Author Topic: Hardwick named Tigers coach  (Read 11238 times)

Offline WA Tiger

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #75 on: August 26, 2009, 08:35:49 PM »
Gee some of you already whinging..... the contract is too long, the hype is too much, the typical words are being said.... ra ra ra. Shut the eff up and be happy for a change, back the new coach in and the club. :banghead

WELL DONE RICHMOND AND CONGRATULATIONS HARDWICK, welcome to the biggest club in the AFL!!!!!
I was having a go at the media not the club WAT  :thumbsup. Hardwick spoke very well. If he can implement and install what he wants into the team then we'll be very happy. He's got a big job ahead of him.



No offence mate I was just generalising, you know how it can go.. back at you.. :thumbsup
DIMMA - You will be held ACCOUNTABLE...

“We are really excited about what we have brought in. We have got great depth of players that can take us where we need to go. We are just putting some cream on the top at the moment,” he said.

"Rucks:
Shaun Hampson is the No.1 man"

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Hardwick on SEN @ 5.45pm
« Reply #76 on: August 26, 2009, 09:39:31 PM »
Looks like we're gonna be hearing a lot more about processes!


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Offline 3rogerd

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #77 on: August 26, 2009, 09:57:00 PM »
how many games in before usual suspects will wanting his head. :rollin

Offline WA Tiger

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #78 on: August 26, 2009, 10:38:01 PM »
Just finished watching the 18 minute interview with Hardwick and he did not let me down!! Very impressive, very honest and straight to the point, he knows where this club needs to go and the players should expect and will recieve no mercy and about bloody time!!

He actually blew me away by embracing the club immediately and passionately. Loved it when he said a Richmond football club jumper will not be thrown on the floor while he is at the club, I also love his confidence.

Bring on 2010, judjing by his enthusiasm I reckon he can't wait either.. :thumbsup
DIMMA - You will be held ACCOUNTABLE...

“We are really excited about what we have brought in. We have got great depth of players that can take us where we need to go. We are just putting some cream on the top at the moment,” he said.

"Rucks:
Shaun Hampson is the No.1 man"

Offline WA Tiger

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #79 on: August 26, 2009, 10:39:04 PM »
how many games in before usual suspects will wanting his head. :rollin

Training during the pre-season should hark them up... :thumbsup
DIMMA - You will be held ACCOUNTABLE...

“We are really excited about what we have brought in. We have got great depth of players that can take us where we need to go. We are just putting some cream on the top at the moment,” he said.

"Rucks:
Shaun Hampson is the No.1 man"

Offline one-eyed

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Old Richmond champs give new man thumbs-up (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #80 on: August 27, 2009, 04:38:10 AM »
Old Richmond champs give new man thumbs-up
Jon Ralph | August 27, 2009

RICHMOND greats have lauded the appointment of Damien Hardwick, with Kevin Sheedy labelling him the ideal candidate.

Sheedy was at one stage a candidate for the role, but pulled out well before Hardwick was appointed.

Hardwick won the first of his two flags under Sheedy, and the Essendon coaching legend encouraged him to be true to his personality as a player.

"If he can get a team to play footy the way he played himself, it will be a great start," Sheedy told the Herald Sun.

"I am really pleased Damien had got an opportunity. Obviously his time at Essendon, Port Adelaide and Hawthorn has given him nearly two decades in successful clubs."

Tony Jewell, the club's last premiership coach in 1980, said the task was massive.

"It will be a tough gig for him but he's got a good pedigree. He was a terrific player, and the ultimate team player," he said.

Four-time Richmond premiership coach Tom Hafey and club legend Francis Bourke said the club had made a smart decision.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,25986886-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Hard man now the head man (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #81 on: August 27, 2009, 04:40:24 AM »
Hard man now the head man
Mark Robinson | August 27, 2009

THE Essendon half-back line of 2000 was Hardwick, Wallis, Solomon. Tough, uncompromising, snipey, all of them.

