The coaching caper in the AFL is no easy feat, and has seen some of the most revered figures in the sport depart on disappointing terms.

In the wake of Melbourne's sacking of Simon Goodwin, the club has appointed long-time assistant coach Troy Chaplin as the caretaker for the final three games.

Chaplin's brief tenure at the helm could be leveraged to advance his own ambition of becoming a senior coach in the league, with the upcoming matches serving as an audition for the Demons or rival clubs.

It could also, however, merely act as a stopgap, providing a familiar face for Demons players who this week saw their long-time coach depart in difficult circumstances.

Since the turn of the century, all but three (Geelong, Hawthorn and Sydney) clubs have hired an interim coach after a head coach has walked out the door mid-season.

Understandably, the perpetual success of the Cats, Hawks and Swans has seen long-term coaches Mark Thompson and Chris Scott monopolise Kardinia Park; Alastair Clarkson's four premierships were spread across 16 years, as Paul Roos and John Longmire were the pair that put the Swans firmly on the map in the AFL.

Which brings up the next point: What is the definition of a caretaker coach?

In this exercise, a caretaker coach will be defined as someone who stepped into the role during a season following the sacking of a senior coach.

Let's delve in.

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West Coast

Premiership coaches John Worsfold and Adam Simpson controlled the majority of this century at the Eagles, but the latter's mid-year departure saw assistant coach Jarrad Schofield granted the opportunity to lead the club.

Schofield took over the struggling Eagles mid-way through 2024, and was valiant in his first outing against Brisbane, going down by 13 points.

West Coast would salute twice in seven weeks under Schofield, but no more after that, as Andrew McQualter was appointed senior coach for 2025.

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