Wallace in spotlight and Melbourne wary of wounded Richmond
Michael Gleeson | April 18, 2009
TWO teams are winless. One team is the clear favourite to win the wooden spoon, that team is also the three-to-one outsider to win the game. But it is the other team's coach whose job is in peril.
Melbourne plays Richmond tomorrow, but the game is scarcely about Melbourne. This game is all about Richmond, and more pointedly Terry Wallace.
Dean Bailey's side has not won a game this season either, but then no one has expected it to. The expectations are that Melbourne will win precious few games this year but that it is at least part of an acknowledged bottoming out process that is now hopefully at the very beginning of a Jack Watts-Sam Blease up-swing.
Richmond, on the other hand, still retains hopes of finals this year and a flag not too far beyond that. Hence it is still unsettled by the ramifications of the first-round belting by Carlton. Win solidly tomorrow and in the next fortnight and the storm will have left the tea-cup. Lose and … well you know what happens next.
"They have had a tough week but it doesn't change our focus, it doesn't change what we are about, we need to be competitive for the whole game, four quarters," Bailey said yesterday.
"I think the headlines and words used were well documented. I am sure Terry, like we are, is just keen to play the game on Sunday. The headlines have been circling. The headline (that Richmond was a ticking time-bomb) brought some attention. I don't think it was an acceptable headline. But that was the way it was portrayed, we now move on and play the game."
With such focus on Richmond and how it might behave before the game, in the game and, most pertinently, after the game, Bailey appropriately reminded that he cared little for what the Tigers did.
"I expect us to come out pretty hard. I expect us to be on the front foot. I expect us to be winning first possession. I expect us to be tackling. I expect us to come out in a proactive way, that is what we have to do — what Richmond do that is up to them," Bailey said.
"We are not going to walk out there and just accept them attacking us, we need to attack them and I think that is always the best way to approach any situation."
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