Paul Stringer - Quits..

@ said:
@ said:
He's a divisive character, not surprisingly he's a mate of Isaac Moses.
Nothing's good enough for the three stooges it seems

Good on ya BT

It's a bizarre situation isn't it. You can do everything possible for some people but they will never be happy.

The only thing I can think is how weak these guys are mentally. The club not winning isn't their fault but they want the best possible dollars, a special masseuse and their life coach to be given a full time job with the club.

Exactly. They need a bit of tough love, and told no.

From what I gathered from those Stringer quotes was that he believes that the other players are starting to see a bit of unfair treatment and the club are bowing down to Woods and Teddy.
 
@ said:
Wests Tigers assistant Paul Stringer walks out on club

Adrian Proszenko
Adrian Proszenko

Paul Stringer has become the latest staffer to part company with Wests Tigers, but believes the remaining members of the club's "big four" should not follow suit after being afforded "red carpet" treatment to stay.

Stringer was one of three assistant coaches at the club, but felt he couldn't remain after a series of controversies, including the axing of Jason Taylor and the saga surrounding controversial "football whisperer" Joe Wehbe.
\
\
The former Eels, Rabbitohs, Northern Eagles and Bears prop had attempted to continue at the Tigers under new coach Ivan Cleary, who wanted to shift him into a pathways role. However, Stringer had become disillusioned with the direction of the club and Taylor's sacking proved the last straw.

"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax Media.

"JT was a mentor of mine as a player and he ended up being my coach in my last year of playing. For us to have a relationship and work with him years later was pretty special. I think he's a good coach and he wasn't treated the best.

"It's not all about me, I'm just one person. But, personally, the way I felt when that happened to Jason, I felt the last two or three weeks I was there in body but not in soul. I was going to work and ticking off the boxes, coaching the boys and doing the right thing. But, mentally, I was struggling really bad.

"I had a talk to the family; I was struggling mentally and not sleeping properly. I was thinking I was doing all the wrong things for my personal wellbeing and that of my family's wellbeing.

"I decided to sit down with Ivan, have a chat and tell him where I'm at. I spoke to [head of football] Kelly Egan, we came to an agreement and parted ways on Tuesday."

Before Christmas Stringer felt the Tigers were in the best possible shape. That pre-season was the best he had been involved in, players posting personal bests across a range of performance markers. However, the 40-year-old felt there was a different vibe in the new year amid rumours about Taylor's tenure and the ongoing contract negotiations involving key players Luke Brooks, Mitchell Moses, Aaron Woods and James Tedesco.

"I don't want to go into it too much and bag the place, especially with JT being the one who brought me on board and the way he treated people," Stringer said.

"The respect he had for the players and squad and staff, he would walk into the place and shake everyone's hand every single morning and that's the way I was brought up. There are other people in the organisation that aren't like that, I suppose."

As an inducement for the big four to re-sign, the club attempted to find a staff role for their mentor, Wehbe. Stringer said the involvement of Wehbe and massage therapist Anthony Carbone so close to the beginning of the season was a "distraction". It is understood Wehbe was seeking about $130,000 for a permanent role, although that never eventuated after resistance from some staffers.

"For me personally, that was a big distraction, yes," Stringer said.

"There are certain things in life and rugby league that I believe in: I believe in hard work, ripping in at training and doing plenty of contact, you get used to contact by doing it at training.

"That was mentally hard for me when Jason said Joe was going to come into the club. He wasn't there for long, it was about two or three sessions. I had a chat to Jason about it after that week and let my feelings be known to him and so did all the other coaches. Some of the other coaches liked it, some players liked it, some didn't.

"It was a bit strange that he was coming in two weeks before round one after we'd had a good pre-season and ripped in. But I was part of a coaching team and a squad, so I embraced it – it was 'let's see if this can make us better'.

"Then it didn't eventuate for some reason. And Jason was gone just five weeks after that."

Taylor, during an appearance on the Fox Sports program League Life, said he believed Woods and Tedesco owed it to the Tigers to stay and fulfil their undoubted potential. Stringer agreed with the assessment.

