The question about premiership tattoos that caught Michael Voss off guard
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Michael Voss was in a deep hole. It was 2011 and the Brisbane Lions, the team he had captained to three premierships, had lost the first seven games. He was coaching the club, and pressure was mounting ahead of a game against fellow strugglers, North Melbourne, then coached by former teammate Brad Scott.
The Lions prevailed by 14 points. After the match, Scott was asked if there was any consolation in his old club breaking the drought. Scott, as notoriously ruthless a competitor as Voss, scoffed and shook his head in disgust. âIs that a serious question?â he asked. âPeople donât understand this â because you played for another club is irrelevant. We came here to win.â
Michael Voss is a Brisbane Lions legend, and returns to the Gabba in charge of the team attempting to end their grand final hopes.Credit: Getty Images
Twelve years later, Voss will return to the Gabba for a preliminary final, now as the coach of Carlton. He, too, will be playing to win against the club that appointed him coach (without interviewing any other candidates) in September 2008, then sacked him in early August 2013 in a fruitless pursuit of former Swans coach Paul Roos.
Thatâs all water under the bridge. âI think itâs a lot of what other people talk about it,â he said at the Gabba on Friday. âI havenât spoken about it at all; I havenât shared my story with the players at all because weâre busy forging our own and what version we want to be for the Carlton Football Club. Weâve got such a great story to tell, and we get to lean into that.â
Whatever Vossâ feelings â private or public â Brisbane Lions fans are likely to experience more mixed emotions. âOur supporters will be 100 per cent barracking for the Lions, but I think if it came to pass that Carlton got over the top of us, none of them would begrudge seeing Vossy get to a grand final and do well,â club chair Andrew Wellington said on Tuesday.
On his left ankle, Voss sports a tattoo commemorating his three premierships with the Lions. Asked if heâd ink a new Blues tattoo should his team go all the way, he grinned. âCanât confirm. But it wouldnât feel right if I didnât,â he said. âWeâll see how we go.â
Vossâ combination of skill, hardness and leadership means he remains a revered figure at the Lions, despite the brutal nature of his exit a decade ago. It wasnât just the three premierships, either. Vossâ career began with the âBad Newsâ Bears in 1992, when they were still based on the Gold Coast. He transformed them from a punchline into a powerhouse.
Wellington also said the nature of the AFL market in Queensland â and the history of the Lions themselves â meant that crowds were less tribal in their loyalties. âNotwithstanding our Fitzroy history, a lot of our supporters have come on board either through the Bears or in more recent times,â he said. âA lot of the early Bears were players who came from other clubs.â
James Kliemt, who led the club supporter group The Lionsâ Roar through some difficult years either side of Vossâ sacking, confessed to difficulties in reconciling past and present. âIt is strange,â he said. âIâve thought about this, and I just think clubs are so corporate now that theyâve lost that feeling from years gone by when the rivalries were so much more visceral.â
Four members of the legendary triple premiership Lions dynasty from 2001-03 are now senior coaches. Apart from Voss, thereâs Collingwoodâs Craig McRae, Chris Scott (Geelong) and his brother Brad (now with Essendon). âThey canât all coach the Lions, so you canât begrudge them pursuing their career,â Wellington said.
Michael Voss celebrates the Lionsâ premiership in 2001.Credit: Pat Scala
Unstated in all this is a sympathy and affection for Voss that perhaps would not be extended to the Scotts, at least not to the same degree: the Lions, after all, sacked their favourite son, and the club unravelled. Earlier this year, Kliemt confessed to wincing as Voss, once again, skated close to the coaching abyss after the Blues had lost eight out of nine games.
âI actually went back and watched the media conferences that Vossy did after those games, and saw how defeated and down he was,â he said. âYou could see what a tough spot he was in. And then they won [against Gold Coast in round 14], and he was like, wow, what happened there? It was lovely seeing the growth in him and the team after that.â
The rollercoaster Voss was riding brought back memories of his sacking in 2013. âIt was devastating for him, and the club was not in good shape off-field at that point,â Kliemt said. âHe was on a hiding to nothing; he was a young coach. Heâs much more articulate now than he was then, and he has a much more nuanced perspective on the on-field versus off-field stuff.â
Failure, he said, had humbled Voss. âIt was funny that the lesser lights of that Brisbane team seemed to take to coaching more naturally. [Voss] approached it like the bull-at-a-gate player that he was, and his experiences have clearly taught him that maybe a time of getting sat back on your bum is what you need to be that more well-rounded character at the end.â
In late 2021, the Lions named the playing field of their new home base at Springfield, in Brisbaneâs south-west, Michael Voss Oval. Voss was honoured by the acknowledgement, but he declined an invitation to this yearâs 20th anniversary celebrations of the 2003 premiership on 30 August: âHe just felt it wasnât the right look.â
McRae, however, did attend, despite Collingwood being frontrunners for this yearâs flag. McRae, who played 195 games with Brisbane, was being inducted into the clubâs Hall of Fame. âHe very kindly said if they [Collingwood] canât win he hoped we do â playing to the crowd a bit, I suspect,â Wellington said.
Kliemt reiterated whatâs been a common theme of seasons 2022 and 2023: even the Magpies are no longer the hated foes of yore.
âYou canât dislike âFlyâ [McRae]; you canât dislike what heâs done with [Collingwood], and itâs the same with Vossy,â he said. âBut it will be interesting! Youâre enormously supportive until theyâre playing your team.â
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