Frawley's uphill battle
03 June 2004
Herald Sun
RICHMOND president Clinton Casey said yesterday his board needed to appoint an experienced coach to help rebuild the troubled club.
Casey said his research of the AFL's most successful clubs has convinced him the club cannot afford to gamble with a novice team boss.
"My personal view is that we need an experienced coach," he said.
Casey's view, expressed yesterday in a wide-ranging interview, is a clear message that Danny Frawley's time is up at Punt Road and that the club will pursue former successful AFL coaches, such as Rodney Eade and Terry Wallace, for the job next year.
Casey also declined to snuff out the perennial hope of luring Kevin Sheedy back to the club.
"Kevin Sheedy is currently under contract at Essendon. If that situation changed in the future and he was available, and we didn't have a coach, he would be fantastic," he said.
A full review of the football department is about to begin at Punt Rd.
It will include recommendations on Frawley's performance and whether a new coach is needed.
"It won't be my decision. It will be made by a group of people who are a lot more experienced than I am," Casey said. "But if you are asking me, the Richmond footy club needs someone who has coached before and understands the environment.
"I think at the stage we are with our list and the management needed, we need someone with good experience.
"I've gone back and had a look at all the successful clubs in the past 20 years. They have had the right coach for the right environment.
"Richmond can be a difficult environment, too, so you need a coach to suit that."
Casey did not rule out Frawley getting a contract extension and paid tribute to the ex-St Kilda captain, who joined the club at the end of 1999 after working as an assistant coach under Tony Shaw at Collingwood.
"Danny has got some outstanding qualities; his leadership, his work ethic, his guidance of our young talent. When I look back I see that his outstanding qualities were the best thing that happened to this football club," he said.
But he agreed there was too little experience in the coaching set-up when Frawley arrived.
"When Danny Frawley arrived at our footy club, he arrived as a novice with novices all around him. In hindsight it wasn't the right thing to do," he said.
Casey agreed that the vast experience of Denis Pagan had been the perfect fit for Carlton as it struggles through the biggest crisis in its history.
"The way he conducts himself shows he's not about to panic, that he's in control. To be able to get through the tough times a club needs a person like that," he said.
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