The first bloke particularly was thought to have white line fever.

As for him being an AFL coach, Dean Wallis, assistant coach of Fremantle, thinks it bizarre.

"Amazing and bizarre," Wallis said yesterday. "For someone who hated training, who hated meetings, who hated all things other than playing the game, gone a full circle to be now a senior AFL coach, and all my teammates and anyone who knows Damien Hardwick would've thought, 'S..t'.

"He was bizarre when it came to training, he hated hot and colds, hated recovery, 'this is bulls..t, why are we doing this for, bloody hell, this is crap, what are we doing'.

"He just wanted to play the game, he was anal. He crossed that white line and all he worried about was playing footy - just give me a jumper, give me a footy and let me go and beat up the opposition."

He was good at that, Hardwick, the beating up and the aggression, but that undersells him as a player.

He played 207 games, kicked 14 goals, is a two-time premiership player with Essendon (2000) and Port Adelaide (2004) and was an assistant coach when Hawthorn won last year's flag.

He is an Essendon best-and-fairest winner ('98) and All-Australian (2000).

In the Bombers' premiership campaign, Hardwick was an inspirational, fearless competitor.

"I don't know what Dimma was on but as soon as he stepped over that white line, he was a different cookie. I suppose we all knew what each of us was doing, we just looked at each other gave a wink and a nod, and our philosophy back there was junkyard dogs," Wallis said.

"Anyone who came into our backyard, we'd attack them, and we did it better than most."

Wallis said Hardwick was a smiling assassin. "He'd punch you in the gob with a smile on his face," he laughed.

As a footballer, Wallis was in awe.

"We got a DVD of us about that time, around '99 and 2000, and some of the amazing work he did, just putting his body on the line, the great chase and tackles, going back with the flight of the ball and getting crunched," Wallis said.

"I remember one day in the showers after the game, Jason Johnson and Dimma were standing side by side and comparing battle scars and bruises," Wallis said. "That's how they got off on footy, seeing how beat up they could get."

Hardwick was always a "tough" footballer but he also could play.

As a youngster at Upwey-Tecoma in the Dandenongs, he used to play in the centre.

"I was coached by my old man, who was a good coach but he was very harsh," Hardwick said yesterday. "I don't think he ever gave me a best-and-fairest vote throughout my whole career.

"I think when I first started I was a centreman but I was just a bit ... the skills weren't up to it, so you always went down back if you didn't have great skills.

"Then obviously I went and learned under Denis Pagan and spent a couple of years there, got delisted at North Melbourne, went to Springvale, had my jaw broken in my first game there in three places.

"Then I was very fortunate that Denis took me across to Essendon with him, at the highly-regarded pick of 87, I was that year in the draft."

His old man and Pagan were influential figures in his career.

He told his dad on Tuesday night he had won the Richmond job. "(Dad said) "I think 'you bloody ripper' was his first one."

Pagan yesterday said he was surprised Hardwick wasn't a senior coach already.

"He was very hard and tough, uncompromising the way he played his football," he said.

"In 1992, I got the tip-toe, there were no under-19s then and I think Damien did, too.

"I went to Essendon and I rang Damien up - there were supplementary lists then.

"There wasn't a lot of interest at the start, but he played a few games in the reserves and he was outstanding, he won everyone over with his approach and desire."

After Pagan returned home to North Melbourne to start his dynasty, Hardwick was one of the foundations of which Kevin Sheedy built his.

Sheedy simplified his approach: To beat the best, you had to be tougher than the best and the best and toughest was North Melbourne. Sheedy used Hardwick, Solomon, Long, Wallis, the Johnsons, Barnard and others as, as one person put it, natural born killers.

Hardwick ended with the Bombers in 2001 and said at the time to being "disillisioned" with his transfer to Port Adelaide.

The Bombers were in salary cap strife but, later in the same year, broke with tradition and awarded Hardwick life membership after nine years service and not 10.

