Humble lesson for Tiger leader
18 December 2004
Herald Sun
By MIKE SHEAHAN
Mike Sheahan's view: THE return of Clinton Casey and the majority of his team at Punt Rd now seems a formality. Come this afternoon, when the election result becomes official, Casey should still be president of the Richmond Football Club.
If so, he will feel both relieved and vindicated, and probably a trifle smug.
That's understandable. He has been under heavy attack for several months and might have lost office against a fresher, more aggressive, issues-driven opposition.
He is entitled to indulge himself in the moment, but he would be wise to heed the lessons of recent times as soon as any hangover passes.
If Casey is returned, it won't be because of his record. It will be a supporter cry for stability, and will reflect the respect afforded Greg Miller by the Richmond membership, and the lack of appeal and ideas of the Macek group.
As odd as it may sound, Charles Macek's team included too many reminders of the rocky past.
It undersold the membership by basing its campaign on the views of players from the glory days of the 1960s and '70s.
Assuming Casey is returned, he now has to learn to embrace all sections of the Richmond family: fellow directors, the staff, supporters, both corporate and rank-and-file, and past players.
He has to be more things to more people. More accommodating, less abrasive towards those who don't share all his views.
The humble, common touch of his predecessor Leon Daphne would be a useful example.
Casey needs to share the load, too, to involve more people. A board of nine may be cumbersome, but that's what he's got. He should involve all of them.
The stinging criticism from several former directors, particularly Brendan Schwab and Peter Welsh, was that Casey ran his own race, wouldn't listen. When a club is going poorly, dissent festers under that style of government.
Fortunately, everyone at Richmond seems happy with new chief executive Steven Wright, the man who should steer the ship on a daily basis.
His main task is to stop the financial haemorrhaging that has claimed more than $3 million in two years.
He also needs to be watchful of the Past Players' Association, reminding it of its purpose.
Mike Perry and company do a fine job. They are important as a group built largely on the glory days of the 1960s and early '70s.
They should be seen as heroes, mentors and confidants; they may need a gentle reminder they are not a powerful political faction.
Richmond has to regroup from here. Its dismal recent history makes it beholden on everyone with Richmond at heart to pull together.
The Tigers hardly are likely to take inspiration from Collingwood, but the fact is Eddie McGuire can deliver a spray that melts paint. Behind closed doors.
Yet, on public display, he is the amiable president of what he sells as the world's greatest sporting club with the world's most passionate, loyal supporters.
A final word on the election. Miller was wrong to join Casey's ticket, yet he probably decided the result.
If he is elected to the board, he has a duty to sit on the board. Not forever, but for a respectable period.
If and when the place is functioning smoothly, he should step down and concentrate on what he does best, run a football department.
G. Miller out, R. Hunt in, perhaps.
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