Taylor Gambles on Youth...

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Jason Taylor intends to gamble on youth in his second coming as an NRL coach at the Tigers
JAMES HOOPER
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
FEBRUARY 08, 2015 12:00AM

ARMED with one of the most exciting young rosters in the NRL, Jason Taylor intends to gamble on youth in his second coming as an NRL coach.

It’s a blueprint which has seen South Sydney, the Sydney Roosters and Melbourne Storm all crowned premiers over the past three seasons, balancing experienced stars with emerging talent.

Preparing to embark on the Tigers’ first NRL trial match in Alice Springs next weekend, Taylor opened up about his first three months at the helm of the previously divided club.

Appointed in October and given scope to make changes, Taylor has spent the off-season designing a game plan to ensure the flamboyant Tigers show greater control.

The new coach is confident of having a defensive system to suit Mitchell Moses and Luke Brooks.

Brooks missed 105 tackles last season, the most of any NRL player, as opposition teams isolated and exposed the rookie No.7.

“The biggest thing from our perspective is the defensive structure itself. First and foremost, anyone who’s going to run on to an NRL field needs to be able to put their hand up and make their tackles,” Taylor said. “But we also want to provide those guys with plenty of support in relation to the structure around them.

“I’ve watched a lot of the tries that were scored against the guys last year, particularly the ones where Luke Brooks was isolated, and we just want to be able to do that better.

“We need to give the boys support in terms of structure, hopefully meaning they’re isolated less often. A small guy with bad technique is going to struggle big time. A small guy with good technique will make most of his tackles.”

Aside from Brooks, Moses, James Tedesco, David Nofoaluma, Tim Simona, and Curtis Sironen, the Tigers will be forced to turn to some of the NRL’s next generation after losing more than 700 games worth of first-grade experience.

Gone are the likes of Adam Blair, Braith Anasta, Liam Fulton, Bodene Thompson and Blake Austin, with unsung rookies Matt Lodge, Lamar Liolevavae, Jesse Sue, Sitaleki Akauola and Nathan Brown now fighting for positions.

In recent seasons, South Sydney, the Sydney Roosters and Melbourne Storm have nailed the blueprint on how to balance exciting young talent with established NRL stars.

“We’ve put a lot of time and effort into changing a lot and I’m confident people who’ve followed us over the last couple of years will see a very different team,” Taylor said.

“We’re intending to play with a lot more control.

“We’re confident in the roster we’ve got and there’s some genuine uncertainty about where we can get to. We don’t need to be too worried about where we might be at the end of the season.

“I just want us to be a better side at the start of this season than we were at the end of last year. It’s important that we play a style of footy that allows our key players to play their best footy.

“It’s one thing to have a number of creative players in key positions but it’s also important that they all feel they can contribute.”

Taylor showed he was prepared to make tough decisions, sacking club legends John Skandalis, Steve Roach, Paul Sironen and Todd Payten from the club’s football department staff inside his first fortnight in the job.

Intent on putting an end to the club’s injury curse, Taylor and his new support staff have overhauled the club’s preparation, from the way the team trains to how players recover as well.

Rather than rush fullback Tedesco back against the Eels in Alice Springs next Saturday, Taylor will instead aim at the trial against the Cronulla Sharks at Campbelltown on February 21 for his return from a fractured knee cap.

“We’ve put a lot of time and effort into all of the guys who’ve been injured. There’s been a big focus on getting them back to full fitness,” Taylor said. “Teddy has pushed ahead of schedule over the last few weeks but I’m not going to rush him for the Alice Springs trial. We’re looking at giving him some game time in the Cronulla trial in another fortnight and then assess how he’s going.

“If he gets through that then he will be a chance for round one. It’s looking more likely this week than it was a couple of weeks ago.”

The Tigers era under Taylor will officially begin in Alice Springs next Friday night.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/jason-taylor-intends-to-gamble-on-youth-in-his-second-coming-as-an-nrl-coach-at-the-tigers/story-fni3gpz1-1227211669416?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A%20dailytelegraphnrlndm%20%28Daily%20Telegraph%20%7C%20NRL%29
 
Well JT has plenty of youth to gamble on…

Hopefully they will work out well for Taylor and the club...

They have to start sometime and this year could be very exciting for all of us..good luck to them and Taylor,the winning platform is starting to get built..

The next couple of trials should see what type of potential we can take into the 2015 season..
 
Unfortunately his left with no option but to play a lot of our youth for the year . We have lost a heap of experience and more than ever we will be relying on our Representative players to show the young guys the way .
 
@foreveratiger said:
Unfortunately his left with no option but to play a lot of our youth for the year . We have lost a heap of experience and more than ever we will be relying on our Representative players to show the young guys the way .

Correct. Taylor simply needs to keep it simple for the trials. If anyone is carrying a niggle, they sit it out. If they pick up a niggle during the game, they come off. I'll be heading out to the Sharks trial so I'm keen to see the structural changes he has implemented.
 
Exciting to hear that Teddy is looking likely for the Cronulla trial. I'll expect the same of Taylor as I did of Potter: continued development of our youngsters and an upward trend of results.

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_
 
Structure is good

Lets see how the structure looks when it is put under pressure

Some weeks these kids will cope , others they won't

Simple as that
 
It's not a gamble at all.

He has already identified young talent at the club. He spends a year developing the kids and giving them a crack at the top grade, all the while saving some dollars. By the end of the year he has an idea of who will make it, who won't, and who can play a role at the club. Then he can go to market and spend to fill the gaps.

This is an investment in the future of the club.
 
