Who has been the AFL's best coach in 2015?

By Michael Cowley / Expert

There is an absolute tidal wave of water still to pass under the proverbial bridge between now and the first weekend in October, but as we have just passed the halfway mark of the season it’s quite often time to reflect and look ahead.

We do it with teams all the time, have a look at how they’re travelling, who they face, and by gazing into the crystal ball, predicting where they are going to finish.

We even do it with players, pondering on who is set for All Australian selection.

But what about coaches?

With a dozen games down and just 10 to go, if the coach of the year gong was handed out tomorrow night in a glittering ceremony at say, the Monash YMCA, who would be the deserving winner?

As I said I know there’s still an ocean of water to flow, but at this point who would be the leading candidates?

And I should also mention, too, that the AFL Coaches Association has handed out this award since 2003 and in those 12 seasons only five times has the premiership winning coach won the award.

After giving the award to Paul Roos, who brought the Swans from 11th in 2002 to a preliminary final in 2003, the award then went to the coach of the regular season ladder leaders for the next seven years, before steering away from the trend to reward John Worsfold for bringing West Coast from last in 2010 to a preliminary final in 2011.

Then John Longmire, whose Swans went from a third-placed finish to premiers, and Ken Hinkley in 2013 for taking the Power from 14th to top eight the next season, were rewarded. Longmire won the award again last season after leading the Swans to a first-placed ladder finish.

With Fremantle rolling along the way they are, Ross Lyon – who won the award with St Kilda back in 2009 – would be a short-priced favourite, but I think a couple of others deserve mention, and candidacy for the (half-yearly) award.

And with last year’s grand finalists – barring a hiccup from Sydney on Friday – appearing to be thereabouts again, both Longmire and Alastair Clarkson could be legitimate candidates.

But I choose to steer away from the favourites. They have the cattle and class, and it’s no surprise they are where they are. Some might even dare to say a lesser coach could have each sitting where they are. I personally doubt that, but you get my gist.

The coaches I have been impressed with in season 2015, and my mid-season coach of the year candidates, are Adam Simpson, Damien Hardwick, Luke Beveridge, and Leon Cameron.

Simpson’s Eagles have been a revelation. Last season they were 11-11 and finished ninth. Those 11 wins were all against teams that didn’t make the top eight. At this point last year they were 5-7. Now they sit 9-3 and in second spot on the ladder.

They have been accused of being flat-track bullies and belting unsuspecting sides from the east on Subiaco, and while they have won four out of five at home – the only loss to co-tenant Fremantle – they have also won four on the road, including Richmond in Melbourne and Port in Adelaide.

Simpson went to Perth with rave reviews and he’s now living up to the high expectations.

Heading into this season, his sixth at the helm of Richmond, Damien Hardwick was at a point where it could go either way. He had taken the Tigers to the finals twice, but both times they meekly bowed out in week one. He needed more and so too did the fans.

Last year they started dreadfully being 3-9 at this point but rallied to reach the finals in eighth position. Six rounds in and with just two wins, it seemed likely where Hardwick might end up.

But to his credit he and his team have turned that around, and now, not only have moved into the eight with a 7-5 record but they have collected two impressive scalps along the way – ending Fremantle’s unbeaten start to the season, and then turning a certain loss on the road into a stunning comeback win last Friday night against the Swans.

Of their remaining 10 games they only meet three teams above them – Fremantle, Hawthorn and Collingwood – and all are clearly winnable games on current form.

Could this be the year of the Tiger?

Next is Luke Beveridge.

While his Bulldogs may not be serious premiership contenders this season, they are certainly making the moves in the right direction. Last year they were 4-8 right now, and went on to be 7-15 and finish 14th, beating just two sides above them on the ladder.

This season under Beveridge they are 7-5 and sit inside the eight. But what’s more impressive are some of their scalps – West Coast, Richmond, Adelaide, a very good Greater Western Sydney outfit at the time, and the stunning one, Sydney in Sydney.

Beveridge has the kids playing like it is fun again. The tension has disappeared in their play, and they are getting some great results. They may or may not make the eight in 2015, but the future is glistening.

And finally, Leon Cameron.

I know some may say well he’s got the star kids, he should be getting the results, but I’ve been so impressed by the way Cameron has brought these talented kids to the next level.

In his first season he went 6-16. They have already surpassed that with a 7-5 record, which sees them out of the eight on percentage.

Injuries to key people, notably Shane Mumford and Joel Patful, has and will continue to hurt them in 2015, but I saw enough signs this year – including their big wins over Carlton and the Gold Coast and of course that wonderful win over the premiers – that in 2016, they will be a serious finals team.

Well to me they are the mid-season standout coaches, with perhaps an honourable mention to Paul Roos, who I feel beyond a doubt has continued to improve the Melbourne Demons, although wins and losses don’t show that right how.

My pick right now is Simpson, but by season’s end, I reckon Hardwick might be the man.

The Crowd Says:

2015-06-30T09:38:49+00:00

Dan Lonergan

Guest


Adam Simpson has ensured his team thrives even with injuries to key players, while Luke Beveridge has changed in a short space of time a rigid game plan that Brendan McCartney had in place that was all about development and put building blocks in place. Beveridge with a very young side has managed to put it all together in 12 weeks and give them a finals chance. Cameron's time will come with an excellent young list.