"The club has done everything in their power to keep them there and sometimes you can do too much for people as well," he said.

"I'm a bit old school, a bit treat them mean, keep them keen kind of thing. Sometimes when you lay out the red carpet too much they get too used to it.

"It's a problem in society these days, the younger generation, and I have the same problem with my kids, too. Sometimes you can give them too much, you can give them too much too early without them working too hard for it.

"They owe it to the club to stay."

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-assistant-paul-stringer-walks-out-on-club-20170414-gvl1sy.html

He lost me when he started talking about "loyalty""direction of the club" and "we had a good pre-season".I completely agree with what he says about Tedesco/Woods.Sorry it didnt work out for you Paul but you only gave Cleary a solitary week to get you onside_
 
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
Wests Tigers assistant Paul Stringer walks out on club

Adrian Proszenko
Adrian Proszenko

Paul Stringer has become the latest staffer to part company with Wests Tigers, but believes the remaining members of the club's "big four" should not follow suit after being afforded "red carpet" treatment to stay.

Stringer was one of three assistant coaches at the club, but felt he couldn't remain after a series of controversies, including the axing of Jason Taylor and the saga surrounding controversial "football whisperer" Joe Wehbe.
\
\
The former Eels, Rabbitohs, Northern Eagles and Bears prop had attempted to continue at the Tigers under new coach Ivan Cleary, who wanted to shift him into a pathways role. However, Stringer had become disillusioned with the direction of the club and Taylor's sacking proved the last straw.

"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax Media.

"JT was a mentor of mine as a player and he ended up being my coach in my last year of playing. For us to have a relationship and work with him years later was pretty special. I think he's a good coach and he wasn't treated the best.

"It's not all about me, I'm just one person. But, personally, the way I felt when that happened to Jason, I felt the last two or three weeks I was there in body but not in soul. I was going to work and ticking off the boxes, coaching the boys and doing the right thing. But, mentally, I was struggling really bad.

"I had a talk to the family; I was struggling mentally and not sleeping properly. I was thinking I was doing all the wrong things for my personal wellbeing and that of my family's wellbeing.

"I decided to sit down with Ivan, have a chat and tell him where I'm at. I spoke to [head of football] Kelly Egan, we came to an agreement and parted ways on Tuesday."

Before Christmas Stringer felt the Tigers were in the best possible shape. That pre-season was the best he had been involved in, players posting personal bests across a range of performance markers. However, the 40-year-old felt there was a different vibe in the new year amid rumours about Taylor's tenure and the ongoing contract negotiations involving key players Luke Brooks, Mitchell Moses, Aaron Woods and James Tedesco.

"I don't want to go into it too much and bag the place, especially with JT being the one who brought me on board and the way he treated people," Stringer said.

"The respect he had for the players and squad and staff, he would walk into the place and shake everyone's hand every single morning and that's the way I was brought up. There are other people in the organisation that aren't like that, I suppose."

As an inducement for the big four to re-sign, the club attempted to find a staff role for their mentor, Wehbe. Stringer said the involvement of Wehbe and massage therapist Anthony Carbone so close to the beginning of the season was a "distraction". It is understood Wehbe was seeking about $130,000 for a permanent role, although that never eventuated after resistance from some staffers.

"For me personally, that was a big distraction, yes," Stringer said.

"There are certain things in life and rugby league that I believe in: I believe in hard work, ripping in at training and doing plenty of contact, you get used to contact by doing it at training.

"That was mentally hard for me when Jason said Joe was going to come into the club. He wasn't there for long, it was about two or three sessions. I had a chat to Jason about it after that week and let my feelings be known to him and so did all the other coaches. Some of the other coaches liked it, some players liked it, some didn't.

"It was a bit strange that he was coming in two weeks before round one after we'd had a good pre-season and ripped in. But I was part of a coaching team and a squad, so I embraced it – it was 'let's see if this can make us better'.

"Then it didn't eventuate for some reason. And Jason was gone just five weeks after that."

