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Noble off Down Under


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According to another rumour he's off to coach South Sydney. And then there's the one about him going to Worcester RU.

I know the report in the Star says he'd be Matthew Elliott's 'right-hand man', but he would be assistant coach. Would he be willing to drop down after all this time as head coach?

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According to another rumour he's off to coach South Sydney. And then there's the one about him going to Worcester RU.

I know the report in the Star says he'd be Matthew Elliott's 'right-hand man', but he would be assistant coach. Would he be willing to drop down after all this time as head coach?

Not sure, but then I suppose any amount of time spent in Aus mixing with their top coaches could provide invaluble experiance.

"it is a well known fact that those people who most want to rule people are, ipso facto, those least suited to do it."

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SInce Noble loves packing his teams with Aussie journeymen, taking up a role in Australia seems perfect for him.

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SInce Noble loves packing his teams with Aussie journeymen, taking up a role in Australia seems perfect for him.
Absolutely! I was thinking the very same thing. I never rated him as a coach before and could never imagine him being succesful in Oz. Assuming he ends up there of course.
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I thought you were supposed to go from Assistant to Head Coach, not Head Coach and ex test Coach to Assistant.

Plenty of Assistant Coaches have a very low profile in Australia and many never get the chance at a top job, the ones that do often have to wait many years look at Ivan Henjak as one example.

Steven Kearney is the Kiwi Test Coach but can not crack an NRL top job, neither could the previous Kiwi Coach the Leeds current Coach.

Could be a very long wait if true.

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Noble has always been quite open about wanting to coach in the NRL.. and theres no way he'd get a head coaches job without serving some time as an assistant.. there are plenty of assistant coaches in the NRL who have coached top grade sides before.. royce simmons and steve folkes spring to mind. so dont think he'll be too worried about not being in total control.. hope he does have a go down under..

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Noble has always been quite open about wanting to coach in the NRL.. and theres no way he'd get a head coaches job without serving some time as an assistant.. there are plenty of assistant coaches in the NRL who have coached top grade sides before.. royce simmons and steve folkes spring to mind. so dont think he'll be too worried about not being in total control.. hope he does have a go down under..

Both of your examples are Coaches that have been sacked from the top job though.

Simmons had zero chance of a top spot again in the NRL.

Folkes has come back from fitness Coach for the West Indies Cricket team to a similar role at Wests, he is no chance at Head Coach in the NRL again, he has pushed his barrow everywhere and in fact would have been better for Saints or Bradford than what they have chosen.

Edited by AndyCapp
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ian millward had loads of success at saints as head coach and also had a head coach role at wigan, 2 of super leagues glamour coaching jobs yet only got a sniff over in austailia as an assistant coach. think it was at north queensland and canberra.

i dont think the aussies give much recognition to coaches who have done well in the english super league, daniel anderson being a slight exception, i just think they dont regard the english super league as being anything special.

Edited by usain bolt
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ian millward had loads of success at saints as head coach and also had a head coach role at wigan, 2 of super leagues glamour coaching jobs yet only got a sniff over in austailia as an assistant coach. think it was at north queensland and canberra.

i dont think the aussies give much recognition to coaches who have done well in the english super league, daniel anderson being a slight exception, i just think they dont regard the english super league as being anything special.

Anderson although getting Parramatta through a late charge to the Grand Final last year is in danger of losing his Job in the off season after this years disastrous campaign.

On Paper Parramatta are a team that should be in the top 6.

Failure is not accepted by Clubs that have the quality Cattle

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I thought you were supposed to go from Assistant to Head Coach, not Head Coach and ex test Coach to Assistant.

Almost - you go from Assistant Coach/Masseur/Kit Man in NRL to Head Coach in SL, not from Sl to NRL; then the situation is reversed.

The interesting thing is that Noble (who I do personally rate) is very sensitive tp personal criticism. The NRL will be a perfect arena for a shrinking violet.

Sport, amongst other things, is a dream-world offering escape from harsh reality and the disturbing prospect of change.

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Perhaps he just wants to live in Australia and learn as a coach? The more coaches and players plying their trade in the NRL the better for me.

"surely they've got to try somthing different now, maybe the little chip over the top?2

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Mediocre coach and awful for youth development

January 2010 finds Brian Noble with a team of fewer than 10 players, playing in a town 100 miles from its home base and where there is little indigenous support and a negligible number of juvenile local rugby league players.

Financial constraints mean that he cannot pay transfer fees for players and cannot pay wages up to the full salary cap. He signs journeymen with no top-level international experience to play in Superleague but also continues the development of Welsh players via a link with the South Wales Scorpions, who are also starting from scratch at a new ground and under new ownership.

