Geelong Advertiser

Saints must restore fans’ faith: Finnis

- JASON PHELAN and ROGER VAUGHAN

ST KILDA chief executive Matt Finnis has conceded the Saints need to restore the faith of fans after a blistering attack from former coach Grant Thomas.

Thomas slammed the club yesterday, saying they are decades from adding to their lone premiershi­p.

He took specific aim at president Peter Summers and Finnis, accusing them of being “pedestrian” and not at the “cutting edge”.

The Saints will finish in the bottom four this season and Thomas, who was sacked as coach after the 2006 season, said they kept finding ways to shoot themselves in the foot.

Asked how far they were away from their next flag, he told Macquarie Sports Radio: “Decades. I mean it’s not the foreseeabl­e future.”

St Kilda’s solitary premiershi­p was claimed in 1966.

“I think we’ve been pretty open about it . . . it’s been an unacceptab­le year and we don’t shy away from that,” Finnis told 3AW.

“We’ve got to make changes and we’re doing that on and off the field.

“We’re hearing that from our fans ... they’re dishearten­ed.

“We’ve got to make sure we restore their confidence and their faith but I’m not going to buy into those comments (from Thomas).”

Finnis also all but guaranteed the club would hang on to its first-round draft pick — likely to be in the top five — in the trade period.

Thomas coached the Saints to preliminar­y finals in 2004-05 but left after they were defeated in a 2006 eliminatio­n final.

Ross Lyon then coached the Saints to losing grand finals in 2009-10 and they have not made the top eight since he left for Fremantle after the 2011 campaign.

Thomas said the Saints have made some good coaching appointmen­ts, along with some bad ones.

“It doesn’t mean it should end up as an unmitigate­d disaster,” he said.

Thomas, who fell out badly with former Saints president Rod Butterss, said the problems were amplified when people in charge at the club were not competent enough.

“At the moment you have Peter Summers and Matt Finnis — they’re lovely people and they want the best thing for St Kilda,” he said.

“But . . . you get sucked along in their slipstream. I’m not sure they are at the cutting edge of what’s required to be successful.

“They seem to me to be quite pedestrian and quite placating in their approach to footy.

“You just want something a little more intense and focused, stronger leadership to deliver success.”

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