Taylor, during an appearance on the Fox Sports program League Life, said he believed Woods and Tedesco owed it to the Tigers to stay and fulfil their undoubted potential. Stringer agreed with the assessment.

"The club has done everything in their power to keep them there and sometimes you can do too much for people as well," he said.

"I'm a bit old school, a bit treat them mean, keep them keen kind of thing. Sometimes when you lay out the red carpet too much they get too used to it.

"It's a problem in society these days, the younger generation, and I have the same problem with my kids, too. Sometimes you can give them too much, you can give them too much too early without them working too hard for it.

"They owe it to the club to stay."

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-assistant-paul-stringer-walks-out-on-club-20170414-gvl1sy.html

Some unanswered questions. I wonder who else Joe wehbe annoyed at the club.his name is coming up alot

He would worry anyone with a qualification. The bloke isn't a psych, and isn't a coach. That leaves only one thing, it begins with a "w" and ends with an "er"._
 
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
Wests Tigers assistant Paul Stringer walks out on club

Adrian Proszenko
Adrian Proszenko

Paul Stringer has become the latest staffer to part company with Wests Tigers, but believes the remaining members of the club's "big four" should not follow suit after being afforded "red carpet" treatment to stay.

Stringer was one of three assistant coaches at the club, but felt he couldn't remain after a series of controversies, including the axing of Jason Taylor and the saga surrounding controversial "football whisperer" Joe Wehbe.
\
\
The former Eels, Rabbitohs, Northern Eagles and Bears prop had attempted to continue at the Tigers under new coach Ivan Cleary, who wanted to shift him into a pathways role. However, Stringer had become disillusioned with the direction of the club and Taylor's sacking proved the last straw.

"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax Media.

"JT was a mentor of mine as a player and he ended up being my coach in my last year of playing. For us to have a relationship and work with him years later was pretty special. I think he's a good coach and he wasn't treated the best.

"It's not all about me, I'm just one person. But, personally, the way I felt when that happened to Jason, I felt the last two or three weeks I was there in body but not in soul. I was going to work and ticking off the boxes, coaching the boys and doing the right thing. But, mentally, I was struggling really bad.

"I had a talk to the family; I was struggling mentally and not sleeping properly. I was thinking I was doing all the wrong things for my personal wellbeing and that of my family's wellbeing.

"I decided to sit down with Ivan, have a chat and tell him where I'm at. I spoke to [head of football] Kelly Egan, we came to an agreement and parted ways on Tuesday."

Before Christmas Stringer felt the Tigers were in the best possible shape. That pre-season was the best he had been involved in, players posting personal bests across a range of performance markers. However, the 40-year-old felt there was a different vibe in the new year amid rumours about Taylor's tenure and the ongoing contract negotiations involving key players Luke Brooks, Mitchell Moses, Aaron Woods and James Tedesco.

"I don't want to go into it too much and bag the place, especially with JT being the one who brought me on board and the way he treated people," Stringer said.

"The respect he had for the players and squad and staff, he would walk into the place and shake everyone's hand every single morning and that's the way I was brought up. There are other people in the organisation that aren't like that, I suppose."

As an inducement for the big four to re-sign, the club attempted to find a staff role for their mentor, Wehbe. Stringer said the involvement of Wehbe and massage therapist Anthony Carbone so close to the beginning of the season was a "distraction". It is understood Wehbe was seeking about $130,000 for a permanent role, although that never eventuated after resistance from some staffers.

"For me personally, that was a big distraction, yes," Stringer said.

"There are certain things in life and rugby league that I believe in: I believe in hard work, ripping in at training and doing plenty of contact, you get used to contact by doing it at training.

"That was mentally hard for me when Jason said Joe was going to come into the club. He wasn't there for long, it was about two or three sessions. I had a chat to Jason about it after that week and let my feelings be known to him and so did all the other coaches. Some of the other coaches liked it, some players liked it, some didn't.

"It was a bit strange that he was coming in two weeks before round one after we'd had a good pre-season and ripped in. But I was part of a coaching team and a squad, so I embraced it – it was 'let's see if this can make us better'.

