Opinion Is Gus our modern day Bullfrog

TAS

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The quote from gus a couple of years ago saying “the bulldogs are the biggest club in Sydney, they’ve just gotta start acting like it” always stuck with me that’s exactly what hes doing now, acting like it.

This is Gus saying Bulldogs are the biggest club in Sydney and also discusses Barrett. I knew after watching this over a year ago that Gus does love the club he just didn't like those running it back then.

https://m.facebook.com/watch/?v=625976801613874&_rdr.
 

B-Train

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There'll only ever be one Bullfrog.. Gus would have to be here for several years and oversee a premiership or two to be anywhere near that status but that doesn't take away from how great an appointment Gus was..

Gus, Khoury and Warburton are the best combination of administrators the club has had in decades. The impact they've had and the moves they've made have been amazing in a short period of time.. Now they need to turn the hype into results in the next few years because it's a results driven business and it's all about premierships at the end of the day.
 

Sword

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Gus believes he can change the bulldogs. I believe in Gus.
 

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Paul Kent: Wayne Bennett and Phil Gould face off in the recruitment race for 2023

Phil Gould’s massive overhaul of the Canterbury Bulldogs could prove very bad news for Wayne Bennett and his new Dolphins team. PAUL KENT analyses the delicate situation.


Some years back your old Sparring Partner here wrote a column about the two most powerful men in rugby league, the types who wielded power with something to border on admiration.
One was a solid-set fellow, with a face kind of like a mudslide, whose contacts in the game counted the likes of James Packer and Nick Politis and beginning there and going down he exhibited the kind of the power that could end or promote careers.

His closest friend was Wayne Beavis, then the most powerful agent in the game, he was on first call contact with then Channel 9 boss David Leckie, counted David Gyngell as a friend, and was forever owed by the surviving ARL clubs for fighting the good fight.

When the Super League war ended Kerry Packer felt such a debt to Phil Gould that he wrote him a cheque for $1 million and spun it across the table. This was in the 1990s, when $1 million took you a long way on the bus.

Gould got a cheque and so did Bob Fulton, who relayed the story here.

A lot has happened since then, but Gould still knows how to wield power better than most in the game.

The other power figure was more slightly built, broad but angular like a spinnaker turned upside down, and his power was the equal of Gould, but also the opposite.

Wayne Bennett was running the Broncos at the time and his circle of power included the Murdoch family, specifically Lachlan, and News Corp chairman John Hartigan, as well as the likes of Jack Gibson and Ron Massey and their thick contact books.

Bennett had no special relationship with a player agent, preferring to have them all jostling for position, but he had the ear of the Queensland Rugby League and League headquarters and a fawning media, and he used them all regularly.

Given they were the same but opposite, competing for the same small spot that was big enough for only one, they often had a hard time getting on, although there was a certain respect.

A lot has happened since then.

Bennett spectacularly blew up his relationship with News Corp, not the first time he left the Broncos but the second, while Gould has recently rebounded from his departure at Penrith, where he had a sweet gig, to take a similar role at Canterbury.

So here they are again, all these years later, still competing for the same piece of turf.

This time it is the 2023 player market.

It began when the Homeless Dolphins hired Bennett recently to lead their club into the 2023 season, their inaugural season and one many hope will continue for a long time to come.

Bennett was the perfect choice.

He was the architect behind Brisbane’s entry to the NSW Rugby League competition in 1988, setting up the club and finding immediate and lasting success as he put in place a template that saw the Broncos dominate for decades.

By hiring Bennett the Dolphins, of no fixed address, showed they were also after fast results.

The differences between now and then were irrelevant.

Back then the Broncos’ beginning had the likes of established stars Wally Lewis, Allan Langer, Gene Miles, Greg Conescu, Greg Dowling, Chris Johns, Brian Niebling, Mick Hancock already playing Origin, or about to be, and all waiting for the chance to play in the bigger Sydney competition.

There is no untapped talent pool this time around.

Regardless, Bennett was hired as much for his ability to recruit as for what he would bring as a coach.

