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Player Watch #44 Sydney Stack

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I've been to 2 vfl matches. Sandringham and Casey.
He was underdone but still looked a class above.
He is being taught a lesson by the club. He's being made to earn his spot back more than needed which I understand.
He is well and truly fit enough to play.

We all know He went to jail As it was very well documented. Thanks for pointing that out like none of us knew. Appreciate it
He has only played about 5 games in 8 or 9 weeks thanks in part for Covid. The first two were spend deep forward, they just wanted ease him in. He was hard at the ball and class when he got it yes he was class, but only had about half a dozen possessions both games.

The three week Covid break was obviously spend doing a fair amount of work, but it isn't game fitness. Last week was his second as a half back, the first against Wiily he was good but compared to Ross who just kept running and presenting for 4 quarters, he still did not look fully AFL fit. Last week was the first week he looked right and ready to take the next step, and he is selected in the mix.

Of course he is being made to earn his spot, Hardwick and co are not exactly gifting games this year, eg Miller, RCD earlier, very reluctant to change the formula, but until now he has not been near to being selected because he had not the preparation. I'm a great fan of Stack, and really hope he is selected, but if he isn't it is because Mansell played well also at half back and had games when Stack was just walking back into the club. Would not be surprised at all if he doesn't make the cut, nothing about the selection committee this year would surprise me, but I don't think it is penalty related.
 
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To suggest his non selection is a punishment shows the poster to have just not “got” what the RFC is about these days.
He would have been cut from the list if they wanted to punish him.
RFC stands behind our boys, supports, encourages and yes, forgives.
Stacky will get a game when warranted, when his inclusion fits the balance and when he’s ready to do his role.
Hope he plays this week. With his confidence up he might just provide the necessary spark.
 

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i dont see the point of not playing him.

need to get a look at him and see if he's worth continuing with.


At this point in our season i completely agree. Needs to come in to either prove a spark to our splattering season, or just for us to see if he is still a talent worth all the trouble
 

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Good luck Stacky.

Hope he plays well. Going by the recent form of this board he'll be ripped to shreds if he doesn't play well. lol
 


Go well Stacky

On Sunday, Sydney Stack rejoins the AFL fray for the first time since August 22 last year.
The talented 21-year-old will take to the field with teammates that need him as much as he has needed them in the past eight months.
His return is a triumph for both Richmond and the man who had to accept, without complaint, the harshest of consequences for two headline-grabbing mistakes in his 21st year.
The first error had him sent home from his team’s hub on the Gold Coast with a massive fine and a 10-week suspension after he breached the AFL’s COVID protocols with teammate Callum Coleman-Jones and found trouble in Surfers Paradise’s nightclub strip.
He watched from afar last year as his teammates won their third flag in four years.

Richmond’s [PLAYERCARD]Sydney Stack[/PLAYERCARD] lines up in the VFL against Sandringham in April.

Richmond’s Sydney Stack lines up in the VFL against Sandringham in April.Credit:Getty Images
Stack’s second error was breaching the COVID exemption Western Australia had granted him to enter the state for a family funeral, when he was arrested out in Northbridge while he should have been in quarantine. The authorities’ response was harsh and unyielding.
For his act of wantonness, Stack spent two weeks over Christmas in Hakea Prison – most of that time in isolation in the jail’s COVID wing with only his legal team able to contact him – before serving two months adhering to bail conditions. He was eventually fined $6000 in the Perth Magistrates court after a series of Supreme Court decisions in the state found incarceration for COVID breaches was a manifestly excessive penalty.
He stood on the steps of that court late in March with his legal team, manager Paul Peos and steadfast Richmond list manager Blair Hartley alongside him, apologised, and resolved to move forward from a three-month ordeal a person close to him described as “distressing”.
“I have a lot of work to do when I get back to Melbourne,” Stack said.
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Stack flies for a mark against Williamstown in June.

