AFL: Nathan Buckley reveals stance on Melbourne coaching job
Buckley is among a lengthy list of potential candidates to take over at the Demons, including two premiership-winning coaches in John Longmire and Adam Simpson,
Goodwin was axed with a year to go on his contract and Buckley, who said he was ready for the attention to come his way, conceded there was a 'compelling case' to get back involved in coaching at the Demons.
Buckley, who took the Magpies to the 2018 grand final, has also been linked to the new Tasmanian team, but while jobs are becoming available, he isn't yet sure if he wants to jump back into coaching.
'I would take the call,' Buckley said on Wednesday.
'I would have a chat but a lot would have to fall into place to leave this position of comfort I have found.
'It's there (the coaching desire) otherwise it would be an easy no.
'I can't lie – when yesterday happened I knew this would all come around again.
'Even in yourself this brings a timeline forward again, if you feel like there's a case, if you like the people, if you see the opportunity to make a change and make a difference, then you're going to have to work that out quick smart.
'I expect the call will come. I will take the next steps as they come.'
Despite Melbourne's failures in 2025, winning just seven games, and having not won a final since 2023, Buckley said he saw upside at the Demons.
'I think the Melbourne prospect is quite compelling,' he said.
'There's a lot that needs to settle. Big club, storeyed history. Experience in the playing group is unquestioned and I like their young group of players as well.
'In that sense, there is a compelling case there, but there's plenty of water to go under the bridge.'
Buckley said he knew in his 'gut' whether he could invest the energy needed to coach again.
'When it feels right you have to jump. I don't think you have all the answers when you get in that position,' he told SEN.
'When I went into coaching it was a blind faith. This is my future and this is what I do, this is the next challenge, this is the next mountain to climb.
'If I went back into it I wouldn't be doing it the same way. It would be far more conscious and far more considered.' Breaking News
The Storm famously sent Harry Grant to the Wests Tigers in a move that helped him develop immensely. Now they could do something similar. National Breaking News
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The Advertiser
2 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Pezet eyes week-to-week NRL in Storm spine squeeze
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Pezet was brought on at halfback late in last week's win over Parramatta, with Wishart shifting to lock. "I'm definitely confident in my own ability to go out there and play 80 minutes of footy in the halfback position," Pezet said. "But that's not what's best for the team at the moment." Jonah Pezet says he wants to chase the opportunity to play in the NRL every week, but insists a loan deal away from Melbourne is not yet at the front of his mind. Melbourne's half-in-waiting for several years, Pezet has been named to come off the bench against Brisbane on Thursday night with Jahrome Hughes injured. Pezet is signed with the Storm until the end of 2029, but is believed to have a clause in his contract that allowed him to speak to rivals if Hughes re-signed. Hughes did so last week, extending his time in purple until 2030. The other factor is the future of Cameron Munster, who is contracted until the end of 2027 but been linked to potential Perth interest. Both Pezet and Munster share a manager in Braith Anasta, while a loan deal could potentially buy time for Munster to decide his future beyond his current deal. "I'd be lying if I said I didn't want to play NRL every week," Pezet said. "As a kid you grow up and that's what you want to do. So of course I want to chase those opportunities. "But I'm just focused on putting my best foot forward every week, so that's when Belza (coach Craig Bellamy) picks me in the team." Melbourne hooker Harry Grant this week backed the idea of loans, speaking of the good it did him at Wests Tigers while stuck behind Cameron Smith in 2020. Asked whether a loan deal could be an option for him, Pezet said it was not something he wanted to be considering. "I think I'll leave that up to Braith and everyone at the club ... they'll sort it all out," Pezet said. "With Hughesy going down there's an opportunity there, and I'll keep putting my best foot forward so that when the time comes I'm ready for that wherever it might be. "Obviously the best footy I play, the more NRL I'm going to get, so that's what I'm focused on." The Storm have stuck with Tyran Wishart as Hughes' replacement at No.7, after the reigning Dally M Medallist dislocated his shoulder last month. Bellamy on Wednesday left the door open for Hughes to return before finals, with the 22-year-old avoiding surgery and back training away from the main squad. Melbourne have not got a specific plan for Pezet off the bench, who has had limited football in the past 16 months with an ACL rupture and subsequent setback. Pezet was brought on at halfback late in last week's win over Parramatta, with Wishart shifting to lock. "I'm definitely confident in my own ability to go out there and play 80 minutes of footy in the halfback position," Pezet said. 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Daily Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Daily Telegraph
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2 hours ago
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