Wallace: We're not going to panic
03 April 2006 Herald Sun
Damian Barrett
FEWER than 15 hours after their mauling by the Bulldogs, Richmond coach Terry Wallace forced players to relive the debacle on DVD in a bid to bolster their psyche before playing St Kilda on Friday.
Wallace brought forward to Saturday the team's debrief in the belief the experience had to be immediately addressed in order to stem more psychological damage.
The match review had been scheduled for today.
The 115-point loss to the Bulldogs left the football world convinced the Tigers would be 0-4, with St Kilda (Telstra Dome), West Coast (Subiaco) and Brisbane (Gabba) their next three opponents.
But Wallace said no one at his club was considering the worst.
"The last thing we are going to be doing is panic," Wallace said last night.
After match rehabilitation commitments on Saturday, players were ordered to sit through the Bulldogs match. "Obviously the magnitude of the loss and people stewing over it, we decided it was best we deal with it yesterday," Wallace said.
"We sat through most of the second half and some of the first half, where we had no issue as we were competitive.
"The second half was non-competitive. What I said to the players was I didn't want to sit there with a big stick and for it to be me standing up the front like a school teacher and berating them.
"What I wanted it to be was an open forum, for blokes to put up their own hands and say, `Gee, my effort wasn't good there' and for blokes to say to other blokes, `Your effort there wasn't good enough'.
"It was an open forum and discussion about how we went about it and it finished off at lunch time yesterday.
"It wasn't an emergency meeting by any stretch, they were coming in anyway. But doing what we did allowed us to focus on St Kilda from Monday morning."
Wallace wouldn't divulge plans to drag Richmond out of the disastrous start to 2006.
He refrained from responding to Bulldog Ryan Griffen's observations that Tiger players "gave up" and were "arguing between each other".
The Tigers last year turned around a 62-point loss to Geelong in Round 1 by winning seven of the next eight games. "I'm not prepared to go in to that (how to get them out of the disastrous start)," he said.
"We have done our discussions internally and that is where they need to remain.
"You only have to go back 12 months to know it can change pretty quickly. That's not saying it will, but it certainly can.
"Last year I got quoted as saying (after Round 1) we should have spent all our time down the pub. I don't know where we should have been this time around."
Wallace isn't daunted by coming opponents.
"Absolutely not, you play every side in the competition, we just happen to play a couple of them (good sides) straight off the bat," he said.
"You have to play them some time. I don't think it really matters whether they are spread three weeks apart or three together."
Part of his recovery program was to try to convince everyone the hard work of the pre-season would not be wasted by the events of last Friday.
"We were devastated by our performance because the one thing that gets lost when you have a performance like that is how much work everyone has put in," he said.
"The assistant coaches, playing group, everyone, and how much we did over six months.
"Everyone sees that and says, `Gee, you might as well have done nothing, it couldn't have been worse'."
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,18688965%255E20322,00.html