: Sun Mar 01, 2009 11:31 pm
This is getting circular and repetitive very quickly - let's try and fix that.
Results
2008 was the worst season the club's had since 1998, no doubt. But it was not the catastrophe some make out. The club won more than half its games and did not fall outside the play-off zone as Wigan and Hull have done fairly of late. It's a situation I'd like to see improved, but not an unacceptable one that demands immediate action.
Looking at this season, it seems bizarre to me that results like drawing with Hull KR and getting pipped by Huddersfield are 'unacceptable' when they are superior to those that last season's second and thrd placed teams attained against the same opposition.
Recruitment
This is what Bradford's success was built on, but it's had the squeeze put on it by external factors
- other clubs' getting their act together (no one's letting any Jimmy Loweses go any more and plenty of others are in the market for anyone half-decent that comes available);
- lack of funds at the club;
- the drop off in youth development (Burgess and the rest vs Leon, JP, Fielden as was, Deacon) leaving more spots to be filled by outside bodies, if not youngsters who previously would not have got into the Bulls frst team squad.
Add that all together and it's unsurprising that McNamara's buys have had a lower success rate than Noble, Elliott and Smith's.
The McNamara regime is doing something to counter this problem
long-term by increasing focus on youth development, building links with Cumbria etc. In the short term the team has been left unbalanced by the failure to secure Mogg, Shenton and Bird, but given that Leeds and Saints also failed to pick up a decent centre this off-season, I can't see how McNamara can be held responsible for failing to magic up players who just aren't avalable to sign.
Tactics/Coaching
Here I'm on shaky ground, rarely seeing games. But results do not bear out the idea that McNamara is clueless. The club's results during his tenure have been at least the equal of every other club in the league with the two obvious exceptions.
He is young and inexperienced relative to some. But then we knew that when we gave him the job. In fact that was part of his attraction - we give him a go and as a result save money relative to what a seasoned coach from outside the club would demand. He gains experience on the job, gows into the role and owes loyalty the club for giving him that chance. Odd to see many of the same posters who decry the jettisoning of young players in favour of those brought in from outside demanding the same course of action taken regarding the coach.
At the moment, the impact of his coaching is limited by the players available to him. I suspect his coaching would look a hell of a lot better with Bird in place of Ben Jeffries, but recent developments make that a moot point.
Conclusion
ME and others talk about McNamara failing to fix 'the problems' as though they're one of the women off Last of the Summer Wine and Steve Mac is their feckless husband who hasn't got round to putting those shelves up because he's too busy rolling down a hill in a bath. The problem is that 'the problems' (the short-term ones) are ever-changing. Every club in Super League is trying to better themselves as if their lives depend on it because their lives
do depend on it. Hull KR and Huddersfield were never going to lie down, and denying them any agency in Bradford' s two (two!) results this season is unfair. This a zero-sum game and we're running hard just to stand still.
Bradford with their B license have a bit of breathing room but not so much that they can afford to gamble by ripping up their long-term plan for recovery when it's less than halfway through. A new coach
could do better long-term than McNamara, but I see no evidence that there is any such person willing to make a long-term commitment to the club, to work his days off travelling to meet players, to build with the long term future of the club in mind rather getting to a final or two in the next couple of years. And I fear that a more likely consequence would be a break-up of the McNamara project, little to no improvement on the field in the short-to-medium term and a further decline in the long-term. Yes, there are league positions below fifth.
Have I said long-term enough? Hope so, because someone had to.