joffaboy wrote:I find it amusing that people are discussing this like Lyon would have had no imput in the process or the decision.
Nettlefield was on SEN and said RL was the proactive force driving this change.
Really there is much jumping at shadows, especially from a certain ex coach who has not been at the club in six years.
Nettlefield, when asked to comment on Thomas's views from FC last night, just said, no I wont comment and then went on to explain the position that Pelchen would fill - said it was very similiar to Drains and it wasn't earth shattering.
Goodness there are a lot of nervous nellies out in SS land.
Wouldn't want to be in the trenches with you lot
I'm not at all surprised MN has said RTB was the proactive force driving the change. Ross clearly loves coaching and any move that maximises his concentration on coaching would have his support. We've had a few goes at trying to get this right (Drain, Peake in recruiting) without rip roaring success, given their shortish tenures. Ross would have found those deficiencies distracting him from coaching.
Some seem, also, to have hurdled from the Pelchen appointment to every bloke over the age of about 21 getting the bullet. If that was the case, then Pelchen would be reversing most of what he did at Port Adelaide and Hawthorn.
Pelchen didn't look to 'juniorfy' the whole playing list at Hawthorn. He looked to get balance in the list. He was one of the first to pursue the age band process, where you seek to have a balance of players in the new, developing, prime and experienced bands. That process might involve a tweak, if you're close, or a longer process, if the starting point is some way off the right balance.
The evidence from his time at Hawthorn suggests he stuck to that principle. While many only recall the young players he got to Hawthorn, in recent times he did get Dew (resurrected 'ol Fatty and he played well in a premiership), Burgoyne and Bruce (not sure about that one!) to Hawthorn to address list balance. He also plucked a few mature age newbies along the way.
I do not believe anybody in the heirachy would have gone down Pelchen Road without Ross being enthusiastically behind it. They know who is the football head of this club and it's Ross. They trust him, they almost revere him. None of them would do anything to p!ss him off, because thus far it's been a mighty fine result.
Pelchen's an ambitious, ruthless bastard. But, he's not stupid. He will well know how Ross is regarded at this footy club, and throughout the industry. He'll support Ross so that he can concentrate on coaching.
If Pelchen has real managerial capability he will know the best managers get the best results by supporting their best people. They stay out of their way, remove the obstacles to success and let them get on with it.
Alternatively, if he's more a political operator, he'll know that Ross is The Boss, anyway, and, therefore, he'll stay well clear of any thoughts of Lenny moving on. I'm sure Pelchen understands footy club man love!
Good move, I reckon.
'I have no new illusions, and I have no old illusions' - Vladimir Putin, Geneva, June 2021