TheBluesMuse wrote:
Yes Bluehammer.
You are giving the same examples and using the same thinking as what we are told we should and I spose it is called for in some circumstances.... eg; Keep it positive, avoid criticising, talk of pride, talk of those bad 4 or 5 years and put them behind us...talk about what it means to win a Carlton B&F.
But what I'm I'm telling you is it has all been said before...and at our lowest ebb I think some abandonment should be forgiven.
The players have obviously copped it more than the fans and I doubt politically correct rhetoric will do anything to improve our situation and definitely won't be bought by the players.
If we are truly building a 'group' of players who will lead us into some success then I'm thinking they would welcome some character and arrogance....and would tire at the thought of shallow words. (well, I would)
I understand your thinking and everything, I just don't agree with it at this point in time.

At our lowest ebb is where we have the least wiggle room. We're a long way behind and pack and we need to make sure we do everything possible to catch up.
The club isn't struggling to attract it's own players, or the core Carlton supporters, the club is struggling to present an image that attract sponsors. One or the major channels for building that image of a club that sponsors want to be associated with is the media. Hell, the main reason sponsors are in it is for promotion through the media.
If we can't get lots of positive exposure through the media, we won't get good money from sponsors. Without that, we'll never fix the cash flow problems the club is having, and we'll never catch up.
Pollitcally correct rhetoric might not hit home with the hard core fans or the players, but it will with the sponsors. And that's what we badly need. It might suck that sometimes you just have to cop it sweet from the media, or if you fight back do it carefully and with facts. But in the end what Sticks did was short-sighted and I think did more harm than good.