Not sure if this article from The Age August 23rd re Longmuir has already been posted:
"Freo favourite Longmuir met with Saints.
Fremantle coaching favourite Justin Longmuir has also attracted interest from St Kilda, with the Collingwood assistant coaching meeting with the Saints' coaching subcommittee earlier this month.
Longmuir and fellow Magpies assistant Robert Harvey have both been spoken to by St Kilda as the Saints move closer to appointing a full-time replacement for Alan Richardson, who resigned in anticipation of being sacked from St Kilda in July.
Caretaker coach Brett Ratten remains the short-priced favourite to replace Richardson, with Ratten having impressed players and staff at Moorabbin since arriving at the club at the end of last season.
But that has not stopped the Saints' coaching selection subcommittee - comprised of president Andrew Bassat, football director Dean Anderson, chief executive Matt Finnis, general manager of football Simon Lethlean and the AFL's head of coaching David Rath - from sounding out candidates from rivals clubs.
The Age understands the Saints panel met Longmuir earlier this month, while Harvey has remained in contact with St Kilda as recently as this week, meeting Lethlean in public in the lead-up to round 23.
Harvey applied for the Saints' coaching job in 2011 after Ross Lyon departed, but St Kilda chose Scott Watters, a move which ultimately didn't work. Harvey has since worked at Collingwood, sharing a strong bond with Pies coach Nathan Buckley.
Longmuir has won rave reviews since arriving at the Holden Centre at the end of 2017, shaping the club's defence which took them to within a goal of a premiership last year. The Pies have remained one of the stingiest defences in the competition in 2019. The former Fremantle forward/ruck, who spent seven years as an assistant at West Coast before heading with his family to Victoria, has been installed by corporate bookmakers as one of two clear favourites to replace Lyon - who was sacked this week - at the Dockers. Former Fremantle assistant Peter Sumich - who coached Western Australia's under-18s to a national title this year - is the other man widely viewed to be a frontrunner in the race to succeed Lyon. Buckley said earlier this week that he expected Longmuir to be in the mix for the Dockers job. "He's been so impressive. He's aspired to senior coaching through his journey and he's continued to school himself up," Buckley said. "His relationship building with the players has been first-class. "I've got no doubt that he could do the job and it's up to the club that look at him to work out whether he's the right fit."
So Ratten, Harvey and Longmuir have been interviewed. Given Ratts comments last Saturday that he would know one way or another in 7 to 10 days whether or not he gets the job, it sounds like a decision could be made early next week....
I don't have a clear favourite out of Ratten/Harvey/Longmuir.