MELBOURNE does not expect any fall-out from its willingness to trade Jack Trengove to Richmond during the recent exchange period.
Paul Roos said the 23-year-old midfielder had no problems with the Demons' actions during the proposed trade, which fell through when Trengove failed a medical examination.
In the suggested deal Richmond was prepared to exchange pick No.12 for Trengove and pick No.23.
Roos spoke to Trengove when the trade was first mooted to see if he would be prepared to consider the switch.
He told him he was a required player but it was an option the club was contemplating.
"It was an opportunity that Richmond presented to us," Roos said on Wednesday.
"It wasn't a fire sale. It was a case of, if it was an opportunity for him? He needed to be comfortable with it."
Trengove has since undergone a second bout of surgery to repair his injured navicular bone and said last week he was prepared to write off 2015 if he had to in order to heal.
Roos said it was too early to make bold predictions about Trengove's immediate future, with the first step being his recovery from the operation.
"[We want to make] sure he is healthy and making sure he heals and making sure that he gets out of the boot and he can walk and run and jog," Roos said.
"If that happens then we're really confident that he can play again."
Roos said Trengove remained positive and was upbeat.
Meanwhile Melbourne welcomed its first- to fourth-year players back to training with the news it had signed Port Adelaide's delisted free agent Ben Newton.
Roos also said Jesse Hogan would hit the training track immediately after missing all but one game in 2014 with a back injury.
The coach said Hogan was like a new recruit for the club given he was yet to play a senior match.
"The hardest thing for Jesse will be to hold him back just to make sure we pace him all the way to the start of the season and give him the chance to play some senior footy," Roos said.