An extra cruelty is the fact that there is no set time-frame for the appeal, so the issue, hanging over the Force players all season, could yet run and run.
A Force teammate at the Wallabies, lock Coleman, said: "I feel for the supporters back home and all our mates back home. A lot of the fans and the players are still in shock at the moment. It will hit home and when it does hopefully we'll stick tight.
"I personally feel the fight isn't over yet."
Coleman, who had been at the franchise for four years and has led the side as skipper, added: "I've poured my soul into the club. It's very much part of me and I'm sure everyone who has played in the jersey feels the same way."
Feelings are at fever pitch on the west coast, and they haven't been sated by the resignation of ARU boss Bill Pulver. There is talk of Force supporters boycotting the Wallabies v Springboks test in Perth on September 9, or even supporting the South Africans.
However, Haylett-Petty said that would be counter-productive, and preferred another form of planned protest - Australian and South African supporters alike wearing blue Force jerseys to the test.
The division and chaos affecting the game here is lending a surreal backdrop to the test, 12 months after the All Blacks thrashed the Wallabies in the first of three victories last year.
It makes the mental side of Cheika's preparation all the more important. The Wallabies' coach has already created headlines when running an intense and at times unorthodox camp over the past month - with his players forced to train with their mouths taped shut, and Coleman believes experiencing that adversity as a team has brought it closer.
Asked if the Wallabies had a mental block when it came to beating the All Blacks, he replied: "No. Absolutely I think the boys believe now more than ever that this weekend we can beat the All Blacks.
"The growth the team has experienced over the last four weeks - not only physically but mentally... [has been beneficial]. That mental resilience, that hard training that we've been doing, especially for the young guys experiencing it for the first time, I think that's paid dividends."