Hardwick said he loved the Bombers, but playing against them in a final in 2002, he got fined $8000 for starting a blue before the siren.

No one would've expected any different.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,25986824-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Back to the future for Tigers' new man (Age)
« Reply #82 on: August 27, 2009, 04:42:46 AM »
Back to the future for Tigers' new man
Rohan Connolly | August 27, 2009

Damien Hardwick's Hawthorn stint will be invaluable.

PERHAPS the most significant moment of Damien Hardwick's first public appearance as Richmond coach yesterday came when he was asked how his five years as an assistant at Hawthorn had prepared him for the task.

''It gives you a fair blueprint of what needs to be done,'' he said. ''There are some similar traits here to when I first arrived at Hawthorn, and there's no doubt that will hold me in good stead.''

As the football world ponders just what sort of coach the 13th man to hold the Richmond job since the club won its last premiership in 1980 will be, that remark said plenty. Both in a practical and cultural sense.

Like the Tigers have been for a long time now, Hawthorn, when Hardwick arrived as an assistant to Alastair Clarkson in 2005, was a club at which its golden era, via the sheer weight of powerful and influential football figures it created around the place, was beginning to become as much a millstone as a happy memory.

Hardwick played an active role in clearing out those cultural cobwebs, allowing the latter-day Hawks to create their own aura. And, says a close football confidant of his, he'll have no problem taking the same tack at Punt Road. ''I've got no doubt he'll really try to create a new culture there,'' says the friend. ''That's the biggest issue he's got, and he'll address it. Making sure the type of people around the footy club are the right ones, the ones you really do want around the place.''

That is the bigger-picture stuff. The more immediate and obvious impact Hardwick will have on Richmond is in the type of player he introduces to the list and the sort of football the Tigers will play, another area in which he has had a big impact at Hawthorn. Already, he's indicated that a player's ability to ''win the hard ball when it's your turn'' will be a non-negotiable, hardly surprising given his own reputation as a hard-nosed defender in his 207 games and two premierships with Essendon and Port Adelaide.

Even before the ''kicks in the arse'' he received on his way to forging an AFL career, like being delisted by North Melbourne after two years in the under 19s, then having his jaw broken in his first game with VFA club Springvale, Hardwick did it hard. As a youngster, he was coached by his father at Upwey-Tecoma. ''He was a good coach, but he was very harsh,'' Hardwick reflected with a smile yesterday. ''I don't think he ever gave me a best-and-fairest vote throughout my whole career.''

The young Richmond line-ups over which he'll preside can expect a little more largesse, provided they stick to the Hardwick plan.

But the stereotyping of personality that can often go with the profile of the crusty half-back flanker would in his case also be a gross simplification. An intelligent man with a waspish sense of humour, Hardwick is by no means dour, and nor will his football team be.

Those who have worked alongside him during his coaching apprenticeship believe he will give the young faces likely to dominate on the Richmond list over the next three years every chance. ''He'd rather play a kid and lose and at least know there's some direction there than go for the same old," said one former colleague. ''He's a bit left-of-centre in a lot of ways, not afraid to experiment, definitely not just straight down the line.''

The former colleague said Hardwick wasn't afraid to give his players plenty of input. ''He's very good at running meetings and getting player input. He'll keep asking them questions and getting them involved.''

The most obvious similarity Richmond supporters might see with the Hawthorn of today is in the application of the defensive zone, which caught so many of the Hawks' opponents on the hop when they won their unexpected premiership last year. While as senior coach, Clarkson was the most obvious face of one of football's most radical and successful strategies of the modern era, Hardwick played an enormous part in its implementation. As at Hawthorn, when it comes to recruitment, kicking skills will also be at a premium for Hardwick's Tigers.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/rfnews/back-to-the-future-for-tigers-new-man/2009/08/26/1251001942730.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

TigerTimeII

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #83 on: August 27, 2009, 07:54:28 AM »
sometimes it takes something small to make someone change their minds, at first hinkley was my preferred option

but as soon as i heard hardwick say that our jumper will never hit the ground while he is coach , he won me over big time

Ramps shut up!!!!

and put that boner away!

