
by MUNGO JERRY » Thu Feb 08, 2007 9:29 pm
by am Bays » Thu Feb 08, 2007 9:40 pm
by McAlmanac » Thu Feb 08, 2007 10:40 pm
1980 Tassie Medalist wrote:Mungo you don't like the Bays do you??????
by Blue Boy » Fri Feb 09, 2007 1:16 pm
by Wedgie » Fri Feb 09, 2007 1:17 pm
Blue Boy wrote:Very Interesting topic - not bad TM
Here's one though - What if the crows had of let Cornes coach one more year ???
by am Bays » Fri Feb 09, 2007 1:40 pm
Blue Boy wrote:Very Interesting topic - not bad TM
Here's one though - What if the crows had of let Cornes coach one more year ???
by sturt1 » Sat Feb 10, 2007 12:16 am
[/b]1980 Tassie Medalist wrote:October 1990 and their was two candidates for the Crows first coaching job, Cahill and Cornes. History shows Cornesy got the gig and a lot of Glenelg sponsors, board members, players and match day staff followed him (as REB so eloquently pointed out on another forum![]()
).
If Cahill got the gig and his loyal leutenents from Port followed him (e.g. Tredrea & Fairclough), he showed similar bias to Port players that Cornes did to Glenelg players i.e. M Williams, Ginevar and Fiachi (George made the SOO team in 89) made the list of 52, and Port sponsors followed him diluting the Magpies $$$$....
I wonder if:
1. Would the Magpies have been as dominant in the 90s as they were, given some of their core players from the early 90s would have been with the Crows?
2.Would Port Power have got in or would it have been Norwood in 97?
3. Would Glenelg have slid as much as the Bays people and sponsors would have more likely stayed "home"
4. Would the Crows been more successfull with the Port culture in the 90s?
5.WOULD CAHILL HAVE TAKEN HODGES OFF IN THE 93 PRELIM FINAL AGAINST ESSENDON![]()
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I'm after some serious replies here, hence why it is in the history forum, because the history of the SANFL and Adelaide's AFL clubs in last 17 years could have been much different if Jack was the Crows head honcho in 1991......
by sturt1 » Sat Feb 10, 2007 12:17 am
Wedgie wrote:Blue Boy wrote:Very Interesting topic - not bad TM
Here's one though - What if the crows had of let Cornes coach one more year ???
Probably would never have won a flag.
It was the recruiting under Shaw that got them the players to win in 97 and 98.
by sturt1 » Sat Feb 10, 2007 12:21 am
Pseudo wrote:1. A little less dominant. Much of Port's dominance was a direct result of the club's push to control the next AFL side. Assuming that this still would have taken place, it stands to reason that Port would remain strong. However if Cahill had gone to the Crows the Darren Smiths and Scott Hodges etc would have rarely played with the Magpies. Hence Port would be less dominant.
2. If Port had seriously bid for the next AFL license, it would have still been successful. By 1997 Cahill would have long departed from the Crows, probably not by his own choice.
3. Yes, though they might have remained stronger for a little longer, at least until the end of Cornesey's tenure. I am sick to my guts of hearing Glenelg people blame the Crows for the club's slide from top (well, perennially second) to bottom. This is the sort of loser mentality which has seen Glenelg remain on the bottom. Port lost almost as many players as Glenelg yet remained top. The difference is that Port set its sights firmly on the next AFL license and moved on. Glenelg was quick to blame others for its own failings. Thankfully Glenelg finally seems to have become accountable for its own future. Shame it took a decade and a half to get there.
4. No. While Cahill walked on water at Port, his record at other teams was average at best. Getting '80s-era Collingwood to third once was not a huge achievement, given the club's record in the late '70s and early '80s. Cahill did jack (pun intended) at Westies. His record coaching SA teams is particularly woeful; he couldn't even knock of the Tassies ferchrissakes - and that was with a team featuring a large number of Port Magpies and several other Port people in support positions. The Crows upon their formation were essentially a state team. It is therefore obvious why Cornes was chosen, given his then blemish-free record of coaching the SOO team against the Vics.
And a footnote: it would have been far preferable, IMO, if the Crows coach had come from outside SANFL ranks. The Crows coach would have been free of the anti-Glenelg sentiment which came to the fore ("Cornes for Columbia", anyone?) when the Crows hit a bad patch. On a personal level, my mob would have held onto its premiership coach and the player/staff drain would have been slightly lessened.
by Hondo » Fri Feb 23, 2007 9:43 pm
by Snaggletooth Tiger » Sat Feb 24, 2007 8:04 am
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