bluegirl72 wrote:
are you some sort of spin doctor M.C?
you've come out of nowhere, and seem very articulate, but kind of in a professional spin doctorish way.
Not that it matters,
but
I felt sorry for MM for a bit in that interrogation.
he seemed little and old and fragile.
Then when he started blustering and bluffing and going the person instead of the q's..
I felt embarrassed by him, and kind of hopeless for my club. especially when he mentioned Warnock and Watson as future hope for the club(I hope I imagined that..but I thought he said something good about them)
Also, how weird that he made a point of saying 'as long as Sticks and Swann are there, he feels well supported by the club'. Everyone knows they are leaving, so was he grandstanding?
Is that a mature thing to do when the club you are paid to coach is on its knees?
I'm terribly flattered you think I'm articulate. I assure it is only in type. Speak to me in person and you'd consider the possibility that English is my second language.
I agree that early on Mick looked a bit startled. They really made a point out of going after him, which is good in a way because sterile TV is boring TV, especially when you're sitting across from a subject with more in common with a viper than a sheep. Have a bit of a nibble and he'll bite right back.
I think his attitude is a good one, personally. Imagine Ratts in that situation... heaven forbid. He'd probably just agree with them and cede any initiative his role affords, admitting we're rubbish and condemning us to years in the doldrums.
Malthouse is charged with propagating, rightly or wrongly, as much positivity as he can. He is the face of the club, our mouthpiece. Like he alluded to, what's the point of staying on and committing himself to the role if he didn't think he could improve us? I don't think he's being delusional at all. If anything he seems quite pragmatic whenever I see him discuss the situation.
How beneficial is it to everyone down at the Club if he was to come on TV, the whole footy world wanting and praying for a confession of weakness, and just lay down for them? What sort of leadership is that? He is acutely aware of the issues he - and we - face. He has to make the best of it. He has to be positive.
If he turns up and says we're hopeless, we're going nowhere, there's no hope for the future... that'd be worse than a loss to Melbourne. He simply can't do it. If he believes that, then its just as bad.
He's got to find the answers to the questions we as a club are being asked. If he gives up, throws his hands in the air and says "I don't know" he's the wrong man for the job.
I think we should take a heart in the fact he looks as though he relishes the challenge in front of him. He looks as though he's considering a reality whereby he is the man who restores Carlton to a status reminiscent of its former glories. Driven by ego? Yep. But driven to succeed.
I can't stress enough, and its something I've said a few times already, if at round 15 or 16 of next season the light at the end of the tunnel is no closer or brighter, then his position comes under very, very close review. If we haven't seen signs the ship has been righted and we're back on course then move him on, fine. But if we have seen youth injected into the side (and list) and that youth is developing and we're playing better footy... then the discussion turns to contract extensions and terms.