"Then it didn't eventuate for some reason. And Jason was gone just five weeks after that."

Taylor, during an appearance on the Fox Sports program League Life, said he believed Woods and Tedesco owed it to the Tigers to stay and fulfil their undoubted potential. Stringer agreed with the assessment.

"The club has done everything in their power to keep them there and sometimes you can do too much for people as well," he said.

"I'm a bit old school, a bit treat them mean, keep them keen kind of thing. Sometimes when you lay out the red carpet too much they get too used to it.

"It's a problem in society these days, the younger generation, and I have the same problem with my kids, too. Sometimes you can give them too much, you can give them too much too early without them working too hard for it.

"They owe it to the club to stay."

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-assistant-paul-stringer-walks-out-on-club-20170414-gvl1sy.html

Some unanswered questions. I wonder who else Joe wehbe annoyed at the club.his name is coming up alot

He would worry anyone with a qualification. The bloke isn't a psych, and isn't a coach. That leaves only one thing, it begins with a "w" and ends with an "er".

Wifebasher? Windscreenwiper?_
 
@ said:
"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax

Walking out on the club because your mate, who was doing a poor job as coach, got sacked and you got given a different role is hardly being loyal or trustworthy._
 
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
Wests Tigers assistant Paul Stringer walks out on club

Adrian Proszenko
Adrian Proszenko

Paul Stringer has become the latest staffer to part company with Wests Tigers, but believes the remaining members of the club's "big four" should not follow suit after being afforded "red carpet" treatment to stay.

Stringer was one of three assistant coaches at the club, but felt he couldn't remain after a series of controversies, including the axing of Jason Taylor and the saga surrounding controversial "football whisperer" Joe Wehbe.
\
\
The former Eels, Rabbitohs, Northern Eagles and Bears prop had attempted to continue at the Tigers under new coach Ivan Cleary, who wanted to shift him into a pathways role. However, Stringer had become disillusioned with the direction of the club and Taylor's sacking proved the last straw.

"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax Media.

"JT was a mentor of mine as a player and he ended up being my coach in my last year of playing. For us to have a relationship and work with him years later was pretty special. I think he's a good coach and he wasn't treated the best.

"It's not all about me, I'm just one person. But, personally, the way I felt when that happened to Jason, I felt the last two or three weeks I was there in body but not in soul. I was going to work and ticking off the boxes, coaching the boys and doing the right thing. But, mentally, I was struggling really bad.

"I had a talk to the family; I was struggling mentally and not sleeping properly. I was thinking I was doing all the wrong things for my personal wellbeing and that of my family's wellbeing.

"I decided to sit down with Ivan, have a chat and tell him where I'm at. I spoke to [head of football] Kelly Egan, we came to an agreement and parted ways on Tuesday."

Before Christmas Stringer felt the Tigers were in the best possible shape. That pre-season was the best he had been involved in, players posting personal bests across a range of performance markers. However, the 40-year-old felt there was a different vibe in the new year amid rumours about Taylor's tenure and the ongoing contract negotiations involving key players Luke Brooks, Mitchell Moses, Aaron Woods and James Tedesco.

"I don't want to go into it too much and bag the place, especially with JT being the one who brought me on board and the way he treated people," Stringer said.

"The respect he had for the players and squad and staff, he would walk into the place and shake everyone's hand every single morning and that's the way I was brought up. There are other people in the organisation that aren't like that, I suppose."

As an inducement for the big four to re-sign, the club attempted to find a staff role for their mentor, Wehbe. Stringer said the involvement of Wehbe and massage therapist Anthony Carbone so close to the beginning of the season was a "distraction". It is understood Wehbe was seeking about $130,000 for a permanent role, although that never eventuated after resistance from some staffers.

"For me personally, that was a big distraction, yes," Stringer said.

"There are certain things in life and rugby league that I believe in: I believe in hard work, ripping in at training and doing plenty of contact, you get used to contact by doing it at training.

