carltonac wrote:
Youth is not an excuse for pathetic coaching.
Ratten only has a Plan A, not a Plan B or Plan C. This is why he hasn't coached a win against, Clarkson, Craig, Knights, Roos, Lyon and Thompson.
What's Thompsons plan B or C? Or Clarkson....or Roos? Explain them to me.
It's time for some of you to get over it. It's not real. Multiple "gameplans" are nonsense made up in the mind of uninformed supporters.
A "game plan" is how a team is drilled to react to a series of events that occur in a game. It's not a book that the players carry in their back pocket!
The training drills attempt to simulate match situations and the players are expected to react in a manner that will create consistent, quality decision making on game day. That is what Ratten and the other 15 coaches are trying to achieve. Good decision making on a consistent basis.
Unfortunately for Ratten, his charges were beaten over the head with the dumbing stick for 5 years. There was little development of decision making under Pagan. It was a case of "do as I say", not "do as you think". We spoke about this multiple times. Players cannot catch up in the space of 18 months.
Developing the decision making of players is the same as developing any other skill. It takes time and some players will develop the skill faster than others.
At the moment, our players are reacting well to most situations however when our opponents flood the corridor or press up the ground, we are still struggling to work our way through those scenarios successfully. And when we successfully counter that, the opposition will try to devise a new way to break us down. It will take time.
The fact is all the coaches you mentioned (except Knights) have been in similar situations. They've all had their abilities and tactical nous questioned by the supporters and come out the other side. Time is the key!
Essendon* on the other hand will take their turn to come under scrutiny now. Teams put time and effort into us because we were rated as a viable opposition. Lets see how Essendon* fare now that teams are putting time into them.
As for Ratten, he'll keep working on our deficiencies. From what I've witnessed at training, his drills focus on improving our decision making and simulating match scenarios we struggle in. Unfortunately repetition and experience are the only answers. They take time.
We can whinge as much as we want but Ratten can only create the right environment for the players to learn. How long they take to actually become proficient in these areas is out of his hands.