Chooks' feathers fly over Adam O'Brien sticking to his contract

By Joe Frost / Editor

Within minutes of Nathan Brown announcing he was leaving the Knights, the conversation shifted to who his replacement would be.

The usual suspects were tossed up – Geoff Toovey, Tim Sheens, Trent Barrett – as well as some slightly more left-of-field candidates, such as Mark Geyer’s suggestion that Phil Gould was the man to lead Newcastle to their next premiership.

However, the most persistent reports were that it was a two-horse race, between Roosters assistants Adam O’Brien and Craig Fitzgibbon.

Then Fitzgibbon’s agent, David Riolo, said his pony was an early scratching and we’re now apparently watching one thoroughbred canter to the finish line at beautiful Broadmeadow, ready to claim the Newcastle Knights Coach Cup.

I’ve been wrong about this stuff before – getting all hot under the collar about Kevin Walters being named the Titans coach, only for Justin Holbrook to get the gig (and for me to get all hot under the collar again) – but the major media outlets have O’Brien as the unbackable favourite to succeed Brown.

And the reason O’Brien’s apparent succession is such a juicy story is because a faction of the board at Bondi were none too happy with the situation.

In fact, Trent Robinson was forced to hold a press conference on Friday afternoon, denying that there was any animosity towards his assistant and putting the kibosh on suggestions O’Brien would be sacked before the season was out if he took the helm in the Hunter.

“I think he’s obviously ambitious and wants the role and I will support him in that,” Robinson said.

“That’s what head coaches are there for. We are there to develop and progress, and he is good enough for the job. I’m sure they’ll be positive about it.”

It was an eminently sensible response to the situation from the unflappable head Rooster. Because of course they should back their second in charge if he wants to throw his hat in the ring for a No.1 position.

That he had come to the Tricolours after a decade at the Melbourne Storm, the most professional system in rugby league, was a pretty fair indicator that O’Brien had designs on becoming a first-grade coach – he wanted to see how someone other than Craig Bellamy ran things.

If that wasn’t enough of a clue that maybe O’Brien might one day ask to leave in pursuit of a bigger, better job, perhaps the fact he had a clause inserted into his contract stipulating he could leave if a first-grade job was on offer was an indicator.

The guy left his previous club to learn more about being a head coach, had an article in his deal permitting him to leave if he was offered a role as a head coach, and has his tyres pumped up in the media on a pretty consistent basis that he’s a head coach in waiting.

Was it really such a surprise that when a sweet position became available – and given the Knights’ facilities, financial strength, community support and roster, they don’t get much sweeter for a rookie – O’Brien expressed interest?

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

And yes, he’s only been in the eastern suburbs for nine of the 36 months he’s contracted for but it’s hardly a backflip or abandoning a team when you’ve got a contract that states you can do what O’Brien is aiming to do.

Ultimately, while it may be a bit of a bump on the Roosters’ seemingly inevitable road to another grand final, it’s hard to feel too sorry for them.

Just as losing players is the price of success, so too is seeing some of your brains trust depart – just look at Melbourne.

Over the years, the Storm have said goodbye to understudy coaches the ilk of Michael Maguire, Stephen Kearney, Brad Arthur, Dean Pay, Anthony Seibold, Nathan Brown and Kevin Walters.

Yet Craig Bellamy continues to find replacements who keep his side at the top of the standings year after year.

To be fair, Robinson has had some decent assistants leave as well, with Paul Green departing after the Chooks’ 2013 grand final victory to take up the top job in North Queensland, Jason Taylor becoming coach at Wests Tigers shortly after, and Steve McNamara now in charge at Catalans.

A bit of upheaval in the ranks is inevitable in professional sport – the great coaches and clubs simply get on with things.

So perhaps the talk of noses being out of joint at the Roosters was just that, talk.

But if Adam O’Brien does get the job in Newcastle and the 2018 premiers don’t go back-to-back, what’s the bet fingers will be pointed at the bloke who exercised his right to take up a better job?

The Crowd Says:

2019-08-25T09:36:26+00:00

Watda

Guest


They probably aren’t getting upset... now that won’t sell tickets??

2019-08-25T03:00:25+00:00

Peter

Guest


The old Jenn still has your knickers in a knot, eh. Unless you are some sort of super insider, it would have been more accurate for you to say that you, having no personal knowledge, don’t like this report. This would also have saved the unnecessary nasty abuse. Of course, you may be just another feathered fanatic.

2019-08-25T02:23:13+00:00

Peterj

Guest


I just can’t believe the roosters are getting upset that someone else is poaching from them! Gotta say though, Robinson’s response is all class though.

2019-08-25T01:25:41+00:00

WarHorse

Roar Rookie


He could have had the dragons gig if he waited until next year

2019-08-24T23:45:01+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


Multiple NRL coaching jobs come up every year. We have at least two this year, we had six last season

2019-08-24T23:20:34+00:00

Steve

Guest


Ha....so anyone who criticises the Roosters must be a bunnies fan :stoked: ? But you are right it is hearsay technically, but it also makes perfect sense. Why would any assistant sign a contract that precludes them from applying for a head coach role in the NRL where they could make triple the money? But hey...Adam probably had a handshake deal with the Godfather.....God forbid they should get on the wrong side of the great Uncle Nick. He's probably having a pair of concrete boots measured up as we speak lol.

2019-08-24T23:14:45+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


People who reach elite levels in any sports want to achieve the very best they can, be it coaches, administrators or players. As Robinson said, part of his role is to develop the coaching staff, as well as the players. Surely it should be kudos to the Easts machine if O'Brien takes up the role at the Knights, especially if he can make the side a genuine finals contender? If they see this move in a negative light, that to me is just petty.

2019-08-24T23:11:26+00:00

Watda

Guest


“As I understand it”?....hearsay. Maybe you are right. The roosters should get over themselves before they turn into small minded vindictive bunnies??

2019-08-24T22:55:39+00:00

steve

Guest


As I understand it all assistant coaches have a get out clause in their contracts just in case an NRL job comes up, so its not hearsay. Also I'm not sure why an assistant leaving would affect their finals performance in any way shape or form. The Roosters really need to get over themselves.

2019-08-24T22:45:39+00:00

Watda

Guest


Another hearsay story. Clauses in contracts yada yada. At the end of the day the timing is a bit off for the Roosters sake as they are about to play finals and Newcastle should have made a play for O’Brien at the end of the season. Do the knights have a recruiter living in Bondi??

2019-08-24T22:07:33+00:00

Steve

Guest


Can't believe the whinging by certain sections of the Roosters organisation over this. NRL jobs come up very infrequently, are they really all that surprised O'Brien wants to take the gig? The overblown opinion of their own importance is mind boggling. Newsflash....the only people that care are the 3 supporters that turn up to your games lol!

2019-08-24T21:35:31+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


His signing might help the Knights might even sign a couple of up and coming players the Chooks desperately want to keep , how good would that be?

2019-08-24T19:51:54+00:00

Chris Love

Roar Guru


I can’t remember an assistant coach getting the blame for not winning a premiership.

Read more at The Roar