Seibold can indeed coach despite what critics say but Sea Eagles stint is his last roll of the dice

By Paul Suttor / Expert

In the one season Anthony Seibold took command of a united club, he performed wonders.

When he coached his second side, there were all sorts of agendas being pushed behind the scenes which contributed to his downfall. 

The problem for him is he’s walking into a Manly club which has been torn apart by factionalism and this is more than likely his one and only chance to salvage his coaching career in the NRL.

Seibold has finally been officially unveiled as the successor to Des Hasler at the Sea Eagles on a three-year deal and he will be under pressure from the get-go next season not just because he’s replacing a beloved club icon who was in many ways hard done by to be shown the door last month.

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Manly plummeted from eighth to 11th on the back of seven straight losses to finish the season with six of them coming after the controversial build-up to the Round 20 home game against the Roosters when seven players boycotted the match due to the club’s rainbow-themed “inclusivity jersey”.

(Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Hasler had been under contract for next season and threatened legal action after the club’s handling of the jersey drama damaged his chances of a top-six finish which would have triggered a contract extension for 2024.

The Sea Eagles are getting an older and wiser Seibold than the one who was an assistant at the club under Trent Barrett in 2016.

Seibold enjoyed a successful first season as a head coach with South Sydney two years later, winning 17 of 27 starts as he took the team back to the finals and taking out the Dally M Coach of the Year award.

They went within a point of upsetting the premiers Melbourne at AAMI Park in week one of the finals, outlasted the Dragons by the same margin via Adam Reynolds’ field goals and Cameron Murray’s crucial one-on-one steal before their playoff charge ended with a 12-4 Preliminary Final defeat at the hands of the eventual champs, the Sydney Roosters. 

From there, Seibold’s fortunes went south as soon as he inked a deal to head north to coach the Broncos. 

The 48-year-old former Canberra forward had made enemies in outgoing Brisbane coach Wayne Bennett and the Broncos’ old boys network, who wanted Kevin Walters installed. Their allies undermined Seibold behind the scenes before he even arrived at Red Hill.

The first season was barely OK, by Broncos standards, limping into the finals in eighth place but the end result was unacceptable – a 58-0 caning at the hands of Parramatta in their first playoff.

Season two at Brisbane started well with back-to-back wins but then the pandemic hit, halting the competition for two months, and the Broncos’ form collapsed – in their second game after the resumption, the Eels pumped them 59-0 in an ominous sign of what was to come.

They won just one of 11 games and Seibold departed late in the season as the Broncos tumbled to their first wooden spoon.

He said he learned plenty from “some of the challenges that were presented to me” in his inglorious Broncos exit and now has “a vast array of experience”. 

After stints helping out on the Newcastle and England rugby union team’s coaching staff, he’s been entrusted with turning the Sea Eagles’ fortunes around by chairman Scott Penn. 

While he has been the majority owner of the club for the past 15 years, Penn is wresting back control from Hasler and the family of the late, great  Immortal five-eighth Bob Fulton, installing Tony Mestrov as the new CEO late in the season and making several changes to the club’s off-field staff. 

If Penn is mightier than the sordid underbelly of the Sea Eagles’ internal politics, Seibold stands a chance of reinstating the team as finals contenders.

He has been doing the rounds of the media since Wednesday afternoon’s stage-managed announcement and is adamant that he doesn’t see this appointment as his last chance to salvage his coaching career. 

Anthony Seibold after winning the 2018 Dally M Coach of the Year award. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

But it is.

Another failure and his cards will be marked as a coach who could have been a difference maker but was not the complete package that early indicators suggested him to be.

NRL coaches often get a second chance at a new club if their first stint goes awry. Many even get a third start. But unless you have a premiership trophy on your resume, it’s almost impossible to convince a prospective club to take a punt on a coach who’s had three false starts.

