PDA

View Full Version : The making of Brendan McCartney



GVGjr
22-02-2014, 06:42 AM
http://theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/the-making-of-brendan-mccartney-20140221-337hi.html


417
The teacher: Bulldogs coach Brendan McCartney. A coach, he says, is part teacher, part dad, part big brother, part friend, but he has to have a hard edge to him

Brendan McCartney's bigger than I thought. Chunkier. As a footballer, he would have been capable of making his own path through a pack.

His sun-hardened complexion – the legacy of someone of Irish and Scottish heritage growing up in the heat and glare of the Mallee – is offset with bright, lively eyes. His father, Graeme, was the Nyah butcher.

Sometimes you have to be blunt and brutal with a young player who's not getting it. You have to say, “Young feller – you're doing this. You'll do what we tell you”.

Graeme McCartney was in partnership with his brother Billy. Billy coached the Nyah footy team and Graeme, who had one game with Richmond but came home because he didn't like the city, played in the centre. When Brendan was a kid, Billy took him on his meat runs. They were still killing their own meat in those days and Billy exposed him to that side of life, too.

418
Football family: McCartney's father Graeme (right) and uncles Doc (left) and Billy (middle). Graeme played one game for Richmond but returned to Nyah because he didn't like the city.

Brendan McCartney can recall, in detail, the Nyah change rooms – sawdust on the wood floor, cloth ankle bandages, the smell of liniment searing the nostrils. The McCartneys from Nyah played the Roses from Nyah West. The statue of Bob Rose outside the Collingwood club offices is an indication of the status he achieved in the game. Billy McCartney knew all the Roses. Of the Nyah football team, Brendan McCartney says: “They were only country footballers, but they were heroes to me.”
Advertisement

As a kid growing up in Nyah, McCartney believes he was taught “solid values”. “If you called Mrs Parish from down the road something other than Mrs Parish, you got a clip over the ear.”

He was taught to work hard and be humble. His father always said, “Don't dream of a better job – do a better job.” The thing about solid values, says McCartney, is that they stay solid.

He aspired to play AFL footy and describes himself as a “pretty honest” footballer with a creative side. “I understood where to run and how to tap into good teammates.” He got to train with the Geelong under-19s but wasn't asked to continue. A career in the Geelong Football League followed, but injuries cut him down in his mid-20s and he took up running. Running was harder, he says, because you had to train alone. Missing “the team thing”, he became the coach of country football club Ocean Grove.

McCartney's account of his football career is a long list of thank-yous. He starts with his childhood coach, Laurie Henry. “He coached in a way that made you want to try so hard for him and the team.” John Schofield (father of West Coast's Will) was the older player who protected him when he first graduated to senior football. “Someone'd be giving me a hard time and I'd hear a whack in a pack and know that all had been resolved.”

His father was an excellent judge of a footballer, both as to talent and whether the individual in question would prove a good teammate. “You learn something from them all,” he says.

While playing country footy, this man with a passion for learning became a teacher. What did he teach? “Whatever they gave me, but somehow I always ended up getting kids with a lot of go in them who were flighty.” His favourite book, Marva Collins' Way, is about a black teacher battling the odds in a tough school in Chicago. “I can quote whole pages of it.”

McCartney gets asked to speak in public an increasing amount. He's surprised; I'm not. He has clear ideas on a subject many in this culture are fuzzy about: how young males should be – to borrow a notion from Aboriginal culture – initiated. That is, transitioned into manhood. “Young men,” he says, “really do need a strong male influence. They need firm guidance coupled with empathy.”

He thanks the committee at the Ocean Grove Football Club, with whom he won four flags. In 1998, Jeff Gieschen, the Richmond senior coach, gave him the chance to work at AFL level. Then he was given the chance to be part of “the build” at Geelong. He describes then coach Mark Thompson as “an incredible football person with a clear understanding of what matters in a game and what matters in a team”.

The best moment of McCartney's AFL career to date was walking down the steps from the Geelong coach's box at the end of the 2007 grand final, knowing everything they had believed in and laboured for had been proved right. When I ask him the worst moment of his career to date, he pauses, then says, “When you see really good people get kicked when they're down – players who've made a mistake in life or coaches who haven't met expectations. I've never understood why people do that.”

