jimmae wrote:
What happened to the idea of a quiet strength?
I have no doubt Ratten's is a very determined character. He wouldn't have become a great footballer or a decent AFL coach while overcoming his natural diffidence without being mentally strong. He might end up being a very good coach, given enough time. He might even win the flag this year!
He doesn't exude a calm sense of mastery, maverick charisma, empathetic / nurturing man-management, hard-edged discipline or alpha-male leadership. I know these coaching archetypes don't guarantee success, but none of these come naturally to Ratts, and most successful coaches have most of these traits in various mixtures.
As an aside, "quiet strength" isn't the image I get when Ratts is cheering "go Blues" after a goal. Why does he do that? Maybe because he can't effectively communicate his passion and care to the players (is he the only coach in modern football history who loves his club?). Or when he waxes lyrical about "the champ". These are fanboy indulgences, not "quiet strength".
I hope he succeeds, he's one of the good guys. But nice guys don't often finish first.