Five and a kick: Benji's Tigers lost to Penrith, but did they actually win in the long run?
1. Tigers earning their stripes The Tigers played Souths last year when the Bunnies were at their very highest point. Tim Sheens coached them…
Okay, let’s make this easier…there will never again be a full-time captain-coach in the NRL. Cameron Smith will have to wait until retirement to coach the Storm.
Which means, if Craig Bellamy does go to St George-Illawarra in 2014 (and the latest signs are that he won’t), Melbourne will need a new non-playing coach.
Some reports have the Storm players “desperate” for Bellamy not to leave, due to a perceived need to maintain the club’s culture.
They clearly have forgotten the reality of sports, and for that matter any walk of life.
Greatness is not static. It does not reside in one place forever. Champions soar to their peak and then decay. Melbourne will be no different.
This doesn’t mean that, in the advent of a Bellamy departure, the Melbourne Storm should not be caring about winning, or maintaining a positive, professional approach to its football.
It goes without saying that every club seeks to hire the best coach possible when the position is vacant.
But Melbourne, once its core is gone, will never be the same. Yes, the club may very well win many titles in the future, but its ‘culture’, by virtue of its changing personnel, will be different.
And that’s as nature intended. Coaches of the quality of Craig Bellamy are constantly looking for new strategies, approaches, perspectives and Bellamy’s bosses should be no different.
The worst thing the Storm could do in the next few years is to panic, trying to hold on to a formula even as the people responsible for creating it begin to retire or leave.
Craig Bellamy is clearly a tremendous coach. But Melbourne can win without him, as long as its players and administrators don’t obsess over retaining his culture.
Reckon you can pick the winning team? Build your own dream team with Draftstars daily fantasy and compete on any match. For great odds on the NRL head on over to PlayUp. Imagine what you could be buying instead. Set a deposit limit.
1. Tigers earning their stripes The Tigers played Souths last year when the Bunnies were at their very highest point. Tim Sheens coached them…
Who are the hardest working big men in the NRL?
Death, taxes and the Storm defying pre-season predictions that this year will be the one when they slip down the ladder. Inevitably, seven rounds…
Cameron Ciraldo must wonder what to say to his players at times like this. Against the best teams in the league, Canterbury have performed…
1. Sea Eagles see no evil The Manly Sea Eagles are a loveable bunch, which is why they famously don’t have to carry banners…
Playing talent is always important, yet creating a winning culture even more so.