Richard Graham is patient zero at the Reds

By Hoy / Roar Guru

Those that run the Reds, the team I have followed since I can remember, have made a fatal decision that has put them on course for disaster.

It was the first fatal decision that cast the die, patient zero, the signing of Richard Graham.

The Reds offered Graham a role to come over and work under Ewen McKenzie in his overarching role as director of coaching with the view of being head coach when McKenzie moved on. The Reds office boasted of having not only a succession plan for life after McKenzie, but a readymade successor.

However, there are stark facts that cannot be ignored in this story.

Graham came over with an extremely poor win-loss record since 2010. Depending on sources, it was roughly 29 Super Rugby games over two years with the Force, and Graham won just nine at 31 per cent.

I have never once, heard any explanation as to why the Reds, who, having recently won the Super Rugby comp, and topped the Australian conference two years running, chose Graham as the next coach.

A man with a 30 per cent win record as head coach, when at the time, you would have to think it would have been a very attractive role for many coaches across the world. Why did they pick Graham? What did they think he would do differently for the Reds?

The minute I heard he was hired as successor, I could see how this was going to go, and it has followed my predicted pathway. So why did the Reds office think it would go any differently? Richard Graham has shown me, an amateur rugby lover, nothing to suggest he has the ability to coach at the top level successfully.

Graham started coaching the Reds full-time last year. In 2014 he had five wins out of 16 games, another 31 per cent record. So far this year, he has dropped his average with one win from four games. And I can’t see it getting better to be honest.

He is still on his 30 per cent win ratio, with arguably a better team than the one he had previously. I would say the Reds are in a worse position now than we were in 2006-07, because at least then the players weren’t current Wallabies. They were mostly up and comers.

It goes without saying that rugby in this country needs to win, and win well to keep relevant. I fear, really fear, that Graham will cost the Reds wins, fans and players the longer he is at the helm. There is no doubt that he will cost them money. And lots of it.

The fatal decision, the patient zero, has also made fatal decisions that are hurting the Reds. At the end of Robbie Deans’ era, it wasn’t even the win-loss ratio that upset me, but the terrible way the Wallabies were playing. We were dour. And so are the Reds right now.

There are no great wins on the horizon for this team. There are close calls, and shaves, and gruelling arm wrestles, but there is no building to something and no incremental improvements incoming.

Playing Nick Frisby at 10 is nothing but a stop gap, yet Graham has done it twice this year, while actively shifting James O’Connor from 10 to 15, and avoiding using Duncan Paia’aua, who can’t be much worse in regards to risk and reward. Could giving the young bloke a game be any more damaging to our game plan? Surely not.

Let’s face it, Frisby is a nine filling in as a prop and 10. So nothing threatening there. Sure if you play the young kid, he might cost a turnover or two, but when the team honestly struggles to play three phases without dropping the ball cold, or losing it in contact, what does it matter to try something? Worried he doesn’t have the experience? What is a coach doing, if not coaching the young bloke to play?

Thinking of shifting James O’Connor from 10? Why not throw that young 21-year-old kid to the wolves and see if he can handle it?

Why does Graham insist on using our smallest forward as our rock hitting up the ball one out, over and over? It is killing me and I am pretty sure it is killing Liam Gill to be used as a battering ram one out from the ruck all game.

Remember last year, when Graham had that great idea to turn Gill into a linkman? It was terrible, with shocking, telegraphed passes, poor runs and poor organisation. Now, we have this. Slowly killing Gill with heavy contact.

Reds forwards have been too slow to the contact area now for two years now, and it isn’t improving. It hasn’t been fixed. Fitness doesn’t seem to have been made a priority as it was at the Tahs last year and this year under Cheika, heralding in a new age of dominance.

I am a big Adam Thomson fan, and he is certainly adding things to the forward pack. He is a better, tighter version of Scott Higginbotham. But when I see him walking dejected after his team is comprehensively beaten around the park all the way back to their try line, I worry that he is thinking ‘Why did I come here’, which could lead to other prospective players saying ‘Why would I go there?’.

To me, it is so obvious that the Reds cannot wait and see whether Graham will turn his team around, because quite frankly, and very honestly, there isn’t the slightest evidence to suggest he will turn it around or is able to turn it around.

Looking at our team play, we are going backwards. We are wasting time keeping Richard Graham coaching at the Reds, which is what upsets me the most.

The Reds need to make the right decision, and cut Graham.

The Crowd Says:

2015-03-10T17:04:06+00:00

kombiutedriver

Guest


Oh Lord, please make it stop We need a person to inspire the Reds, not deflate them. Perhaps we need a former Qld great to take charge of the rabble that Richard Graham has turned the Reds into. Who is available at the moment?

