The Titans should be an NRL powerhouse

By Adz Sportz / Roar Guru

Yes, you read the title correctly. The narrative that sporting teams can’t succeed on the Gold Coast is incorrect.

The problem has never been the Gold Coast; it’s always been the people in charge. They simply haven’t got it right, from the club’s previous incarnations – the Giants, Seagulls and Chargers – to previous and current Titans administrations.

When you think about it the Titans have a lot going for them as far as resources required to build a strong club.

The players train out of a $25 million state-of-the-art high-performance centre which also houses their administration. They are blessed with the world-class 27,400-seat capacity Cbus Super Stadium in Robina, which is one of the best grounds in Australia to watch rugby league.

The club is finically stable, owned by the multi-millionaire Kelly and Frizelle families, who are passionate about the Titans and devoted advocates of the Gold Coast, and there’s the development of a league club and community centre, which will ensure the club’s long-term sustainability and rich multi-year sponsorships and corporate partners.

(Getty Images)

So let’s put the lack of on-field success aside for a moment and start with other areas where the club needs to improve. There’s been plenty of discussion regarding the club’s identity or lack thereof and what they need to do to build an identity.

The important questions that need to be asked are as follows. Who are the Gold Coast Titans? Should they be considered as a club that represents Queensland and bleeds maroon under their aqua jerseys? Or is it a club representing not only the Gold Coast but also the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales as well?

Perhaps it’s time for the Titans to forget about embracing the notion of representing Queensland and state pride just because they’re based in Queensland.

The first part to building an identity is that they must actively expand their brand from suburban Gold Coast to the Hinterland, Beaudesert, Tweed Heads, Kingscliff, Lismore, Byron Bay, Ballina, Grafton and perhaps all the way down to Coffs Harbour, all fast-growing regions with a combined population of around a million people who need to be engaged by the Titans as their NRL representatives.

The next part is building a roster on the back off the plethora of local talent at their disposal and developing junior talent to become future Titans. They have a huge junior base, with junior rugby league competitions on the Gold Coast, Tweed, Northern Rivers and Toowoomba.

These regions have had plenty of success in the lower grades, with young talent signed to the Titans Elite Development System (TEDS).

(Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

They have two feeder clubs, the Burleigh Bears, who won the QRL premiership in 2016 and are currently sitting second on the Intrust Super Cup ladder, and the Tweed Head Seagulls, who are also challenging for a finals spot this season.

The Titans already have a solid foundation, with several players who are from or have played their junior footy on the Gold Coast and northern New South Wales areas, including Ryan James, Will Mathews, Keegan Hipgrave, Kevin Proctor, Jarrod Wallace, Jai Whitebread, Tyrone Roberts, Tanah Boyd, Brian Kelly and, perhaps most importantly, Jai Arrow.

Jai Arrow, a Burleigh Bears junior, becomes a free agent from 1 November and already has several Sydney clubs ready to pounce on the Queensland Origin lock for the 2021 season. Arrow must be viewed as a long-term Titans player and a potential future captain of the club, so his signature on a long-term contract must be a top priority.

Moeaki Fotuaika and AJ Brimson are superstars in the making, and Ash Taylor, for all the criticism levelled at him over the past 12 months, is a proven matchwinner and could be a matchwinner for years to come with the right guidance and mentorship.

Their roster management has been under the spotlight in recent times, but there’s a very promising core group of players which the club can build around despite some poor decisions made with their recruitment.

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And, finally, the team must win back lost fans and grow their supporter base.

The myth that the Titans don’t have any fans is exactly that, a myth. In the club’s first four years, from 2007 to 2010, they averaged a home crowd of 20,040, which was the second-highest in the NRL during that period.

In 2015 the Titans outperformed the Sharks, Warriors, Raiders and Tigers with total memberships, but while those clubs have since significantly improved their membership numbers, the Titans stagnated between 10,000 and 11,000 members before slumping to under 8000 this season.

So the fans exist, but they’re currently in hibernation and disconnected from the club.

