A teacher, schemer, dreamer … but Des Hasler definitely isn’t paranoid
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″All great coaches are paranoid,” a former Sydney Morning Herald editor and fascinated coach-watcher, Sam North, once remarked. Repeat this statement to Gold Coast Titans coach Des Hasler and there is a prolonged pause while he considers the implications of his answer.
He does not want to admit to paranoia and certainly not to greatness, having spent 47 years earning a reputation for humility in a code where big-headedness is a crime. I interrupt the long pause to remind him of his phone call to his great friend and rival football manager, Frank Ponissi, after learning the long-serving Storm official had been appointed to the NRL Pathways Committee around the time Melbourne was gifted a $10 million academy to develop young players.
Hasler incorrectly linked the two, assuming Ponissi had used his position on the committee to win a big NRL grant for his club. Ponissi explained that the $10 million came from the Victorian government to develop pathways, especially for disadvantaged youth in Melbourne’s northern suburbs.
Still, Des will not concede he sees agendas everywhere in NRL land, or that he believes passionately in siege mentality. “Frank and I go back a long way,” he explains, suggesting he was setting his up former Manly coaching colleague while also agitating for the Titans to gain a place on the powerful committee.
Titans coach Des Hasler and captain Kieran Foran front media after a defeat.Credit: NRL Photos
“The fact he thinks I am paranoid makes it more delicious. I told him I couldn’t understand how a bloke from Melbourne who gets his young players from Queensland could be on an NRL Pathways Committee. I’m pleased my little phone call worked.”
Riiiiiight. But if Hasler was playing an innocent game with an old colleague, he has grounds for paranoia, considering the blurry ethics involved when NRL agents seed stories with journalists in order to engineer moves for their client players and coaches to other clubs. The journo gains the clicks, and agent receives the commission.
For most of this season, Hasler has coached with the proverbial axe above his head, following a story that the Gold Coast board can sack him if the teams fails to make the play-offs. No one I spoke to at the Titans has any knowledge of such a clause in his contract, but such stories can become self-fulfilling prophesies. As defeat builds on debilitating defeat, weak-minded players have a worthy scapegoat other than themselves and it ends in a win for the player manager when his client is appointed to replace the sacked coach.
The Panthers’ golden-point win left the Titans players crushed. But Hasler stayed positive.Credit: Getty Images
So, when the Titans came from 24 points down to lead four-times........
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