Steve McNamara

Story about Steve McNamara which was written couple weeks ago.  His credentials are much better then those who have only ever been assistants like Ryles, mirroring and bettering that of Trent Robinson and Kevin Walters.

I think he would be great option and on NRL 360 they discussed a comment from McElduff saying they will search the rugby league universe.  He didn't say the NRL so they speculated it meant someone already coaching another team but could it mean the super league?

The story:

The 52-year-old, who has been with Catalans Dragons in Super League since 2018, is the pre-eminent coach not to have already worked in the NRL, and should be top of mind to anyone looking for a new coach.

He took over the Dragons when they had just finished 10th of 12 and narrowly avoiding dropping to the second tier after trailing at half time of the relegation playoff in 2017.

In his first year, they won the Challenge Cup, the first ever French side to do so, and have finished in the top four in each of the last four years, including two Grand Final appearances (2021 and 2023) and a Minor Premiership (2021).

Steve Mac has NRL experience, as an assistant at both the Roosters and Warriors, and was England coach for five years between 2010 and 2015.

On CV alone, he should be the top of anyone’s list for the next NRL head coaching job that becomes available and if McNamara had been born in Hurstville rather than Hull it wouldn’t even be a debate.

Blake Solly, who will make the decision, knows McNamara well from his time working in England, when the now-Souths CEO was at the Rugby Football League head office when Steve was England coach, based out of the same location in the Leeds suburbs.

McNamara is contracted to the Catalans and signed an extension in February, but this is rugby league. If Souths wanted their man, they’d get him.

If Souths were to look past McNamara, Parra should swoop and swoop fast.

 

The coaches market is not as deep as many expect, and there is no better candidate out there – for anyone willing to take the plunge on an English coach.

No club has since Mal Reilly left Newcastle in 1998, and the mental block that exists around anyone with that accent is massive.

It’s a massive inefficiency in the coaching market, too, because one of the best predictors of NRL success is Super League success and the best way to train to be a head coach in the NRL to be one somewhere else, which means Europe.

The last two coaches to move from the Catalans, Trent Robinson and Kevin Walters, go alright.

Everyone cites Kristian Woolf’s record at St Helens as proof of concept for his place in the Bennett succession plan at the Dolphins.

Justin Holbrook, who won multiple comps in the UK with Saints, is now widely seen as having been hardly done by at the Titans and is tipped to return to head coaching sooner rather than later.

Yet, by far, the best coach in Super League for the last five years has been McNamara – and he’s just as far away as he ever was.

The only person who come close is Wigan’s Matty Peet, who has only been in post since 2022.

It’s doubly ironic that McNamara isn’t talked up more given that the coaching pathway from the UK to the NRL is busier than it has been in years.

 

Lee Briers arrived in Brisbane and immediately became one of the best assistants on the scene, credited with making the Broncos one of the best attacking sides in the NRL.

Richard Agar is Webster’s right hand man throughout the Warriors’ resurgence and you could time Newcastle’s pick-up in fortunes almost exactly to when Brian McDermott, a Super League winner several times over with Leeds, stepped off the plane.

While the Super League isn’t as strong as the NRL, the fundamentals of coaching are the same.

In many ways, the structural issues in Europe that have led to Wigan, St Helens and Leeds monopolising the competition make the achievements of the Catalans under McNamara even more impressive.

Steve Mac has won consistently without the river of youth talent that keeps the big English clubs going, largely by using the best French players he can get and weaving in outsiders to create a coherent unit.

That part should certainly interest Souths. They don’t have the junior base that Penrith or Brisbane have – they’re Wigan and Saints in this analogy – but do have some juniors that they need to supplement with outsiders.

Super League lacks the star power of the NRL, too, but the Catalans are a little different.

They have always attracted big name players and Perpignan was once seen as a holiday camp for aging first graders, close to the beach and the bars of Barcelona.

Steve Mac completely upended that, creating a culture that turned some of the NRL’s most noted party animals – James Maloney, Mitchell Pearce and Greg Bird to name just three – into, by their own standards, sedate characters.

On the field, the standards around effort, particularly line speed and push supports, will be night and day to what South Sydney and Parramatta currently have.

The only thing tougher than being an NRL coach is being an unemployed NRL coach.

There’s 17 hot seats at any one time and a raft of people gunning for jobs, most of whom are still working in the game, either at clubs or in the media, while waiting for the phone to ring again.

That’s fine, of course, and makes perfect sense.

 

Being head coach material makes you a superpowered assistant coach, much like Holbrook currently is at the Roosters and Michael Maguire was at Canberra before getting the NSW Blues gig.