It has got off to a slow start.

This week the Dolphins missed another couple of key signings when Pat Carrigan extended his deal at Brisbane while Christian Welch did the same at Melbourne.

It came after Tiny Fa'asuamaleaui, Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Harry Grant and Cody Walker all rejected the Dolphins to remain at their current clubs, leaving the Dolphins one marquee short of a marquee signing.

It is enough that some have questioned whether Bennett has lost some of his gloss, the Pied Piper effect failing to spark a signings avalanche. Say that at your peril, it says here.

Still, down in Sydney, Gould has gone about reinvigorating Canterbury’s roster with the kind of gusto he is known for, which will not have been missed by the Dolphins.

With Matt Burton and Brent Naden signed for next season he beat off Bennett last week to capture Viliame Kikau’s signature for season 2023.

In between he signed Josh Addo-Carr, Paul Vaughn, Matt Dufty and Tevita Pangai Jr.

This week he began the work on Canterbury’s spine when he signed Parramatta’s Reed Mahoney for 2023.

Already it is clear the Bulldogs will be unrecognisable in 2023, the season the Dolphins debut.

Gould and Bennett, two old adversaries, are now going to head to head for what is essentially the same player market and Gould has taken the early lead.

Kikau was supposedly a Dolphins’ target, as was Mahoney for one small moment, but both were lost to the Bulldogs.

The Dolphins are now focusing on Brandon Smith, who just this week walked off the golf course with several Sydney Roosters players and looms as Politis’s key target for 2023.

It begins to raise the question about where Bennett goes, and the Dolphins themselves, if the grand plan fails to materialise.

What if Bennett fails to recruit a top heavy roster, as the Dolphins hoped?

Where he always preached from the Jack Gibson School of Coaching, “always leave a club in a better place than when you got there”, that philosophy got wobbly wheels at Newcastle where he ended up sacking himself, basically admitting he no longer had the appetite to go through a rebuild.

Since then Bennett transformed himself into a gunslinger, a hired gun brought in to apply the finishing touch to a team’s premiership charge in a roster that was already mature.

He nearly did it at Brisbane and nearly did it again at South Sydney, taking both to losing grand finals.

Now, without options, he might not have a choice but to return to coaching life as a development coach.

How that news reaches the Dolphins remains to be seen.

What is sure is that Gould has taken the early points for season 2023, but don’t write off Bennett yet.

On Friday the Dolphins finally struck, announcing Felise Kaufusi and his travelling elbows as the club’s first big-name signing.

It was a significant first-up effort.
 

billy beane

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I didn’t realise till lately, just how much Gus loves his Bulldogs and his passion for our club.
He’s done it all with Canterbury when you consider as a player, premiership winning coach, all under the greatest bulldog of them all, our beloved Bullfrog who crafted our DNA.
Gould has already said, he’s hear for the long haul and wants to return Canterbury to the club he once knew, to the club they once were and to the club that is the epitome of the league.
I don’t know if he would want to or find the energy to do it again at another club.
Maybe and I hope he is here to stay to keep his influence and watchful eye at the Bulldogs till the end just as our patriarch Peter (Bullfrog) More did.
Maybe he owes it to Bullfrog for the belief and guidance shown in him all those years ago as a young coach who guided Canterbury to that premiership all those years ago.
Maybe Gus was the apprentice and Bullfrog the Master who taught him the lessons on how success is earned.
Gus has now come full circle.
Come on Doggies.
Well he is definitely our most influential administrator since Bullfrog. His ability to attract players and get things moving is second to none.

Gus appears to be in his element running the team he has always loved and admired.

I hope he is still here in 15 years and spoken of as a Bulldog great alongside Bullfrog.
 

wendog33

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"Felise Kaufusi and his travelling elbows" hahaha
 

1976dog

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Bullfrog was the best in the game at the time. No doubt about that. He also had a man called Punchy, who went under the radar so to speak. Punchy help the bullfrog and the bulldogs become who they are. I remember seeing them both on the bench seats watching at
Port Macquarie. I'm pretty certain it was to watch McCracken. Can someone ask Gus on twitter his thoughts on Punchy. Wonder who Gus has as his right hand man?
 

