Crawley Files: Why Phil Gould will be great for Canterbury Bulldogs

Bulldogsforlife23

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Phil Gould is rugby league’s most polarising figure. Opinionated, unbending, passionate, intelligent. Likes an agenda, too.

Plenty might even go as far as to say he’s also the game’s biggest pain in the bum. From where I’m standing, he leads a very strong field.

But what can’t be disputed is Gould is a rugby league genius.


And he’s the man most likely to turn around the Canterbury Bulldogs, the club that has been bashed from pillar to post in recent years for reasons mostly of their own making.

Sometimes in this game the stars just align. And the fact Gould has a track record in turning joints around, albeit with a few casualties along the way, isn’t the only reason it is looking so promising here.


What a lot of younger league fans, who identify Gould’s coaching journey only with the Panthers, Roosters and the NSW Blues, perhaps don’t realise is that the return to Belmore is also personal to Gus.

It contains a touch of real nostalgia which is sure to have him emotionally invested in making them winners again – with as much passion as he has shown anywhere else.

And it is a “back to the future” opportunity for Gould and the Bulldogs that could end up as a carbon copy of the impact he had at Penrith – and, just maybe, the results the Panthers are having now.


Gould began his playing career at Penrith, returned as a coach, won them a premiership, went on a winding path elsewhere for years and returned as football general manager to put the Panthers on a new course.

As is almost compulsory when it comes to Gould, along the way he put noses out of joint and turned the local world upside down in doing so.

Just ask Ivan Cleary and Anthony Griffin.

The same fate awaits him and the Dogs. He played there, coached them to a premiership, has long been disconnected from them too … and he’s returning with the same goal.

He is going to have to stick it to a few people along the way to achieve that. But what’s new? The fact is he gets results.


And that first success is almost forgotten. Back at the Bulldogs … way back in 1987-88. In ’87, the first season after he retired as a player at age 28 – he played 103 first-grade games for four clubs – he was given the reserve grade team under the legendary Warren Ryan.

Canterbury had won the comp under Ryan in 1984 and ’85 before going down to Parramatta in that famous 4-2 grand final in 1986.

But events started to unravel. Favourite sons like Chris Mortimer and Peter Kelly were let go along with a whole lot of other good players.

The Dogs missed the finals in ’87, the always uneasy relationship between Ryan and CEO Peter “Bullfrog” Moore deteriorated even more and “The Wok” headed off to Balmain, where he took them to successive grand finals in 1988-89.

People close to the club believe to this day that Gould was only brought in as a stopgap for Chris Anderson – Moore’s son-in-law and a club legend – who was coaching Halifax and had lifted them from the bottom half of the ladder to a championship (1984-85) and Challenge Cup (1987-88).

Some suspect “Bullfrog” was happy for the side to slip so he could justify Anderson’s return when his contract ended. Instead, Gould defied everything – including history.


He became only second person to win a premiership in his rookie year as a coach, ironically against the Ryan-coached Tigers. The first coach to do so was Balmain’s Leo Nosworthy in 1969.

Gould was also the youngest (non-playing) coach to win a title – two months before his 31st birthday.

By the end of ’89 (the Dogs finished ninth), Gould was gone from Belmore. And, as predicted, Anderson took over and kept the job for seven years (winning a title in 1995).

But from there, Gould took success with him wherever he went.

In 1990, he guided Penrith to a grand final and the next year – with the likes of Royce Simmons, Greg Alexander, Mark Geyer and Brad Fittler playing a part in that history-making triumph – he delivered the Panthers their first premiership trophy.


Gould also went on to become NSW’s most successful coach – still is – before coaching the Roosters.

He then went into coaching director roles at the Roosters and Panthers.

Let’s not kid ourselves.

He has always been one of the game’s most divisive figures – and that is never going to change because it is in his DNA.

Ask anybody in Queensland – they can’t stand the sight of him when it comes to Origin.

