Pafloyul wrote:
aramari wrote:
Pafloyul wrote:
I don't like Roos' quick-fix mentality, pure and simple.
This mentality is flawed unless you have a great system, list management and culture. If you do, then you have a huge advantage over the competition. Mid-level picks for the likes of J Kennedy, Mumford, McGlynn etc is an exceptional outcome. Plug and play rather than waiting 3 years to see if a kid can cut it, and keep first rounders for elite young talent is a big win.
Roos's thinking at it's worst goes beyond a middling pick for the likes of Kennedy every now and then. At any rate, they obviously did their homework on that player and pretty much realised he could play as a starting midfielder if given the opportunity.
The Jury is still out whether Sydney have the balance right and Victorian clubs are not in a position to emulate Sydney's culture. Who is to say Roos would adjust his outlook to suit each club and different circumstances? You would have to treat everything as a 'case by case' scenario and not simply say 'we want to trade our second round pick for a player'. There is also a lot of difference between a wooden spooner's second round draft pick and a premiership sides one. I think the evidence suggests that Roos is of the old school, even if a superior example of that.
Can you take an ordinary player, and make him excellent? Can you identify a particular role for a player that hasn't yet found a niche? If you can do those things, you can do what the Swans did.
Melbourne went for experience last year and it was a disaster, unsurprisingly. If Roos tried it next year it would probably have middling success. After years of building a club to a high level of competence, it can work brilliantly. Helps if you have an extra 10% in the cap though...