API Koroisau Interview

Blocker1963

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Api Koroisau explains major issues at Wests Tigers​

With just three wins in his first season at the helm, Koroisau has already recognised a number of major concerns facing the club that will need to be addressed in the pre-season.

The captaincy being thrust upon him just weeks after arriving for pre-season was also a spanner in the works for Koroisau, who admitted the responsibility left him at a crossroads.

“We didn’t really have the go-to guy at the Tigers," he said.

"A lot of our game plan at the start of the year was free-flowing footy… we just weren’t gaining any momentum. We didn’t know who we were as a team, we didn’t have any identity.

“I hadn’t really built that relationship with everyone and then a couple of weeks into pre-season, we all voted for captain and I got the nod. I didn’t know exactly how I wanted to come across.

"I had some good advice from someone that said ‘you got picked as captain for being yourself, so don’t change who you are’. I battled with how do I bring my point across?

"I would love to just get angry, but at the same time, our team is so young and inexperienced and if I do get angry, I’m gonna lose a few blokes without a doubt.

"When you watch from the outside perspective, you could easily say they’re not putting in the effort and they’re playing horribly – it was never it, we just didn’t have the footy down right and the mentality of how we wanted to play."

The departure of Sheens from the head coaching role will allow Tigers legend Benji Marshall to move into the pressure-filled top job a year earlier than anticipated and leaving him plenty of work to do.

But according to Koroisau, the football smarts of the Kiwi legend should hold him in good stead.

“Sheensy’s footy mind is crazy… he has obviously been there for years - he wanted to play that style of footy where we were passing the ball and had lots of shape, but we didn’t have a Benji to sort of execute that for us," he said.

"Benji is the opposite – he is really strategical and has been in the game a lot more recently and played under different coaches like Wayne Bennett.

"He’s more about the structure and understanding the feel of the game... these days, for the first 20 minutes you’ve just got to kick to the corner.

"He sees the game so differently and because he played the game so differently as well, it’s a big asset."

Can the Wests Tigers improve in 2024?​

With a handful of talented young stars coming through the grades and the likes of Jayden Sullivan and the Fainu brothers joining the club next year, there's reason to believe the future is bright for the Tigers.

And with a season under his belt in his new surroundings, Koroisau is more than ready to crack the whip and ensure premiership-level standards are in place at their multi-million dollar training facility.

“A lot of what I learned was if I want something done, I have to pull the trigger on it – whether it’s game plan or how I want to play," he said.

"A lot of the time, coaching staff will come up with game plans but at the same time, you’re not gonna beat Penrith by game-planning. You’re gonna beat them by literally doing what they do and trying to do it better.

"We didn’t have a very fluid attacking style, so we’re not gonna beat them by trying to go around them.

"We have really good middles and fit middles… when we put some good games together, we put it on our middles. If we started with that from the start of the year, we could have built from that.

"All I want at the moment is to enjoy this off-season and when we do get into pre-season, just a full change in everything. This time around, from day dot, this is how it has to be – there is no ifs or buts.

"All it does is create discipline that everyone buys into and if you can get that into a team, that’s just one step. I’ll be bringing that whip and no one is safe."
 

Api Koroisau explains major issues at Wests Tigers​

With just three wins in his first season at the helm, Koroisau has already recognised a number of major concerns facing the club that will need to be addressed in the pre-season.

The captaincy being thrust upon him just weeks after arriving for pre-season was also a spanner in the works for Koroisau, who admitted the responsibility left him at a crossroads.

“We didn’t really have the go-to guy at the Tigers," he said.

"A lot of our game plan at the start of the year was free-flowing footy… we just weren’t gaining any momentum. We didn’t know who we were as a team, we didn’t have any identity.

“I hadn’t really built that relationship with everyone and then a couple of weeks into pre-season, we all voted for captain and I got the nod. I didn’t know exactly how I wanted to come across.

"I had some good advice from someone that said ‘you got picked as captain for being yourself, so don’t change who you are’. I battled with how do I bring my point across?

"I would love to just get angry, but at the same time, our team is so young and inexperienced and if I do get angry, I’m gonna lose a few blokes without a doubt.

"When you watch from the outside perspective, you could easily say they’re not putting in the effort and they’re playing horribly – it was never it, we just didn’t have the footy down right and the mentality of how we wanted to play."

The departure of Sheens from the head coaching role will allow Tigers legend Benji Marshall to move into the pressure-filled top job a year earlier than anticipated and leaving him plenty of work to do.

But according to Koroisau, the football smarts of the Kiwi legend should hold him in good stead.

