The Demons victory means Roos' work is done

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

Apart from being an excellent game of footy and a great contest, the Melbourne Football Club’s twenty nine point victory over Hawthorn last Saturday delivered more than just four competition points.

It was another piece of evidence that suggests a much improved Demons side is more than capable of playing finals in the very near future.

The win represented a changed team, a team that previously contained some young talent and loyal servants, yet one that had been stripped back to bare essentials and rebuilt from the ground up.

For the first time since 2006, Melbourne fans can actually believe that their team has a shot at finals. This season will complete a decade of absence from September action yet the club can almost taste a new beginning.

If they are able to reproduce their efforts from the weekend more frequently, those finals might come sooner rather than later.

The three years of Paul Roos’ tenure might just go down as one of the most successful overhauls undertaken by a football club in recent memory. As many clubs continue to make decisions that befuddle and confuse loyal supporters, Melbourne seem to have pulled the right rein in just about every aspect under the guidance of Roos.

Their drafting, recruitment and retention has been spot on, and players who were struggling or showing limited potential only two years ago have started to flourish under the coaching of a proven winner.

Players such as Jack Watts and Max Gawn appear to have grown a leg this year and the youthful inclusions and development of Christian Petracca, Jack Viney and Tom McDonald have added much flair, enthusiasm and creativity to the way the Dees approach the game.

While some of the list predates Roos and not all of the quality in drafting and retention is his work, his ability to mould the talent at his disposal has been masterful and his decision to stand by players like Gawn and Watts has reaped dividends. Finally, the loyal Nathan Jones has some capable allies.

Melbourne had taken on a sense of desperation prior to Roos’ arrival. The coach himself has spoken in the past of the disarray that he felt the club was in after he analysed the structures from top to bottom.

An understandable lack of belief in their ability to win, futile comments and input from senior officials and the lack of a plan that could steer the club in a positive direction are all symptomatic of a club in crisis.

Roos set about mending all of the above and someone with his qualifications around culture, planning and the ability to lead from a position of authority was a shrewd and calculated choice by the Administration.

It was also an expensive one with reports placing his salary nudging the two million dollars per season mark. Coach’s salaries are generally well kept secrets, but if that estimation is anywhere near correct, the Melbourne Football Club invested heavily, yet wisely.

It seemed to be the worst kept secret in the AFL before the deal was announced and Roos constantly deferred attention from his potential new gig. In the end a two year deal was ratified and the enormity of the task became immediately apparent to Roos.

His first on-field step was to address poor decision making and tentativeness and empower players to have the courage to play in the style that he knew would eventually prove to be successful. This would lead to some early pain, yet as the players began to trust the structures, he knew that things would change.

The first sign of success was the ability of the Dees to stop opponents scoring in the way they had previously, this was obvious almost immediately. Having had 2,691 points scored against them in 2013, Roos shrunk that down to 1,954 in exactly twelve months.

Percentage was elevated from a pathetic 54.07 to an almost respectable 68.40. Sure there was the odd slip up, yet generally, the numbers trended in the Melbourne defence’s direction.

From there, Roos then stepped out of his comfort zone in developing a more attacking brand of football than he had adopted for much of his time at the Swans.

The epic ‘flooding’ encounters of the mid to late 2000’s against a similarly minded West Coast will always be synonymous with Roos’ time in Sydney, yet with the cattle at his disposal, rule changes and the evolution of the modern game Roos had to mould a style to suit.

The end product saw the Dees go toe to toe with the big boys on Saturday and outscore them when it was most needed.

Calls for Simon Goodwin to take over the helm at the start of the season have subsequently been proven to be rash.

Many felt that the habits had been adequately ingrained in the playing group and the time was ripe for Goodwin to begin his senior coaching career.

Goodwin had showed amazing maturity and invested in a long term vision to his coaching by signing a five year deal and intending to work under Roos for an extended period. The decision to stick with this plan through 2016 was justified last Saturday and now is the perfect time for Goodwin to take the reins.

Goodwin has learnt from one of the masters and apparently has considerable responsibility already, however, the job was not quite complete. Saturday afternoon saw the completion of the rebuild. It was the full stop, the exclamation mark, the arrival moment for the Demons.

Their ninth win of the season was different to the eight before. There was something more lasting, permanent and passionate about the way that it was completed. The rendition of ‘It’s a Grand Old Flag’ in the sheds was evidence of that.

