gerry atric wrote:
jimmae wrote:
How is Paul Roos moving to the boundary line an original idea by him? There's only so many places you can position a coach, and they've all been done well before him in this sport.
Well in AFL/VFL, coaching from the boundary line went out when Ron Barrassi came in. So it is over 40 years since it has been done which is many generations of teams and players, so I think it is reasonable to call it a new idea. Certainly the set up is. In the old days with coaches on the bench no-one watched from the box, there were no elevated boxes. Roos did it and now several coaches have followed. Roos didn't ever coach in a grand final from the boundary though. Maybe it is the future, but I don't think you can watch a game effectively from ground level. Anyone on this site choose to watch from the front row?
I think it offers something for the coaches. It doesn't always make for a great spectacle, but the coach can see the game from the perspective of the players.
Any mug can sit in the box and see what's unfolding, and any mug coach can tell you what's occurring tactically so long as they're on staff. You want some of the quality analysts' eyes on the ground taking in the 'reality' of it, and your best communicators interacting with the players during the quarter.
Perhaps it was fine to be detached 15 years ago when players would come off for a rub-down, to suck in some oxygen or to be dragged but now with tactical rotations, measured rotations and the like, why not use the time to deliver further instruction and reinforce good play?