It's not always sunny on the Gold Coast

By matt.nolan / Roar Rookie

They are the team that was supposed to be the jewel in the national crown for the AFL. A couple of years ago they were flying. It was a matter of when, not if the Gold Coast Suns were going to take the football world by storm.

They were supposed to race the ever-improving Greater Western Sydney Giants to the first expansion premiership. With guys like Jaeger O’Meara, David Swallow, Tom Lynch, Brandon Matera, Trent McKenzie and the like improving week by week, how could they not be successful?

When you add arguably the best player of the last 20 years to that mix, one Gary Ablett, there was an air of inevitability surrounding the Suns that they were destined for great things.

The situation up on the coast right now could not be further away from the promise of recent years. With crisis talks being held and members’ frustration at an all-time high, the question has to be asked, what happened to the Suns?

Let’s start with the skipper. Some have said that in hindsight it was a mistake getting Ablett to lead the club in its first years as his shadow proved too great and didn’t allow the young group to find their own feet quickly enough.

I am not a full subscriber of this theory and believe the problems have run far deeper than one man in south-east Queensland.

We all know Ablett is a once-in-a-generation player. A Brownlow medallist, premiership player and incredible athlete that has been at the top of the football world for a decade.

Perhaps he was not the man to lead them, there are numerous examples of the best player not always making the best captain as his former skipper Cameron Ling proved at Geelong. But there comes a point where if you are good enough to be on an AFL list, you are good enough to demand improvement from yourself.

Your coaches also need to demand improvement from you on a weekly basis. It is too easy to point the finger and say the players underneath Ablett haven’t grown to be the players they should be because of his greatness. That is a huge copout.

There was always going to be a significant transition period for the Suns but the wheels falling off when the great man went down reveal far more than over-reliance on him.

If we drill down on the recruiting of the Gold Coast from 2012 onwards it doesn’t really paint the rosiest of pictures either. The Karmichael Hunt saga was no more than a publicity stunt, which some may argue served its purpose of more people becoming interested in the club. From a football perspective however, it was money down the drain and of zero benefit.

Aside from Ablett, the Suns have failed to sell the club to any real big fish such as Buddy Franklin, Kurt Tippett or even Nick Riewoldt and it is widely accepted that the long-term on-field success of a footy club can and often is built around a star big man. This rings true even rolling back the decades, think Wayne Carey, Jonathan Brown and even more recently Jeremy Cameron at GWS.

Lynch is growing into a star but we are five years into the Suns’ AFL life and their inability to land another marquee player that is six inches taller than ‘Gaz’ has found them wanting. In stark contrast to their GWS counterparts who have recruited mature-age players magnificently, the Suns have failed miserably.

While we witness the brilliant form of Heath Shaw, Shane Mumford and so far in 2016 Steve Johnson, the old heads at Gold Coast, when not injured, have been underwhelming at best.

Nick Malceski has failed to be half the player he was at Sydney, Matt Rosa has shown only glimpses, Michael Rischitelli has been good without being great and the top-end draft talent that has been stockpiled has failed to continue on the upward trend of the last couple of years. Zac Smith and Charlie Dixon both performing well at their new clubs also rubs salt into an already gaping wound.

The biggest excuse the Suns have right now is their injury list. Jack Martin busted his shoulder in his first game in 2014 and is yet to really shine, O’Meara and Swallow have barely been sighted the last two seasons due to ongoing knee problems, while Ablett’s shoulder issue has been well documented.

Currently the club has 21 players in the medical room not playing. Add Steven May who was suspended for his crude hit on Lions ruckman Stefan Martin and you have 22 players that are unavailable – effectively a full team. Not saying it is the only reason behind the Suns’ rapid fall but these injuries would test the depth of any AFL club.

As far as improvement and where it will come from, the Suns need to get back to basics. Rodney Eade is a good coach. He has been there and done it before, both at Sydney and the Western Bulldogs as head coach and on both occasions has taken them deep into September. He may not have the cattle right now but the best attribute of both Sydney and the Dogs then and now is their maniacal attack on the footy and contested ball.

This is Gold Coast’s biggest issue at present. Regardless of experience or injuries, there is one thing you can control on a football field and that is your intensity at the contest. Melbourne have lacked it for several years but are discovering how valuable contested possession is so far this season. The Suns need to follow in their footsteps.

Whether it is Ablett himself or young Darcy MacPherson playing his third game, they need to crack in one contest at a time. Go and watch Jack Viney’s tape from the weekend and replicate it.

They may not win a lot of games for the rest of 2016 but for the Suns it’s not about winning four points, it has to be about winning back the respect of the footy world.

The Crowd Says:

2016-05-21T06:51:40+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


Hard to say from the outside but from all accounts he is lazy as hell. Had a great debut season and then just figured he could coast on the strength of that. Could possibly see him back as a mature age recruit if he got delisted, went away for a few years and returns around 27-28 with a better mindset and more hunger. I don't think the Suns can keep him on after this year if they're serious about reforming the culture at the club.

