barass quote
Quote:
Whilst my heart says it would be great to welcome back ex Carltonians, the head says you get the best availablie, no matter what their club links.
I'm with you 125.9% barass. We need to attract and sign up the best available training coaches in the land to manage the fast tracking of a list that contains 25 players under 23 years of age.
As for strategists and tacticians, only the best will do, and they should focus on the game plan and the opposition. There's no need for them to be Carlton greats.
Quote:
This is what CFC have done in the past - Barassi, Parkin, Kernahan, Bradley etc. If the ex Carltonians are the best in the marketplace then fantastic, but do we all honestly think this is the case?
What I believe though is that our current ratio of coach to players at Carlton needs a further injection of intense coaching and player support. I remember a photo in The Herald (now the H/S) during the early 80's of the Carlton team's support and coaching staff; there was over 100 of them...when we had money. But this is what kept all players on their toes, improving from every outing and winning flags.
Everyone knows that a classroom with a lower teacher-student ratio will help kids' progress faster than those in a high teacher student ratio. In tennis an elite player will have a coach one on one to help them with their game, picking up every little flaw (dependent on the coaches capability of course). A focussed eye will find and work through flaws in a player's game/skills far more effectively and quicker to resolve them, than a having a general view of numerous players.
I am not necassarily proposing that the ex Carlton players to be THE skills coach (unless they are the best available), but to have them focussing on, and mentoring a young kid, with a view to helping identify weaknesses with them one on one to work through the flaw. With a focussed eye.
We have 3 skills coaches at present (part time or full time?); a ruck coach in Dempsey, a KP coach in Daniher and a midfield coach in Libba. 3 skills coaches for 44 players. That's my point. We have an unusually high number of kids in that group with skills deficiencies (which is the norm for rookies), but only 3 coaches. Nobody is working enough with the kids one on one. Then we wonder why our skills are below par. They're only kids.
How many ruckmen is Dempsey looking after? 7?
How many KP players is TD looking after? 12?
How many midfielders is Libba looking after? 15?
Forget Mitchell he has the Bullants seniors to look after.
Furthermore, the club has had its spirit tested since 2002. In fact, there has been more focus on Carlton off field woes since 2002, than where it should be; on the field with the players. Along with that, the spirit around the club has been diluted or misguided/misdirected. We need to get that spirit back into the team on the field.
Kids on our list who are now 18, 19, 20 or 21 were 13, 14, 15 or 16 in 2002, too young to feel the spirit of Carlton, and too young to know about '95, '87, '81, and '82. How are they to know? Reminding players constantly who we are, what we stand for, and how we're going to achieve greatness. Keep the spirit up.
I think that the successful players of the past, have enough currency to inspire and inject this spirit in the kids. After all we are hoping that these kids become 10 year players. I want to give them every opportunity to make those 10 years count as successful years; for the players and the club.