Tigers plead for board stability Jon Pierik
December 11, 2010 RICHMOND has called on its members to deliver board stability in a bid to ensure the club continues its upward curve.
Voting closes at midnight tomorrow in the latest round of elections with five candidates jostling for three spots.
President Gary March and long-time board members Peggy Haines and John Matthies are seeking re-election but are being challenged by coterie members Philip Anderson and Neil McKay.
Matthies, the founding partner of a leading Melbourne legal firm who is on the Tigers' finance sub-committee, rejected McKay's recent assertion that the club needed greater financial security.
"We have had a profit for the last five or six years. I think this year our profit will be declared at $2.85 million and an operating profit of $759,000, which is not bad for a team that finished second last," Matthies said yesterday.
"Whilst we haven't reduced our debt substantially in the last five years, I think it's been reduced from $5.2 million back to $4.5 million.
"We have increased our football department spend in that time. Compared with '05 we are spending nearly an extra $4 million on football.
"If we hadn't increased our football spend, we could nearly have eradicated the debt. But it's like the chicken and the egg, if you don't increase your football spend, you become very non-competitive.
"We have a plan to not only eradicate the debt but also to have a treasure chest to go with it."
March recently unveiled a 12-month plan to eliminate the club's $4.5 million debt.
Anderson, the chief executive and founding director of a fibre-optic company, says he will encourage the Tigers to employ a greater use of "leading edge technology" if he wins a seat.
But Matthies says the Tigers are already proficient in that department.
"We believe we already have leading-edge technology with a couple of people that we have involved in the club. I won't say who they are but we have a guy who is a real guru in that area," he said.
Matthies has also taken a special interest in the club's recruiting and culture since joining the board in 2004.
"I think the current board is doing the job. We are just about to open our new $20 million facility at the club. Our membership [last season] was the second highest membership it has been," he said.
http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/tigers-plead-for-board-stability-20101210-18szl.html