2015-03-10T05:15:39+00:00

Adam

Guest


Couldn't agree more. The solution to some or most of our on field issues is strong leadership from the side lines. An under tens coach knows this, so why does management persist?

2015-03-10T03:31:47+00:00

KTinHK

Roar Pro


Agree totally, Hoy.

2015-03-09T22:25:41+00:00

Harry

Guest


Depressing reading in today's Australian where QRU Chairman Rod McCall excuses Graham because of the horrendous injury toll. I completely disagree - the pathetic performances against the Brumbies and the Tahs show a team playing without confidence, direction or purpose, and woefully failing at the basics. The coach has got to take responsibility for that, injury toll or no injury toll.

2015-03-09T13:04:15+00:00

Johnny Boy Jnr

Guest


The Reds look terribly unfit. Have they been at sizzler during pre season??

2015-03-09T06:22:30+00:00

Hannes

Guest


As a Force supporter I remember how first the coach and then the captain dropped us. I can only say that "Karma can be a b...." Pocock and Graham both proved to be a good "loss". Now we have local players and players that want to be involved with WA rugby coming through the ranks and less Eastern State players (and coaches) trying to make "name" for themselves out in the West. We will loose games, but rugby will be winning.

2015-03-09T03:15:15+00:00

redbull

Guest


Mooney was an excellent attack coach and his teams always had a go. But his tactics and defence were non-existent or terrible. Saying that I would rather watch the 2007 reds going down swinging than the rabble that wore reds jerseys on saturday night.

2015-03-09T02:02:23+00:00

Ruckin Oaf

Guest


Yep they were clueless but at least there was some effort.

2015-03-09T01:28:31+00:00

Anto

Guest


It was the same last year. After every loss, in his press conferences he showed zero insight into what had just occurred. That's the scariest part.

2015-03-09T00:28:13+00:00

absent qlder

Guest


Well said

2015-03-09T00:26:37+00:00

kamoshika

Guest


Yes yes, all hail the messiah Cheika...Now focus back on RG's deficiencies please

2015-03-09T00:09:30+00:00

Douglas

Guest


Agree - a good coach will inspire the players to play hard and give it their everything. Look at how hard the Rebels play and how passionate they are, sure they don't have the technical skills to win every game but they're throwing their heart and soul into their games because they believe in their club and their coach. Same with the Brumbies and to a large extent the Waratahs. You don't see mass defections from those teams, or the Western Force for that matter. The Reds on the other hand look as though they've given up trying and I blame a lot of that on their incompetent coach.

2015-03-08T22:16:16+00:00

Stuart Burvill

Guest


Saw Saia at the Caxton after the game having a few drinks. Went up and spoke to him "what did you think of the game" "Oh well you win some you lose some" Didn't seem to care much. That was just the impression we got could be wrong.

2015-03-08T14:47:22+00:00

Moreton Bait

Guest


That's what is looks like to me too

2015-03-08T14:08:44+00:00

Westie

Guest


Genia? Ffs.

2015-03-08T13:48:41+00:00

Colm

Guest


Here here. Couldn't have said it better myself. That was one of the worst games of rugby I have witnessed and it all stems from Graham. Adam Thompson can be captain coach for all csre

2015-03-08T11:39:08+00:00

SandBox

Roar Guru


agree with everything you said there Hoy. I have become so disinterested in the Reds that I haven't even watched a game this year. That's despite all the signings in the off season. The 'give him until they play with a full roster' has some small merit, but with injuries these days, a full roster may not be available in the near future. Teams have to adapt to injuries. For the Reds' sake, I really hope I'm wrong, but I don't see a scenario where Graham will come good

AUTHOR

2015-03-08T11:18:31+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


I can't take credit for the title... Though I used the term in the article, I went with something like fatal decisions or something... The gist of what I wanted to write was really...How and Why was the decision made to hire Graham? My though of patient zero was really the decision to hire him was patient zero of a whole lot of bad decisions that leaves us where we are now... Terrible form, what looks like disinterested players, no visible improvement on the horizon... The odd decision to hire Graham doomed us, and it really upsets me as it was a completely flawed decision from the minute it was conceived.

AUTHOR

2015-03-08T11:13:05+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


I disagree PJM. I think we would have had about three more tries on us last night if not for Thomson. His cover defence was very good, and I think you are being very harsh.

2015-03-08T10:38:23+00:00

Comrade Bear

Roar Rookie


What I see is a team that doesn't want to play for Richard Graham. ...but as players they also hate losing. Unhappy camp.

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