On the subject of preparation for the new season, people forget that the likes of Hull had a pre season that started last October.
The 2009 season never even saw them made it to the playoffs, so from the sides perspective, they finished playing early September. That gives them a hell of a lot of time to rest and recuperate. This also applies to other cellar dwellar sides. Its why IMO we often see the weaker teams start off strong, then fade when the real big guns get upto speed.
Now look at Saints pre season, and also i would say Leeds as well. Their league season finished mid October, so with a months rest, pre season would only start November at the earliest. Now remember that Saints and Leeds both had significant numbers of players in the international set up, which meant they were playing RL till the back end of November. Hence we have the likes of James Graham commenting that his pre season was about one month, due to being given December off to recover.
Saints had Roby, Graham, Eastmond, Wilkin and Moore all playing in the internationals. So that means that quite a bit of our new playmaking nucleus didnt get much time to work on moves etc. Is it therefore any wonder that we are a little slow out of the blocks and looking ring rusty in the creative department.
The same also applies to Leeds by the way, who struggled against Celtic and were noticably battered by a Castleford side that doesnt possess anything like the firepower of Hull.
For me some of the issues at Saints are structural, and Potter has been given the job of building a new team for the decade ahead. He has taken on a tough and thankless task. His job is not to win trophys per se (they are a bonus), its to manage the transition, and to put in place the nucleus of a new era of success.
This is a difficult journey, and there will be some hard knocks to take along the way. However at the end of it, Saints will hopefully have the players with the skills to ensure the sides of the 21st centuries second decade, are as competitive and successful as those in the first decade.
I think its a fair analogy to say that Potters job is in some respects a mirror of Saints new stadium project. The new stadium has taken lots of planning and preparation over a number of years, and only now can we see the potential of whats to come. Along the way, the club, council and other officials have taken a lot of criticism and cynicism about whether the project was even serious. Now with the stadium nearing construction there is a general impatience to
get it built. The key of course is not to rush, but to put everything in place, so its built right, and leaves a lasting legacy. "Rome wasnt built in a day" as the old adage goes.