Alan79

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Gould isn't the only one involved with the recruitment process. We recruited some big names and great potential before he joined us. So I won't completely write his involvement off as insignificant, nor do I think he deserves every scrap of credit here.
 

wendog33

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Bullfrog was the best in the game at the time. No doubt about that. He also had a man called Punchy, who went under the radar so to speak. Punchy help the bullfrog and the bulldogs become who they are. I remember seeing them both on the bench seats watching at
Port Macquarie. I'm pretty certain it was to watch McCracken. Can someone ask Gus on twitter his thoughts on Punchy. Wonder who Gus has as his right hand man?
Big Willy :grinning:
 
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Dingo

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View attachment 34313
Paul Kent: Wayne Bennett and Phil Gould face off in the recruitment race for 2023

Phil Gould’s massive overhaul of the Canterbury Bulldogs could prove very bad news for Wayne Bennett and his new Dolphins team. PAUL KENT analyses the delicate situation.

Some years back your old Sparring Partner here wrote a column about the two most powerful men in rugby league, the types who wielded power with something to border on admiration.
One was a solid-set fellow, with a face kind of like a mudslide, whose contacts in the game counted the likes of James Packer and Nick Politis and beginning there and going down he exhibited the kind of the power that could end or promote careers.

His closest friend was Wayne Beavis, then the most powerful agent in the game, he was on first call contact with then Channel 9 boss David Leckie, counted David Gyngell as a friend, and was forever owed by the surviving ARL clubs for fighting the good fight.

When the Super League war ended Kerry Packer felt such a debt to Phil Gould that he wrote him a cheque for $1 million and spun it across the table. This was in the 1990s, when $1 million took you a long way on the bus.

Gould got a cheque and so did Bob Fulton, who relayed the story here.

A lot has happened since then, but Gould still knows how to wield power better than most in the game.

The other power figure was more slightly built, broad but angular like a spinnaker turned upside down, and his power was the equal of Gould, but also the opposite.

Wayne Bennett was running the Broncos at the time and his circle of power included the Murdoch family, specifically Lachlan, and News Corp chairman John Hartigan, as well as the likes of Jack Gibson and Ron Massey and their thick contact books.

Bennett had no special relationship with a player agent, preferring to have them all jostling for position, but he had the ear of the Queensland Rugby League and League headquarters and a fawning media, and he used them all regularly.

Given they were the same but opposite, competing for the same small spot that was big enough for only one, they often had a hard time getting on, although there was a certain respect.

A lot has happened since then.

Bennett spectacularly blew up his relationship with News Corp, not the first time he left the Broncos but the second, while Gould has recently rebounded from his departure at Penrith, where he had a sweet gig, to take a similar role at Canterbury.

So here they are again, all these years later, still competing for the same piece of turf.

This time it is the 2023 player market.

It began when the Homeless Dolphins hired Bennett recently to lead their club into the 2023 season, their inaugural season and one many hope will continue for a long time to come.

Bennett was the perfect choice.

He was the architect behind Brisbane’s entry to the NSW Rugby League competition in 1988, setting up the club and finding immediate and lasting success as he put in place a template that saw the Broncos dominate for decades.

By hiring Bennett the Dolphins, of no fixed address, showed they were also after fast results.

The differences between now and then were irrelevant.

Back then the Broncos’ beginning had the likes of established stars Wally Lewis, Allan Langer, Gene Miles, Greg Conescu, Greg Dowling, Chris Johns, Brian Niebling, Mick Hancock already playing Origin, or about to be, and all waiting for the chance to play in the bigger Sydney competition.

There is no untapped talent pool this time around.

Regardless, Bennett was hired as much for his ability to recruit as for what he would bring as a coach.

It has got off to a slow start.

This week the Dolphins missed another couple of key signings when Pat Carrigan extended his deal at Brisbane while Christian Welch did the same at Melbourne.