Or anyone who watches the footy on Channel 9.

But what won’t be disputed is that he is the one man most likely to take a club that has been floundering for five years – since Des Hasler was shown the door – and use his contact book and authority to take this club back to where it long belonged.


The Dogs have already got quality players like Josh Addo-Carr and Matt Burton arriving next season.

On Wednesday it was confirmed Tevita Pangai was the latest to come on board.

And be assured, Gus won’t be adding any second-raters to that lot and he will clean up what he sees as the dead wood – those players he doesn’t think he can win with.

He will upset some and win others over.

He will also help sort out political issues that have haunted Canterbury for way too long and put in place structures at a junior level to grow from within.

But more than anything, it will be his ruthless winning mentality that will be his biggest influence. And even if he comes with baggage, that is what the Bulldogs most need right now.

 

chisdog

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Phil Gould is rugby league’s most polarising figure. Opinionated, unbending, passionate, intelligent. Likes an agenda, too.

Plenty might even go as far as to say he’s also the game’s biggest pain in the bum. From where I’m standing, he leads a very strong field.

But what can’t be disputed is Gould is a rugby league genius.


And he’s the man most likely to turn around the Canterbury Bulldogs, the club that has been bashed from pillar to post in recent years for reasons mostly of their own making.

Sometimes in this game the stars just align. And the fact Gould has a track record in turning joints around, albeit with a few casualties along the way, isn’t the only reason it is looking so promising here.


What a lot of younger league fans, who identify Gould’s coaching journey only with the Panthers, Roosters and the NSW Blues, perhaps don’t realise is that the return to Belmore is also personal to Gus.

It contains a touch of real nostalgia which is sure to have him emotionally invested in making them winners again – with as much passion as he has shown anywhere else.

And it is a “back to the future” opportunity for Gould and the Bulldogs that could end up as a carbon copy of the impact he had at Penrith – and, just maybe, the results the Panthers are having now.


Gould began his playing career at Penrith, returned as a coach, won them a premiership, went on a winding path elsewhere for years and returned as football general manager to put the Panthers on a new course.

As is almost compulsory when it comes to Gould, along the way he put noses out of joint and turned the local world upside down in doing so.

Just ask Ivan Cleary and Anthony Griffin.

The same fate awaits him and the Dogs. He played there, coached them to a premiership, has long been disconnected from them too … and he’s returning with the same goal.

He is going to have to stick it to a few people along the way to achieve that. But what’s new? The fact is he gets results.


And that first success is almost forgotten. Back at the Bulldogs … way back in 1987-88. In ’87, the first season after he retired as a player at age 28 – he played 103 first-grade games for four clubs – he was given the reserve grade team under the legendary Warren Ryan.

Canterbury had won the comp under Ryan in 1984 and ’85 before going down to Parramatta in that famous 4-2 grand final in 1986.

But events started to unravel. Favourite sons like Chris Mortimer and Peter Kelly were let go along with a whole lot of other good players.

The Dogs missed the finals in ’87, the always uneasy relationship between Ryan and CEO Peter “Bullfrog” Moore deteriorated even more and “The Wok” headed off to Balmain, where he took them to successive grand finals in 1988-89.

People close to the club believe to this day that Gould was only brought in as a stopgap for Chris Anderson – Moore’s son-in-law and a club legend – who was coaching Halifax and had lifted them from the bottom half of the ladder to a championship (1984-85) and Challenge Cup (1987-88).

Some suspect “Bullfrog” was happy for the side to slip so he could justify Anderson’s return when his contract ended. Instead, Gould defied everything – including history.


He became only second person to win a premiership in his rookie year as a coach, ironically against the Ryan-coached Tigers. The first coach to do so was Balmain’s Leo Nosworthy in 1969.

Gould was also the youngest (non-playing) coach to win a title – two months before his 31st birthday.

By the end of ’89 (the Dogs finished ninth), Gould was gone from Belmore. And, as predicted, Anderson took over and kept the job for seven years (winning a title in 1995).