In the first 25 years of the NRL era, there has only been two coaches who fit this description and they both at least had Grand Final runner-up credits in the bank – Brian Smith, who was given a go by the Knights and Roosters after starting out at Illawarra, St George and Parramatta, and Graham Murray, who also kicked off his career at the Steelers before coaching the ill-fated Hunter Mariners and Roosters before the Cowboys handed him the reins.

Manly’s roster is still relatively strong, not of “premiership-winning” calibre as Penn would have you believe when he was trying last month to make a case for why Hasler had underperformed as coach.

They have 2021 Dally M Medal winner Tom Trbojevic returning from shoulder surgery at fullback, a potential star in Josh Schuster getting a chance to form a potent halves combination with captain Daly Cherry-Evans while Jake Trbojevic and Haumole Olakau’atu will be the foundation of a solid pack.

Add in the likes of Reuben Garrick, Jason Saab, Tolu Koula, Taniela Paseka and Lachlan Croker and Seibold has a team capable of threatening the top four although depth is a worry and a few injuries to their key players could result in another slide like last season.

Their only significant losses are the departure of veteran five-eighth Kieran Foran to the Gold Coast and prop Martin Taupau, who is yet to sign a deal elsewhere.

“If we work hard and connect and bring that togetherness to the group, along with unlocking some of the potential of some of the younger players, we can continue to improve,” he said in a video interview posted on the club’s website.

He won’t be overseeing pre-season training until the end of the month due to his England rugby commitments but is confident new assistants Shane Flanagan and Jim Dymock, along with Steven Hales, will get the squad heading in the right direction. 

Seibold spoke of wanting to challenge the players over the summer months, “making the guys accountable to the effort parts of the game”. 

“I’m really looking forward with great optimism for what we can do over the next couple of seasons. There’s an opportunity to build and not just build but bring some success to the Manly team.”

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-09T08:21:50+00:00

Megeng

Roar Rookie


Geez I like your enthusiasm...

2022-11-09T05:28:38+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


Not dissimilar at Manly. When he took on the Broncos there was a rift between players and club management after the departure of the previous coach and how he was able to use players and media against the club. Hopefully for Siebold guys like the Trbojevics and DCE set high standards in performance, culture and leadership. At the Broncos most of the best paid and most senior players were their worst players and looked disinterested. Imagine having the young guys on $150K that you’re trying to tell you have a no shortcuts and reward for effort culture watching Darius Boyd and Milford bludge their way through the season offering nothing on field and zero leadership. Then they go and recruit old guys like Isaac Luke and Ben Te’o, both well past their best days, as some type of senior player solution? FFS. Darren Lockyer should have been punted with Bennett rather than leaving him there as a “winner” of the battle with Bennett.

2022-11-09T04:18:57+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Well the PR machine is humming at the least. Let's see what happens on the field in the second half of a long season.

2022-11-09T03:18:04+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Looking at Seibold's Head Coach body of work: tanked at Mackay in the Q Cup, broke all sorts of records at the Broncos, but had a good 2018 season with Souths. Scratch the surface of his Rabbitohs season and to be fair to Maguire, he had assembled not just a good squad, but a great squad. Madge did Siebs a solid by debuting Cam Murray, Angus Crichton and Campbell Graham the year before and if you add the likes of Greg Inglis, Dane Gagai, Alex Johnstone, Cody Walker, Adan Reynolds, John Sutton, Damian Cook and three of the Burgess brothers, the fact Seibold couldn't get them into a Grand Final probably says something about his coaching bona fides. That Manly gig for 2022 looks incredibly hard, I just don't think there would be too many (if any) coaches who could handle the role, certainly Siebold's name wouldn't spring to mind. Good luck!!

2022-11-09T02:56:29+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Tigers will finish in front of Manly. They have recruited well, Koroisau is one of the form players in the comp and has the skillset to turn the Tiges into a decent team. They also get one of the best edge forwards in the comp with Isaiah Papali'i and look likely to get John Bateman and Dave Klemmer. I also rate the coaching team of Tim Sheens and Benji Marshall to reinvigorate the Tigers. Manly on the other hand...

