Wests Tigers announce leadership group for 2022

Talking about AD as a captain and a leader by Forum members amazes me. Yes he tries hard, is likeable etc, but has not been outstanding at 5/8,centre or FB . If Hastings or Peachy perform to expectations, AD as much as most like him , may find it difficult to even make the top side.
We're all on the outside looking in, as far as I'm concerned, so it's always easier to pass judgement on the club that hasn't had success for quite some time. I've yet to read anything constructive that addresses (each of) our core issues and details any possible solutions to how the club can resolve them. There's a lot of criticism yet no one is knowledgable enough of all details, to give an accurate evaluation or assessment IMO.
It's honestly not too difficult to see how the last decade has helped produce the club's lowest ebb and that there's always been ongoing leadership issues which have affected the ability to maintain certain performance standards.
But these are the things the pundits fail to recognise and they're just as naive as (some of) the fans if they think it's as simple as resetting or restructuring the club's systems and hoping for rapid transformation. There's an ingrained culture problem that takes more than words and effort. Throw in that it's also a losing culture that isn't strong enough to attract the talent/quality, as of yet.

The team's historical constraints are incomparable to every other team. The fact there's a leadership void and we've chosen to allocate it collectively - to help create more accountability, ownership and shared management (of/in the team) isn't that foolish and is probably more convenient for a club like us, considering the inexperience of the team and how this still limits the team's capabilities in many aspects.
I'd never wish for the club to place all the responsibilities of the captaincy on Douiehi prematurely and I can't believe people are wishing to burden him with that pressure either., especially since he's coming back from injury.
 
Last edited:
I think a lot of people are way over analysing this. We don't have a standout performer who's guaranteed to be playing every week. A couple of new faces in leadership group is good - last year we had zero leadership so keeping what we had would be insane.
Obviously the club is demoting Tamou to an extent but haven't just dropped him as captain entirely which would have been embarrassing for him and us. Adding the pressure of captaincy to Brooks is probably unnecessary given how fragile he can already be. Doueihi will miss the first 1-2 months of the season. Tamou underperforming on field so may play limited mins. Peachey is experienced and likely to play 80 mins. Ken, who knows why he's there, but he's a better option than Nof so that's something.
Will the club rotate captains on a weekly basis all season? No. Will we have a few captains throughout the season? Probably.
You’re post almost mirrors a msg that I sent to my mates group chat in response to a jab about having 5 captains again (which it isn’t, it’s a leadership group). I can only think of 3 maybe 4 players who are guaranteed starters and they are simply too young, not equipped or too new to be captain. It’s an indication of where we are at as a squad.

It will work itself out as the season progresses. My prediction douehi comes back, cements his spot as starter and kicker and will rise to the position. Just bad timing with injury…
 
Voted by the Players - Maybe they know something we don't?

Maybe he didn't nominate himself so he can focus on getting back into the NRL and not have the added pressure.

Normally when these things happen people are provided with only those names who want to be nominated.

Doubt we will ever know unless someone asks him about it during the season.
 
Yeh good points.
You've probably heard something like in sport you should refrain from talking about 'religion, politics and sexual agenda. Soon drugs will be a household name that you could throw in that list.
Just yesterday a friend of mine said he was driving in a town near Sydney that had 'girls of the night' walking the street in broad daylight, people openly using drugs or dealing.
If we as a society don't try and deal with it by not putting our heads in the sand then I fear for my grand children.
Get on YouTube and Google the street life of Philadelphia, Kensington.
It's frightening!
They say Australia is about 10 years behind the US logistically, is this how we want to end up????
We were in Toronto in 2007 I witnessed the same thing female drugged out of her head and just urinating on the footpath.
I wouldn’t let my wife or children go out after dark.
 

NRL 2022: Wests Tigers reveal five-man leadership group after captaincy overhaul​

Tigers coach Michael Maguire has defended the decision to share the captaincy of the club among five players this season, insisting it’s a formula that works.