As the new coach takes over from Roos, the club needs to continue to aid the rise. Their biggest mistake could be looking back on Roos in a melodramatic way as soon as the first hurdle is placed before them, and there will be hurdles.

What Roos did was remarkable, yet the simplicity behind football is constantly discussed by coaches. Winning contested ball, forward entries, possessions and metres gained are quite easy things to comprehend. Building spirit and a consistent message based on a sound game plan might just be the greater part of Roos’ achievement.

It would be foolish to think that the Demons will ride off into the sunset and walk away with the 2017 premiership. Just as foolish as seeing a statue of Roos erected in the front office of the club as some sort of Messiah.

He is great coach who applied basic and tested principles and structures to a group of young men and led a rebuild that was tangibly achievable through hard work.

On Saturday he had every right to throw the phone in the coach’s box firmly at the wall, stand up and simply say, ‘My work here is done!’ There would have been a nice Shakespearean feel about that scene.

However the Melbourne Football Club fare over the course of the next few years, their progress was envisioned, instigated and led by Paul Roos. The supporters now beam with joy again and surely numerous finals appearances await.

Whether this does come to fruition or not will not provide much pleasure to me either way. The privilege of having witnessed what Roos was able to achieve with a basket case is pleasure enough for me.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-16T07:23:58+00:00

Kiama Chris

Guest


Roos is an excellent manager of people and a team builder. These are surely the most important attributes of any successful coach. He has surrounded himself with assistants, including Goodwin, working as a team. Just look at Longmire's success at the Swans to see what can and hopefully will happen at the Dees. None of this can happen without the buy-in of the players and it surely seems that that has happened. It's wonderful to see Jack Watts enjoying football after the weight of expectation he has carried. And so he begins to fulfil his potential. Another Roos hallmark. But none of this could have happened without the reform of the Board and management structure. This I believe was what had to happen to get Roos to the club. And it did. Now there seems to be no doubt as to whose job is what and they're all singing from the same songsheet. So yes, Paul Roos is a genius, but no-one can do it on their own, which is what Roos will tell you every time. Hope he enjoys his time off in the next few years and makes one last appearance at another struggling club. Not Brisbane though - yet.

2016-08-11T17:17:51+00:00

justinr

Guest


Also a $$$ boost for myself & Cam Rose.

2016-08-11T14:56:32+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


Yeah, can't argue with that. When you look at where the club was at when Neeld was sacked, and where they are now, in the space of what has been just a few years - well, it is pretty remarkable.

2016-08-11T12:06:18+00:00

Bob Brown

Roar Guru


Absolutely fabulous from the former Swans mentor. Very positive indeed and who's to say he won't win another flag, but this time with the Demons.

2016-08-11T10:26:01+00:00

Birdman

Guest


Yeah, yeah, nah. too early to declare the Roos era a success just yet IMHO. May well be on the fast track but I would argue they are 2 seasons behind based on picks received.

2016-08-11T06:25:44+00:00

kick to kick

Guest


Not sure Roos is a great coach in the accepted sense. But he is a sensational change manager who is able to embed a new and positive culture. He's not a terrible AFL tactician but his contribution is far more about enabling players and sustained success. On that basis Melbourne could lose the last 3 games of the season and still be in good shape.

2016-08-11T02:26:55+00:00

Wilson

Roar Guru


you could well see them win all 3 as Cat don't have a good record against lower teams this year?

2016-08-11T02:11:11+00:00

mdso

Guest


Wait until next year they will be saying the same thing about Woosha. Just change a few bits here and there and change names.

2016-08-11T01:07:48+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


Roos has delivered his promise. But Melbourne can unravel in the last 3 rounds. To feel good about his tenure and truly be satisfied with what he's achieved, they need to finish the season strongly. With 3 games to go, they must beat Carlton in round 22 and at least produce fighting performances against Port this week (ideally winning, but we know Port are hot and cold, and if Port produce a hot performance at home they can challenge any team) and Geelong in round 23. 2 wins from the last 3 rounds would really build a strong platform of confidence to launch into next season. But regardless, I say well done to Roos.

2016-08-11T00:23:09+00:00

Rocko

Roar Guru


I agree it was a great win, but would argue they need to back it up this week against Port in Adelaide to show their growth as an up-and-coming team.

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