But from there, Gould took success with him wherever he went.

In 1990, he guided Penrith to a grand final and the next year – with the likes of Royce Simmons, Greg Alexander, Mark Geyer and Brad Fittler playing a part in that history-making triumph – he delivered the Panthers their first premiership trophy.


Gould also went on to become NSW’s most successful coach – still is – before coaching the Roosters.

He then went into coaching director roles at the Roosters and Panthers.

Let’s not kid ourselves.

He has always been one of the game’s most divisive figures – and that is never going to change because it is in his DNA.

Ask anybody in Queensland – they can’t stand the sight of him when it comes to Origin.

Or anyone who watches the footy on Channel 9.

But what won’t be disputed is that he is the one man most likely to take a club that has been floundering for five years – since Des Hasler was shown the door – and use his contact book and authority to take this club back to where it long belonged.


The Dogs have already got quality players like Josh Addo-Carr and Matt Burton arriving next season.

On Wednesday it was confirmed Tevita Pangai was the latest to come on board.

And be assured, Gus won’t be adding any second-raters to that lot and he will clean up what he sees as the dead wood – those players he doesn’t think he can win with.

He will upset some and win others over.

He will also help sort out political issues that have haunted Canterbury for way too long and put in place structures at a junior level to grow from within.

But more than anything, it will be his ruthless winning mentality that will be his biggest influence. And even if he comes with baggage, that is what the Bulldogs most need right now.

1. The political issues have already been sorted out &
2. " Plenty might even go as far as to say he’s also the game’s biggest pain in the bum." This quote might also apply to the writer.
3. If you are going to write the full history of RP Gould, then you should say he was a Parramatta junior as well.
 

Burt Matton

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Old “mouth cheese Crawley“ can suck a big fat dogs dick. It’s murdering him to write this stuff. Be a good boy and do as you’re told. Hahaha.
 

D.O.W.

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And there’s the influence of “The Gouldfather”, he won’t be the only jurno back-peddling in lieu of negative statements made against the club.

Despite being one of the most successful clubs in modern history, we’ve been slammed by all and sundry for a lean 5yr period (other teams far less scrutinised for longer periods of struggle) broadly due to the direct appointment of Raelene Castle IMO who gave total autonomy to Hasler and in-turn screwed the club royally with back ended contracts and a 3yr x 1.2M per season deal involving his old mate Foran who was cast as an injury riddled journeyman with a checkered history, that can only be best described as suspiciously unexplainable.

But here we are, 2022 looming, JAC, Burton, Dufty, TPJ and Naden signed up, Vaughan soon to be announced…Gould coming in as GM of football with his vision and footy brain, vast network, ability to pull in talent/sponsors and last but not least, the respect he commands… you better believe it, we’re back baby!!!
 

Vlasnik

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And there’s the influence of “The Gouldfather”, he won’t be the only jurno back-peddling in lieu of negative statements made against the club.

Despite being one of the most successful clubs in modern history, we’ve been slammed by all and sundry for a lean 5yr period (other teams far less scrutinised for longer periods of struggle) broadly due to the direct appointment of Raelene Castle IMO who gave total autonomy to Hasler and in-turn screwed the club royally with back ended contracts and a 3yr x 1.2M per season deal involving his old mate Foran who was cast as an injury riddled journeyman with a checkered history, that can only be best described as suspiciously unexplainable.

But here we are, 2022 looming, JAC, Burton, Dufty, TPJ and Naden signed up, Vaughan soon to be announced…Gould coming in as GM of football with his vision and footy brain, vast network, ability to pull in talent/sponsors and last but not least, the respect he commands… you better believe it, we’re back baby!!!
Just reading that gives me a chubby :grinning:
 

Dogmonster

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The bastards are talking us up, so if any losses or indiscretions come our way next year, they will have there pants half down waiting to shit on us again.
 
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