Wittenberg
Juniors
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Some truth in your response Muzby. As fans we couldn’t wait to get rid of Doust and we got Johnston. Couldn’t wait to get rid of Price and got Mary.......Brian Johnson: “Who made who?”
Some truth in your response Muzby. As fans we couldn’t wait to get rid of Doust and we got Johnston. Couldn’t wait to get rid of Price and got Mary.......Brian Johnson: “Who made who?”
Dennis and a few others, great posts that spell out what we the fans want but it seems like the Club couldn’t give a flying f**kc about what the fans want. We’re all just a bunch of whingers that have no clue to them.I was thinking overnight that maybe it's possible to simplify what the issues are with respect to the malaise we are experiencing.
In the end the conclusion I came to revolves around what do league fans really care about and admire about their team.
2 things stood out:
(a) Style of football our team plays - at the end of the day, RL is a spectator sport and in our case, a big part of our weekend pastime.
Following St. George was always such a highlight of my weekend. Even when we weren't doing that well, we still tried to play an exciting brand of football.
I used to love our backlines that featured slashing centre pairings and try scoring wingers.
Fullbacks (Brian Johnson springs to mind) that just knew when to chime in to the backline and were great one on one tacklers.
Beattie and Johnston, Gasnier and Cooper more recently.
Wingers like Blacklock, Walford.
Win lose or draw, it was the club philosophy to give the fans a great brand of football to watch.
Nowadays we get served up a bunch of bash and barge, stereotyped rubbish that is honestly hard to endure let alone get excited about.
We look like and play like a dumb football team that is just making up the numbers.
No direction, no leadership, no ambition and no passion.
(b) Grit and never say die attitude.
If you know your team will never, ever give up no matter what the game situation is, as a fan you sleep easy at night even if you lose.
All league fans love gritty competitive players and teams.
The Cowboys run to the 2017 GF after we gifted them 8th position was astounding.
I admired them for that "never say die" push in the face of adversity without Thurston and having to cope with a bunch of injuries.
Even Souths last night showed incredible fight and determination to hang on and beat Easts.
Manly's siege mentality is something that has worked for them and something McGregor could have fostered a lot more instead of making excuses about JDB and Widdop's injury all the time.
So we currently do not show any grit or determination.
Once we lose the arm wrestle we capitulate. Opposition coaches can actually rely on that to happen and they devise tactics accordingly.
Players and club friendly journos coming out of the woodwork trying to convince the public that it's just bad luck have no personal integrity because empty excuses cannot fix what has happened to St. George.
These two things are the crux of what fans like to see.
After that, the rest doesn't matter.
Sounds the Bennett Year’s.A team who tries their guts out.
Doesn't give up.
Doesn't lose games like the Souths loss,.in the last few seconds.
A team that has pride in the red v.
And a team that plays what's in front of them.
AND A NEW COACH.
Some truth in your response Muzby. As fans we couldn’t wait to get rid of Doust and we got Johnston. Couldn’t wait to get rid of Price and got Mary.......
Yes absolutely true every word we love you Ricky Walford 10 more meters and you would have caught Renouf. Apart from 2010 my favourite game was one we lost by 1 point to Ricky Stuart’s Roosters Browny was the coach. I was at the pub rorters everywhere not one gave any lip and only one or two started doing the cockle doodle doo crow and not one Dragon fan dropped his head, why because both teams played like machines for 80 minutes trying every trick in the book. They had us on paper but couldn’t shake us on the field. The Dragons lost that day but Browny won the battle between the coaches it was fkn epic. I want that back again the score was 9-8 I was never a big Jeff hardy fan but he gave his all every game chook Herron might be the slowest winger to ever play the game but he gave 100% growing up there was no Chica Fergusson no Larry Corowa there was only the Great Ricky Walford for me could have called himself Jesus for all I cared, to me he was that and he was St George none of our current squad elicit that. I now see Flo as the last of St George an end of an era that started shakily in 1921 Once a upon a time they changed the rules to beat us now they may have to change them again so we can keep up and I nearly got into a fight with big mal at his pub because I was too boisterous about our club now I’m just disgusted by this bunch of girls masquerading as St George Rugby league players. Worst thing is Norm Provan is watching this charadeI was thinking overnight that maybe it's possible to simplify what the issues are with respect to the malaise we are experiencing.
In the end the conclusion I came to revolves around what do league fans really care about and admire about their team.
