Author Topic: Inside Hardwick’s premiership years: Dad jokes, records & Queen cover band (Age)  (Read 611 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Inside Hardwick’s premiership years: Dad jokes, vinyl records and the Queen cover band

Konrad Marshall
The Age
May 24, 2023


The first time I spoke at length with Damien Hardwick about coaching mortality, he sat at the big oval-shaped desk inside the Tigerland war room, only months after surviving an ill-conceived coup. “You enter this game knowing there’s a bullet out there with your name on it,” he said. There was precious little to indicate that one day he himself would be the trigger man.

Or was there? He did talk about the grind, the constancy, and the way the creeping tendrils of the job insinuate themselves into every aspect of your life. He mused a little, too, on what the end might look like, and smiled at the thought. “I might finally get to see Greece in summer.” I heard him say that more than once.

I was lucky enough to write three books about Richmond’s three flags under Dimma’s watch, remaining connected to the club since January 2016 in a way that goes well beyond the dreams of my lifelong fandom, and to me, the most striking aspect of the great cultural transformation at Richmond has always been the coach.

In 2016, the players spoke lovingly of him, but also of a highly specific playing method that required study - sometimes hours of homework each week - within an atmosphere of complexity and control, and - for some of them, at least some of the time - confusion. But he was no automaton. He was a rousing figure, with passion and combustible emotion always on display.

I used to sit in the briefing room before big matches, watching and listening as the coach delivered fire and brimstone oratories in the minutes before the first bounce. After one such soliloquy, then football manager Dan Richardson turned to me in the back row. “One of his best,” he said, smiling and excited. “Chills.” The hair on the back of my neck was up, too. But the Tigers lost. And kept losing. The bakes and sprays after the losses were memorable, too, except for those times when - “Konrad, can you leave the room for a minute” - there was nothing for me to remember.

The fateful off-season before 2017 happened, and that’s been well dissected - new leadership philosophies and programs were brought in, along with new assistants and players and cultural figures, but the biggest shift was always within the man in the middle, and his rare ability and willingness at that moment to shed that micromanaging side of himself.

He began sharing his silly side more - the dad jokes, yes, but also the rambling stories with stupid non sequiturs. Before one of the biggest games of the 2017 season, his pre-game speech riffed on a short video of his daughter utterly destroying him in a game of Connect 4, and the coach having a tantrum about it.

Before another game, he wanted to explain - at length, eating into game analysis time - why he had a red spot on his forehead. Apparently he had tried to clean his favourite water bottle by shaking it full of boiling water, and when he unscrewed the lid it exploded all over his bonce.


Richmond’s “munted selves”: Part of Damien Hardwick’s inspiration for the Tigers before the 2017 AFL grand final. The message was that these imperfect head shots of his players were what he wanted to see, as grand finals were imperfect and messy.

The visual aid before the 2017 grand final was an A3 sheet with a headshot of every player in the team, only these headshots were action photos, with their tongues lolling out to the side, or their eyes half closed, jawlines kilter or cheeks stretched in panic. They looked ridiculous.

Dimma called them “the munted heads” - but in their expressions he saw individuality and imperfection, and that was what he expected to see because grand finals are imperfect and messy, and he would need them each to bring their best munted selves to the field to meet the moment.

In subsequent years these little expressions of affection turned even more overt. He started giving players gifts related to the theme of the week, whether a De Walt hammer or an NFL ball.

Often the gifts were personalised. A vinyl record, for instance, for each player - Liam Baker got Lose Yourself by Eminem, Kamdyn McIntosh got I Am The Walrus, while Straight Outta Compton seemed the best fit for Dustin Martin - and he penned a handwritten letter for each player explaining why.

At some point, it all started to sound a bit cultish, and outsiders would sneer a little about this perception of Richmond exceptionalism, from the mindfulness program that had players laying in darkened rooms, imaging lines of purple energy emitted from their body and linking them on field, to the tearful “Triple H” sessions in which players broke down sharing three stories about a hero, hardship and highlights from their most intimate lives.

It was all a bit too easy for some to assume the Tiges were drinking kumbaya Kool Aid. Imagine what the punditry would have thought in the days before one preliminary final when the entire playing list and coaching staff sat in the old change rooms of the Jack Dyer Stand, coming together in a frenzied Senegalese drum circle, or the day before another preliminary final, when Dimma invited a Queen cover band to rock the entire club in the Maurice Rioli Room. (We are the champions, indeed.)

Vulnerability and authenticity may well have become buzzwords in the wider sporting world, but the belief in them at Richmond was carefully practised and planted and nurtured, and that only happens when the coach - the sun within the solar system of any club - shines on those programs.

He found that they dovetailed well with his tactical acumen, too, with a defence built on system but dependent on trust and anticipation, and an attack predicated on sharing the footy - the so-called “Spurs mentality” of always putting a teammate in a position to score, giving up a good shot in favour of a great shot - and the desire to “fight forward”, even if through grubby handballs and tap ons and blast kicks.

In a measured and quantified world that so often focuses on weaknesses, Dimma focused on strengths: “I love your run, Bachar” and “Keep jumping, Jack” and “We look our best when you’re hunting, Cotch.” He knew what it meant to us, too, in the grandstands, and in private meetings with his players he would ask them: “Tomorrow night, what do you want the fans to see?”

He knew what he wanted to see, commissioning his audiovisual team to assemble game clips set to music, so the players could watch ragged, dirty passages of play, and he could shake his head and smile at how proud he was of their ability to corral and chase and menace.

Or he might stop match review vision to demand applause for a player nowhere near the ball, who stopped an exit from an opposition forward line because of a selfless 100-metre sprint to stand on a vacant patch of grass on the fat side of the ground. He saw everything that unfolded on the field, but more importantly he let the players know that he saw them, too, and how they fit within the story of any game.

He was a storyteller to the end, and his favourites were always seemingly about mountains. Overcoming the perilous final “Hillary Step” on Mount Everest perhaps, or the treachery and danger of the Bottleneck on K2. On a trip to America, Dimma stood at the bottom of the Dawn Wall of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, and marvelled at how a person might claw their way up, alone, with no rope, free-climbing its sheer face.

He constantly compared the AFL season - and even specific matches - to that act of scaling a mountain, imploring his players to strive for the summit together, step after step.

With the announcement of his resignation on Tuesday, it simply feels as though he didn’t have another ascent in him - not right now anyway. Maybe putting one foot in front of the other, climbing that mountain again and again, became too Sisyphean for him to contemplate. Maybe right now he doesn’t want to climb. Maybe he just wants to go for a walk.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/inside-hardwick-s-premiership-years-dad-jokes-vinyl-records-and-the-queen-cover-band-20230524-p5data.html

Offline Simonator

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That’s a great read and what an insight. Dimma really gave everything. I wonder if this level of dedication is the standard ?

Offline rogerd3

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And people threw barbs at him about his tactical nouse.
 :shh