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Departed Crows coach Pyke was stressed out

3 minute read

Don Pyke quit as Adelaide's AFL coach because he was "stressed out", retiring Crows stalwart Andy Otten says.

DON PYKE, Senior Coach of the Crows addresses his players during the 2017 AFL First Preliminary Final match between the Adelaide Crows and the Geelong Cats at Adelaide Oval in Adelaide, Australia.
DON PYKE, Senior Coach of the Crows addresses his players during the 2017 AFL First Preliminary Final match between the Adelaide Crows and the Geelong Cats at Adelaide Oval in Adelaide, Australia. Picture: Adam Trafford/AFL Media/Getty Images

Adelaide's players must take some responsibility for the departure of their AFL coach Don Pyke, retiring Crows stalwart Andy Otten says.

Pyke quit last Thursday despite being contracted for two more years, with the Crows now searching for a new mentor.

The Crows on Wednesday named a four-member panel to select the next coach - the club's football director and ex-captain Mark Ricciuto, chief executive officer Andrew Fagan, former Adelaide and Geelong player James Podsiadly and basketball great Phil Smyth.

Otten says Pyke was "stressed out" as the Crows slipped from being losing 2017 grand finalists to missing the finals in consecutive years.

Pyke broke down when telling senior players, including co-captain Taylor Walker, of his decision to stand down as coach.

"It was pretty sad to see Pykey call it quits, he caught a few people by surprise,'' Otten told SEN radio on Wednesday.

"How deflated he kind of looked, that was pretty hard to see.

"It (the club) is an interesting place at the moment.

"The leaders have got to get together, the playing group also have to have a look at themselves and take some of the responsibility.

"He (Pyke) was pretty stressed out towards the end of it and the uncertainty with this review probably took its toll."

Two separate reviews are being held into Adelaide's fall from grace.

An internal review by club staffers is being staged along with an external review by a four-member panel headed by Hawthorn legend Jason Dunstall and Fremantle great Matthew Pavlich.

The Dunstall-led review was expected to report its findings within a fortnight.

Otten, who played 109 AFL games for the Crows from 2008, said Adelaide's season spiralled after the mid-season bye.

At that point, the Crows were entrenched in the top eight but they lost seven of nine games post-bye to finish 11th.

"A little bit of everything," Otten said of the reasons for the plunge.

"Some of the better players down on form and younger players didn't come on either.

"I think the frustration of it all started piling up, it just kept snowballing into this massive mountain at the end of the year."

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