Young Welsh players such as Elliot Kear, Lloyd White, Ben Flower get some opportunity to play in Superleague that no other club would have offered them.

September 2010 finds the Crusaders in the playoffs, ahead of Bradford, Wakefield, Castleford, Catalans and London. The Scorpions finish sixth in Championship 1, ahead of Workington, London and Gateshead.

You're right ... after following up a career history of winning three Grand Finals and a Challenge Cup with Bradford, the saving Wigan from relegation with this kind of abject failure at Wrexham ... he must be a rubbish coach.

How many effing medals have you got?

:lol:

Under Scrutiny by the Right-On Thought Police

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January 2010 finds Brian Noble with a team of fewer than 10 players, playing in a town 100 miles from its home base and where there is little indigenous support and a negligible number of juvenile local rugby league players.

Financial constraints mean that he cannot pay transfer fees for players and cannot pay wages up to the full salary cap. He signs journeymen with no top-level international experience to play in Superleague but also continues the development of Welsh players via a link with the South Wales Scorpions, who are also starting from scratch at a new ground and under new ownership.

Young Welsh players such as Elliot Kear, Lloyd White, Ben Flower get some opportunity to play in Superleague that no other club would have offered them.

September 2010 finds the Crusaders in the playoffs, ahead of Bradford, Wakefield, Castleford, Catalans and London. The Scorpions finish sixth in Championship 1, ahead of Workington, London and Gateshead.

You're right ... after following up a career history of winning three Grand Finals and a Challenge Cup with Bradford, the saving Wigan from relegation with this kind of abject failure at Wrexham ... he must be a rubbish coach.

How many effing medals have you got?

:lol:

Good post - well said.

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January 2010 finds Brian Noble with a team of fewer than 10 players, playing in a town 100 miles from its home base and where there is little indigenous support and a negligible number of juvenile local rugby league players.

Financial constraints mean that he cannot pay transfer fees for players and cannot pay wages up to the full salary cap. He signs journeymen with no top-level international experience to play in Superleague but also continues the development of Welsh players via a link with the South Wales Scorpions, who are also starting from scratch at a new ground and under new ownership.

Young Welsh players such as Elliot Kear, Lloyd White, Ben Flower get some opportunity to play in Superleague that no other club would have offered them.

September 2010 finds the Crusaders in the playoffs, ahead of Bradford, Wakefield, Castleford, Catalans and London. The Scorpions finish sixth in Championship 1, ahead of Workington, London and Gateshead.

You're right ... after following up a career history of winning three Grand Finals and a Challenge Cup with Bradford, the saving Wigan from relegation with this kind of abject failure at Wrexham ... he must be a rubbish coach.

How many effing medals have you got?

:lol:

Great post H, says it all. Nobby's the best British coach of the Super League era by a country mile.

And when they found our shadows

Grouped around the TV sets

They ran down every lead

They repeated every test

They checked out all the data on their lists

And then the alien anthropologists

Admitted they were still perplexed

But on eliminating every other reason

For our sad demise

They logged the only explanation left

This species has amused itself to death

No tears to cry no feelings left

This species has amused itself to death

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January 2010 finds Brian Noble with a team of fewer than 10 players, playing in a town 100 miles from its home base and where there is little indigenous support and a negligible number of juvenile local rugby league players.

Financial constraints mean that he cannot pay transfer fees for players and cannot pay wages up to the full salary cap. He signs journeymen with no top-level international experience to play in Superleague but also continues the development of Welsh players via a link with the South Wales Scorpions, who are also starting from scratch at a new ground and under new ownership.

Young Welsh players such as Elliot Kear, Lloyd White, Ben Flower get some opportunity to play in Superleague that no other club would have offered them.

September 2010 finds the Crusaders in the playoffs, ahead of Bradford, Wakefield, Castleford, Catalans and London. The Scorpions finish sixth in Championship 1, ahead of Workington, London and Gateshead.

You're right ... after following up a career history of winning three Grand Finals and a Challenge Cup with Bradford, the saving Wigan from relegation with this kind of abject failure at Wrexham ... he must be a rubbish coach.

How many effing medals have you got?

:lol:

Good post.

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Noble's record speaks for itself: anybody who belittles it needs to go away and have a think.

I believe that his time at Crusaders is in many ways one of his keynote achievemnents. Whatever he does next will be to suit him.

If he leaves Crusaders, it's important to remember thaat he has a an able and ambitious replacement in Iestyn Harris

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