Sunday Territorian

Bellamy serves a vicious verdict

- SCOTT BAILEY

MELBOURNE’S coach Craig Bellamy has launched a stunning public critique of his players, questionin­g if they have lost the character that for so long made them the best.

In a dressing down following his side’s 20-18 loss to Cronulla on Friday night, Bellamy admitted he would have been embarrasse­d if his side had won, and threatened future changes.

Melbourne’s loss was just their second of the season and they still sit comfortabl­y in the top four, but it came after they narrowly got out of jail against an injury-ravaged Warriors last week.

Asked if the $3 million in missing Sharks talent had affected his team’s mindset before Friday’s loss, Bellamy was brutal in his response.

“That’s one thing I think we’ve been pretty strong at over the past couple of years, but after the last couple of weeks I’m starting to doubt if this group has got that,” Bellamy said.

“And we better find that or I’ll be finding some new players.”

Pressed on how strong a statement he had just made, Bellamy didn’t relent.

“We gave young (Ryan) Papenhuyze­n a go tonight and how good was he?” Bellamy said.

“So if I have to go and do that and put young players in, I’ll do it.

“There’s a lot of players in that team who have got a lot of points up.

“So there’ll be a couple tapped on the shoulder saying you need to improve. I don’t want to sit here and bulls**t to you. At the moment we aren’t playing games out like Storm teams play games out.” It comes at a time of a significan­t change in Melbourne.

While Cameron Smith remains at hooker, only he, Dale Finucane, Will Chambers and Jesse and Kenny Bromwich have played more than 100 NRL games in the squad.

Bellamy said on Friday night his team had probably been lucky to win a number of games since round three, but conceded they were unfortunat­e not to beat the Sydney Roosters a fortnight ago.

But he said his team deserved the result they got against the Sharks, where they at one stage went 14 minutes without completing a set in the second half.

“It was a crap second half for us. They took real advantage of it, they played a near perfect second half,” Bellamy said.

“We were outplayed, outtoughed physically, out-toughed mentally. Their game management was a whole heap better than us.”

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