Author Topic: Miller must hold firm and play long game  (Read 2036 times)

Offline mightytiges

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Miller must hold firm and play long game
« on: August 31, 2004, 03:25:05 AM »
Miller must hold firm and play long game
31 August 2004   
Herald Sun

AS SAVAGE as Richmond has been in its overhaul in recent times, the policy is correct.

Bloody, yet absolutely bloody correct.

Since the Tigers finished top four in 2001 and promptly suffered delusions of grandeur, they have finished 14th, 13th and 16th. They have won 18 of 66 games. That's a rate of 27 per cent. That's embarrassing.

It's the same number of wins Fitzroy recorded in its final four years (1993-96). From two fewer games.

It has got worse rather than better. Since the Tigers sat 6-2 after eight rounds in 2003, they have won five of 36.

Terry Wallace will need to be Matthews, Sheedy, Pagan and Malthouse rolled into one to find a quick solution.

The inept, spiritless performance against Sydney at the MCG on Saturday suggested the players, like departing coach Danny Frawley, couldn't get out of the place quickly enough. Fortunately, there is a new beginning.

None of the 2004 coaching panel -- Frawley, Wayne Brittain, Darren Crocker and Paul Spargo -- is returning, and 10 or more players won't be back.

The club will go into the 2005 season with a new chief executive, football manager, recruiting manager, senior coach and two or three assistants, and a revamped player list.

Maybe even a new president. Brendan Schwab and his cronies haven't gone away, they simply have laid low for a while. That is a makeover by anyone's definition.

The constant is director of football Greg Miller, who has the faith of president Clinton Casey and, it seems, the bulk of the supporter group.

Miller has delivered Wallace after luring Nathan Brown to the club last summer. He narrowly missed on Dean Solomon.

That's the upside. The downside is the loss of further ground on the field and several indefensible recruiting decisions under Miller's governance in the past two drafts.

Justin Blumfield, sixth in Essendon's best-and-fairest in the premiership year of 2000, was worth the risk, but Billy Nicholls, Simon Fletcher, Ben Marsh, Shane Morrison and Luke Weller were football's scratchie cards; a punt in hope.

While none of them claimed early draft choices, nor did Daniel Jackson (53), Brent Hartigan (70) or Andrew Raines (76), and they are kids.

Miller's decision to commit to five years and an estimated $3 million for Wallace illustrates just how hard he believes the job will be.

What he must do from here is stay faithful to the task.

Selections 1 and 4 have to be invested in youth. That should be non-negotiable.

If an established player becomes available, Richmond has to wait until the pre-season draft or miss out.

As much as Miller likes the immediacy of a Brown and a Solomon, recent history says the long-term view must be taken.

To Frawley's credit, he is appreciative of the opportunity he got to coach and has departed without venting his spleen.

He will be remembered as a good bloke who gave it his best shot, a shot that wasn't good enough.

The indictment on the coaching panel is the lack of improvement in so many players.

Who is better than they looked like being going into 2002? Chaffey, Fiora, Hall, Ottens, Pettifer, Tivendale and Zantuck all have marked time or gone backwards.

Mark Coughlan has been the pick of the group set to emerge in 2002, but injury ruined his 2004.

The only sustenance for long-suffering supporters has been flashes of brilliance from David Rodan and the debut of six youngsters led by Hartigan and including the names of Raines and (Tom) Roach.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,10624279%255E19771,00.html
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Offline mightytiges

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Re: Miller must hold firm and play long game
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2004, 03:37:51 AM »
Nothing new there but a fairly accurate summary of where we are and in which direction we need to go in IMHO. Doesn't say on the net who wrote it?

Rodan should also be in the marking time/gone backwards category. All those guys named are a indictment on our former coaching panel's (geez it's great to say that) failure at player development. Summed up by not bothering to have a real ruck coach  ::).
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Miller must hold firm and play long game
« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2004, 08:49:11 AM »
Nothing new there but a fairly accurate summary of where we are and in which direction we need to go in IMHO. Doesn't say on the net who wrote it?


I reckon it is a Mike (whad do you think) Sheahan special. Mainly because it states the bleeding obvious  :help :thumbsup
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Offline Tiger Spirit

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Tigers get down to work
« Reply #3 on: August 31, 2004, 12:51:12 PM »
Tigers get down to work
31 August, 2004
Paul Gough
Sportal

Richmond football director Greg Miller believes the Tigers are poised to make the most of the pain of finishing with their first wooden spoon in 15 years in November's national draft.

By finishing last on the ladder and winning less than six games, the Tigers will have selections one and four in the November draft - which Miller says will enable the club to select the cream of Australia's teenage footballing talent.

