As Christian Petracca and the Melbourne Demons look to move on from a dramatic last few weeks that have been rife with speculation, the superstar midfielder has been labelled “hopelessly naïve” in his alleged bid to move clubs.
Both parties, who put to bed any chance of a shock departure from the Demons on Saturday night via a club statement, have been forced to navigate nuclear rumours and accusations around the superstar’s future at the club after Petracca felt disillusioned with its direction.
And while the present has now been branded an “exciting time” by one Melbourne great, the extents that Petracca went to move away from the Demons may have been greater than first thought.
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‘He’s got five years, he’s red & blue’ | 01:25
Speaking on Fox Footy’s On The Couch on Monday night, reporter Jon Ralph laid down his understanding of the situation when all has been said and done.
“This was real for a very long time, until it wasn’t – when (on Saturday night) Christian committed his future to the football club,” Ralph begun by saying.
“He contacted rival players, my understanding is he was even keen to talk to rival pro scouts and list bosses to assess his options – that is unprecedented, I don’t think we’ve ever seen that; that’s how serious he was to drive this (cultural) change.
“I think he was hopelessly naive about the process itself, and thinking it might stay quiet.”
“It was ugly, and I think there’ll be some causalities on the way as well, but in the end, I think this has happened a lot across the footy landscape (and) unfortunately for Melbourne – this one played out really publicly,” 226-game Demon Garry Lyon added.
Melbourne’s year in the footballing limelight hasn’t been a pretty one all things considered, with the constant (and disruptive) nature of media attention surrounding Clayton Oliver late last year starting well before the 2024 season.
And while Oliver is by no means directly to blame for Petracca’s internal falling out with the club, Ralph hinted that perhaps his own work ethic hasn’t been upheld by his teammates in recent times.
“We’re talking about cultural problems, let’s face it – the club has too many scallywags, and for Christian Petracca, he feels like he busts his butt on a weekly basis … and there’s too many players (that aren’t),” Ralph continued.
“A lot of people said: ‘How did Melbourne stuff this up so badly?”
What Petracca told teammates revealed | 02:07
Ralph went on to direct viewers to an interview Petracca did with the Melbourne Football Club released on July 1, addressing his own challenges with a notable amount of maturity and transparency; not pointing towards a level of issue that has since become public.
“Can you see why potentially Melbourne was a little bit blind-sided when he said no one supported him?” questioned Ralph.
“It hasn’t aged well it’s fair to say that bit of vision – not for Christian anyway, but we (also) can’t understand the trauma he went through either, so I can understand he was just recently out of hospital when he conducted that interview as well,” Brisbane Lions champion Jonathan Brown added.
Petracca is still yet to speak publicly on his trauma, with the media storm taking a complete life of its own ever since reports first started swirling of his unrest.
“I think it’s an exciting time when you can air all your dirty linen out on the table, and then watch how well you deal with it,” Lyon finished by saying.
“There’s no club in the AFL who’s had their linen more exposed than Melbourne, and now we sit and wait and say: ‘What are you going to do?”
Speaking earlier in the evening on Fox Footy’s AFL 360, host Gerard Whateley wondered whether Melbourne will be prepared to make similar change to what Collingwood did a few years ago.
“There was an environment around Collingwood where it required total change – and they got that total change and it reinvigorated and emboldened that team to the success that it had. It feels like Melbourne’s at that point,” Whateley stated.
“They’ve got to be truthful with themselves and truthful with their supporters,” co-host and Herald Sun Chief Football Writer Mark Robinson added.
“There’s so many questions still, which Christian will address one day I’m sure, but I think it’s dawned on everyone right now that that injury and what happened in the weeks after had such a great impact on him that it wasn’t properly addressed, either with Christian, with his teammates, with the club especially.
“It led to this calamitous situation of what we’ve seen the last two and a half weeks surrounding Christian Petracca.”
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