"That was mentally hard for me when Jason said Joe was going to come into the club. He wasn't there for long, it was about two or three sessions. I had a chat to Jason about it after that week and let my feelings be known to him and so did all the other coaches. Some of the other coaches liked it, some players liked it, some didn't.

"It was a bit strange that he was coming in two weeks before round one after we'd had a good pre-season and ripped in. But I was part of a coaching team and a squad, so I embraced it – it was 'let's see if this can make us better'.

"Then it didn't eventuate for some reason. And Jason was gone just five weeks after that."

Taylor, during an appearance on the Fox Sports program League Life, said he believed Woods and Tedesco owed it to the Tigers to stay and fulfil their undoubted potential. Stringer agreed with the assessment.

"The club has done everything in their power to keep them there and sometimes you can do too much for people as well," he said.

"I'm a bit old school, a bit treat them mean, keep them keen kind of thing. Sometimes when you lay out the red carpet too much they get too used to it.

"It's a problem in society these days, the younger generation, and I have the same problem with my kids, too. Sometimes you can give them too much, you can give them too much too early without them working too hard for it.

"They owe it to the club to stay."

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-assistant-paul-stringer-walks-out-on-club-20170414-gvl1sy.html

Some unanswered questions. I wonder who else Joe wehbe annoyed at the club.his name is coming up alot

He would worry anyone with a qualification. The bloke isn't a psych, and isn't a coach. That leaves only one thing, it begins with a "w" and ends with an "er".

I'm thinking he's more of a con man than anything._
 
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
Wests Tigers assistant Paul Stringer walks out on club

Adrian Proszenko
Adrian Proszenko

Paul Stringer has become the latest staffer to part company with Wests Tigers, but believes the remaining members of the club's "big four" should not follow suit after being afforded "red carpet" treatment to stay.

Stringer was one of three assistant coaches at the club, but felt he couldn't remain after a series of controversies, including the axing of Jason Taylor and the saga surrounding controversial "football whisperer" Joe Wehbe.
\
\
The former Eels, Rabbitohs, Northern Eagles and Bears prop had attempted to continue at the Tigers under new coach Ivan Cleary, who wanted to shift him into a pathways role. However, Stringer had become disillusioned with the direction of the club and Taylor's sacking proved the last straw.

"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax Media.

"JT was a mentor of mine as a player and he ended up being my coach in my last year of playing. For us to have a relationship and work with him years later was pretty special. I think he's a good coach and he wasn't treated the best.

"It's not all about me, I'm just one person. But, personally, the way I felt when that happened to Jason, I felt the last two or three weeks I was there in body but not in soul. I was going to work and ticking off the boxes, coaching the boys and doing the right thing. But, mentally, I was struggling really bad.

"I had a talk to the family; I was struggling mentally and not sleeping properly. I was thinking I was doing all the wrong things for my personal wellbeing and that of my family's wellbeing.

"I decided to sit down with Ivan, have a chat and tell him where I'm at. I spoke to [head of football] Kelly Egan, we came to an agreement and parted ways on Tuesday."

Before Christmas Stringer felt the Tigers were in the best possible shape. That pre-season was the best he had been involved in, players posting personal bests across a range of performance markers. However, the 40-year-old felt there was a different vibe in the new year amid rumours about Taylor's tenure and the ongoing contract negotiations involving key players Luke Brooks, Mitchell Moses, Aaron Woods and James Tedesco.

"I don't want to go into it too much and bag the place, especially with JT being the one who brought me on board and the way he treated people," Stringer said.

"The respect he had for the players and squad and staff, he would walk into the place and shake everyone's hand every single morning and that's the way I was brought up. There are other people in the organisation that aren't like that, I suppose."

As an inducement for the big four to re-sign, the club attempted to find a staff role for their mentor, Wehbe. Stringer said the involvement of Wehbe and massage therapist Anthony Carbone so close to the beginning of the season was a "distraction". It is understood Wehbe was seeking about $130,000 for a permanent role, although that never eventuated after resistance from some staffers.

"For me personally, that was a big distraction, yes," Stringer said.

