Pressure Points: Gus is the centre of attention at the Dogs - and he'll be the fall guy if they fail in 2024

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Here’s a thought experiment for you: close your eyes, think of each of the 17 NRL clubs, and picture who the most important person there is.

There’s a decent chance you’ll get a coach – Trent Robinson, Wayne Bennett, Craig Bellamy – or a player – Latrell Mitchell, Shaun Johnson, Daly Cherry-Evans – and that stands to reason, given that they are the most important people at rugby league clubs.

The honourable exceptions might be the Wests Tigers, where their dysfunctional boardroom overpowers their rookie coach and unexceptional players, and, of course, the Bulldogs, where the General Manager of Football constantly steals the limelight.

This offseason has been a showcase of Phil Gould, with coach Cameron Ciraldo and captains Reed Mahoney and Matt Burton taking a backseat while the man above them in the pecking order dominates the coverage.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing, either. Gould is one of the game’s enduring figures, with a CV that few can match and a public persona that dominates the media landscape.

Gould is a leading official at one of the biggest drawcards in the game, controlling recruitment policy at a time when the only thing worth talking about is recruitment. That, alone, would be enough to generate a lot of coverage.

Then there’s ‘Gus’, the media character, who is a leading pundit for one of the two organisations that pay to broadcast the sport in Australia and thus guaranteed to draw an audience, positive or negative.

When you’ve got an interesting person doing the only interesting thing – and throw in that he’s doing a lot of it in a relatively quiet off-season – then it’s perhaps not surprising that Gus is the story.

Newspapers competing to show photos of him meeting players, as if a recruitment manager meeting players wasn’t a major part of his job, is more newsworthy because it is Gus who is shouting the coffees.

This isn’t entirely without merit or precedent.

Soccer fans will remember Harry Redknapp, that sport’s premier wheeler and dealer, with an arm out of the Range Rover window, holding court with journalists camped outside of the training ground as one of the endearing images of the 2000s and perhaps, one day, we will think of a blurry images of Canterbury Leagues with a similar nostalgia.

Where Gus might worry, however, is that when he is the story and not the players, the pressure will fall back on him.

That’s happened before, with the Trent Barrett sacking fiasco – “Trent will be the coach of the Bulldogs long after I’m gone” – and now, the pressure will ramp up.

Gould’s gambit on arrival at Belmore was to do to Canterbury what he had done to Penrith. It’s easy to see how that might happen, with the Dogs a sleeping giant in terms of junior base, Leagues Club cash and massive, if sometimes nascent, support.

The argument over the last few years has been about the coach, as evidenced by the Barrett sacking, and then the roster, which had gradually been turned over in the last two years.

Ciraldo is secure in the coaching role (as much as anyone can be) and now, the roster bears very little relation to that which ended the Barrett era.

 

Bulldogs coach Cameron Ciraldo. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Just four of the 17 from Barrett’s last game remain in the Top 30 and Connor Tracey, the latest arrival, is their 26th signing in 18 months. That’s a lot of turnover, and now it needs to work.

Recruitment is a collaborative business, of course, but it won’t look like that. It could be that Gould, who has the job for as long as he wants it, is taking the questions to shield Ciraldo, but it could also be that he is the one calling the shots.

Either way, if this doesn’t work, it’ll be Gould who gets the pelters.

What ‘working’ means is a bit nebulous with Canterbury. They finished 15th last year with the worst defensive record in the comp by a distance, conceding almost a hundred points more than the Dragons and Tigers.

Doing better than that is progress, but with such investment in the squad, it’ll be interesting to see how fans react.

The sides that finished 15th in 2022 made the top four. So did the side that finished 15th in 2021.

Nobody is quite expecting that, but with a roster that now includes four players who played in the Grand Final in 2022, two more who played in 2021 and another from 2020, it’s hard to argue that the cattle are the problem anymore.

Much as Gus is seen as one of the best at list management, it’s hard to discern what the plan is with the names that he has acquired.

Currently, they have more utes than a Bunnings car park, with a host of players who can cover a lot of roles, but no clear articulation of where they’re all going to fit in.

We can assume that the spine will include Burton at 6 and Mahoney at 9, with (probably) Toby Sexton getting first crack at the 7 jumper. The fullback, however, could be any of Stephen Crichton, who is either going to play there or be the league’s most overpaid centre, or Blake Taaffe, who one presumes didn’t swap backup at Souths for backup at Canterbury, with last year’s 1 Hayze Perham and now Tracey in the mix.

