Synbad wrote:
But Sticks could have said there was an internal investigation
He did.
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and that without the girl pressing charges it was al unclear
At the time of the press conference, it was unclear whether they could even speak on the nature of the matter, let alone describe the situation as unclear.
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The club had dealt with the situation on the surface and is available to assist on any ongoing investigations
Fiona Hudson & Sam Edmund wrote:
When asked if Carlton had felt compelled to investigate, Kernahan said: "I think it's already been looked at by other parties.
"It's an alleged thing and the AFL are looking at it. I don't want to go into it ... I don't want to be involved in that at the moment.
"As I understand no charges have been laid. Have people looked into it? Yes they have and we've known about an alleged action and I don't know what else to say about it. It's ongoing, if it is going at all."
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Either way He could have hired a public relations company to to strategise for him ...
Or the communications department could have scheduled a press conference later, when the situation had settled a little bit more.
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But he went in with the same professionalism as he goes in to anything..
The only thing he could have done was be more firm with Tony Jones in that it was not a matter in which they were available for comment, which is not in his nature. Professionalism is another debate entirely.
In all probabilities, the only difference between what you wanted from him and what he delivered, was a slightly more authoritarian performance. Hell, you would have been happy with brow-beating. That's not even professional.
It's a sad state in the world today if, when genuine and in good taste, how you say something or how quickly you respond can completely misconstrue what you're originally putting across.