Hawks hat fits best for Wallace
24 July 2004
Herald Sun
Mike Sheahan
RICHMOND and Adelaide already have registered their interest in Terry Wallace as a prospective coach.
A chat with a coaching sub-committee at one, an expression of interest by phone from the other.
If Hawthorn hasn't done something similar just yet, it will, and as soon as this weekend.
Wallace is in an extraordinary position: at or near the top on the list of possible coaches at three AFL clubs.
He is understood to be Richmond's primary target, marginally ahead of Rodney Eade; he is tipped to be Hawthorn's first choice; and he is regarded as the most likely alternative to Neil Craig in Adelaide.
Wallace may have botched his departure from the Western Bulldogs at the end of the 2002 season, but he didn't damage his reputation.
His record 79 wins from 148 games (53.3 per cent is healthy, his enthusiasm is undeniable, there is no keener student, and, not to put too fine a point on it, he is media-friendly.
He is sitting pretty. So, what will convince him to pick one ahead of the other if it comes to a choice?
Knowing Wallace, it will be almost a mathematical exercise. He will list the pros and cons, weigh the ticks against the crosses, and come to a decision.
My guess is he will end up at Hawthorn. Not because he has playing history at Glenferrie, but because he believes that's where he is best suited.
Be in no doubt, his decision will be based on logic, not emotion, hope or romance.
List strengthHawthorn: Nowhere near as good as most of us predicted, as 16th position and two wins from 16 rounds tell us. Everitt has been outstanding and Croad encouraging. Hodge, still just 20, continues to blossom.
Richmond: The Tigers also have failed to live up to pre-season expectations, although the most optimistic prediction was a spot in the bottom of the eight. Bowden is reborn, while Richo has stuck at his task in typical fashion, and Brown has added a dose of class.
Adelaide: An ageing list was knocked round by a batch of injuries to key men, including Hart, Goodwin and Stevens. Five wins is a poor return.
Ricciuto has been the main man yet again, with good support from Edwards and McLeod.
List flexibilityHawthorn: Will be rewarded with two selections in the first three or four at the national draft. Will be happy to trade, but will struggle to move Nick Holland and John Barker at the money.
Jonathan Hay and Angelo Lekkas represent the best trade bait.
Richmond: The Tigers also are in line for a priority choice, which would give them two selections in the first four or five.
The kids look exciting: Schulz, Hartigan, Roach, Jackson, Gilmour, Raines.
Ottens would create huge excitement if made available, but Richmond might have invested too much time and money to give up on him just yet.
Gaspar reputation badly damaged this year might be happier going home to Perth. He will be better.
Adelaide: The Crows have to hang on to what quality they have, and finally confront rebuilding via the draft.
Bizarre as it sounds, they have made just three top 30 selections in the past five drafts: Laurence Angwin (2000), Brent Reilly (2001), Fergus Watts (2003).
Internal expectationsHawthorn: The Hawks are talking a rebuilding program of anywhere from 3-5 years. A rather gloomier assessment than the flag talk six months ago.
The new coach will be given time, a rare commodity in the modern game.
Richmond: Reality has hit home at Punt Rd: the place needs to be reblocked and rebuilt.
Greg Miller will settle on a mix of youth and experience and try to grab another Nathan Brown (or Dean Solomon) but, with three of the first 25 draft selections, the emphasis will be on youth.
Adelaide: For reasons that escaped most of us, the Crows thought they could finish in the top four this year.
The hopes for 2005 must be more realistic. Off-field stability and financial strength, coupled with a home-ground edge, are handy, yet a competitive team remains the basic requirement.
AdministrationRichmond: The performance has been poor to fair. How can it be rated any higher when the team is in the bottom four for the third year in a row, with another loss of $2 million to come?
Hawthorn: Similar mark to Hawthorn. It has been a season of crisis after crisis, on and off the field. As Shane Crawford said the club has been "all over the shop".
Adelaide: Sound, as always. A cash flow that would fund New Zealand, no rumblings, not even a hint of fallout from the decision to dump Gary Ayres.
LeadershipRichmond: Time for change. Loyal servant Wayne Campbell at 32 (in September), should be left to concentrate on his game. Too soon for Coughlan. Kane Johnson by default.
Hawthorn: Time for change here, too. Neither the club nor Crawford showed the other much respect this week, which tells us something.
Too soon for Hodge. Has to be one of Thompson, Vandenberg or Everitt.
Adelaide: Ricciuto is a strong, visible leader and gets good support.
The X-factorRichmond's instability and recent history is against it, while Adelaide eats Victorian coaches like apples.
Hawthorn also carries a major query on stability in the form of Don Scott and the growing toll on Ian Dicker.I have a hunch Wallace will find himself headed back to Glenferrie.
Bet he never thought Jason Dunstall and Dermott Brereton ever would be offering him a job.
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