"There are certain things in life and rugby league that I believe in: I believe in hard work, ripping in at training and doing plenty of contact, you get used to contact by doing it at training.

"That was mentally hard for me when Jason said Joe was going to come into the club. He wasn't there for long, it was about two or three sessions. I had a chat to Jason about it after that week and let my feelings be known to him and so did all the other coaches. Some of the other coaches liked it, some players liked it, some didn't.

"It was a bit strange that he was coming in two weeks before round one after we'd had a good pre-season and ripped in. But I was part of a coaching team and a squad, so I embraced it – it was 'let's see if this can make us better'.

"Then it didn't eventuate for some reason. And Jason was gone just five weeks after that."

Taylor, during an appearance on the Fox Sports program League Life, said he believed Woods and Tedesco owed it to the Tigers to stay and fulfil their undoubted potential. Stringer agreed with the assessment.

"The club has done everything in their power to keep them there and sometimes you can do too much for people as well," he said.

"I'm a bit old school, a bit treat them mean, keep them keen kind of thing. Sometimes when you lay out the red carpet too much they get too used to it.

"It's a problem in society these days, the younger generation, and I have the same problem with my kids, too. Sometimes you can give them too much, you can give them too much too early without them working too hard for it.

"They owe it to the club to stay."

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-assistant-paul-stringer-walks-out-on-club-20170414-gvl1sy.html

Some unanswered questions. I wonder who else Joe wehbe annoyed at the club.his name is coming up alot

He would worry anyone with a qualification. The bloke isn't a psych, and isn't a coach. That leaves only one thing, it begins with a "w" and ends with an "er".

I'm thinking he's more of a con man than anything.

Exactly what I have been thinking. Everything about him screams con man, down to not wanting the players to publicise him._
 
Surprised there are 5 pages on this bloke. He is a virtual nobody in the grand scheme of WT, no big deal that he's done the bolt. Hope Fairleigh does a good job if he is indeed appointed next, he seems to get pretty good wraps from most.
 
@ said:
Surprised there are 5 pages on this bloke. He is a virtual nobody in the grand scheme of WT, no big deal that he's done the bolt. Hope Fairleigh does a good job if he is indeed appointed next, he seems to get pretty good wraps from most.

Yep - if we are moving on he is not part of it.
He is not hapoy with what happened and naturally that is implicated. Goodluck to Stringer but dwelling on any of that is not helpful for anything that Cleary is trying to do now.
 
I totally respect him in this decision and likewise on his feelings on our headline players. It also allows the appointment of an interim or permanent selection by the new coach.
 
@ said:
@ said:
He's a divisive character, not surprisingly he's a mate of Isaac Moses.
Nothing's good enough for the three stooges it seems

Good on ya BT

It's a bizarre situation isn't it. You can do everything possible for some people but they will never be happy.

The only thing I can think is how weak these guys are mentally. The club not winning isn't their fault but they want the best possible dollars, a special masseuse and their life coach to be given a full time job with the club.

"How weak these guys are mentally" I too feel concerned about this.
Where is the Joe Wehbe 'whisperer' that I read about a few months ago who wanted to 'help players' out of the ' goodness of his heart' then turns around and wants our club to fork out $130,000 !!! We did the right thing to get rid of him! Poor Isaac, missed out on some managers fees there.
 
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
Wests Tigers assistant Paul Stringer walks out on club

Adrian Proszenko
Adrian Proszenko

Paul Stringer has become the latest staffer to part company with Wests Tigers, but believes the remaining members of the club's "big four" should not follow suit after being afforded "red carpet" treatment to stay.

Stringer was one of three assistant coaches at the club, but felt he couldn't remain after a series of controversies, including the axing of Jason Taylor and the saga surrounding controversial "football whisperer" Joe Wehbe.
\
\
The former Eels, Rabbitohs, Northern Eagles and Bears prop had attempted to continue at the Tigers under new coach Ivan Cleary, who wanted to shift him into a pathways role. However, Stringer had become disillusioned with the direction of the club and Taylor's sacking proved the last straw.