Brent ReadBrent Read
Follow
@brentread_7

4 min read
February 23, 2022 - 1:46PM
News Corp Australia Sports Newsroom

Wests Tigers coach Michael Maguire has defended the decision to share the captaincy of the club among five players this season, insisting “leadership is not just about one person — it is about the team”.
The Tigers on Tuesday announced that Adam Doueihi, Luke Brooks, Tyrone Peachey and Ken Maumalo would share the captaincy duties with incumbent skipper James Tamou, the decision coming after the club brought in a leadership expert to help sift through their captaincy candidates.

Maguire has actually borrowed from an old playbook in arriving at his final call. When he first took over the coaching reins at South Sydney 10 years ago, he shared the captaincy among five players.

It was a concept he had previously seen used in American sports as well as the AFL.

Still, it was a surprise when the club announced on Tuesday that the five players in the leadership group would share the captaincy in a rotational capacity this season.

The decision prompted mixed reviews on social media but Maguire urged the club’s fans to retain the faith as they prepare to finalise their preseason preparations on Friday night against the Sydney Roosters.

“It strengthens that position,” Maguire told The Daily Telegraph.

“Leadership is not just about one person — it is about a team.

“Everyone plays their part in what goes on. We have gone through a process and the guys who have been chosen into that leadership position all have strengths in their own different ways, in their character and the way they do things.

“I wanted that to be the pinnacle of where we are going as a club. It’s not about sharing the load — it is about being that person for the team.

“It strengthens up the leadership. Everyone plays their part on the field whether they are a front-rower or a back. The accountability about how we play, it strengthens that because it is spread across the team.

“It is a really good diverse group of players.”

Tamou had hinted at the changing role during Friday night’s preseason game against Manly and News Corp subsequent revealed the club had turned to leadership guru Dan Haesler over the offseason to help strengthen their leadership group.

Haesler had worked in rugby league before, most prominently with Warriors star half Shaun Johnson. The final say belonged to Maguire and the players — it is understood they voted for their preferred candidates. The board then held a phone hook-up on Monday night to ratify the leadership team.

The Tigers and their coach enter the season under pressure to start fast and most of the responsibility will fall on four of the five men who now share the leadership duties — Doueihi is expected to be sidelined until at least round 10 as he recovers from a knee injury.

Maguire confirmed the responsibility of being the team’s voice with officials would be rotated through the group.

“One person acts as the captain — one tosses the coin and talks to the ref,” he said.

“Other than that it is about everyone playing their part. It will rotate around. I picked it up from the AFL world — they have been doing it forever.

“I have been through it at three clubs and I found with where we are at the moment. I remember when I introduced it at Souths and everyone was up in arms.

“I put it in, it started to work, the strength of the group started to grow and everyone thought it was the best thing. But success brings a lot of that, too.”

Maguire insisted Tamou was on board with the leadership change.

“Jimmy Tamou is such a strong leader and presence, having the boys with him act that level is where we want to be,” he said.

“I shared the idea and spoke to him in-depth about it. He thinks it is going to be the right thing for the team and where we want to go as a group. He was excellent about it.

“It is the right time. The group is in a good position to be able to do this.”

Shock duo added to Tigers’ leadership crew

The Wests Tigers have confirmed a five-man leadership group.

James Tamou, Luke Brooks, Adam Doueihi, Ken Maumalo and Tyrone Peachey have been unveiled as part of a leadership revamp and will be expected to share responsibility for the captaincy this season.

Tamou led the side last season but the club has overhauled its leadership structure over the preseason after bringing in leadership guru Dan Haesler.

While Tamou, Brooks and Doueihi were part of the leadership group last season, they have been joined by Peachey and Maumalo as part of the revised structure.

Wests Tigers chief executive Justin Pascoe congratulated the group on their appointment.

“On behalf of everyone at Wests Tigers I would like to congratulate the five players on their appointment to the club’s leadership group ahead of the 2022 season,” Pascoe said.

“It’s great to have a group that consist of players in different stages of their careers, and I look forward to working closely with this group over the coming year.”

Brooks said: “To be in the leadership group at the club means a lot, especially the way we chose the leadership group through our teammates.