Josh Addo-Carr will be on one wing and Jacob Kiraz might be on the other, though he was a centre by the end of 2023 with Blake Wilson impressing late on. If Kiraz stays inside, then the other slot might be new arrival Bronson Xerri, or Tracey or another utility, Drew Hutchison.

(Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images)

The back row, one suspects, will be Viliame Kikau and Jacob Preston, but where does that leave Jaeman Salmon or Kurt Mann, two more of the utilities that have joined. Are they going to play lock? If they do, what about the four other blokes who played there last year and are still on the books?

The middle remains light and yet there are so many players. It looks scattergun and, if it plays like that, then Gus will be the guy fielding the questions.

That’s the problem with being the centre of attention. It’s great to be in the limelight and be proactive in the off-season – and lord knows, the Dogs have needed to be proactive – but when things go wrong, everyone knows where the fingers will point.

There’s a feeling that Canterbury might be fighting the last war with these signings. In 2023, they were slammed by injuries in the second quarter of the year.

That can happen to anyone, but at the time, few could remember it cutting so hard at the same time in the same positions as it did at the Dogs. There’s no accounting for that and, really, it probably bought Ciraldo some time.

If it were to happen again, they’d be well stocked in the utilities department at least.

The lack of cattle was already a problem, and it’d be hard to argue that anyone coming in is not better than the blokes that have walked out. Quality-wise, there are upgrades.

Jake Averillo and Paul Alamoti might go onto great things – expect Averillo to fire at the Dolphins in particular – but neither have a better record than Crichton if he plays in the centres.

Luke Thompson and Tevita Pangai junior, too, have great records and potential, but it would be hard-pushed to say that they have performed anywhere near their pay cheques at the Dogs.

What they were, however, was specialist middles, and now Canterbury are very light in that position and massively overstocked in guys that can play multiple positions.

That’s the thing about being a Jack-of-all-trades – the second part is that you’re often a master of none.

It has been said that rugby league only has three positions: halfback, prop and everyone else. Canterbury have the everyone else covered, but their weakest two areas remain the two most important.

If they fail in 2024, the responsibility for that imbalance will fall on Gould. No wonder he’s meeting front rowers.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-03T20:24:25+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


I'm a bit relieved the Dragons didn't employ him when they were flirting with it.

2023-12-03T21:03:03+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Hope he gave you some decent tips ! :silly:

2023-12-01T22:18:03+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Signing that sort of contract is almost the kiss of death for NRL coaches these days. Hope that doesn't apply to your bloke.

2023-12-01T10:07:23+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Ciraldo has a five year contract, nothing to worry about… :laughing: :laughing:

2023-12-01T09:15:21+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


They’re still streets ahead of the Dogs middle . Knights have two recent Origin props and a current kiwi .’ All the Sharks boys would be a walk up start for the Dogs and improve the Dogs pack… . I guess it’s not impossible, but I’d need to see a far better game plan than anything I’ve seen from the dogs in eight years to convince me they can achieve anything with such a lightweight middle

2023-12-01T08:41:24+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


That said the Knights ran 5th with the 2 Saffs and Leo Thompson and the Sharks ran 6th with BHU, Toby for 14 games and Tommy H.. who individually wouldn't have made any rep sides or collectively, conclusively dominated many opposing middles.

2023-12-01T08:04:09+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Perfect summary He annoys the hell out of me in commentary but you can’t knock his results I’m sure someone will say “yeah, well what about the five year plan” Ok it took eight (or whatever) not five, but what he said would happen at Penrith is exactly what’s happened The Bloke in a Bar interview was some of the best footy content I’ve ever heard…

2023-12-01T07:59:19+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


That’s just not true. They will have to pay RFM or arrange a settlement if he doesn’t land a contract elsewhere As for ‘how do they have the money?’ Put the Bulldogs roster up against the Panthers roster man for man and tell me who has the greater player spend

2023-12-01T07:55:26+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


IF they land AFB it won’t be until 2025 The lack of big middles is a massive concern for 24. I like the rest of the team but if Knight and King are out starting props we’ll struggle Both decent enough players but just not big enough to own the middle

2023-12-01T07:49:01+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Good call. That’s my concern with this lot. Guys like Hutchinson, Mann, Salmon, etc look good when they’re slotting into gun sides but how effective are any of them when they’re the main man? . I had a very brief chat with Gus at Canterbury races last Friday night…