"It wasn't the sole reason, but I'm a pretty loyal, trustworthy person and when something like that happens to a mentor _," Stringer told Fairfax Media.

"JT was a mentor of mine as a player and he ended up being my coach in my last year of playing. For us to have a relationship and work with him years later was pretty special. I think he's a good coach and he wasn't treated the best.

"It's not all about me, I'm just one person. But, personally, the way I felt when that happened to Jason, I felt the last two or three weeks I was there in body but not in soul. I was going to work and ticking off the boxes, coaching the boys and doing the right thing. But, mentally, I was struggling really bad.

"I had a talk to the family; I was struggling mentally and not sleeping properly. I was thinking I was doing all the wrong things for my personal wellbeing and that of my family's wellbeing.

"I decided to sit down with Ivan, have a chat and tell him where I'm at. I spoke to [head of football] Kelly Egan, we came to an agreement and parted ways on Tuesday."

Before Christmas Stringer felt the Tigers were in the best possible shape. That pre-season was the best he had been involved in, players posting personal bests across a range of performance markers. However, the 40-year-old felt there was a different vibe in the new year amid rumours about Taylor's tenure and the ongoing contract negotiations involving key players Luke Brooks, Mitchell Moses, Aaron Woods and James Tedesco.

"I don't want to go into it too much and bag the place, especially with JT being the one who brought me on board and the way he treated people," Stringer said.

"The respect he had for the players and squad and staff, he would walk into the place and shake everyone's hand every single morning and that's the way I was brought up. There are other people in the organisation that aren't like that, I suppose."

As an inducement for the big four to re-sign, the club attempted to find a staff role for their mentor, Wehbe. Stringer said the involvement of Wehbe and massage therapist Anthony Carbone so close to the beginning of the season was a "distraction". It is understood Wehbe was seeking about $130,000 for a permanent role, although that never eventuated after resistance from some staffers.

"For me personally, that was a big distraction, yes," Stringer said.

"There are certain things in life and rugby league that I believe in: I believe in hard work, ripping in at training and doing plenty of contact, you get used to contact by doing it at training.

"That was mentally hard for me when Jason said Joe was going to come into the club. He wasn't there for long, it was about two or three sessions. I had a chat to Jason about it after that week and let my feelings be known to him and so did all the other coaches. Some of the other coaches liked it, some players liked it, some didn't.

"It was a bit strange that he was coming in two weeks before round one after we'd had a good pre-season and ripped in. But I was part of a coaching team and a squad, so I embraced it – it was 'let's see if this can make us better'.

"Then it didn't eventuate for some reason. And Jason was gone just five weeks after that."

Taylor, during an appearance on the Fox Sports program League Life, said he believed Woods and Tedesco owed it to the Tigers to stay and fulfil their undoubted potential. Stringer agreed with the assessment.

"The club has done everything in their power to keep them there and sometimes you can do too much for people as well," he said.

"I'm a bit old school, a bit treat them mean, keep them keen kind of thing. Sometimes when you lay out the red carpet too much they get too used to it.

"It's a problem in society these days, the younger generation, and I have the same problem with my kids, too. Sometimes you can give them too much, you can give them too much too early without them working too hard for it.

"They owe it to the club to stay."

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/wests-tigers-assistant-paul-stringer-walks-out-on-club-20170414-gvl1sy.html

Some unanswered questions. I wonder who else Joe wehbe annoyed at the club.his name is coming up alot

He would worry anyone with a qualification. The bloke isn't a psych, and isn't a coach. That leaves only one thing, it begins with a "w" and ends with an "er".

When we first started hearing about this guy (Whehbe), he was hailed as some kind of mysterious hero, and you'd be forgiven for thinking he was heavily qualified and had a wealth of experience. Seeing as though that isn't the case, and with all of the negativity surrounding this guy now it's all coming across really creepy.. And not sure what the deal was with this special "massage therapist", like I said.. Creepy 😕 Glad we didn't bring him on board..

Agree._
 

Members online

Back
Top