To state the bleeding obvious, the way the Titans can reconnect with those fans and grow their fan-base is with on-field success – the right coach; the right structures; well-thought-out player recruitment, retention, development and basic roster management; and star players living up to not only their potential but also their price tag as well.

With the sacking of coach Garth Brennan, the appointment of the next coach could be the most important decision not only in Titans history but also in the history of rugby league in the region. The next coach must oversee immediate and significant on-field improvement.

But that improvement shouldn’t wait until a new coach is appointed for 2020. At the time of writing there are still eight rounds to go this season. The playing group must galvanise under interim co-coaches Luke Bert and Craig Hodges to lift themselves off the bottom of the ladder and show a bit of pride in the jersey.

It all comes down to attitude, both individually and collectively. Some of these players could be playing for their futures at the club considering roster surgery is usually conducted when a new coach joins a club to ensure they get the team they want.

On paper there is enough talent in this side to be challenging for a top-eight spot, but they have catastrophically failed. They’re currently dead last on the ladder and owe it to the loyal fans who have stuck by them to finish the season with some of the good performances they’re capable of.

The best marketing tool to win support for your club is to win games. The blueprint for success is there for the Titans; it’s now up to every single person involved within the club to finally get it right on and off the field.

If they do get it right, the Gold Coast Titans can become an NRL powerhouse with long-term sustainability and success.

The Crowd Says:

2019-07-20T07:59:05+00:00

soapit

Guest


for qlders

2019-07-19T23:26:23+00:00

Cam

Guest


Something small but I feel is important is don't have the Broncos and Titans playing at home on the same round. That would give you a game in SEQ every round and means the Titand aren't up against their big Brother. In a couple of rounds we have a Friday night with Titans playing the 6pm game and Broncos the 8pm game. That doesn't help anybody. The AFL does it in places like Adelaide, Perth, SEQ and it means there is a game there every weekend of the season.

2019-07-19T22:07:08+00:00

Contego

Roar Rookie


I agree an entertainment precinct / club near Robina would be great and personally it should have been included on the ground floor of the Centre of Excellence which is never talked about given how that ended. At the time they established the Titans bar in a location which has never worked for much better pub operators (congratulations should go to the Helm bar for surviving and appearing to prosper where others have failed). Food trucks etc have been added this year and if Oxenford can provide the owners with funding that is a compromise I can live with. I often hear about transport but I find catching a train works well - though it is undoubtedly an issue getting there from certain suburbs

2019-07-19T08:14:41+00:00

Noosa Duck

Roar Rookie


well Adam as well as being a champion player Mal has coached the raiders Qld & Australia. What experience that brings to the table in this situation remains to be seen. I believe there needs some serious knowledge in building the Club image and having the Australian coach as Head of Football operations as I take the roll to be is a big plus for the club. Then getting a coach that blokes know and respect would be mighty helpful because most young blokes over the past few years from the region by passed the Titans & headed for the Bronco's and there lies part of their problem

2019-07-19T06:32:50+00:00

Dogs Boddy

Roar Rookie


That's because Brisbane had a deal that they would be the only club in SE Brisbane, so the club had to base itself in NSW. Like the way the Raiders had to play out of Queanbeyan back in the day so they could enter the NSWRL.

2019-07-19T06:26:23+00:00

Dogs Boddy

Roar Rookie


You know what I have always thought this. For mine, the Titans colours are the kind of thing your wife would pick out to tile the bathroom in. The kind of colour that makes you die a little inside every time you see it (except she loves it because it goes with her dolphin theme). I can't see the harm in a rebrand colour wise. The panthers aren't exactly brown and white any more after all.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T05:19:34+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


The argument is if the club didn't pay overs, they wouldn't have been able to attract players with the lack of success. They simply recruited the wrong players Boyd, Peachy etc When Taylor was re-signed, he was a Dally M Rookie of the Year the previous season and he was in-form. Well out in front of the rest of the comp when it came to try assists. He was slotting field goals to win games. Sure a million is obviously too much, but the club expected bigger things from Ash at the time. Saying he wasn't worth it is easy with the benefit of hindsight.