“Sheensy’s footy mind is crazy… he has obviously been there for years - he wanted to play that style of footy where we were passing the ball and had lots of shape, but we didn’t have a Benji to sort of execute that for us," he said.

"Benji is the opposite – he is really strategical and has been in the game a lot more recently and played under different coaches like Wayne Bennett.

"He’s more about the structure and understanding the feel of the game... these days, for the first 20 minutes you’ve just got to kick to the corner.

"He sees the game so differently and because he played the game so differently as well, it’s a big asset."

Can the Wests Tigers improve in 2024?​

With a handful of talented young stars coming through the grades and the likes of Jayden Sullivan and the Fainu brothers joining the club next year, there's reason to believe the future is bright for the Tigers.

And with a season under his belt in his new surroundings, Koroisau is more than ready to crack the whip and ensure premiership-level standards are in place at their multi-million dollar training facility.

“A lot of what I learned was if I want something done, I have to pull the trigger on it – whether it’s game plan or how I want to play," he said.

"A lot of the time, coaching staff will come up with game plans but at the same time, you’re not gonna beat Penrith by game-planning. You’re gonna beat them by literally doing what they do and trying to do it better.

"We didn’t have a very fluid attacking style, so we’re not gonna beat them by trying to go around them.

"We have really good middles and fit middles… when we put some good games together, we put it on our middles. If we started with that from the start of the year, we could have built from that.

"All I want at the moment is to enjoy this off-season and when we do get into pre-season, just a full change in everything. This time around, from day dot, this is how it has to be – there is no ifs or buts.

"All it does is create discipline that everyone buys into and if you can get that into a team, that’s just one step. I’ll be bringing that whip and no one is safe."
Imagine turning up to a preseason off a wooden spoon with api John Bateman and David klemmer yelling at you hopefully brings all out players up a gear
 
"We have really good middles and fit middles… when we put some good games together, we put it on our middles. If we started with that from the start of the year, we could have built from that.
Not trying to toot my own horn but I literally said this all year that our strength was our forward pack & trying to play expansive attacking footy with the backline we had was setting us up to fail. Api pretty much confirmed what we all knew... Sheens was holding the side back & once Benji gained more control we started to improve.
 
Another Api related quote comes to mind.
Luke Brooks and AD were asked if having Api Koroisau or Jake Simpkin at hooker made a difference to the gameplan. Answer "not at all".

It basically means Sheens unstructured fast footy/200 passes was not going to work. As Api says "We didn’t know who we were as a team, we didn’t have any identity. I hadn’t really built that relationship with everyone".

Farah and Lawrence had a play called "bread and Butter" where Lawrence would know to expect an inside ball from Farah.

Sheen's plan sucked! We had strong middles and while we can pass to the backs more, we did not have settled combinations. Heck we still don't have a defensive structure.

Benji has a lot to fix. I can't believe Sheens came out of retirement to prove that Madge is a better coach then him. (it's a low bar).
 
Another Api related quote comes to mind.
Luke Brooks and AD were asked if having Api Koroisau or Jake Simpkin at hooker made a difference to the gameplan. Answer "not at all".

It basically means Sheens unstructured fast footy/200 passes was not going to work. As Api says "We didn’t know who we were as a team, we didn’t have any identity. I hadn’t really built that relationship with everyone".

Farah and Lawrence had a play called "bread and Butter" where Lawrence would know to expect an inside ball from Farah.

Sheen's plan sucked! We had strong middles and while we can pass to the backs more, we did not have settled combinations. Heck we still don't have a defensive structure.

Benji has a lot to fix. I can't believe Sheens came out of retirement to prove that Madge is a better coach then him. (it's a low bar).
Agree, Benji has said something similar about his playing days, that everything he did on game day had been practiced over and over at training. I don't believe him completely, but there's certainly some truth to the fact that even 'ad lib' footy needs to have some form of structure to it.
Players need to understand what the bloke inside of them are trying to do with the footy. You have to get the basics absolutely flawless before you start adding to it. You could see that our set plays this year were basically get it to bloke 'X' two wide of the ruck and let them create, and not only could they not create, they also had no bodies in motion to help them create.
Benji should be able to get them playing with more shape this year, and our halves & backs will look much better for it.
How will everything else go? 🤷‍♂️
 
There have been numerous reports now that Benji is surprisingly big on percentage play footy and then play off that. This is the only thing that gives me hope.

If we can get a former fullback to teach Bula how to inject himself into the backline, I expect Fainu and Sullivan to strip numbers much better then our 2023 halves. Even Sezer.
 
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