Blue Vain wrote:
GWS wrote:
Of our players under 22 who would you have in the seniors and who would you have in the Bullants at the moment?
I agree with your post GWS, I think the mix is pretty good. The promotion of Jesse Smith was timely and I would like to see Livo given the last few games.
Apart from that, I believe Denis has done well and I've given him credit for that this year. I would however like to see the kids get a bit more time, especially JR.
There is no doubt that Denis has changed enormously this year. His willingness to play kids and to institute a "contemporary" game plan is refreshing and overdue. Full credit to him.
However, I firmly believe our players have suffered from his regressive approach of 2003/4 and I cant forgive that.
This is the first thread on this subject I've seen with worthwhile debate.
There's an element of what Blue Vain writes I agree with, although I'm not sure how much Pagan should be condemned from another perpective.
As GWS pointed out, Pagan arrived to a basket case of a club, a demotivated playing list missing significant talent, and off-field problems as great as those facing any other incoming coach.
Whether correctly or not, Pagan determined that a back-to-basics approach was in order to turn around the culture of the players. Changing organisational culture is incredibly difficult, often necessitating an exaggerated approach to get to middle ground.
In a sense, the simplistic game-plan reflected this approach. Essentially it was a case of getting the players to do the ordinary things extraordinarily well, as Robert Walls once said. This laid the groundwork, enabling the defensive development of players such as Walker, Simpson et al.
The problem was the game-plan was out of date, but this doesn't necessarily mean our players were significantly disadvantaged in the long term. Watching our performance against Melbourne last week illustrated just how far players such as Walker have come. While we are a young team, it is now being consistently noted how much sustained pressure we place on the opposition.
Blue Vain is correct: some of the out-of-date training would have had a negative impact, but I think it also laid the foundations for success better than we might realise.