2015-06-30T05:58:48+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Just make sure you mention they are 2 games clear with all the weaker sides to come. It's a little bit like pretending Hawthorn hasn't lost games to lowly sides because they got within 2 goals. Some clubs can win close games, some Hawks lose them.

2015-06-30T02:48:29+00:00

Ben

Guest


Even better. $1.5M per annum at a canter then. She could even moonlight giving advice to the player group regarding potential interpretation of rule changes. #StandByTheHirds.

2015-06-30T02:23:43+00:00

13th Man

Guest


we were actually predicted by many to fall. Simpson has been fantastic but Lyon has Freo 11-1 and likely minor premiership. Certainly taking nothing away from the Eagles rise and Simpson should surely be credited with that but i still think Lyon has been the better coach only slightly.

2015-06-30T01:16:50+00:00

Macca

Guest


I believe she s a lawyer to Ben - I'm pretty sure I heard that about 1,000 times whenever she decided to throw her two bob in.

2015-06-30T01:14:58+00:00

Ben

Guest


It would be a good move if the club could find a way to put Tanya on the payroll too - her tireless work behind the scenes was excellent. She is obviously an incredibly savvy operator and her advice to and support for James no doubt contributed to the board's decision to extend James' contract and pay for his sabbatical to France. Anything less than $1M a year as Corporate Counsel or PR & Comms head would be a crime. The club should also think about her career development costs if they wanted to maximise the return on their investment/know whats good for them, A post grad course at Harvard or Wharton would be brilliant for all involved. Go Paul, get it done!!

2015-06-29T15:01:31+00:00

WhereIsGene

Guest


I'm pretty sure if you asked James Hird who's the #1 coach his answer would be James Hird.

2015-06-29T13:41:53+00:00

jax

Guest


The ladder shows Freo in 1st place and they were expected to play finals by everyone and finish Top 4 by many. The ladder shows WC in 2nd place and they were expected to finish 12-15th by most people. Which team has jumped the most above expectations and who coaches them?

2015-06-29T10:33:19+00:00

Gecko

Guest


If Hinkley could get coach of the year with his ability to get a bottom team playing inspiring footy, Luke Beveridge is on target this year. The Bulldogs' 'all-lines-press' has come from nowhere and is one of the most exciting new things in the game in 2015.

2015-06-29T08:48:30+00:00

James Hird

Guest


Me. I'm the best. Just ask me. Or ask my missus. -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2015-06-29T08:20:17+00:00

john ryan

Guest


I would have thought that the WADA hearing might put the kibosh on that one,I don't know who would want Hird trouble with a capital H

2015-06-29T06:59:09+00:00

joe b

Guest


Agreed. Essendon are through the worst of it, the board should show faith in James and commit to extending his contract asap, before other clubs snap him up (namely, Carlton). I just hope the AFL don't introduce some type of salary cap for coaches, I would loathe it if Essendon were prohibited from digging deep to secure Hird, and guaranteed premiership glory.

2015-06-29T05:45:24+00:00

Josh

Expert


The Tigers form at the moment has certainly been impressive but this is the problem, we've seen them produce patches of great form in the home and away before (last year's run home, finishing 5th in 2013, beating both grand finalists in 2012), this is really nothing new. For my view, to show they've taken the next step, they NEED to produce this kind of form at finals level. Until then I won't be convinced this is anything more than another false dawn.

2015-06-29T05:41:03+00:00

Josh

Expert


Very true Ryan, to the discerning eye it was not all gloom and doom for the Dockers. At the start of the year I thought they could finish anywhere between outside the eight and premiers, but my view was that a flag would only come about if pretty much everything went right for them. So far, bar Michael Johnson's hamstring, everything has, and beyond my own team winning, I'd love to see the Dockers snag a flag.

2015-06-29T05:39:06+00:00

Josh

Expert


I don't really see them as being that far ahead of Sydney or Hawthorn, in fact, I don't know if I even have them ahead of those teams at the moment, but you can't argue with the kind of consistency that delivers an 11-1 formline, whether that's close wins or not. They still have a percentage of 135. IMO from here they should be able to finish with a top two spot meaning a home prelim, and from there they can set up another Grand Final appearance without ever needing to leave home. It's the chance the Dockers have badly needed, and bravo to them I think on the turn around from a disappointing finish last year. No doubt in my mind that Lyon's often brilliant coaching is a major factor.

2015-06-29T05:36:27+00:00

David

Guest


A lot of clubs will be hoping for that

2015-06-29T05:11:44+00:00

Ben

Guest


James Hird for mine. Although the results haven't been forthcoming, he has the player group right behind him and he is working under difficult circumstances. Hopefully Mr Little will double his salary and extend his contract for another 5 years - #StandbyHird.

2015-06-29T05:11:13+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Lyon is the leader at this stage. The ladder tells the story!

2015-06-29T04:58:42+00:00

Macca

Guest


Balthazar - "Coasting to the line" may be or maybe not but when you consider the Hawks have lost their games by 2, 8, 10 & 4 points and Freo have won 6 by less than 15 (even if only 2 of those count) the difference between the 2 sides isn't as far as 3 games would suggest

2015-06-29T04:56:23+00:00

Pieman

Guest


... and Footscray - and GWS - and the Eagles - and even Richmond (let's face it Dimma has taken the Tiges from the bottom half of the eight to ........

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