2023-12-01T02:39:01+00:00

Pomoz

Roar Rookie


The facts don't really support this assertion. A coach is a leadership position. Three grand finals and two wins. Multiple SOO wins. He can coach, that much is true. Lets talk about administration leadership. He become football GM at the Roosters. After years in the wilderness, the Roosters win and make multiple grand finals. Their development pathways start delivering rep quality players and the club is competitive every year. He moved to GM at the Panthers. Previously, they barely made the semi finals in 10 years. Most of their spine brought from other clubs rejects (Walsh, Burns, Kingston. WTF?). By the time he leaves they have a succession of junior players coming through, winning finals in junior grades and making the semi finals every year. The team he brought through development pathways he put in place, threepeat. A poor leader? Nah. He is polarising because he is opinionated and expresses himself using hyperbolic adjectives. He doesn't suffer fools and tends towards the dramatic when offering his viewpoints. He seems to turn up his hyperbole to 11 when he is on TV. It gets on my nerves too and I'm a Gus fan, but only a fan of footy Gus, not TV Gus. TV Gus revels in being a maverick contrarian and sticking it to the man, usually the NRL leadership. If he was a poor leader, players and coaches he has worked with would not like him. I have never heard a player say "I didn't like Gus, he was a poor coach, poor leader, terrible GM". Usually they say the opposite. If you really want to understand Gus watch him in podcasts like "Bloke in a Bar" talking about development. Listen to six tackles with Gus when he talks about players and teams. His passion and knowledge of the game is inspiring. TV Gus is a bore.

2023-11-30T03:25:21+00:00

Stewy76

Roar Rookie


I tend to think when Gould has a leadership position within a football club that he is only a fraction as effective as he thinks he is. Keen to hear what others think..

2023-11-29T22:17:44+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


Ciraldo has been gifted with 2 big roster overhauls. Time to make an impact.

2023-11-29T21:02:41+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


How do clubs just walk away from contracts that aren’t completed, with seemingly no financial penalties to the cap ? Certainly nothing that seems to affect their following year’s salary cap. Faitala-Mariner had two years to run in his Bulldogs contract. Told not to return to the club & was due to be paid for two more seasons at $400,000 per season. How do they continue to buy huge numbers of players, including some very expensive new signings each season. Yet get rid of players that haven’t completed their contracts, requiring payouts?

2023-11-29T09:14:37+00:00

Succhi

Roar Rookie


Ciraldo will be gone this year, Bulldogs will appoint an experienced coach, who won’t get along with Gus, and Gus will be gone at the end of the year, citing media commitments. In 10 years time, the Bulldogs will win the comp, and speaking from his retirement home on the Gold Coast, Gus will claim he was responsible for the win, whilst also announcing he has been appointed the head of football at the Titans, and he has a 5 year plan in place.

2023-11-29T03:10:08+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Gus the fall guy, surely this is satire Mike? If it starts to unravel there will be sudden reports in the media about how Ciraldo has lost the group. I'd expect a reopening of last year's allegations too. Gus will say there's no truth to it. 100% support. Then 2-3 weeks later and with "more information" of how bad it actually is he'll be forced to intervene for the good of the club.

2023-11-29T01:25:51+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


"Currently, they have more utes than a Bunnings car park" Nice one. Hutchison I can understand - given he can cover 9, 13, 7 and centre (though I don't think that's a good spot for him). Taaffe gives them some depth at two problem positions - fullback and half. Tracey's probably a bit more than a utility - just not sure what his best spot is. No idea what they want with Mann, Turpin or Salmon.

2023-11-29T00:57:07+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


How will every other side cope without a utility? They're the backbone of NSW selection year after year!* *obviously not the same utility. Each year one has a good run and then ends up in reserve grade soon after... and NSW tend to lose too.

2023-11-28T23:45:19+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


If Gus has told us once he’s told us a thousand times ‘there’s not a lot out there.’ So the plan is buy up everything to starve out the rest. He’s got a particularly strong 9,6,1, good looking youth sprinkled with GF winners, and speed out wide.. bookies would have him pretty short to get AFB. Importantly, won’t get burnt with injuries again. That’s Top 8 or a failure. No excuses built in.

2023-11-28T23:35:24+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


Apparently Eisenhuth has signed for the Dragons, meaning Gus has missed out on signing another utility. Lift your game Gus - you can't win Utility Pokemon unless you collect them all!

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