It came after Tiny Fa'asuamaleaui, Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Harry Grant and Cody Walker all rejected the Dolphins to remain at their current clubs, leaving the Dolphins one marquee short of a marquee signing.

It is enough that some have questioned whether Bennett has lost some of his gloss, the Pied Piper effect failing to spark a signings avalanche. Say that at your peril, it says here.

Still, down in Sydney, Gould has gone about reinvigorating Canterbury’s roster with the kind of gusto he is known for, which will not have been missed by the Dolphins.

With Matt Burton and Brent Naden signed for next season he beat off Bennett last week to capture Viliame Kikau’s signature for season 2023.

In between he signed Josh Addo-Carr, Paul Vaughn, Matt Dufty and Tevita Pangai Jr.

This week he began the work on Canterbury’s spine when he signed Parramatta’s Reed Mahoney for 2023.

Already it is clear the Bulldogs will be unrecognisable in 2023, the season the Dolphins debut.

Gould and Bennett, two old adversaries, are now going to head to head for what is essentially the same player market and Gould has taken the early lead.

Kikau was supposedly a Dolphins’ target, as was Mahoney for one small moment, but both were lost to the Bulldogs.

The Dolphins are now focusing on Brandon Smith, who just this week walked off the golf course with several Sydney Roosters players and looms as Politis’s key target for 2023.

It begins to raise the question about where Bennett goes, and the Dolphins themselves, if the grand plan fails to materialise.

What if Bennett fails to recruit a top heavy roster, as the Dolphins hoped?

Where he always preached from the Jack Gibson School of Coaching, “always leave a club in a better place than when you got there”, that philosophy got wobbly wheels at Newcastle where he ended up sacking himself, basically admitting he no longer had the appetite to go through a rebuild.

Since then Bennett transformed himself into a gunslinger, a hired gun brought in to apply the finishing touch to a team’s premiership charge in a roster that was already mature.

He nearly did it at Brisbane and nearly did it again at South Sydney, taking both to losing grand finals.

Now, without options, he might not have a choice but to return to coaching life as a development coach.

How that news reaches the Dolphins remains to be seen.

What is sure is that Gould has taken the early points for season 2023, but don’t write off Bennett yet.

On Friday the Dolphins finally struck, announcing Felise Kaufusi and his travelling elbows as the club’s first big-name signing.

It was a significant first-up effort.
Bennett can have our scraps
 

Mitch Connor

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Gus didn’t recruit JAC lol. Article is invalid.
 

Noeasyday

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View attachment 34313
Paul Kent: Wayne Bennett and Phil Gould face off in the recruitment race for 2023

Phil Gould’s massive overhaul of the Canterbury Bulldogs could prove very bad news for Wayne Bennett and his new Dolphins team. PAUL KENT analyses the delicate situation.

Some years back your old Sparring Partner here wrote a column about the two most powerful men in rugby league, the types who wielded power with something to border on admiration.
One was a solid-set fellow, with a face kind of like a mudslide, whose contacts in the game counted the likes of James Packer and Nick Politis and beginning there and going down he exhibited the kind of the power that could end or promote careers.

His closest friend was Wayne Beavis, then the most powerful agent in the game, he was on first call contact with then Channel 9 boss David Leckie, counted David Gyngell as a friend, and was forever owed by the surviving ARL clubs for fighting the good fight.

When the Super League war ended Kerry Packer felt such a debt to Phil Gould that he wrote him a cheque for $1 million and spun it across the table. This was in the 1990s, when $1 million took you a long way on the bus.

Gould got a cheque and so did Bob Fulton, who relayed the story here.

A lot has happened since then, but Gould still knows how to wield power better than most in the game.

The other power figure was more slightly built, broad but angular like a spinnaker turned upside down, and his power was the equal of Gould, but also the opposite.

Wayne Bennett was running the Broncos at the time and his circle of power included the Murdoch family, specifically Lachlan, and News Corp chairman John Hartigan, as well as the likes of Jack Gibson and Ron Massey and their thick contact books.