Stack flies for a mark against Williamstown in June.Credit:Getty Images
He knew by then that the Tigers were going beyond what many clubs would do to hold up their end of the bargain and he was determined to undertake the hard yards required for him to use the opportunity.
As he began his period of purgatory in Perth, Stack began working with a personal trainer to stay in shape.
His management group, Inside 50, led by Peos in Perth and Cam Read in Melbourne, worked in lockstep with Hartley, the man who added Stack to the Tigers’ list two years earlier, to help Stack face the consequences of his actions and recognise that plenty of people, including at Richmond, remained in his corner.
Stack heard from teammates and club officials regularly. Vice-captain Jack Riewoldt also made it clear the leadership group knew when they recruited Stack there might be some hiccups as he adjusted to an elite environment, but they would ride the bumps with him.

A host family put up their hand to house Stack when back in Victoria, and Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said the club would open their arms up for him when he returned.
“In his own time he’ll get up and address the group, he’ll tell his situation of what he’s been through and, more importantly, what he wants to do going forward,” Hardwick said the day after Stack was fined.
In early April at Punt Road Oval Stack’s re-emergence began as Richmond’s VFL team played Sandringham in the opening match of the season. He found his feet, gathering 10 touches, and was away.
He kept turning up, getting fitter, and performing in the VFL, but the Tigers didn’t rush to put him back in the team, even as injuries hit and players struggled to recapture the form that made them premiership winners.
Then, last Saturday, Stack picked up 29 touches against Preston. The old zip was back as he charged through congestion and accelerated with intent.

Of course, his return was complicated when he picked a bad time to be reported, but a fine cleared the way for him to be selected to play against Collingwood.
The pride in Hardwick’s voice was evident as he declared on Friday that Stack was close to selection.
“He is going well. He has really impressed in the way he has gone about it,” Hardwick said.
“He started obviously a little bit behind the eight-ball but his fitness has really picked up and he is starting to see the form that we know that Sydney can play with.”
There were no excuses from Hardwick as he explained the path Stack has been on at Richmond.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick with young Tiger [PLAYERCARD]Sydney Stack[/PLAYERCARD], in 2019.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick with young Tiger Sydney Stack, in 2019.Credit:Getty Images
“I think what happens is everyone matures and everyone grows up at stages, don’t they?” Hardwick said.
“Some take a little longer than others, but we always thought Sydney’s on-field performance is not our biggest concern.
“He can play the game, there is no doubt about that. But what we have been really impressed with is how he has gone about his life off-field.
“He has started to get some things in play, he has started to grow up, which is not only going to make him a great footballer, I think, but also a great person off the field.”

Read hopes people will let Stack put his past behind him and focus, as Richmond have, on the character he is, rather than make judgments based on headline-grabbing, silly mistakes.
Syd is an honest kid and the first to admit to his mistakes. He is also lucky to the have the unwavering support of family and friends,” Read said.
“His return to the highest level is the culmination of a lot of background effort from a lot of people, but most importantly, the hard work of Syd to accept his mistakes, take what has come, and work to get back the trust he lost, along with the conditioning to play at the highest level.”
People have seen what Stack can become. Now he is back, it’s time to push forward.
 

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Go well Stacky

On Sunday, Sydney Stack rejoins the AFL fray for the first time since August 22 last year.
The talented 21-year-old will take to the field with teammates that need him as much as he has needed them in the past eight months.
His return is a triumph for both Richmond and the man who had to accept, without complaint, the harshest of consequences for two headline-grabbing mistakes in his 21st year.
The first error had him sent home from his team’s hub on the Gold Coast with a massive fine and a 10-week suspension after he breached the AFL’s COVID protocols with teammate Callum Coleman-Jones and found trouble in Surfers Paradise’s nightclub strip.
He watched from afar last year as his teammates won their third flag in four years.

Richmond’s Sydney Stack lines up in the VFL against Sandringham in April.