“I have been here for a while now. When I came in I didn’t really see myself as a leader. That is something that I have had to grow over the years.”

Doueihi added: “Obviously very honoured and humbled. Being a local junior makes it more special. When I left the club, I never pictured myself leaving. To come back and earn the respect off the boys, the peers and coaching staff ... is a pretty special feeling.

“It is now time for us to lead the boys forward and get some success.”
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: BZN
I wasn’t a fan of having so many captains when Cleary was at the club, and still not. It raises too many questions than it answers.
Why did the other 8 players miss out?
Does it not show indecision and lack of leadership from the head coach?
Or is it a case of when volunteers were asked to step forward, these 5 players froze with indecisiveness, as others stepped back?

Why not have a leader in each of the following groups?
Forwards.
Backs.
Spine.
Then have one of those 3 as captain?
 
I wasn’t a fan of having so many captains when Cleary was at the club, and still not. It raises too many questions than it answers.
Why did the other 8 players miss out?
Does it not show indecision and lack of leadership from the head coach?
Or is it a case of when volunteers were asked to step forward, these 5 players froze with indecisiveness, as others stepped back?

Why not have a leader in each of the following groups?
Forwards.
Backs.
Spine.
Then have one of those 3 as captain?
The only thing I can think of that is good for Madge having 5 captains in a leadership group is there will be at least 5 players standing up for him when the knives get thrown around later in the season.
 
The article doesn’t explain why it was necessary or how the team will benefit from having 5 captains, other than fostering leadership behaviour in hose 5?
 
The article doesn’t explain why it was necessary or how the team will benefit from having 5 captains, other than fostering leadership behaviour in hose 5?
It was necessary because unfortunately no single player is good enough for captain. Maybe the Peach but we have learned from picking captains that haven't yet played for us, and maybe Doueihi but not much good picking someone who's out half the season. And of course the coach can't come out and say to the media nobody's good enough to hold it by themselves.
 
The only thing I can think of that is good for Madge having 5 captains in a leadership group is there will be at least 5 players standing up for him when the knives get thrown around later in the season.
Most of the leadership group were retained. I think there are 2 new members for some fine wining and dining with Lee. It was an old American idea of rewarding group leaders with an impressive job title.
 
Nope

edit: correction. Both players PLAYED a big role in the outcomes. The fact they were captain had almost nothing to do with it.

Honestly I couldn't even remember for sure who the 2005 GF captain was, I had to look it up. I thought it was Prince but I wasn't convinced it wasn't Buckets or Hodgo.

In my frank opinion, Hodgo and Buckets were the real leaders in 2005. Prince played great but he wasn't the heart and soul of the side, any more than Benji was.
Just because your memory is fading, it doesn’t make your point correct.
You are wrong. Prince lead us to that premiership. Without him and his leadership we dont make it.
 
Last edited:
It was necessary because unfortunately no single player is good enough for captain. Maybe the Peach but we have learned from picking captains that haven't yet played for us, and maybe Doueihi but not much good picking someone who's out half the season. And of course the coach can't come out and say to the media nobody's good enough to hold it by themselves.

So, if that’s the logic, why did we actively get rid of players who showed leadership and looked like possible captains? Why didn’t it work 4 years ago when we named 5 captains?
If this was included in a John Cleese trading film we would be laughing 😝 but unfortunately this is the reality. 😢
 
I just came to say, like the previous 2 posters, I don't care. I don't think we won in 2005 because Scott Prince was captain during the GF, nor did we fail because Aaron Woods was the captain for several years.
Remember Sheens took the C off Buckets and gave it to Prince midseason
 
Imo I think it’s just an view to next year captain. Don’t think anyone stood out to replace tamou this year.
Ken was a surprise for me being a winger but has obviously shown enough to get selected
 
Now the Leadership Group is sorted ..It's time to look at the Coaching structure..

I'd start with a Fullback Coach, Wing Coach, Centre Coach, Halves Coach, Lock Coach, Edge Coach, Hooker Coach, Prop Coach and a Bench Coach for the guys who haven't played Rugby League since they were 6 years old..
 

Latest posts

Back
Top