Bennett had no special relationship with a player agent, preferring to have them all jostling for position, but he had the ear of the Queensland Rugby League and League headquarters and a fawning media, and he used them all regularly.

Given they were the same but opposite, competing for the same small spot that was big enough for only one, they often had a hard time getting on, although there was a certain respect.

A lot has happened since then.

Bennett spectacularly blew up his relationship with News Corp, not the first time he left the Broncos but the second, while Gould has recently rebounded from his departure at Penrith, where he had a sweet gig, to take a similar role at Canterbury.

So here they are again, all these years later, still competing for the same piece of turf.

This time it is the 2023 player market.

It began when the Homeless Dolphins hired Bennett recently to lead their club into the 2023 season, their inaugural season and one many hope will continue for a long time to come.

Bennett was the perfect choice.

He was the architect behind Brisbane’s entry to the NSW Rugby League competition in 1988, setting up the club and finding immediate and lasting success as he put in place a template that saw the Broncos dominate for decades.

By hiring Bennett the Dolphins, of no fixed address, showed they were also after fast results.

The differences between now and then were irrelevant.

Back then the Broncos’ beginning had the likes of established stars Wally Lewis, Allan Langer, Gene Miles, Greg Conescu, Greg Dowling, Chris Johns, Brian Niebling, Mick Hancock already playing Origin, or about to be, and all waiting for the chance to play in the bigger Sydney competition.

There is no untapped talent pool this time around.

Regardless, Bennett was hired as much for his ability to recruit as for what he would bring as a coach.

It has got off to a slow start.

This week the Dolphins missed another couple of key signings when Pat Carrigan extended his deal at Brisbane while Christian Welch did the same at Melbourne.

It came after Tiny Fa'asuamaleaui, Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Harry Grant and Cody Walker all rejected the Dolphins to remain at their current clubs, leaving the Dolphins one marquee short of a marquee signing.

It is enough that some have questioned whether Bennett has lost some of his gloss, the Pied Piper effect failing to spark a signings avalanche. Say that at your peril, it says here.

Still, down in Sydney, Gould has gone about reinvigorating Canterbury’s roster with the kind of gusto he is known for, which will not have been missed by the Dolphins.

With Matt Burton and Brent Naden signed for next season he beat off Bennett last week to capture Viliame Kikau’s signature for season 2023.

In between he signed Josh Addo-Carr, Paul Vaughn, Matt Dufty and Tevita Pangai Jr.

This week he began the work on Canterbury’s spine when he signed Parramatta’s Reed Mahoney for 2023.

Already it is clear the Bulldogs will be unrecognisable in 2023, the season the Dolphins debut.

Gould and Bennett, two old adversaries, are now going to head to head for what is essentially the same player market and Gould has taken the early lead.

Kikau was supposedly a Dolphins’ target, as was Mahoney for one small moment, but both were lost to the Bulldogs.

The Dolphins are now focusing on Brandon Smith, who just this week walked off the golf course with several Sydney Roosters players and looms as Politis’s key target for 2023.

It begins to raise the question about where Bennett goes, and the Dolphins themselves, if the grand plan fails to materialise.

What if Bennett fails to recruit a top heavy roster, as the Dolphins hoped?

Where he always preached from the Jack Gibson School of Coaching, “always leave a club in a better place than when you got there”, that philosophy got wobbly wheels at Newcastle where he ended up sacking himself, basically admitting he no longer had the appetite to go through a rebuild.

Since then Bennett transformed himself into a gunslinger, a hired gun brought in to apply the finishing touch to a team’s premiership charge in a roster that was already mature.

He nearly did it at Brisbane and nearly did it again at South Sydney, taking both to losing grand finals.

Now, without options, he might not have a choice but to return to coaching life as a development coach.

How that news reaches the Dolphins remains to be seen.

What is sure is that Gould has taken the early points for season 2023, but don’t write off Bennett yet.

On Friday the Dolphins finally struck, announcing Felise Kaufusi and his travelling elbows as the club’s first big-name signing.

It was a significant first-up effort.
Gould played Bennett off the break on this occasion
 
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