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  • Fittler How I Lost Control

    http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/spo...-1225832522790


    How I lost control - Fittler
    By Jessica Halloran From: The Sunday Telegraph February 21, 2010 12:01AM Increase Text Size Decrease Text Size Print Email Share Add to Digg Add to del.icio.us Add to Facebook Add to Kwoff Add to Myspace Add to Newsvine What are these?

    Sea change ... Brad Fittler at Bronte Beach. Photograph: Anthony Reginato Source: The Sunday Telegraph
    BRAD Fittler kicks back to tell Jessica Halloran about his Roosters sacking and his 'outstanding' new life.

    AT times it felt like he was being hurled through the air at 120km/h. Brad Fittler likened his coaching life to being on the amusement park ride the Vomatron. "It was out of control, the ride,'' Fittler says. "It was totally out of control. It was like the Vomatron amped up five times.''

    Last year was the hardest year of Fittler's life. "No doubt,'' he says. "No doubt.''

    He went from Roosters' darling to discard within months. His relationship with one-time father figure and club chairman Nick Politis dissolved over the way he was sacked. "I thought there was a better way to do it,'' Fittler says. "But let's be honest, it was a pretty awful year. I didn't help it.''

    He was emotionally tired and his skin broke out in a blotchy red rash during the most stressful part of the season. "You don't want to turn up and you've got to,'' Fittler says. "You are old enough to know it's going to go away. So, you get through it.''

    Off-field the Roosters were a rabble and on it they were a shambles. Frustratingly, Fittler watched one-time star Willie Mason "play really poorly''.

    He felt his coaching soul was being smashed when he realised the playing group was no longer listening to him.
    "When you lose control, that is the worst feeling,'' Fittler says. "I lost control. Not so much control, but just that they weren't listening. They were not doing what I was saying. You're in a job where you have to direct people and I wasn't good enough at it.''

    You weren't a good enough coach? "Yeah, it was obvious,'' he responds. "Whether you've got a hard crew or not, I've got to tick it off as 'well, I didn't do my job - that's life'.''

    Fittler's life now is a far different story. He spends afternoons hang gliding, he has relaxed on Thai and Greek beaches over the past four months and now has a coastal office. He often hangs out of his window, sucking up the sea air and can sometimes be seen shouting to passers-by, including NRL chief David Gallop who surfs the local waves.

    He finally has time to read again and is immersed in Naomi Klein's book, The Shock Doctrine - it's the book that caused him to remark that the AFL is behaving like "capitalist animals'' in Sydney's west.

    Last week he adored the "unreal'' experience of being an assistant coach of the All Stars and next week he is going skiing. "I've just had a spell of all-time greatness,'' Fittler says. "My life is outstanding. Outstanding.''

    He is even mending fractured relationships. Last week he picked up his BlackBerry and dialled Politis' number for the first time since leaving the club. "We didn't really speak after I left,'' Fittler says. "I don't hold grudges that often. The way it went down was poor, I thought there was a better way to do it. But let's be honest, it was a pretty awful year. I didn't help it. The things I did didn't help it.

    "You live and die by the sword. Things could have been done a little bit different. I didn't ring for any other reason than I didn't have much to say. We are good mates. Obviously I've got a soft spot for the Roosters. I had a lot of great times there. I think Brian Smith is the man for the job. I've been out there and done interviews and the players look happy and so does Brian.''

    Fittler is working as a reporter for BigPond TV, hopping around NRL clubs doing pre-season interviews, as well as having a contract with Channel Nine.

    As an observer, he says the Roosters have made the right move with Mason and admits he was disappointed that the 29-year-old didn't perform for him.

    "The big thing I'd got with Willie last year was that his footy was really poor. Whatever he was doing off the field that was up to Willie, but on the field he was poor,'' he says. "That's the only thing from my point of view.

    "Your footy is usually a reflection of everything that is happening in your life, so his footy was really poor. From the club point of view, that was disappointing to me, because I was the coach.''

    The controversial main star of the NRL has been moved on to Townsville and Fittler sees the move to North Queensland as the last chance for the one-time Test forward.

    "It's tough for him,'' Fittler says. "There's a side to Willie where he has a lot of charisma and for whatever reason he is good for our game. If he fails, he's going to get hammered and he's going to have to go pretty good not to get hammered.

    "That's all his doing. That's no one else's doing. He understands that, he's just got to make sure he's good enough to get out of it.''

    As a coach, Fittler felt he was giving his all but there were others at the Roosters that wanted more from him. He remembers being called into a meeting with some Roosters officials, who noted that most coaches put in hours from dusk to dawn and took their laptops home with them still working away at the coaching game.

    Fittler says his natural personality is not a lot like some other "stiff (coaching) dudes'' and found the meeting quite perplexing. "They spoke about other coaches,'' Fittler says. "How they work 10 hours a day and then take their computers home and work even more. I just went, 'look, I'm very confident I'm doing enough time. We work hard. We get there early'. It's getting out of control. It's a game of footy. It's more about competing than anything you can really do.''

