.Having Arthur Laundy involved helps them more than most people realise.
I'd be going for Atkinson over Hynes if we are looking at pilfering the Sharks halvesThe sharks seem off Hynes, maybe if they get bounced out in straight sets again he's an option
The Bulldogs came 6th, massively over achieved and got bounced out first weekI think perspective is important- Bulldogs were wooden spooners in 2021. They've made great progress with a pro steering the ship. 3 x Premiers Panthers were almost insolvent in 2011.
I'd be going for Atkinson over Hynes if we are looking at pilfering the Sharks halves
Cheaper and objectively a better player right now based on Sharks form in 2024
I clearly stated that in my first post - retireSo do you want Gardner to be responsible or not responsible for the results of the club?
run the football business without interference and micro managing of Gardner ( this has been reported ad nauseam - the staff turn over during Gardner tenure is alarming)you still haven’t answered my question of what changes exactly for Parr if Gardner retires tomorrow?
Ok Phil , so we cannot compare the Knights to others. The Knights are a special case. What is an acceptable time frame to a Premiership in your opinion ? 10 years from now ? we've finally achieved mediocrity when do you see a Premiership? or not even a Premiership - when do you see being better than average is achievable ?With respect to the bulldogs, they’ve had one good season where they crashed out first week of the finals, how’s that any different to us in 2020 where we finished 7th after being wooden spooners in 2017? Making the top 8 isn’t that hard as we have shown, there’s a big difference between that and having sustained success like the storm, panthers and roosters have.
On the topic of the bulldogs it’s very hard to compare them to us, it’s a completely different structure, for Wests the knights are part of the business where commercial and financial KPIs exist, the Bulldogs survive solely because they have a very successful leagues club that literally gives them $8-10 million every year, Gus essentially has the same job as Peter Parr (general manager of football) but doesn’t have any financial checks and balances that any sustainable business would otherwise have.
Mind you Gus still answers to Adam Driussi who’s the chairman the same as Parr answers to Gardner.
So you think new unnamed CEO of wests is the answer despite not knowing who this CEO could be and not knowing what the directive is from the wests board.I clearly stated that in my first post - retire
run the football business without interference and micro managing of Gardner ( this has been reported ad nauseam - the staff turn over during Gardner tenure is alarming)
Ok Phil , so we cannot compare the Knights to others. The Knights are a special case. What is an acceptable time frame to a Premiership in your opinion ? 10 years from now ? we've finally achieved mediocrity when do you see a Premiership? or not even a Premiership - when do you see being better than average is achievable ?
Well if we got Nicho, I don't know if we'd have the most talented spine in the NRL but we'd surely have the best looking one
@PhilGould got tooheys column for today?
Adam O'Brien can still attract a critic or two but his record as an NRL coach now speaks for itself.
He's taken the Knights to four finals appearances in five years and at the same time, re-established the club's defensive DNA with a hard-nosed emphasis on work ethic, effort and meeting high standards. He clearly has a united playing group who is right behind him. Record crowds and memberships have been a by-product of the success.
But the question now is: How does O'Brien take his team to the next level and become a genuine title challenger?
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Some key roster recruitment decisions over the next few months will be crucial. So too will be O'Brien's mindset around his side's attack and not being satisfied to battle for a place in the bottom of the eight by playing a risk-free, ugly brand of footy that relies heavily on the attacking brilliance of Kalyn Ponga.
O'Brien needs to find a middle ground between the traits that have made his side tough and resilient defensively and an attacking game plan that is capable of consistently posing a threat to premiership heavyweights like Penrith and Melbourne.
Therein lies his challenge.
Spots on roster open up
With Daniel Saifiti and Tom Jenkins moved on, and Enari Tuala and Krystian Mapapalangi also departing to open up roster spots, the door is now ajar for the Knights to re-sign popular local juniors Brodie Jones and Mat Croker after it was suggested they look elsewhere several weeks ago. By our count, the Knights now have five top 30 spots left to fill. We're told the club was happy to keep Tuala but he was swayed by more security at the Dogs.
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Selling his vision
Expect Kalyn Ponga to be a major playerduring the recruitment process when the Knights officially sit down with Melbourne halfback Jonah Pezet and his agent Braith Anasta come November 1.
Pezet, who has a year to run at the Storm, is the club's number one recruitment target and the opportunity to play alongside the game's biggest attacking threat in Ponga is certain to be a major attraction for the former Knights junior.
The club would be mad not to get Ponga in a room with Pezet to share his thoughts and vision first hand during negotiations.
If they manage to sign Pezet, we'd expect the Knights will try and get him out of Melbourne immediately. That would necessitate Jackson Hastings being moved on during the off-season.
It goes up every article. Would be nice if there was some half decent RL content.Latest Jimmy Brings has Ponga on 1.5 a year. Haha. Ponga must be on a commission.