Excellent article by Barry Hall...

Always depart on good terms
The Age | Barry Hall | August 22, 2010

I'LL BE honest and admit that last year when things were coming to an abrupt and rocky end for me at the Swans, there were times when I considered going public and playing the blame game.

It would have been easy to blow up and carry on. It's human nature that if something substantial happens to you, you look at everyone else first for someone to blame. For me, the thing I had to do was accept responsibility because I was the one who had stuffed up. I was fortunate that I had some really good people around me to help me through it and make the right decisions, decisions I'm very thankful I made.

I had Phil Mullen, then the Swans' player welfare manager and now my manager, beside me every step of the way. If I was straying down the wrong path, Phil and others would put me back on the right track again. Talking things through before reacting was the way to go.

I can think irrationally about things, but, thankfully, most of the time before I've said or written something I would regret, I've had people put me straight. It's amazing how many times you sit down, think about things and say: ''Geez, lucky I didn't say that because it was wrong.''

At the end of the day, I feel I can go back to the Swans without feeling uncomfortable. Not burning bridges was the sensible way to go. I won a premiership there and I was a captain of the club, so it was important to do that, to be able to feel that way. I think Phil realised that early on, while it took me a bit of time.

Without people knowing too many details about what goes on behind closed doors, it makes if hard for the public to judge what is right and what isn't and whose side to take. In the end, if it's at least seen as an amicable split, then it's a good result for the club and player, no matter who is wrong or right.

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