2016-05-20T11:56:50+00:00

Carl Spackler

Guest


They would probably make the eight then. You know you get compensation for losing talent right? Just look at the Giants, they have lost a few and are now in with a real chance of a flag. The question of feeding caviar to a bunch of sows comes to mind then though. Bit of a waste.

2016-05-20T08:12:12+00:00

Slane

Guest


What is the deal with Trent McKenzie, Paul? I thought his kicking was going to revolutionize the game a few years ago.

2016-05-20T07:41:08+00:00

Samantha

Roar Rookie


Pretty sure they are way ahead of Brisbane's facilities ... I could be wrong but don't think I am.

2016-05-20T07:28:57+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


It's definitely not a certainty - if Prestia, Swallow and O'Meara all walk, and Ablett retires - that's pretty much the end of that.

2016-05-20T07:27:13+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Their training facilities are meant to be the worst in the league, and that probably goes all the way down to the medical department.

2016-05-20T03:51:33+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


Kolo is having a real slump, and Martin is probably a few years off having a robust enough body to handle AFL footy. Still looks a bit fragile. Prestia, Swallow and O'Meara are all looking to jump ship as soon as they are able. Matera too most likely. McKenzie will probably be delisted at the end of this year. I think their trough is worse than the media thinks because many feel that in time the Suns will inevitably become contenders at some stage. I think that's by no means a certainty.

2016-05-20T03:47:34+00:00

Gecko

Guest


Before we lay much of the blame at Ablett's feet, it's interesting to note that at Melbourne and St Kilda it wasn't a change of skipper that revived these clubs (there was no change of skipper). It was the change in coach and management. The coaching and management bear the brunt of the responsibility at the Suns, along with injuries and the lack of a strong support base on the Gold Coast. Also worth noting that the Suns' current trough may not be as bad as the media thinks. They've got some good young players like Saad, Martin and Kolodjasni and just need their midfield to get back into fitness to at least start being competitive again.

AUTHOR

2016-05-20T03:04:05+00:00

matt.nolan

Roar Rookie


I really hope they turn it around because the support is there. The Lions are struggling too but it's amazing what some good performances will do to the psyche of a club and it's faithful. The advantage Port and Brisbane have is they at least have flags on the belt whereas the Suns haven't proven anything so they have a long road ahead!

AUTHOR

2016-05-20T02:49:53+00:00

matt.nolan

Roar Rookie


I agree Paul. It seems like everyone is in cruise control hoping things will get better but no one is willing to get their hands dirty.

2016-05-20T01:59:08+00:00

Hammerhead

Guest


Anyone here know how much Gold Coast spends on its medical department? I can't help but think they've shelled out more on recruiting players than developing the players they have and keeping them in good condition.

2016-05-20T01:20:44+00:00

Corrupt

Guest


Well said. It did look diabolical for Port Adelaide pre Ad Oval and a decent team. Both QLD teams will come good and the crowds will come back in force. We have seen that with the Swans, when it looked all over with there too. They just need to push through this and come out the other end.

2016-05-19T23:58:56+00:00

Steve

Guest


Well said. Not sure where to lay the blame with that huge injury list that the Suns have. So much negative things are being thrown around now like the fact that the Gold Coast is a grave yard for sporting teams and no one in QLD likes AFL. Also that the Gold Coast is a holiday place and that if you look for people you will find them down the beach rather than at a football match. So anyway I think there is hope for AFL in QLD but the AFL needs to help more. It's like they have turned their backs away from QLD to focus on other teams and forgotten the Suns and the Lions. They use the excuse that the Gold Coast is just a holiday location on the map. Well it is the 6th largest city so someone must live there. Junior footy is doing really well in QLD so the AFL should work with that. And yes there are people in QLD who like AFL but they don't want to go to games and see the Suns and the Lions get flogged and dish up crappy football that is not worth watching. Most football fans are the ones that jump on the band wagon when a team is winning. So if the Suns and the Lions start winning the crowds etc should come back. You just have to look at Port Adelaide a few years ago. They were playing bad football and their home games had poor crowds. Now they fill their home games with 50 plus thousand in Adelaide. Also people are blaming Eade their coach and say that their old coach Bluey was a must better coach. Yes Eade was a good coach in his time but even coaches lose touch. Example would be Mick Malthouse. He was a great Premiership coach in his day but did not do much for Carlton.

2016-05-19T23:54:46+00:00

Carl Spackler

Guest


Not only is the Gold Coast, 'God's waiting room' it is also football club's 'departure lounges'.

2016-05-19T23:28:48+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


When you have a core of players who are there for the lifestyle & the pay cheques, as opposed to winning premierships, it’s not surprising there’s a lack of attitude and commitment at the contest.

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