Still he is a career coach lets hope he contracts a dose of Richmonditis and begins to love the club, left the dogs in the lurch IMHO
I have to say H Tiger, TW’s departure from the Bulldogs was one of my concerns about having him as coach. But having heard him speak about it a number of times and having thought about it, I now realise he actually did them a favour by being honest and up-front about the whole thing.
Another Coach might well have dutifully stayed on till the bitter end. But, being such a pro active person meant that TW couldn’t stay in the new circumstances he found himself in. And if he was the sort of Coach that would’ve stayed on, prepared to hit his head against a brick wall, then it’s unlikely he would be the sort of Coach that could help us now.
TW has explained several times his reasons for leaving and that he had put together what he thought was a good group of coaching staff. But due to financial constraints, mid-term, the Club let 4 of those people go. Which, to TW, rightly or wrongly, was an untenable situation, when he’d spent a few years putting that team of staff together. He saw the writing on the wall and resigned. Everyone jumped up and down about TW resigning mid-term, but not when his staff was let go mid-term. Two wrongs don’t make a right, but most of the flak seems to go one-way on this. Whether that’s all there is to it or not I wouldn’t know.
TW know his own strengths and weaknesses and developed a team of assistants that could help him get the best out of his players and this group was all but taken out from under him. I think the thing that most couldn’t deal with was the fact that TW was just honest about the situation, from his side of things and others didn’t understand.
What would be worse, having a Coach stay on and just go through the motions for a couple of seasons until his contract is up, knowing that he no longer has the resources available to get the same out of his players that he did before? Or moving on and letting someone else with the enthusiasm to do the job take over, knowing and being comfortable, from the outset, with the circumstances he would be dealing with?
Wouldn’t it just be cheating the players, supporters and everyone else by staying on when you know things aren’t as they were before and are unlikely to improve in the short-term? Maybe that’s a selfish way to look at things, but why continue to do something when you know you’re on a hiding to nothing? And didn’t others want TW to stay on for their own selfish reasons as well?
At least Terry was able to be honest with himself and move on, without having others dictate what was in his best interests. As a result, and even though it took some time, he was able to put himself in a position where he is now in a role that someone like him can thrive in, because he gets to call the shots. Some people just don’t need the feeling of hitting their head against a wall, time after time. Unlike some Richmond supporters I know.