Deja Vu? St Kilda has another Malcolm Blight moment

By johnhunt92 / Roar Guru

Watching St. Kilda dismiss Scott Watters gave me a sense of déjà vu.

Yes coaches have been sacked for hundreds of years, but I was sure St. Kilda sacked a coach in a similar fashion to Watters in the past.

And then it clicked – Malcolm Blight.

Obviously they are not cut of the same cloth as players and coaches, with Malcolm being a legend of the game and Scott Watters being a battler.

But when it comes to their respective stays at Moorabbin, Scott Watters charted a similar path that Blighty went down in 2001 with the only major difference being the length time each spent at the club.

Blight if you remember, penned a two year deal with St. Kilda in 2001 that had just experienced two miserable seasons under Tim Watson.

He inherited a club with a lot of youth but also a lot of ageing stars who were on the cusp of retirement.

After a positive start, the Saints fell apart by Round 15 which culminated in receiving a 97-point hiding from Adelaide.

Prior to that Blight, had become publicly incensed about the culture of the club while the club became riled at his seemingly ‘lack of interest’ in the job.

A few weeks prior to his sacking he sprayed the team out on the Docklands pitch moments after a loss to Melbourne (they lead by 19 at ¾ time before conceding 10 goals in the final quarter to lose by 31).

Even more infamously, he was quoted on Adelaide radio saying that the culture at St. Kilda was a ‘500 percent worse’ than he had experienced at previous clubs.

He reportedly was also planning a clean out of players and staff he thought were either too old or were too linked to the ‘old ways’ of the club.

Sound familiar? It is eerily similar to the Scott Watters era.

Scott Watters came to St. Kilda when it was heading into a rebuilding phase.

After a reasonably positive 2012, the wheels fell off in 2013 with club winning just five games.

Watters’ became subject to question by players and staff at the Saints for his ‘lone ranger’ approach to the job.

Watters was told by the board numerous times that football manager Chris Pelchen was his boss and contrary to his belief, he reported to Pelchen.

He also expressed a Laissez-faire attitude to describing where St. Kilda was as a club.

One week he was quoted as saying St. Kilda was a top contender while the next week he would say the club was in rebuilding mode without consulting the players.

The final straw in my mind was the allowance of rampant speculation that club greats in Riewolt, Montanga and Dal Santo would be traded in a rebuild the club.

Not once did Watters quell the speculation, rather it was left to Pelchen to raise the denials.

The coaches voice was only raised on the day of his sacking to deny speculation he would lose his job.

Much like the Blight situation thirteen years ago, the trust between players, coach and staff broke down over cultural and management issues.

It means now that just weeks out from pre-season, St. Kilda will disrupt not only their pre-season but another club’s to start the process of rebuilding.

The Crowd Says:

2013-11-07T10:26:32+00:00

JES

Guest


No wonder Lyon walked out the door.

2013-11-07T09:25:14+00:00

Me too

Guest


Unlike Blight Watters was at least committed, and spent more time at the club, rather than on the golfing greens. Unlike Blight also, Watters unfortunately didn't seem to have much nous and had no clear direction. Both slammed the club culture - Blight at least had the track record to do so, Watters had no record and slammed a culture that had missed two flags by the proverbial bees digit.

2013-11-05T02:57:11+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Sorry mate you might have misread what I wrote. It's COSA not COLA. As in 'S' for 'Stupidity' And it was tongue in cheek.

2013-11-04T01:50:22+00:00

Brian

Guest


Actaully St Kilda like Hawthorn are South East Melbourne clubs. The cost of living pressures for their players in Brighton is much higher then those Bulldog players living in Caroline Springs or the Geelong players.

2013-11-04T01:40:57+00:00

Johnno

Guest


There is one very simple solution for this. The AFL should invest in a 9.8% top up of St. Kilda's salary cap through a new scheme called the COSA (Cost of Stupidity Allowance). This way the basic stupidity of all involved at the club will be effectively counterbalanced by the COSA. Another viable initiative is to get bring Kosi out of retirement and load him up with a 9-year $15 million deal paid for sneakily using the COSA. No one will ever know about it and no one on The Roar will be any the wiser!!!

AUTHOR

2013-11-03T09:26:13+00:00

johnhunt92

Roar Guru


Obviously they are not cut of the same cloth as players and coaches, with Malcolm being a legend of the game and Scott Watters being a battler. I think I made that clear mastermind. It similar because of the manner they were sacked in and the position St Kilda as a club were in. No comparisson of their pedigree as there is a huge gap

2013-11-03T07:41:37+00:00

Avatar

Roar Guru


On an overall basis, there is no way Watters' time at St Kilda can be compared to that of Malcolm Blight's. Blight came to the Saints having enjoyed success at Geelong and Adelaide (taking the Cats to three Grand Finals and the Crows to two flags), whilst Watters was untried as head coach, having come from Collingwood who were premiers as recently as 2010. Blight was experienced, Watters wasn't. But yes, rebuild the Saints as they tried to, but both were unsuccessful.

2013-11-03T07:18:47+00:00

Me too

Guest


about 17.

2013-11-03T02:36:03+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


Is there another club I the league where the head coach isn't the boss? Bizarre.

2013-11-02T22:21:18+00:00

Greg

Guest


Typical of St Kilda. Totally disorganised and disfunctional. They won home and away matches in spite of this disarray but you cannot win premierships with such disfunction. Players and officials must be on the same page to win premierships. Their window has now passed so we have another 10-12 years of whinging before the process begins again...with no premiership.

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