2 things stood out:
(a) Style of football our team plays - at the end of the day, RL is a spectator sport and in our case, a big part of our weekend pastime.
Following St. George was always such a highlight of my weekend. Even when we weren't doing that well, we still tried to play an exciting brand of football.
I used to love our backlines that featured slashing centre pairings and try scoring wingers.
Fullbacks (Brian Johnson springs to mind) that just knew when to chime in to the backline and were great one on one tacklers.
Beattie and Johnston, Gasnier and Cooper more recently.
Wingers like Blacklock, Walford.
Win lose or draw, it was the club philosophy to give the fans a great brand of football to watch.
Nowadays we get served up a bunch of bash and barge, stereotyped rubbish that is honestly hard to endure let alone get excited about.
We look like and play like a dumb football team that is just making up the numbers.
No direction, no leadership, no ambition and no passion.
(b) Grit and never say die attitude.
If you know your team will never, ever give up no matter what the game situation is, as a fan you sleep easy at night even if you lose.
All league fans love gritty competitive players and teams.
The Cowboys run to the 2017 GF after we gifted them 8th position was astounding.
I admired them for that "never say die" push in the face of adversity without Thurston and having to cope with a bunch of injuries.
Even Souths last night showed incredible fight and determination to hang on and beat Easts.
Manly's siege mentality is something that has worked for them and something McGregor could have fostered a lot more instead of making excuses about JDB and Widdop's injury all the time.
So we currently do not show any grit or determination.
Once we lose the arm wrestle we capitulate. Opposition coaches can actually rely on that to happen and they devise tactics accordingly.
Players and club friendly journos coming out of the woodwork trying to convince the public that it's just bad luck have no personal integrity because empty excuses cannot fix what has happened to St. George.
These two things are the crux of what fans like to see.
After that, the rest doesn't matter.
Inside the Dragons' season from hell: 'Everyday, the fans tell me to sack Mary'
Andrew Webster
September 6, 2019 — 8.00pm
At 4.03pm on Friday, May 17, Dragons coach Paul McGregor sat in front a television in his team's hotel in Mudgee.
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He was waiting for the breaking news about their star forward, Jack de Belin, who had taken the Australian Rugby League Commission to the Federal Court over its controversial “no-fault stand down” policy.
Under pressure ... Dragons coach Paul McGregor is fighting to keep his job.Credit:AAP
The Australian and NSW player had been sidelined indefinitely after being charged by police in December following an alleged rape of a 19-year-old woman.
But he was going to be OK to play while the court case played out, according to the Dragons.
For weeks McGregor and the players convinced themselves that the judgment would fall their way. The coach was certain de Belin would be allowed to play on.
De Belin, 28, had continued training with the side, cutting teammates in half in opposed sessions. All that was needed now was the favourable Federal Court judgement that would allow him to take his place on the bench for the match against the Knights in two days' time.
When the news broke at 4.03pm that Justice Melissa Perry had found in the ARLC’s favour — and overwhelmingly so — McGregor was speechless. As for the players, they were furious.
Two days later, the Knights whipped the Dragons 45-12.
In the past week, as speculation swirls about McGregor’s future with his side sitting second last on the ladder, the Herald has spoken to several people at St George Illawarra about how their season has crashed and burned.
They identify this moment in May as the chief reason, as much as angry fans say it’s a cop-out. Nobody at the Dragons anticipated de Belin wouldn’t be playing this season. Perhaps they should have.
While any coach will stand by a player protesting his innocence, it was naive and flawed for McGregor to assume how the Federal Court would rule in such a complex matter.
Can this be the only reason for the Dragons' season from hell? No, and that's the mess the Dragons must unravel and quickly.
“Every day, I’m getting disgruntled supporters asking if I’m sacking Mary,” said Dragons chief executive Brian Johnston, the only person at the Dragons prepared to go on the record. “I tell them that we’re going through a process. We need to follow the process while we have existing [lower grade] teams in the semi-finals. We need to pay respect to them and keep some continuity because all this talk is a distraction at the moment.
“I understand the fans are hurting. We’re all hurting in here. All the staff are suffering more than perhaps some of the players. We’re the one team on the field, off the field, in the office and at home. We all stick together when best we can in the challenging times.”
The "process" is an independent review in the off-season across the entire football department, which will partly involve Phil Gould, who coached McGregor as a player for NSW in the 1990s.