    One of his greatest lows came when he got hopelessly drunk on a trip to Townsville. "Had a great night up to the death,'' Fittler recalls. But then he blanked out, just like he did outside a Glebe police station in 1999, and this time he was found trying to get into someone else's hotel room.

    Even though he wasn't getting an official answer on his future, he was constantly asking for one before the axe finally dropped. "There was no surprise,'' Fittler says. "I knew months before.

    "I kept going to (CEO Steve Noyce), 'what's happening?' I was really concerned about the other staff. They may not live under the same spotlight, but their jobs are also very temporary. I felt sorry for them because they'd all left jobs to come and do this.''

    Fittler enjoyed the wild journey, but he also found it exhausting. He didn't swim in the ocean for two years when he was Roosters head coach. "Oh, I love the ocean,'' he says. "But I just didn't get to the beach when I was coaching. You just get so serious and caught up in it.''

    "I'll get back into coaching one day,'' Fittler says. "I'm open to it at some stage.'' And with those words he took off to go hang gliding.

  • #2
    Keep gliding point towards north off Clovelly cliffs
    Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe

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    • #3
      This sounds positive for our future relationship with Freddy. It's good to hear from him about it, and obviously he's got enough personal introspection that he knows where he ****ed up on his own, and when and where other people let him down too.

      Maybe though, to be an effective coach, you just can't be Mr. Relaxedaboutit - you have to be driven.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by The Brain View Post
        Keep gliding point towards north off Clovelly cliffs
        ??? isn't that the flightpath? or is that the intent?!

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        • #5
          Well it takes alot to realiase when you screwed up, while to took his sacking and 4 months to realise it, at least he realises where it went wrong !

          His comments on mason are interesting, it gives credence to club getting rid of willie, especially when the former coach says that willie was not trying.

          It's good that he is back talking to Politis.

          Delecto Oriens est odio Meridianus
          To love Easts is to hate Souffs

          Originally posted by Bill Shankley, Liverpool FC
          At a football club, there’s a holy trinity – the players, the manager and the supporters. Directors don’t come into it. They are only there to sign the cheques.
          Originally posted by Andy Raymond Commentating Souffs V Manly 18/04/09
          The fireworks at the Easter show are making more noise than the crowd tonight

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          • #6
            I just want to know what is with this Parramatta Membership rubbish.....

            I he came out and said he joined Panthers, I could totally understand, but he may as well be wearing a Souths cap.....

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            • #7
              When he said that they weren't listening to him anymore it explains their efforts on the field...still a lot of blame has to fall on the players shoulders though...they're the ones paid to do a job and they did it poorly and put **** all effort into it...the players did not only let Freddy down but the whole club and the supporters as well...Freddy paid the price for it though...and the fans did as well...

              They owe us all big time this year...

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              • #8
                My question is..if they were'nt listening why didn't he drop some of them ****ers to newtown. Instead he kept persisting with them.
                Exonerate the West Memphis Three - www.wm3.org

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                • #9
                  I would say because he was thinking that being a mate would help him out, but it never works that way....

                  He was too freakin nice to them,......

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                  • #10
                    It was very early on that he lost control. This was confirmed at a coaches course.
                    The young players were shit heads and to go with that Fitler failed to step up, a bit like he failed to step up in those GFs.

                    He should never had coached aleast beyond that part season.

                    Fitler did some great things fir the club, but he did some ordinary things too.

                    Interesting that he has gone squirrelling back to the filth at Penrith
                    The Internet is a place for posting silly things
                    Try and be serious and you will look stupid
                    sigpic

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                    • #11
                      Hopefully he mends his relationship with the Roosters. Would hate to see him calling Penrith home again. Good luck with the future Freddy, 07-08 showed that he had some talent, we all know 09 was a disaster in every respect and I doubt we'll ever hear the true story of why he lost control. Would like to see him give coaching another go in the future.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by phantom View Post
                        I just want to know what is with this Parramatta Membership rubbish.....

                        I he came out and said he joined Panthers, I could totally understand, but he may as well be wearing a Souths cap.....
                        Que? Say it isn't so.

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                        • #13
                          Good to hear the rifts are healing. One of the most depressing aspects of last season was the Freddy disaster.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by adamkungl View Post
                            Hopefully he mends his relationship with the Roosters. Would hate to see him calling Penrith home again. Good luck with the future Freddy, 07-08 showed that he had some talent, we all know 09 was a disaster in every respect and I doubt we'll ever hear the true story of why he lost control. Would like to see him give coaching another go in the future.
                            I will always regard Freddy as a champion player, but I think it just came naturally to him, and he didnt have to think too much about it.....you cant pass that on as a coach to players who need a plan to follow, he tried, but it didnt work, I dont think he will ever be a coach, but that in no way lessens my regard for him as a player.

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