It also qualifies you to speak about the game on TV, as Shane Flanagan did for years on Fox League ahead of his return to the NRL head coaching ranks with the Dragons, and as Benji Marshall did before committing to the Tigers staff.

When taken collectively, however, it can lead to a closed shop that rewards those already in the system and punishes those outside of it, which in turn diminishes the collective knowledge of the profession as fewer outside ideas filter in.

It disincentivises clubs to go beyond the established names on the circuit, who live in fear the ridicule of picking an outsider who fails, even if that means picking an insider who has already failed before.

Coaches, like players, tend to have managers and thus someone to put their name forward to the right people and arguments to make around who they might bring in if they were to get a job.

McNamara doesn’t have a manager and has nobody to fight his corner in the media, which is why he

The closed shop, however, does lead to recycled ideas and, ultimately, stasis.

Anthony Griffin, for example, was able to accumulate ten seasons in the NRL despite having a winning record in just three of them, because he was a known quantity, and Trent Barrett got five cracks with just one with a better than 50% record.

That Barrett is mentioned in connection with a third stint, moving up from his current assistant’s role at Parramatta, tells you everything.

The counterbalance to this is the club that picks someone from outside and immediately benefits, which is the braver, and thus rarer, decision.

Andrew Webster had essentially no public profile when he was named Warriors coach – he wasn’t even rugby league’s most prominent Andrew Webster – but had an instant impact and was named Dally M Coach of the Year in 2023, precisely because he brought something that other coaches didn’t.

Someone can get that with McNamara, and he’s far less of a punt than Webster was. Looking from 18 months on, that appointment seems like a stroke of genius.

The question now is whether Souths or Parra have the confidence to make that move for themselves. 

 

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  • If are seriously looking outside the NRL then McNamara or Shaun Wane should be options. Experienced head coaches, have won Super League comps and know what it's like to handle egos in a dressing room.

  • Coaching in Super League is like playing in Super League and I hate to be rude but it's where those that aren't up to NRL standard go. 

    • What absolute rubbish. He is more qualified than most to take the job. 

      • Why isn't he already here and doing well?

        I am more than happy to be proven wrong but if you haven't made it here, you likely have a long way to go to being able to be good here. That's like saying Good NBL or A-League coaches make good NBA or Premier League coaches. One or two might but most won't, that's why they coach in the lesser league.

        Happy to be proven wrong but until then, I am not excited about where the Eels are again (Complete rebuild) and the prospects of us being contenders anytime soon. 

        I will be the first to be happy about being wrong, trust me.

        • The same could be said about untried coaches in NRL, why aren't they already coaching and doing well.  They need an opportunity.  McNamara has been an assistant at roosters and warriors but wanted head coach role experience, just like Trent Robinson did and Kevin Walters did but they didn't have the success of McNamara in the super leagueI.

          McNamara has better credentials then coaches like Fitzgibbon, Webster, Ciraldo, Wolfe, Ryles, Hannay, Slater who have not experienced pressure of head coach role but gotten roles or are talked about as next big thing.

          • All of what you have said is true........but he hasn't done it before and that is what concerns me. How many untried coaches do we have to go through to get a good one?

            If we didn't have Bennett lined up, why let BA go now? It would have been better to tell him, then the team that this is his last season with the Eels and see what he and the playing group do with that. It might be the rocket up all of their arses that they needed. I guess we will never know?

            Now we have a team (really it's the entier club) who is struggling, have no clue what the future means or holds for them and an interim coach who has failed at two previous clubs. 

            I don't think this was the smart thing to do. Letting BA go was absolutely the right thing but without a plan and to throw so much termoil on top of all that. Wreeks of a knee jerk reaction without a forward thinking plan going forward.

            If BA had lost the dressing room or if BA said not thanks then different story. I think BA would have gone hell for leather to prove everyone wrong but again, I guess we will never know.

    • Isn't that where Brian Smith and Daniel Anderson made their name?

      Anyway, whoever we get some will be disappointed.

      • And Trent Robinson. And Michael Maguire. And Kevin Walters.

        Super League these days is a proving ground for both coaches and players. The competition is so small in Australia that you can't just stick to the insular coaching environment here. Looking overseas is the right thing to do.

    • Trent Robinson did ok. So did Malcolm Reilly. I would take a proven Super League coach every day of the week over an unproven NRL assistant

      • this came up 12546368458?profile=RESIZE_930x

        https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/12546368458?profile=RESIZE_930x
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