@happy tiger said:
Structure is good

Lets see how the structure looks when it is put under pressure

Some weeks these kids will cope , others they won't

Simple as that

Taylor is talking a lot isn't he. Its easy now. Lets see how he goes when we are under pressure.
 
@Glen McWilliams said:
It's not a gamble at all.

He has already identified young talent at the club. He spends a year developing the kids and giving them a crack at the top grade, all the while saving some dollars. By the end of the year he has an idea of who will make it, who won't, and who can play a role at the club. Then he can go to market and spend to fill the gaps.

This is an investment in the future of the club.

its a big gamble to go with so much youth in your side .taylor has been with the club since October so he wouldn't know much about our young guys. I really hope he has a great year with the kids but when the going gets tough you need experience to pull you through. good luck to taylor and the boys I hope iam wrong and taylor is right. 😛ray:
 
At this stage I'd rather a new coach in his first pre-season talk a lot if it is of substance. JT has identified key areas that need improving and has gone into a bit of depth about where we were going wrong and how to remedy it. It's not sensitive information, every team in the NRL knows we've been defensively inept for years.

That's better than saying nothing at all, or just giving the "we're working hard" soundbites we're accustomed to, as that translates to me as "I've got nothing."
 
I like the way Taylor has gone about his job. I think he'll make an immediate impact.

He is clever, not afraid to make changes, has learnt from the clubs with the best structures and his attention to detail is second to none.

Occasionally though he makes mistakes. He is like that smart kid at school who nails everything academically but lacks the street smarts or common sense.

His approach to the Nines and the Camden trial squads a case in point. On paper every decision he has made makes sense, trouble is the flip side could be that all he has taught them is that it is ok to lose and not try very hard or in the Camden trail destroy all the young under 20 kids confidence by fielding weak teams and getting smashed.

Going to be a bit of a roller coaster the next few months. More ups then downs hopefully.
 
For me it's not the young guys that are the gamble it's the old guys that are a worry. Last year I thought the under performers were guys like Anasta,Galloway,Lawrence,lulia,Richards(other than kicking). The young guys may make the odd error but are still the strength of the team.

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.1.5_
 
@grrrrrrrrrr said:
For me it's not the young guys that are the gamble it's the old guys that are a worry. Last year I thought the under performers were guys like Anasta,Galloway,Lawrence,lulia,Richards(other than kicking). The young guys may make the odd error but are still the strength of the team.

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.1.5_

Well said, I see Halatau, Lawrence and Lulia as our weakest links.

Go Tigers :sign:
 
@Glen McWilliams said:
It's not a gamble at all.

He has already identified young talent at the club. He spends a year developing the kids and giving them a crack at the top grade, all the while saving some dollars. By the end of the year he has an idea of who will make it, who won't, and who can play a role at the club. Then he can go to market and spend to fill the gaps.

This is an investment in the future of the club.

But we still need to perform across the board or we won't attract talent or will pay far too much for that talent
 
Plenty of enthusiasm on here for the season ahead, it might be a better season than anyone dared to hope
 
I would rather the club run with talented youthful players than go into the market and pick up injury prone fringe first graders. No one knows what lies ahead that's what makes this season so anticipated ..usually you pretty much know what is in store with maybe a few new signings etc. The talk that JT will make the big decisions when needed is also unknown, when I see a player on 600k playing in the reggies well there you go! . There is no gamble with the youth as realistically he has no option and sometimes this just might click into place well lets hope so. .
 
The one area that has to improve is defence.

I had high hopes that Potter would improve that area but I was disappointed. Yep we played OK early on but slowly the defence got worse until the floodgates opened.

I'll get shouted down about the injury toll but I see the top teams bring in youngsters and they are pre-drilled with their club's defensive structure and they don't let the first grade side down too much.

Taylor is saying all the right things about our defence. He is getting my attention, I hope he delivers. Everyone knows Brooks was a liability in defence last year but Taylor wants support for him. All good youngsters who get to this level can tackle but the team's structure is harder to adjust to.

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_
 
@cqtiger said:
The one area that has to improve is defence.

I had high hopes that Potter would improve that area but I was disappointed. Yep we played OK early on but slowly the defence got worse until the floodgates opened.

I'll get shouted down about the injury toll but I see the top teams bring in youngsters and they are pre-drilled with their club's defensive structure and they don't let the first grade side down too much.

Taylor is saying all the right things about our defence. He is getting my attention, I hope he delivers. Everyone knows Brooks was a liability in defence last year but Taylor wants support for him. All good youngsters who get to this level can tackle but the team's structure is harder to adjust to.

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_

but we still have the same defensive coach kidwell
 
@spearby said:
@cqtiger said:
The one area that has to improve is defence.

I had high hopes that Potter would improve that area but I was disappointed. Yep we played OK early on but slowly the defence got worse until the floodgates opened.

I'll get shouted down about the injury toll but I see the top teams bring in youngsters and they are pre-drilled with their club's defensive structure and they don't let the first grade side down too much.

Taylor is saying all the right things about our defence. He is getting my attention, I hope he delivers. Everyone knows Brooks was a liability in defence last year but Taylor wants support for him. All good youngsters who get to this level can tackle but the team's structure is harder to adjust to.

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_

but we still have the same defensive coach kidwell

And we were in the 8 before the farah story broke. Potter got shafted and the team capitulated on cue

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_
 
Reading Taylor gambles on youth reminds me of 20 years ago when the Wests Magpies coach of the day gambolled on youth by bringing in Russell Wyer, Jamie Ainscough and Jason Taylor into the starting line up. All St.Gregory's college boys if memory serves me well. Now, all these years later, the youth that was brought through then is bringing through the youth of today.
 

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