In 2011, he followed Thompson to Essendon under new coach James Hird. McCartney describes Hird as a driven man with a deep love of his club who is “humble, given the heights he reached as a player”. Hird publicly applauded McCartney as a coach and Thompson encouraged him “to have a go” for the Port Adelaide job. He didn't get it, but the feedback was good so he applied for the Western Bulldogs coaching position, beating former Charlie Sutton medallist, Leon Cameron, now the coach of Greater Western Sydney.

McCartney is about building a club. He shows me a quote of Sir Alex Ferguson's, thanking two power brokers at Manchester United during his early years: “Thanks for giving me the time to a build a football club, and not just a football team.”

He disagrees with those who say AFL football is brutal. His word for it is confrontational – “every minute, every hour” – and says his best experience at the Bulldogs has been hearing some of the senior players talk about their feelings for the club and then watching them “walk the talk”. Once people feel they belong to an organisation, he says, “they are obliged to help it grow”.

A coach, he says, is part teacher, part dad, part big brother, part friend, but he has to have a hard edge to him. “Sometimes you have to be blunt and brutal with a young player who's not getting it. You have to say, 'Young feller – you're doing this. You'll do what we tell you'.” Later, when the young feller does what he's been told, McCartney thanks him for making the club better. “Nowadays, you have to be collaborative.”

His second favourite sport is Test cricket. His favourite cricketer? Allan Border. “He was a ferocious competitor who knew his place in the game and respected it.” In the AFL, he is impressed by players such as Joel Selwood, Simon Black, Lenny Hayes, Dale Morris … “I like humble, hard-working people who give.”

McCartney thanks Simon Garlick, the CEO of the Western Bulldogs, and the board of the club. “They've provided stability and providing stability requires a certain courage.” Then he thanks me for my interest and, like others before me, I see a vision which is inclusive at every turn and based on sound values.

Go_Dogs
22-02-2014, 08:23 AM
Nice article. He makes everyone he speaks to a believer.

Hotdog60
22-02-2014, 08:49 AM
It's good to read about someone that is building for a sustained future rather than a quick fix.
I loved Rocket and he has been one of the best coaches we have had but I thank the board for having the courage to buy into something that could yield greatness for a long time.
Let us be that Manchester united.

Scraggers
22-02-2014, 02:04 PM
It's good to read about someone that is building for a sustained future rather than a quick fix.
I loved Rocket and he has been one of the best coaches we have had but I thank the board for having the courage to buy into something that could yield greatness for a long time.
Let us be that Manchester united.

Could not have said it better myself

Twodogs
22-02-2014, 02:25 PM
Who else is going to read Marva Collin's Way now? It's just shot up to the the top of my "next book I'm going to read" list.

Straight after I've finished Percy Chapman's biography.

Remi Moses
22-02-2014, 02:30 PM
Martin Flanagan's a great writer, and that story was a beauty.

boydogs
22-02-2014, 03:02 PM
Others have said before McCartney would make a great leader or teacher in other industries, such as the military or youth work. He seems to be the right man at the right time to bring our kids through, but he will need to take the next step once they have matured

SonofScray
22-02-2014, 03:56 PM
Martin Flanagan is my favourite writer.

I'm a big fan our coach and how he presents himself, probably a bit old fashioned in some ways but I love the fact he is quite explicit in his views on how things should be and that remains a driving factor in his behaviour. That is the way you "walk the talk."

Great photo of our old mate Doc there, no doubt many of you would have crossed paths with him over the years, a great Bulldogs man. He would be rapt with how Brendan is handling the development of this Club. Really miss the opportunity to chat about the year ahead and how we will go with him. It is a very special time for us as a Club to have a leader with that close a connection to a man who was a staunch, one eyed, fan of our Club. You can see that NOD really respects the vibe of the place and the narrative we have built up over many years of waiting for our day in the sun.

bornadog
22-02-2014, 05:57 PM
The one thing I like about Macca is he has a plan and a way of doing things and he is going to stick to it. In the end if it comes off he will be a hero if not , we won't forgive him easily.

For me, we must make finals in 2015, then I will be satisfied he is on the right path. To date, so far so good.

Bulldog Revolution
23-02-2014, 09:55 AM
For me, we must make finals in 2015, then I will be satisfied he is on the right path. To date, so far so good.

We've been heading in the right direction but its all about the development of our young players and team

If you lose playing veterans then the reality is that you aren't good enough

If you lose whilst playing young players in important roles and blooding the list then at least there is the hope you are going somewhere

We need lots of players to take big steps forward in 2014 and 2015