In Griffins defence, the fallout at the Panthers was really all about his falling out with Gus Gould. He did have issues with some players, in particular Matt Moylan who left the club at the end of season 2017, but for the most part I think it is fair to say he had the support of the majority of the then playing group. His relationship with Gould deteriorated at the beginning of season 2018 during a pre season game against the Bulldogs when they had a very public spat in the tunnel at half time. It clearly never recovered. The Panthers finished 5th at seasons end but only two points off 1st place as the four sides above us all finished on 34 points, we had 32. His sacking really wasn’t about player relationships, it was about the fact he and Gould could no longer work together. Gould sacked Hook and not long thereafter Gould left the Panthers after he himself was undermined by the Board, Chairman of the Board in particular when Ivan Cleary was brought back into the fold a decision that blindsided Gus.
At the end of the day, it largely doesn’t make all that much difference to me personally, but it doesn’t make a lot of business sense to give one coach 7 or 8 seasons, and the incoming replacement coach is only given one season before being discarded.
It is worth noting Hook guided the Panthers to three successive semi finals appearances before being sacked. The coach who replaced him Ivan Cleary finished 10th in 2019 before obviously bouncing back this past two seasons.
Anyway, good luck in the future my late father in law, was a Dragons tragic, so I have a soft spot for you guys in his memory.
According to a former dragon who played for the panthers under Griffin….. it’s a different story. Funny they worked together this season… wonder how that all went…
I give you Jamie Soward…
Former Panther believes the team will play better since coach's departure
wwos.nine.com.au
Retired NRL player Jamie Soward said he had first-hand experience with Anthony Griffin's problematic coaching style and believes the Panthers will actually play better since his departure.
Speaking on
Sports Sunday, Soward confirmed some of the criticisms directed at Griffin and his approach to coaching and managing players.
"I only spent a short time with Anthony Griffin, but from what I found he was very poor in his communication skills," Soward said.
The former NRL halves specialist played for Penrith between 2014-16, and said the Panthers' controversial decision to punt Griffin weeks out from the finals was the right call.
Soward even suggested Penrith will improve without Griffin at the helm.
"I felt two weeks ago that they had reached the ceiling under Anthony Griffin," he said.
"The game plans were not conducive to the style of football that those guys out there wanted to play and we only saw the best out of the Penrith Panthers when they got behind.
"You'll see the players play a lot freer now. Guys like Sione Katoa, his game had changed.
I've played with a lot of these guys. You watch how they played before Anthony Griffin got there."
Former Penrith player Jamie Soward believes the Panthers will play better now that Anthony Griffin is no longer coach.
Soward was critical of how Griffin had handled the array of young talent that has been coming through the Panthers juniors ranks to the NRL, and said it was a similar case when he was coach of the Brisbane Broncos.
"I think they [Penrith] have under-achieved the last couple of years under Anthony Griffin," Soward said.
"He had a very talented squad that people forget about in Brisbane between 2011 and 2014. Three finals series but failed to go any further than that."
Soward said he was most "alarmed" by Griffin's dismissal of the efforts of junior coaches in helping the Panthers have one of the most talented young squads in the NRL.
"They had won junior competitions. The academy that they built was all in place before Anthony Griffin got there," Soward said.
"This is what I took offence to - in 2014 we were one game short of the grand final. That to me seemed like a pretty good place [to be in].
They debuted a lot of juniors that had won the 20s competition. 2015 in the NRL side wasn't great but they still had plenty of young guys come through."