McGregor has regularly sought counsel from the former Panthers general manager, and last week asked him to be an "external set of eyes". Gould has already spoken to McGregor and will speak to senior staff and players next week. He will not make a call on the coach's future, and isn't expected to have any role at the club beyond that.
It already seems decided, though, that assistant coaches Ben Hornby and Mathew Head will be sacked while Dean Young is tipped to survive. He’s considered a head coach of the future, but he’s not yet ready.
Dean Young is dragons defence coach and has been BIG BIG FAIL. Worst defensive record in dragons living memory.
Hornby gone.
Head gone , with minor premiership achieved!
Looks like Dean Young will replace minor premiership winning coach Head.
Does this look like another favouritism board decision or what! Can't hurt Craig Youngs feelings can we!
THIS IS THE CORE PROBLEM!
We want all these parasites.Young's both shown the doorWell said. This is our biggest issue, apart from getting rid of Mary.
It's the whole set up of the club and the way it is run. Until we get away from the whole "jobs for mates/connections" theme, we'll continue to struggle.
So now we're supposedly doing another friggin' season review, but this time with Phil Gould, and who is he? Mary's mate, and so it continues.
Like getsmarty said earlier, we want transparency as fans and major stake holders but instead the club just treats us all like dirt.
Aspiration to be the best in everything and pursuing that goal ruthlessly and relentlessly, coupled with the ability to change when required, then aspiring to be the best in everything again and pursuing that ruthlessly and relentlessly.
Who at the club sees and has decided that dean Young has a future as a head coach. Mary & Craig Young obviouslyInside the Dragons' season from hell: 'Everyday, the fans tell me to sack Mary'
Andrew Webster
September 6, 2019 — 8.00pm
At 4.03pm on Friday, May 17, Dragons coach Paul McGregor sat in front a television in his team's hotel in Mudgee.
- Send via Email
He was waiting for the breaking news about their star forward, Jack de Belin, who had taken the Australian Rugby League Commission to the Federal Court over its controversial “no-fault stand down” policy.
Under pressure ... Dragons coach Paul McGregor is fighting to keep his job.Credit:AAP
The Australian and NSW player had been sidelined indefinitely after being charged by police in December following an alleged rape of a 19-year-old woman.
But he was going to be OK to play while the court case played out, according to the Dragons.
For weeks McGregor and the players convinced themselves that the judgment would fall their way. The coach was certain de Belin would be allowed to play on.
De Belin, 28, had continued training with the side, cutting teammates in half in opposed sessions. All that was needed now was the favourable Federal Court judgement that would allow him to take his place on the bench for the match against the Knights in two days' time.
When the news broke at 4.03pm that Justice Melissa Perry had found in the ARLC’s favour — and overwhelmingly so — McGregor was speechless. As for the players, they were furious.
Two days later, the Knights whipped the Dragons 45-12.
In the past week, as speculation swirls about McGregor’s future with his side sitting second last on the ladder, the Herald has spoken to several people at St George Illawarra about how their season has crashed and burned.
They identify this moment in May as the chief reason, as much as angry fans say it’s a cop-out. Nobody at the Dragons anticipated de Belin wouldn’t be playing this season. Perhaps they should have.
While any coach will stand by a player protesting his innocence, it was naive and flawed for McGregor to assume how the Federal Court would rule in such a complex matter.
Can this be the only reason for the Dragons' season from hell? No, and that's the mess the Dragons must unravel and quickly.
“Every day, I’m getting disgruntled supporters asking if I’m sacking Mary,” said Dragons chief executive Brian Johnston, the only person at the Dragons prepared to go on the record. “I tell them that we’re going through a process. We need to follow the process while we have existing [lower grade] teams in the semi-finals. We need to pay respect to them and keep some continuity because all this talk is a distraction at the moment.
“I understand the fans are hurting. We’re all hurting in here. All the staff are suffering more than perhaps some of the players. We’re the one team on the field, off the field, in the office and at home. We all stick together when best we can in the challenging times.”
The "process" is an independent review in the off-season across the entire football department, which will partly involve Phil Gould, who coached McGregor as a player for NSW in the 1990s.
McGregor has regularly sought counsel from the former Panthers general manager, and last week asked him to be an "external set of eyes". Gould has already spoken to McGregor and will speak to senior staff and players next week. He will not make a call on the coach's future, and isn't expected to have any role at the club beyond that.
It already seems decided, though, that assistant coaches Ben Hornby and Mathew Head will be sacked while Dean Young is tipped to survive. He’s considered a head coach of the future, but he’s not yet ready.