Quote ="sally cinnamon"Out of interest how do we know if someone was a good assistant or not? Sharp was on the Saints coaching staff when they were probably at their peak in terms of quality players, was he a good assistant here, and a not so good assistant at Hull in 2009....?
As for not quite making it at Huddersfield, I think Sharp deserves a bit of credit for what he achieved there, he took teh club on a level from where Tony Smith had left it. Smith told Hudds that he wasn't interested in renewing his contract at the end of 2003, before he got the Leeds job lined up, he was saying the club needed more investment etc. So credit to Sharp, he was willing to take on a challenge that Smith didn't want, and he made Hudds competitive, cleaned up their discipline (which had been bad under Smith, and went bad again after Sharp left), got them to be a playoff club and took them to a Challenge Cup final, all things which would have been unheard of even during the Smith era. But now Nathan Brown has done that, its as though he's achieved miracles which have never been done before! Sharp did it as well mainly through a combination of bringing on home grown players through the Academy, and signing talented British players at other clubs who were losing their way.
I like Jon Sharp, he seems like a bright bloke in RL terms, and he did bring a professional set up to Hudds, I remember both Michael De Vere and Ben Roarty commenting that their facilities and training set up was closely modelled on how NRL clubs work. I reckon if Sharp got a coaching job at a bigger SL club with the finance to sign top players, he would win trophies.'"
It begs the question; why hasn't he then? Sounds like an ideal candidate for Wigan. One thing that does strike me about Sharp is that he iis a blamer, pretty much like Cull in that respect. When it goes wrong he never took responsibility.
As for Celtic, I think they have it spot on. A natural progression of coaches. If Nobby leaves after a period of time, Sharp takes overall responsibilty, Harris can learn from both, making him ready for the head coach's role eventually.