We had 25 years of failure before they even brought in zoning, but you're right, we certainly didn't get one of the stronger zones. The club was badly managed for decades in both a football and a business sense. We never really expected success - which is one reason 2005 was such a surreal experience for me. There was a general perception that we were "too nice", but Roos has shown that "niceness" is not incompatible with success. He has managed to tap in to one aspect of the club's tradition - a commitment to fair play and camaraderie on all levels - but has managed to add to that a grittiness that had been absent for a very long time. We always had a few gritty, highly skilled players, which is why we've won so many Brownlows, but only since Roos has that quality been instilled in the entire team (with the odd exception here and there).
Is Tadhg kennelly coming back to the swans? YES HE IS!
Collapse
X
-
I can't say I agree, Annie. Jack Bissett took the club to four consecutive grand finals in the 1930s as captain/coach. So far, Roos has taken us to two.
If we had won consecutive flags, I would have been prepared to say Roos had been our best coach. But unfortunately, we all know what happened in 2006.
I can't comment on Jack Bissett. I'm sure he was dead way before I was born.Wild speculation, unsubstantiated rumours, silly jokes and opposition delight in another's failures is what makes an internet forum fun.
Blessed are the cracked for they are the ones who let in the light.Comment
-
also take into account the game was no where near the professional level in Blissets day as it is now - In reality, Blissets acheivements, whilst wonderful at the time, were really only the equivalent to simple suburban footy - not a national competion that there is now (and I'm not fond of Roos, but he has achieved big things).I used to be indecisive, but now I'm not so sure..................
Chickens drink - but they don't pee!
AGE IS ONLY IMPORTANT FOR TWO THINGS - WINE & CHEESE!Comment
-
also take into account the game was no where near the professional level in Blissets day as it is now - In reality, Blissets achievements....were really only the equivalent to simple suburban footy - not a national competition that there is now (and I'm not fond of Roos, but he has achieved big things).Comment
-
We had 25 years of failure before they even brought in zoning, but you're right, we certainly didn't get one of the stronger zones. The club was badly managed for decades in both a football and a business sense. We never really expected success - which is one reason 2005 was such a surreal experience for me. There was a general perception that we were "too nice", but Roos has shown that "niceness" is not incompatible with success. He has managed to tap in to one aspect of the club's tradition - a commitment to fair play and camaraderie on all levels - but has managed to add to that a grittiness that had been absent for a very long time. We always had a few gritty, highly skilled players, which is why we've won so many Brownlows, but only since Roos has that quality been instilled in the entire team (with the odd exception here and there).Comment
-
I used to be indecisive, but now I'm not so sure..................
Chickens drink - but they don't pee!
AGE IS ONLY IMPORTANT FOR TWO THINGS - WINE & CHEESE!Comment
-
The finals were played in (arguably) the strongest competition of the day....can't do any more than that.The eternal connundrum "what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object" was finally solved when David Hasselhoff punched himself in the face.Comment
-
We can't know how they'd perform in today's competition - although I suspect Laurie Nash and Bob Pratt, among others, would not have too much trouble getting selected.Comment
-
That's right - you can't make comparisons across eras. Jack Bissett and his teams did their very best against the competition of the day.
We can't know how they'd perform in today's competition - although I suspect Laurie Nash and Bob Pratt, among others, would not have too much trouble getting selected.I can't say I agree, Annie. Jack Bissett took the club to four consecutive grand finals in the 1930s as captain/coach. So far, Roos has taken us to two.
If we had won consecutive flags, I would have been prepared to say Roos had been our best coach. But unfortunately, we all know what happened in 2006.Does God believe in Atheists?Comment
-
Comment
-
But I still want to know how have I been disrespectful???? My original post read that I thought what he did at the time was wonderful - and it was - so how you read that as being disrespectful beggars belief!
But back on topic - Kennelly is back - lets hope we get a couple of years out of him, that he stays injury free (of course that goes for the entire team) and he might just be a member of our next premiership side (despite being at what some consider the ancient age of 28!)I used to be indecisive, but now I'm not so sure..................
Chickens drink - but they don't pee!
AGE IS ONLY IMPORTANT FOR TWO THINGS - WINE & CHEESE!Comment
-
I'm pleased to say I'm too young to know that, but the Richmond culture of the last 20 years has something in common with the way we used to be, although our supporters were never, ever that feral. We always loved our club regardless, and no-one ever spat on the coach.Comment
-
Comment