November 24, 2024

Arthur, who missed the finals, is going to introduce a new strategy.

Brad Arthur, one of the most under-pressure coaches going into the season, is about to alter his strategy after the Parramatta Eels’ appalling 2023 season ended without a finals appearance.

After reaching the Grand Final the year before, the Eels had high expectations going into the 2017 campaign.

But their season would be derailed by injuries, suspensions, and patchy play, as they finished outside the top eight and missed the chance to end the NRL’s longest premiership drought.

Due to this, the 49-year-old coach has decided to shift his emphasis and adopt a fresh strategy this off-season in an effort to help the team succeed.

Shaun Lane told Wide World of Sports, “I think he has understood more so than ever the importance of being unified as a team and working together towards the same goal.”

 

I am aware that he has been working hard on himself as well. Our leadership is the foundation of everything we do, and he has done an excellent job of refining himself during the off-season and determining what he needs to do better for us.

Our pre-season training program seems to be bringing it out; it feels like the best program I’ve ever participated in. For the most part, it’s been fun, even though you get flogged every day.

“I’ve been really impressed with Brad in this off-season and I’m confident in what he’s been feeding to us.”

Arthur has been coaching the Eels for the past ten years and has overseen more than 250 NRL games, but he has not yet helped the team win a Grand Final—an accomplishment that distinguishes great coaches from mediocre ones.

Josh Hodgson, Waqa Blake, Andrew Davey, and Jack Murchie are the four players from last season that have left the team. Although they have added Morgan Harper and Kelma Tuilagi, they aren’t big additions that will significantly alter the team, so they will field a lineup that is similar to that from the previous campaign.

Arthur won’t be the only one under pressure this season as he is forced to watch the finals from the stands.

While Brown has had inconsistent play throughout his career, there were rumors last season that Gutherson wasn’t the X-factor the team needed. Gutherson, who was supposedly cut from the team at one point during the previous campaign, talked about Arthur’s shift in priorities.

Like all of us, he’s simply become more driven, Gutherson said.

“You should always try to participate in the big games and give yourself a chance to win, rather than just watching them on TV.

“Brad is no different—every year he leads from the front with even greater zeal and motivation. When things go wrong, he’s the first to raise his hand.

“The boys have bought into what he is trying to push this year … it’s a great feeling at the club right now.”

On Saturday, March 9, the Parramatta Eels will kick off their 2024 campaign against the Canterbury Bulldogs, their rivals.

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