Ross Lyon will again meet with St Kilda officials as he closes in on an extraordinary coaching return to the AFL club he dramatically walked out on 11 years ago.
The 55-year-old has become St Kilda’s preferred coaching candidate after the Saints last Friday sacked Brett Ratten, less than 100 days after giving him a two-year contract extension.
Lyon met with with Saints president Andrew Bassat and chief executive Simon Lethlean for four hours on Monday.
The parties will sit down again on Wednesday to further discuss the unlikely reunion.
Lyon coached St Kilda to grand finals in 2009 and 2010 before his bombshell defection to Fremantle at the end of 2011.
In one of the biggest AFL stories this century, the Dockers abruptly dumped Mark Harvey as coach before 24 hours later naming Lyon as their new leader.
Lyon led the Fremantle to the club’s first and only grand final appearance in 2013 but was sacked in late-2019, having missed the finals in four consecutive seasons.
He has since held media roles and spent time focusing on business interests.
If Lyon does return to St Kilda, he would be the first coach since David Parkin in 1991 following a six-year break from Carlton to have a second full-time stint in charge of an AFL club.
James Hird was forced to sit out the 2014 season as a result of Essendon’s supplements saga but never actually quit the Bombers.
Lyon said on Monday it was a “delicate time” and claimed he was still weighing up if he wanted to coach again after three years out of the system.
“It’s a big step isn’t it … we just had initial discussions,” Lyon told the Seven Network, adding he had an interest in the role “otherwise I wouldn’t come and meet”.
A number of retired St Kilda heroes, including Brendon Goddard and Stephen Milne, have come out in support of Lyon returning to Moorabbin.
Since Lyon led St Kilda to four-straight finals appearances between 2008 and 2011, the Saints have made the top-eight just once – a fifth-place finish in 2020.