Why Roos must be the next Demons coach

By Troy Murray / Roar Rookie

Paul Roos is the best AFL coach not currently coaching an AFL team. More importantly, he is the best coach for the Melbourne Demons. 

Whether Roos wants to coach or can be persuaded to do so next year remains the one million dollar question. Why one million dollar?

That has been the rumoured figure that is being offered to entice the premiership winning coach out of retirement, to don the headset once again.

In economic terms, the benefit of securing Roos would far outweigh the seven figure cost per season required to obtain his signature. That’s why Melbourne must do all in their power to get their man. 

As a player, Roos was a hard nosed half back, not blessed with great athleticism or skill set.

Still he played 356 games for Fitzroy and Sydney in a career that spanned 17 seasons.

He was named All-Australian on seven occasions, captaining the side two times and was named centre half back in Fitzroy’s team of the century. 

As a head coach, Roos’ achievements are nothing short of remarkable. After succeeding Rodney Eade at the Sydney Swans mid way through the 2002 season, Roos guided the side to consistent performances throughout his tenure.

The Swans played finals football in all but one year between 2003 and 2010 under Roos’ leadership, with the only glitch coming in 2009. They competed in back to back grand finals in 2005 and 2006, tasting premiership success in 2005 (defeating West Coast by four points). 

As coach at Sydney, Roos instilled a culture the envy of not just the AFL but arguably all sporting clubs in Australia.

It was this culture and team orientated ethos that enabled the Swans to be competitive against the star studded West Coast Eagles throughout the mid 2000s.

Such a culture has been sadly lacking at the Melbourne Demons in recent times and is the reason the struggling club must secure Roos’ services to turn the club around. 

Since 2007, the Demons have tried several different coaching options. Following the departure of  Neale Daniher, the Dees have tried Mark Riley, Dean Bailey, Mark Neeld and current coach Neil Craig in head coaching positions.

In this time the club has had numerous draft opportunities and concessions as a result of their poor on-field performances.

In 2012, the club was investigated by the AFL for “tanking” (attempting to lose matches) in order to obtain further priority draft picks.

Though cleared in early 2013, the club was fined $500,000 for “acting in a manner prejudicial to the interests of the AFL.”

So what would change at the Melbourne Demons if Paul Roos was appointed head coach? Firstly, an over reliance on draft picks and hand outs would not be present under Roos’ leadership.

The consistency of the Swans in the 2000s, meant Roos was not met with the opportunity to draft the pick of football’s young talent.

Instead, he developed young players and traded intelligently, building a depth of squad capable of consistent performances over a long period of time. 

Those players that had come to the club with reputations due to their high draft selections, Jack Watts and the like, or players who had performed well at other clubs, notably Chris Dawes and Mitch Clark, would all be treated the same.

Individual accolades would be secondary to team success and the overall culture would benefit as a result. 

In addition, Roos’ coaching style would demand a high-pressure, defensive style similar to that successfully employed currently at the Swans under John Longmire and the Dockers under Ross Lyon, who were both assistants under Roos in the mid 2000s.

Such a style would make the Demons a far more competitive and respected side in the AFL and Paul Roos is the man the Demons must get, to guide them in this direction. 

The Crowd Says:

2013-07-16T10:34:34+00:00

Connar Olsen

Roar Rookie


Paul Roos will be a great first choice for Melbourne if not, either Rodney Eade or John Worsfold or Even Gary Ayres. Mark Thompson will be a great first choice for West Coast.

2013-07-13T02:13:34+00:00

Lroy

Guest


Mate.. as a WCE fan I concur.. but I think they are going to give Scotty Russell a shot.. there has to be a reason he pulled out of the Port Adelaide process when he was the clear favorite going in ;-)

2013-07-13T01:06:35+00:00

Radelaide

Guest


I agree giving Craig a couple of years wouldn't go astray and I'm a port fan.

2013-07-13T00:37:25+00:00

David

Guest


As a WCE supporter, I'd like to see Roos coach the Eagles next year but I know he would be perfect for the Demons. They are a great club but have had a tough few years - Roos could turn the whole club around and that would be a great satisfaction to a person of his character. He will retain good players and attract others, he will build a culture that will be a legacy for years to come and there is no way to put a price on all of that. However, his decision is unlikely to be made on financial grounds - it will be the challenge that will attract him. My concern however, is who is the next "Melbourne"? We all know Gold Coast and (probably) GWS are on the up, if Melbourne does improve, who will finish last next year and 2015 and 2016? Bulldogs, Saints, Carlton, WCE?

2013-07-12T23:47:21+00:00

Neil Kemmis

Guest


Nah, Mark Williams is too busy touring with Dragon. But I do like his "Show no Mercy" song. -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2013-07-12T23:41:56+00:00

Connor

Roar Rookie


If his heart is not in it, then it's not worth going after him. There are other experienced coaches who could do as good a job and have the heart and will to do it. What's wrong with our current coach? Craig did an excellent job with Adelaide and since he has taken over the reins from Mark Neeld we have been much more competitive and he seems to have injected life and run into the team. Whatever happens, let's hope that the selection panel (thankfully omitting Garry Lyon) chooses the right coach with lots of experience, and not an untried one with none.

2013-07-12T23:30:12+00:00

Lroy

Guest


why would Roos want to coach the Dees? Ron Barrasi the 70's supercoach and Tom Hafey didnt win flags when they went up to Sydney.. why would the reverse happen automatically with Paul Roos? Coaching the bottom club is all pain not much gain.. your basically trying t set the club up for future success.. inevitably it will be some other guy who reaps the benefits of anything Roos achieves. But 1 million per year wouldnt go astray.. Id be asking for 1.5 if I was him ;-)

2013-07-12T23:15:22+00:00

Train Without A Station

Guest


You don't address the question, why should Roos coach Melbourne? I doubt he needs the money. He likely earns good money consulting and in the media, why open himself up to the scrutiny? Chocko Williams has A point to prove after not going out on his own terms. What's in it for Roos?

2013-07-12T22:47:47+00:00

Jack

Guest


Please make it so.

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