2019-07-19T05:08:21+00:00

RandyM

Guest


it's like judging Sydney just by Kirrbilli and Potts Point and then saying no real people live in sydney just stuck up toffs.

2019-07-19T03:36:47+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


See I disagree Adam. It’s not that Taylor is untalented but he is not and never will be worth his current price, few are.. It’s Ben Hunt all over. Hunt is an excellent player , just not worth over a $ mill a season. If you pay overs your team will suffer. It hollows out the middle group and is death to your long term prospects. They should have let him walk.

2019-07-19T03:36:01+00:00

Poonoo

Guest


Neil Henry was the right type of coach for them and was building towards something a few years ago. He's a hard ass and even got them to the finals eventually after a few rough years, but Jarryd Hayne came in and ruined the team harmony. So much of Henry's hard work was undermined and they now have to start over again. Sydney FC in the A-League have a "No Dickheads" policy when it comes to players and it has worked wonders. The Titans need that approach too.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T03:07:15+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


Probably a fair assessment. That's one of the reasons Mal was brought in and another reason they need to build a club around local players. Players who are part of the community in the region, rather than players from elsewhere who go to the coast for a paycheque and a holiday.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T03:04:55+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


True! I'm not sure it mattered as much back then considering most of the Broncos roster made up the Queensland Origin team and the fact the majority were Queenslanders. That gave them their identity which the Titans apparently lack. The old Broncos were a Queensland team who represented all of Queensland. When the Cowboys cam into the comp in 95, many North Queenslanders didn't immediately convert. The Cowboys needed to connect to their communities and show that they wanted to represent them and that took a few years. It only got weird when watching Lazarus and Chris Johns were running around in Blues jerseys.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:58:02+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


If they were currently 10th, it would have probably only delayed the inevitable if they didn't make the finals. I'd say this was better done sooner rather than later

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:56:14+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


I'm an advocate for a club to represent the Ipswich-Logan corridor. A team there will ensure the entire SE of Qld is represented, rather than another team in the Brisbane metro area who will never convert Broncos fans. They could potentially share from the same junior talent pool

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:52:11+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


The train station is right next to the stadium. There is parking there, but if there's a 20k crowd, good luck. Many fans park 20 at the shopping centre or a few of the pubs around, but then it's a 20 minute walk to the stadium. The other option for fans is to park at their nearest station and catch the train. Suncorp doesn't have any parking near the stadium either but they have a train station next to the ground, and they still show up

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:47:59+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


I can't say I know much about the owners, But Daryl Kelly bailed them out after the Michael Searle disaster then bailed them out again. Rebecca Frizelle was chairperson of the club before buying it. So whether they have the nous or not, if it wasn't for them, the Titans would be dead. I think they made a smart move in hiring Meninga. He's been there 3 months now but his authority was only recently broadened. He needs more time, I think he'll get the club to where it needs to be.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:38:50+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


Ethan that's true, but it could be a bit of spin from Dennis Watt just to sooth the wound of sacking Brennan. But as far as recruitment goes, that's one of the reasons Mal was brought in, and had his role broadened. The club has their TEDS program and signed a bunch of kids who were successful in juniors to development contracts.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:33:40+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


They paid overs for Taylor to keep him, because the Broncos were prepared to pay that much to get him back. The issue is the Titans coaching staff's inability to get the best out of him. He's lacked a proper mentor since he started playing first grade. Even naturally gifted players like Taylor need proper coaching to turn a player from "having the potential" to "living up to that potential". Titans have failed Taylor more than he's failed them.

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:29:13+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


The Don is good! Or is it Is Don is good? Either way he's a cult figure on the coast. Titans need more players held in the same regard. They all love the Don. Highest try scorer in club history

AUTHOR

2019-07-19T02:27:29+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


The first incarnation was "Gold Coast-Tweed Giants". Tweed is in NSW. I guess they didn't consider themselves a Qld club back then

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