 :lol :lol

Offline Smokey

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #84 on: August 27, 2009, 09:21:11 AM »
Well, now that we have named our coach it already feels much more 'calm' around the place.  It's much easier to deal in knowns.   :thumbsup

My first choice didn't make it to the last 2 and my second choice lost out to Hardwick but I have no great concerns with that - I am happy that the process was thorough and exhaustive and threw up the best possible candidates for us to make a final choice.  Now that Hardwick is our coach he has my total and unqualified support and like others on here I have been impressed thus far with his words and demeanor.  Like any new coach he will have a honeymoon or grace period before the expectations of the masses will begin to judge him and that time won't be until well into next season at the earliest.  Until then he brings a breath of fresh air and hope that had been killed off in the latter stages of the Wallace era.  I don't care so much if he plans to cull savagely or if he decides to give a few a last crack - what will matter far more importantly to me is how he goes about changing and developing a winning mindset and strength of character in the playing list, regardless of who that might consist of.  That's the stuff that will have much more long term positive impact on our club.  So welcome aboard Damien, thank you for accepting the challenge that we present, and good luck.  I won't say you will need the luck, I'm a believer in making your own.

 :gotigers

Ramps

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #85 on: August 27, 2009, 09:25:46 AM »
sometimes it takes something small to make someone change their minds, at first hinkley was my preferred option

but as soon as i heard hardwick say that our jumper will never hit the ground while he is coach , he won me over big time

Ramps shut up!!!!

and put that boner away!

 :lol :lol

Ramps Public Relations NL is very pleased with the result. Anyone needing Electronic Public Relations strategies can contact me on here and I will personally turn the tide of Public Opinion in your favor  :D.

As for TT your stupidity never ceases to amaze but if your prepared to pay my PR fee then I am willing to exercise my new found PR strategies and knowledge to ensure that you become a well respected member of this forum  ;D

TigerTimeII

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #86 on: August 27, 2009, 04:27:50 PM »
sometimes it takes something small to make someone change their minds, at first hinkley was my preferred option

but as soon as i heard hardwick say that our jumper will never hit the ground while he is coach , he won me over big time

Ramps shut up!!!!

and put that boner away!

 :lol :lol

Ramps Public Relations NL is very pleased with the result. Anyone needing Electronic Public Relations strategies can contact me on here and I will personally turn the tide of Public Opinion in your favor  :D.

As for TT your stupidity never ceases to amaze but if your prepared to pay my PR fee then I am willing to exercise my new found PR strategies and knowledge to ensure that you become a well respected member of this forum  ;D

ur welcome ramps but its all good

as im not here to prove my intelligence or gain respect as the ppl that matter know who i am and what i am

on here , i can be many different people lol, depending on what mood im in , but as u know i love to stir the pot a bit lol

the more ppl that hate me on here the better

anyway lets hope that our new coach gets all our wicks hard over the next 3 yrs and beyond

if not , we will be sending viagra to punt rd not chicken poo!!!

Offline cub

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #87 on: August 27, 2009, 06:21:09 PM »
^






Offline one-eyed

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #88 on: August 28, 2009, 07:43:46 PM »
Rohan Connolly on 3aw reckons not only will Hardwick cut hard into the list but will be big on only bringing in players with good footskills as he saw that at Hawthorn. Hellalujah if true!

Offline rbartlett

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Re: Hardwick named Tigers coach / official announcement at 10.30am Wed
« Reply #89 on: August 29, 2009, 12:22:25 AM »

For your reference, Damien Hardwick becomes the 38th known person to coach the Richmond Football Club.
http://www.rhettrospective.com/tikiwiki/tiki-index.php?page=Richmond%20Football%20Club%20senior%20coach


- Rhett Bartlett
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