Richmond’s Sydney Stack lines up in the VFL against Sandringham in April.Credit:Getty Images
Stack’s second error was breaching the COVID exemption Western Australia had granted him to enter the state for a family funeral, when he was arrested out in Northbridge while he should have been in quarantine. The authorities’ response was harsh and unyielding.
For his act of wantonness, Stack spent two weeks over Christmas in Hakea Prison – most of that time in isolation in the jail’s COVID wing with only his legal team able to contact him – before serving two months adhering to bail conditions. He was eventually fined $6000 in the Perth Magistrates court after a series of Supreme Court decisions in the state found incarceration for COVID breaches was a manifestly excessive penalty.
He stood on the steps of that court late in March with his legal team, manager Paul Peos and steadfast Richmond list manager Blair Hartley alongside him, apologised, and resolved to move forward from a three-month ordeal a person close to him described as “distressing”.
“I have a lot of work to do when I get back to Melbourne,” Stack said.
Advertisement

Stack flies for a mark against Williamstown in June.

Stack flies for a mark against Williamstown in June.Credit:Getty Images
He knew by then that the Tigers were going beyond what many clubs would do to hold up their end of the bargain and he was determined to undertake the hard yards required for him to use the opportunity.
As he began his period of purgatory in Perth, Stack began working with a personal trainer to stay in shape.
His management group, Inside 50, led by Peos in Perth and Cam Read in Melbourne, worked in lockstep with Hartley, the man who added Stack to the Tigers’ list two years earlier, to help Stack face the consequences of his actions and recognise that plenty of people, including at Richmond, remained in his corner.
Stack heard from teammates and club officials regularly. Vice-captain Jack Riewoldt also made it clear the leadership group knew when they recruited Stack there might be some hiccups as he adjusted to an elite environment, but they would ride the bumps with him.

A host family put up their hand to house Stack when back in Victoria, and Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said the club would open their arms up for him when he returned.
“In his own time he’ll get up and address the group, he’ll tell his situation of what he’s been through and, more importantly, what he wants to do going forward,” Hardwick said the day after Stack was fined.
In early April at Punt Road Oval Stack’s re-emergence began as Richmond’s VFL team played Sandringham in the opening match of the season. He found his feet, gathering 10 touches, and was away.
He kept turning up, getting fitter, and performing in the VFL, but the Tigers didn’t rush to put him back in the team, even as injuries hit and players struggled to recapture the form that made them premiership winners.
Then, last Saturday, Stack picked up 29 touches against Preston. The old zip was back as he charged through congestion and accelerated with intent.

Of course, his return was complicated when he picked a bad time to be reported, but a fine cleared the way for him to be selected to play against Collingwood.
The pride in Hardwick’s voice was evident as he declared on Friday that Stack was close to selection.
“He is going well. He has really impressed in the way he has gone about it,” Hardwick said.
“He started obviously a little bit behind the eight-ball but his fitness has really picked up and he is starting to see the form that we know that Sydney can play with.”
There were no excuses from Hardwick as he explained the path Stack has been on at Richmond.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick with young Tiger Sydney Stack, in 2019.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick with young Tiger Sydney Stack, in 2019.Credit:Getty Images
“I think what happens is everyone matures and everyone grows up at stages, don’t they?” Hardwick said.
“Some take a little longer than others, but we always thought Sydney’s on-field performance is not our biggest concern.
“He can play the game, there is no doubt about that. But what we have been really impressed with is how he has gone about his life off-field.
“He has started to get some things in play, he has started to grow up, which is not only going to make him a great footballer, I think, but also a great person off the field.”

Read hopes people will let Stack put his past behind him and focus, as Richmond have, on the character he is, rather than make judgments based on headline-grabbing, silly mistakes.
Syd is an honest kid and the first to admit to his mistakes. He is also lucky to the have the unwavering support of family and friends,” Read said.
“His return to the highest level is the culmination of a lot of background effort from a lot of people, but most importantly, the hard work of Syd to accept his mistakes, take what has come, and work to get back the trust he lost, along with the conditioning to play at the highest level.”
People have seen what Stack can become. Now he is back, it’s time to push forward.
The link on Twitter has a few notable “likes” and “retweets”

Brandon Gale among them
Looks like the chief is behind stack and that’s fantastic to see
 
DEAR COACHING STAFF

THIS GUY IS A GUN DEFENDER!
Please refrain from playing him out of form by moving him forward again.
Think he could even be a midfielder if he put the work in on his fitness
 

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