Terry Daniher urges Dons to ‘fight on’; Matthew Lloyd distances himself from Hird push

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Scott Spits

Updated ,first published

In today’s AFL briefing:

  • Terry Daniher provides inspiration to embattled Bombers.
  • Matthew Lloyd denies involvement in push for Hird to coach Bombers. 

Essendon great Terry Daniher has given an impromptu rev-up speech to the club’s beleaguered playing group, imploring them to not drop their bundle as the club endures one of its lowest ever points.

Terry Daniher with Essendon’s interim coach Dean Solomon on Tuesday.Essendon FC

Asked what lessons modern-day players could learn from the legacy of Neale Daniher – Terry’s Daniher’s brother who lost his long battle with motor neurone disease a week ago – the 1984 and 1985 premiership captain took his “little moment” to challenge the players to “fight on”.

Essendon have won just one game in the past year and slumped to a 1-11 season record by losing to lowly West Coast in Perth on Sunday, only days after sacking fourth-year coach Brad Scott. The 16-times VFL/AFL premiers last won a flag 26 years ago and haven’t won a final since 2004.

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“Fight on boys,” Terry Daniher told the players at the club’s Tullamarine base ahead of the King’s Birthday eve clash against Carlton at the MCG.

“[They’re] going through a tough period at the moment. There’s no question about it.

“Can’t be much lower … you’ve got to face the facts. You’ve got to face them head on, as Nealo would.

“As he’s shown us, there’s only one way – you’ve got to be resilient enough and take it on, take the challenges on.

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“Nealo tried to keep a level playing field from start to whoa [in his playing and coaching career], and I reckon he showed that all the way through. Never fell down, never dropped his bundle.”

Quizzed later on whether “tough love” was the element that the Essendon playing group needed most, 313-gamer Daniher replied: “They’re big boys now”.

“They’ve got to take on the responsibility to get us back up there, get us off the floor,” he added.

“We’ve got a lot of young kids at the club.

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“Sometimes you can lose a little bit, go off track.

“I look my little moment [today] where I could put my two bob’s worth in … whether it will make a difference I don’t know. I hope it does.”

Terry Daniher also welcomed the news that his former teammate and club great James Hird last week declared his strong interest in returning as senior coach. But Daniher stressed that the club must conduct a proper search process to find the right individual to replace Scott.

With Terry Daniher front and centre, the Bombers united to show their support for Neale Daniher’s Fight MND Big Freeze on Tuesday.Essendon FC

In further troubling news for the injury-plagued Bombers, key defender Lewis Hayes re-injured his
knee in the VFL on Sunday in his first game back after a 12-month lay-off with an ACL injury. Although he played out the game, the 21-year-old reported soreness on Monday after hyperextending the ligament in the second quarter of the match, his first hit-out since injuring his knee on AFL debut last year. The Bombers said scans confirmed the ACL was damaged.

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Matthew Lloyd denies involvement in Hird push

Essendon champion Matthew Lloyd has categorically denied he was part of a clandestine campaign to undermine former Bombers coach Brad Scott and push for James Hird to return to the helm of the club.

Last week, The Age revealed the plot to reinstall Hird at Tullamarine – or the “redemption campaign”, as club leaders called it – turned serious in March last year with a telephone message from former Essendon chairman Paul Little to David Barham, who held the title at the time.

Lloyd confirmed on Monday night that he contacted football pundit Kane Cornes, who had said on SEN that the former champion goal-kicker was among Essendon figures behind the campaign to return Hird as coach.

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“I don’t how I got dragged into that at all,” Lloyd said on Nine’s Footy Classified.

“I did text Kane today and let him know that I wasn’t happy with that.”

In discussions on SEN about the vacant Essendon coaching position and the political machinations of the job chase after Hird publicly confirmed his strong interest in the job, reporter Tom Morris and Cornes both named Lloyd as a central ally of his former teammate.

In response to a question from Adam Simpson about the members of “Team Hird”, Morris said:

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“The team behind him? Well, Paul Little is very much part of it.

“There’s other people around the outskirts – well, Matthew Lloyd.”

Separately, Cornes said: “I read this morning in the [Australian] Financial Review of all places that Paul Little’s push for James Hird is back on.

Matthew Lloyd and James Hird in their days as teammates at the Bombers.John Donegan

“That is absolute rubbish that James Hird had no knowledge that Paul Little was pushing as well as others, like [Matthew] Lloyd and like [Adrian] Dodoro … there were secret coffees going on left, right and centre.”

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Lloyd said that in his long career in football media, he had had to regularly discuss the plight of his former club.

“You know what, the most tiring thing I’ve done in my media is talk about Essendon’s failings, year after year, time after time,” Lloyd said.

“I want the best coach, and I don’t care who it is.”

Asked specifically about being a member of a “clandestine cabal”, Lloyd said: “I’ve never met Paul Little in my life.

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“I’ve never [even] had a drink of coffee in my life. I don’t drink coffee.

“I’m the least political person – because I’m not interested. I’m not interested in politics.

“It is categorically wrong.

“To Tom Morris and to Kane Cornes who put that out there, that’s factually incorrect.”

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Lloyd confirmed that he wanted 253-gamer Hird to be an option for Essendon, who are languishing in bottom spot with a 1-11 record and last week sacked fourth-year coach Scott.

“I’m not pro-James [Hird], I’m not against James. I just want James to be part of the process,” Lloyd said.

“If they decide he’s not part of the process, so be it because at the end of the day, I want Essendon to pick the best coach.

“If it’s the next Adam Kingsley or the next Craig McRae – whoever it is – that’s what I want for the club.”

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Former Geelong champion Jimmy Bartel encouraged experienced and successful coaches to “have the confidence” to chase the Essendon coaching job, regardless of whether Hird was a preferred candidate.

“I might be on a little bit of an island … when I hear coaches back out of it [the process] because they’re afraid to compete,” Bartel said on Footy Classified.

“But if we keep hearing time and time again, ‘James Hird hasn’t been a coach for 10 years. He hasn’t been in the hunt week to week’ …”

West Coast premiership coach Simpson last week cast doubt on Essendon’s selection process, while former Sydney counterpart John Longmire was keeping an open mind after Hird’s public declaration for the job.

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Simpson was backing up the thoughts of former Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley, who had said he would not apply for the Essendon job while it appeared Hird was the frontrunner.

“What are you fearful for?” Bartel said on Monday night.

“Because your head coach, wherever you appoint your head coach, has got to be the strongest personality in your group.

“You’ve got to get the whole entire club to believe your philosophy, your direction – on recruiting, list management, development – and if you’ve all these concerns that everyone keeps highlighting, shouldn’t you have the confidence to be able to beat someone [else for the job]?”

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au