live Infotainment Factory: Fake training session led to AFL's greatest ambush

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Wednesday 27 April 2022

Fake training session led to AFL's greatest ambush


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Former Western Bulldogs coach Terry Wallace has detailed the elaborate lengths the club went to hide their infamous "super flood" plan from Essendon in 2000.

The Dogs caused one of the AFL's greatest ever upsets when they defeated the previously unbeaten Bombers by 11 points in round 21.

The match is largely remembered for the Bulldogs implementing never-before-seen tactics defensively, with virtually all of their players pushing back into Essendon's attacking 50 to limit the Bombers' scoring.

READ MORE: Jack de Belin speaks out over female journo fiasco

THE MOLE: Gould says training criticism off the mark

READ MORE: Cameron 'frozen out' by GWS power brokers

Wallace explained the drastic lengths the club went during the week to keep their plans secret on 3AW's Footy: Then and Now podcast.

"We had said to the press we were going to have a very light week and were treating this like a final and all we were going to do light skills," he said.

"That's the way we had planned it all.

"At the Whitten Oval, I'd do an interview with the press before training, we'd kick a few balls around and Essendon would be there watching to see who was out on the track etc.

Western Bulldogs players celebrate their upset win after they defeated Essendon by 11 points in round 21 of the 2000 AFL season.

"But what we were doing then was packing up all our gear, going down to Werribee – who was our affiliate club in the VFL – and we had the whole of the Werribee ground gridded out.

"We had painted the ground into the grids where the players were to stand on the Friday night.

"Essendon thought we were going home, because we'd finished our training session, but we were all driving down the highway and going to Werribee to actually go and train this without peering eyes.

"Did we catch them out? Yeah, I think we did."

'Footy: Then and Now' is a new weekly podcast that gets you excited for the weekend ahead by revisiting famous VFL/AFL moments with the people who shaped them. Follow/Subscribe on Spotify, Apple, and Google Podcasts

https://omny.fm/shows/3aw-is-football/essendon-vs-western-bulldogs-terry-wallace-the-sup/embed

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

Former Western Bulldogs coach Terry Wallace has detailed the elaborate lengths the club went to hide their infamous "super flood" plan from Essendon in 2000.

The Dogs caused one of the AFL's greatest ever upsets when they defeated the previously unbeaten Bombers by 11 points in round 21.

The match is largely remembered for the Bulldogs implementing never-before-seen tactics defensively, with virtually all of their players pushing back into Essendon's attacking 50 to limit the Bombers' scoring.

READ MORE: Jack de Belin speaks out over female journo fiasco

THE MOLE: Gould says training criticism off the mark

READ MORE: Cameron 'frozen out' by GWS power brokers

Wallace explained the drastic lengths the club went during the week to keep their plans secret on 3AW's Footy: Then and Now podcast.

"We had said to the press we were going to have a very light week and were treating this like a final and all we were going to do light skills," he said.

"That's the way we had planned it all.

"At the Whitten Oval, I'd do an interview with the press before training, we'd kick a few balls around and Essendon would be there watching to see who was out on the track etc.

Western Bulldogs players celebrate their upset win after they defeated Essendon by 11 points in round 21 of the 2000 AFL season.

"But what we were doing then was packing up all our gear, going down to Werribee – who was our affiliate club in the VFL – and we had the whole of the Werribee ground gridded out.

"We had painted the ground into the grids where the players were to stand on the Friday night.

"Essendon thought we were going home, because we'd finished our training session, but we were all driving down the highway and going to Werribee to actually go and train this without peering eyes.

"Did we catch them out? Yeah, I think we did."

'Footy: Then and Now' is a new weekly podcast that gets you excited for the weekend ahead by revisiting famous VFL/AFL moments with the people who shaped them. Follow/Subscribe on Spotify, Apple, and Google Podcasts

https://omny.fm/shows/3aw-is-football/essendon-vs-western-bulldogs-terry-wallace-the-sup/embed

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

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