Dew sharpens AFL axe for complacent Suns

Gold Coast's Touk Miller admits he and his teammates "just rolled up" in the AFL loss to Carlton that will force coach Stuart Dew to wield the selection axe.

Gold Coast AFL Coach Stuart Dew

Gold Coast coach Stuart Dew was unimpressed by his team's intent in the AFL loss to AFL. (AAP)

Gold Coast coach Stuart Dew has warned that heads will roll after his side's AFL capitulation against Carlton.

Just seven days after a stirring upset of Sydney, the Suns were outworked by the last-placed Blues in a performance midfielder Touk Miller admitted was laced with complacent efforts.

Carlton dominated after a three-goal Suns burst to begin the Metricon Stadium clash as the AFL's rising star Patrick Cripps orchestrated the cellar dweller's second win of the season.

Dew would have hoped his young side had turned a corner after running down the Swans at the SCG but instead it was back to the drawing board in what's been a frustrating first season at the helm.

The result compounds the pressure on the Suns who are bracing for the exit of star forward Tom Lynch and the possibility of losing other established off-contract players next year, including marquee midfielder David Swallow and Lynch's co-captain Steven May.

"We're trying to bridge the gap from such a really good win last week and it probably sums up the maturity of the group or lack of, being able to deal with such a high and to come back down and reset," Dew said.

"On the back of tonight ... we'll have to make some unforced changes. I just talked to the players then and we can't accept the performance.

"We've got to keep challenging each other and not just put our head in the sand and say 'oh well, that was bad luck'."

Miller said Dew's post-game address produced some concerning feedback.

"(Dew asked for) Just a simple yes or no ... did you prepare and play to win?," Miller told the club's website.

"Interesting results as to what came out.

"You could see that we're not on the same page ... we didn't work hard enough and just rolled up."

While promising changes the coach said the club couldn't afford to be "too reactive" to the loss and that the final four weeks of the season would be telling.

"Win or lose, we're more about how we play," he said

"Consistency's been our battle ... last week we played three-and-a-half (good quarters), this week, 12 minutes.

"So it's disappointing, but a sign of where we're at."


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Source: AAP


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