Wednesday Debate with Cheryl Critchley
09 May 2007 Herald-Sun
Cheryl Critchley
GIVE us a break, Greg Miller, Cheryl Critchley writes.
I'm an ordinary Richmond member who watched all 120 minutes of Sunday's agony with my eight-year-old daughter.
Unlike so many others, I stayed to the bitter end. Jessica and I just sat there in disbelief.
At halftime, we went to check out the new Telstra Dome passout situation and guess what? It wasn't needed because almost everyone who was going out said they weren't coming back.
What do I say to my kids, Greg, when they witness such a demoralising debacle?
It is getting harder and harder to find excuses. And believe me, I've had to make plenty in the past.
I'm often lightheartedly accused of child abuse for taking my three kids to watch the Tigers.
Now I'm beginning to believe that's not so far off the mark.
All the fans want is a club that's doing its utmost to field its best team every week, and for the players to try their hearts out for the yellow and black.
On Sunday we got neither.
Why are we going for "youth" in Round 6? Aren't you meant to do that near the end of the season when all is lost?
How can we give up so early? Do you want people to turn up to games or not?
As for the players, what message has all this sent them? That they aren't good enough, that's what.
If this rot continues, fewer and fewer fans will make the effort to attend, and I don't blame them.
Darren Gaspar's shoddy departure not only angered many fans but left a hole in our backline bigger than Rex Hunt's mouth.
Why?
And where was Greg Tivendale?
Why drop so many senior players, leaving us completely exposed so early in the season?
Two and a half years into Terry Wallace's five-year coaching contract, we're going backwards.
Yes we have had bad luck with injuries. But that doesn't explain a complete freefall.
I love my club and will continue to attend games.
I just want the players and coaching staff to show that they also love Richmond and what it stands for -- not just their huge pay packets.
I'm sick of being told to be patient by football managers and coaches who come from other clubs and will eventually leave when they get sacked or move on.
Us fans are here for life.
Last time Richmond won the Grand Final I was 14 and in the cheer squad. I'm now 41 with three kids.
We've played in three finals series in the 27 years since 1980, and only one of those since my kids were born. The eldest is eight.
Sunday was enough to tip Tiger fans over the edge. They've been told to be patient for 25 years and they have.
They don't want patronising "heartfelt apologies" from paid employees.
I'm not a footy expert and don't pretend to know how to coach or run an AFL side. I know it's difficult.
But what I do know is that many Richmond fans have had enough of the spin.
Most fans don't want Terry Wallace sacked. That would solve nothing and cost a fortune. Fans just want respect.
You say, Greg, that we have a process in place for sustained success. Isn't that what you said when you arrived as football director back in October 2002?
We aren't demanding a Grand Final in the next two years.
All we want is our team to show some real passion and give us a reason to turn up each week.
Cheryl Critchley is a Herald Sun journalist and a one-eyed Tigers member.
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21696979%255E19742,00.html