Eight weeks and counting
5:30:38 PM Tue 29 March, 2005
Samantha Lane
Sportal for afl.com.au
Richmond coach Terry Wallace says he will find out within eight weeks which of his players will be prepared to join him on a quest for success at Punt Road.
Speaking after a hotly-anticipated round one clash with Geelong went horribly wrong for the Tigers, Wallace - in the first year of a five-season deal - said it would be revealed to him very quickly which players would follow him on the 'journey'.
"That'll be one of the things that I reckon I'll find out in a month or two months - who's actually going to take us to where we want to go in the future," he said on Tuesday.
"Do all of the senior players, (or) some of the senior players come along for the ride? Or do we have to look towards a few of the younger guys within the structure of the side?"
"I'm in a long journey and…I reckon I'll know within a month to six weeks who's going to come along that journey with me."
"Those sort of things will work their way out. We've just got to work through all those sort of things."
Wallace was critical of his senior players following the 62-point loss to the Cats, and dragged several of them during the game.
But he denied that his provocative pre-match comments about Brad Ottens' decision to leave Richmond for Geelong had backfired, and even suggested that they were designed to help create a finals-like atmosphere for the club's season opener.
"We put a little bit of heat in our game to sort of find out how many real men we had. Well, they failed the first test, but it gave me a fantastic look at where my group are and what I can do from there."
Wallace said it was futile to panic after one loss, and said he would not be overly reactive in the lead up to his side's round two clash with Hawthorn, the club widely tipped to be wooden spooners in 2005.
"I don't think you slice anyone on one game."
"Obviously I was disappointed like everyone else was, and our players were disappointed. But to me it's the reaction to that that really defines strong people and good teams," Wallace said.
"We've got to work on where we're going and how we're turning the club around for the future. You don't panic about the results of anything at any given time."
Meanwhile, Wallace said No. 4 NAB draft pick Richard Tambling would not debut against the Hawks due to a toe injury.
http://richmondfc.com.au/default.asp?pg=news&spg=display&articleid=192634