markp wrote:ohwhenthesaints! wrote:markp wrote:Otiman wrote:markp wrote:Voss will be the next Tim Watson.
I don't believe so.
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I'll be gob-smacked if he (or anyone) can make a go of it in an caper that gets more complex and demanding every year, without serving an apprenticeship first.
Tony Shaw was a leader of men too.... counted for little.
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I disagree about his looking uncomfortable, IMO he seems to love the limelight. I really fail to see what a vocabulary has to do with it, he will either be able to motivate his players or not...
I was referring to his speech at the Brownlow, obviously no-one should take that as an indication of his potential coaching ability.
I think it would be fascinating to be a bug on the wall during a Cousins/Voss recruitment interview. It would almost definately flow both ways, as Cousins would need to resolve the very issues that are speculated on in this thread.
I'm not sure how Voss will go (I've certainly trotted out the Timmy Watson comparison a few times - much safer to predict failure than success), the thing that really shocks me about the hiring is that it flies in the face of most recent developments at AFL coaching level. The story seems to run that Voss was offered the job as the result of a handshake agreement that he had with the Lions that he'd be the next coach; he'd taken the role at WCE as part of an "apprenticeship".
It surprises me that the Lions AND Voss both decided the "apprenticeship" wasn't necessary. Essentially, Voss enters the coaching arena as a great unknown. He's now coaching players who were teammates not long before (and the only example I can think of for this in recent times is Roos - a success, I don't know if Worsfold coached any ex-teammates, but he'd also have to be considered a success, similarly don't know about Laidley who has a more mixed resume), with only a smattering on his resume that doesn't involve being a player or commentator.
His assistants have more coaching experience than he does.
His skills as a tactician, as a motivator (and motivating from the sidelines is different to leading on the field), as a list manager, as a long term strategic thinker are all unknowns, not just to us, not just to the Lions, but to himself.
Clearly he has convinced himself - and that's a start, if unsurprising - and the Lions. If he can convince Cousins, it might be a signal that he's got some of the skills necessary to the job. Similarly, if he simply drafts Cousins without much consultation, it may demonstrate him to be autocratic (with all the benefits and hindrances that come with that).
All we can say for sure is that Voss represents to the Cousins saga much what he does to the AFL coaching profession - a wildcard.