Tiger leaders iron out club critics
11 August 2007 Herald-Sun
Michael Horan
IGNORE the constant criticism, stick fat and have a red hot go.
That's the formula bottom side Richmond used to bring down top four aspirant Collingwood and claim just their second win of what has been a wretched season.
After a 10-goal flogging against top side geelong last week, Tiger coach Terry Wallace put the club's pride and dignity in the hand of the senior players and between them they pulled off one of the upsets of the season.
"The guys really set themselves. We've been copping our fair share over the journey as you'd expect under the circumstances," Wallace said after his side's 10-point win last night.
"Last week I said in the last four weeks I would hope the senior group would take hold of the group and run with the ball. That's exactly what I asked them to do and that's exactly what they did.
"They pretty much ran the week, had a lot the say in setting up the structure in the way they wanted with myself. They sepent a fair bit of time and committed themselves to certain opponents. "They set the example of the week and they followed it through on the night, which was tremendous."
Wallace said Joel Bowden insisted he go back into defence because he could best serve playing on Anthony Rocca instead of going further up the ground as he had in recent weeks and when the Tigers were seriously challenged in the third term last night, it was skipper Kane Johnson who demanded the players stick to their tasks.
And all of them made a pact to stand together and silence their critics.
'We came away from last week's game and everyone criticised everyone about everything we did against the best side in the competition," Wallace said. I didn't hear one person say McGuane and Thursfield beat Ablett and Mooney on the day on their merits," he said, pointing out the public and media had become blind to any positives at all.
Richmond has been good for a half and bit for the past month before capitulating and getting absolutely thrashed. When there were signs early in the third term last night of it happening again, the Tigers' acid test had arrived.
"It was a testing time I must say. We felt the momentum was their way - they had a bit of memntum in the second quarter and they came out in third and it went their way - so it was a pretty pleasing sign that we stood up and said 'look, we want to get a result here," Wallace said.
"We'd been in that position too often and too long this year and (this time) they stood up and played well.
"In a ssense it doesn't change anything. It doesn't change ladder positions - it doesn't change anything in context at all - but what's it worth?
"I've just got to give credit to the footy club. As much as it has been attacked everyone has stayed very, very strong and committed. That's right through from the board, management, the playing group - everyone has been really really strong and solid with each other.
"There has not been one inkling of a crack anywhere within the veneer of the group. We stikll have real belief in what we're trying to achieve. Others haven't seen it and have criticised us left right and centre about our direction or whether we've got any good young players.
"Everything. We just hope our people see we are going in a (good) direction and we're going to continue to do so no matter what anyone says about us."
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