2022-11-09T02:47:27+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


I don't think Flanagan will need to do anything other than let Siebold be Siebold.

2022-11-09T02:05:12+00:00

Megeng

Roar Rookie


Yeah what have the Romans given us? Essendon and Manly; once were warriors. That’s enough metaphors. Hasler will eventually realise they’ve done him a favour. Manly is buggered between it’s owners, stakeholders, players, supporters, etc. They just can’t get out of their own way. My team is Balmain. I know what I’m talking about.

2022-11-09T01:48:06+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


It's very easy to throw around glib insults. What do you specifically object to in Don's comments, and how do you determine them to be Marxist?

2022-11-08T23:55:18+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Jim Dymock was Flanagan's assistant at the Sharks and has joined him at Manly. Despite being punted by both the Sharks and the Titans Could be a bit of chemistry between them?, " CJC-1295 and GHRP-6."

2022-11-08T23:28:02+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


As a Broncs fan I do not think he can coach at this level. And he did not fail because of the Broncos old boys. Thankfully our time with him as coach is over

2022-11-08T22:58:29+00:00

Womblat

Guest


Yeah true. I was thinking more along the lines of Fulton, Randall, O'Connor, Menzies, Eadie, Carroll, Bull, Reilly, Mossop, Matai, Irvine, 1987, "Manly hates you too", those sorts of memories. Not my club but lots of proud history there. Shame to watch it recently.

2022-11-08T22:11:07+00:00

BeeBop A LooBop

Guest


Spoken like a true Marxist.

2022-11-08T21:53:12+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


I don’t put much stock in the jersey issue being the catalyst to lose the rest of the games. But it’s a good cop out from Des and the players. If you are the owners of the club and the coach and some senior staff are exerting too much influence and power, and you can’t get them to adopt what you want from the team and club, well, you’ve got to punt them. Ultimately, your people need to work to your vision and plans. Personally, I think the players should have been told of the jersey change sooner. But equally, as soon as 7 decided they would not play at all, I would have advised them and their management that they are welcome to negotiate with other clubs. Not because they didn’t accept the jersey. But because you just don’t need that in your business if you have other options. And there’s lots of good players who won’t hold your business to ransom over a personal issue that could have been resolved. And if I didn’t put them on the market then, I would have when a few later showed support on field and in the media for a guy who killed someone at a church. Very convenient that they refer to the bible when objecting to an inclusive jersey, but disregard the “thou shalt not kill” commandment a short time later. Because, you know, we’re supporting our brother…

2022-11-08T21:36:19+00:00

Succhi

Roar Rookie


I hope he goes well, but it’s a big ask and agree this is his last shot as a head coach. Yes he went well at Souths, but had a decent team and culture. Broncos was a disaster, but it wasn’t the old boys who couldn’t tackle. Wouldn’t call Newcastle season a raging success either. I reckon Manly will be a tougher gig than the Broncos.

2022-11-08T21:26:28+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


I’d say Flanagan has taken the role counting on Siebold failing. And whilst it’s a personal opinion based upon no evidence whatsoever, he strikes me as the type who’d white ant the senior coach to get his job.

2022-11-08T20:59:32+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Well he definitley would not have got a "Women in League" jersey

2022-11-08T20:31:22+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


I recon the odds are about $3/$1 Flanagan will be coach by round 15

2022-11-08T20:23:04+00:00

Coastyboi

Guest


Nothing “proud” about the Sea Eagles last season.

2022-11-08T20:15:09+00:00

eagleJack

Roar Guru


Haha as soon as I posted it I realised we were well into the evening. The day got away from me. Thought it was closer to 4pm, which to be fair still isn’t that early to start drinking!

2022-11-08T20:03:35+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Hasler

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