"There doesn't seem to be a great deal of difference between picks five and 30 but the top three or four players are stand-outs," he said of this year's crop of draftees.

And the Tigers will be the only club with two selections amongst the top four picks.

Amongst the likely top contenders to be picked up by the Tigers include Victorian Country midfielder Brett Deledio, South Australian on-baller Ryan Griffin, Western Australian centre-half-forward Lance Franklin and the Northern Territory's exciting goalkicking midfielder Richard Tambling.

After having waited so long for prized early draft selections, Miller told Sportal that Richmond is determined to make the most of it as the club begins the task of re-building its playing list.

Despite having made the finals just twice in the past 22 years, the Tigers have tended to finish between ninth and 14th on the ladder for most of the past decade and as a result have always missed out on the chance for vital early draft picks.

While Miller admits he feels "a bit numb at the moment" from the pain of 14 successive defeats that has resulted in the Tigers finishing on the bottom for the first time since 1989, he admits there is an upside to it.

Not only will the Tigers have picks one and four in this year's national draft but they will also have first selection in the December pre-season draft - meaning they can pick up the best available uncontracted player from a rival AFL club.

The Tigers have already dismissed their entire coaching staff from last year following the end of senior coach Danny Frawley's five year tenure last Saturday as new coach Terry Wallace begins to handpick his coaching team.

And the Tigers have also begun reviewing their playing list with several players expected to be delisted shortly to enable the club to find room for not only its early draft picks but any senior players it picks up through the upcoming October trade period.

Miller said the fact the Tigers had also secured the first pick in the pre-season draft by finishing last on the ladder would make the club an aggressive player in the upcoming trade period.

"From the look so far of the uncontracted players from other AFL clubs there doesn't seem to be the depth of names we have seen in the past few years," Miller said.

"But other clubs will know if they don’t do a reasonable trade with us for a player we seek then we are within our rights to do what the Bulldogs and Carlton did last year and that is take a player that is uncontracted - without a trade - in the pre-season draft in December."

Last year the Bulldogs acquired former Hawthorn forward Jade Rawlings and Carlton secured former Port star Nick Stevens in that manner after their former clubs failed to secure a trade for the pair during the trading period.

Miller added whoever Richmond secured in next year's national draft it would complement an already talented collection of youngsters with Daniel Jackson, Brent Hartigan, Thomas Roach, Andrew Raines and Kelvin Moore all having made a big impression this year, following on from Mark Coughlan, Chris Newman, Andrew Krakouer, David Rodan and Jay Schulz in the past three years.

And he did not rule out taking a "recycled" player with one of the Tigers' late draft picks saying it often represented better value than taking another youngster.

"With the lower draft choices it is much cheaper to take recycled player than a kid because of the two year minimum contracts (a club has to give a youngster)," he said.

"And when you get beyond pick 70 the chances of the (young) player making it drop to about five percent and for a youngster you are a spending a minimum of $130,000 (over two years).

Miller said he was confident the Tigers would have a much better list in 2005.

"The best thing we can do is learn from 2004 and not forget the pain of what we have all witnessed," he said.

"But we can look forward to the future with a lot of hope."

"We have learned about our current list and our deficiencies and we will use the advantages the AFL system has given us now to look ahead and move forward."

http://richmondfc.com.au/default.asp?pg=news&spg=display&articleid=168793
Everything that is done in this world is done by hope.  --Martin Luther

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Offline mightytiges

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Re: Tigers get down to work
« Reply #4 on: August 31, 2004, 03:20:56 PM »
Miller said he was confident the Tigers would have a much better list in 2005.

"The best thing we can do is learn from 2004 and not forget the pain of what we have all witnessed," he said.

"But we can look forward to the future with a lot of hope."

"We have learned about our current list and our deficiencies and we will use the advantages the AFL system has given us now to look ahead and move forward."

Took us 20 years but we have finally faced reality. Guess the one and only advantage of all this is there can be no excuses or fooling of ourselves.

I'd agree out list should be much better talent wise but as it's going to take a couple of years for the young blokes to find their feet at AFL level, build body strength and gel as a unit. Next year is still going to be a tough year results wise.

If we're following the rule of no rejects until picks in the 70's, then our first 6 picks (1,4,20,36,52,68) will be thankfully used on drafting kids  :). Having a much younger list should free up our salary as well  :thumbsup.
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Miller must hold firm and play long game
« Reply #5 on: August 31, 2004, 04:47:31 PM »
I reckon it is a Mike (whad do you think) Sheahan special. Mainly because it states the bleeding obvious  :help :thumbsup

Struth I was spot on - it is a Sheahan special (whad do you think) :cheers ;D :thumbsup
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)