Wallace has a ball as players return
By Chloe Saltau
The Age
May 24, 2006
TERRY Wallace is confident the return of three key players, though not yet Nathan Brown, will mean Richmond should not have to resort to more crimes against football in an attempt to this weekend defeat embattled Geelong for the first time in six years.
Wallace staged a Sheedy-esque entrance to his weekly press conference yesterday, twirling a ball on his finger to the Harlem Globetrotters' music Sweet Georgia Brown, at pains to point out he was bemused rather than hurt by the Essendon coach's cutting remarks about Richmond's tactics in upsetting powerful Adelaide on Saturday.
Brown, who has not played since round three because of the lingering soreness in the leg he broke last year, will rejoin his teammates at a full training session today but he is more likely to return to the team the following Saturday against Fremantle.
Still, the Tigers should regain captain Kane Johnson from a hamstring injury and tall defenders Ray Hall and Darren Gaspar, who Wallace suggested should strengthen the team sufficiently to avoid the possession-oriented, uncontested style described by Sheedy as "basketball crap".
"I think you do (start with a clean slate) every week," Wallace said.
"I don't know whether it's (basketballers Andrew) Gaze and (Chris) Anstey that will be coming into the side, but certainly … they (Johnson, Hall and Gaspar) are three key players for the footy club so from that point of view we will be stronger so we'll have a different structure in our side as well."
Richmond has not beaten Geelong since round eight, 2000, and has not won at Skilled Stadium for 16 years. The Tigers also know enough about responding to embarrassing defeats, having done so twice this season, to be wary of the Cats following their 102-point loss to Collingwood. But Richmond does have form, however ugly it looked against the Crows, on its side.
"Over a five-week period we've won four games," Wallace said. "Obviously we had one very poor loss in amongst it, but four out of five is not bad. They've got to find their form. Out of their last six they've won one."
There is, Wallace's globetrotter stunt suggested, a little bit of Sheedy in him, or at least more Sheedy than Sheedy might have thought.
On Sunday night, the Essendon coach said he hoped he and Wallace were "very different people", a remark the Tigers' coach chose not to take personally. He had not heard from Sheedy in the days since, and did not expect to.
"I've got enormous admiration for Sheeds, and no problems in regards to our relationship whatsoever," Wallace said, but referred to Sheedy's part in having the 15-metre penalty changed to 50 metres in the 1980s by instructing his Essendon players to impede opponents who marked and thought of playing on.
"Everyone has done something in their coaching careers that perhaps hasn't been 100 per cent to the trend of where you'd like the game to go, to get a result at any given time. This was a one-off circumstance that was very similar to that."
Both coaches have doubtless circled in their diaries round 21, the "hot August night" when Essendon and Richmond meet again.
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