It wouldn't be Richmond if Mike didn't get his say
Sheahan: The case for CaseyFuture looking bright at last
11 December 2004
Herald Sun
By MIKE SHEAHAN
THERE is unmistakable optimism emanating from a large section of the chronically downbeat Richmond supporter group.
The arrival of Terry Wallace, Troy Simmonds and a batch of highly rated youngsters has had a profound impact on morale.
Wallace and Simmonds both managed to secure rare and risky five-year contracts, but both were in demand. Quality comes at a price.
The club performed as it should have at the draft table, snaring at least two, and as many as four, of the country's best youngsters. That's why Greg Miller took the extraordinary step of joining Clinton Casey's election ticket.
The veteran football man says he is only midway through a major rebuilding program; that he isn't interested in returning to square one.
While it was an extraordinary decision -- the rest of the staff have been warned to stay out of the election battle -- his public commitment to Casey ultimately might swing the result.
Talkback callers and email writers, and Richmond leads the way in both, have indicated a strong belief in Miller and, by extension, the Casey group.
Miller is a man of vast football experience. He is a good footy man because he knows the game and its participants, and does what it takes to get what he wants.
Five-year contracts for Wallace and Simmonds seem excessive. They might even prove to be so. But Richmond secured the best available coach, and, in Simmonds, got an experienced, capable ruckman-forward to replace Brad Ottens.
Wallace is a sound investment. His preparation is impeccable; he will be worth four or five more wins. Good teams make good coaches, but good coaches improve bad teams; Denis Pagan and Denis Pagan alone was responsible for Carlton's spectacular improvement this year.
Miller told the Herald Sun recently he saw traces of North Melbourne of the late 1980s and early '90s in the current Richmond group.
There's more than a trace of romance in that assessment, given the North crew included names such as Carey, Longmire, Stevens, Schwass and Archer, but the Tigers do have 12-15 kids who look to be chances.
Brett Deledio and Richard Tambling join Jay Schulz, Daniel Jackson and Brent Hartigan, and perhaps Tom Roach and Andrew Raines.
Richmond also has Nathan Brown, Matthew Richardson, Mark Coughlan and Joel Bowden, all of whom will be better under Wallace.
At board level, Casey carries a long list of convictions against his name, yet he does make a valid point when he says he must be better for five years' experience.
Like so many gung-ho businessmen before him, he paid football insufficient respect on arrival and it came back to bite him.
Casey and Miller have made plenty of mistakes, but they also make a sound case for a further 12 months.
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,11651547%255E19742,00.htmlSheahan: The case for MacekCasey's used up his lives
11 December 2004
Herald Sun
By MIKE SHEAHAN
WHY shouldn't there be change? How long does one bloke and his cronies get to make a footy club function properly?
Richmond has finished 14th, 13th and 16th in the past three years, and has lost enough money to end Victoria's public health crisis.
There is a debt of $5 million, according to the Macek group.
Surely time's up. Something has to be tried. Anything.
Every Richmond great except Jack Dyer seems to have endorsed the challengers. From Francis Bourke down.
That must help at the ballot box, although it's hard to know how former players become instant experts on how a business is running. A business viewed from afar.
The Macek group has a liberal dose of experience. The man himself, Brendan Schwab, Peter Welsh and Mike Humphris all have been there before. Schwab and Welsh departed less than 12 months ago, frustrated, they say, by Casey's style and their inability to effect change.
Welsh and Bryan Wood both are Richmond premiership players, which will appeal.
The challengers cleverly point to membership targets of 40,000, to average crowds of 40,000, to blockbuster crowds of 60,000, to a return to "big four" status.
They are sexy figures, but, unfortunately for them, it's not that simple.
They also have promised to refrain from a slash and burn approach. The coach is secure, the chief executive Steven Wright is secure.
What they are promising is change in the way the business is run.
It's simply a question of governance, Macek says.
Who can you trust? Casey has exhausted supporter faith, Macek says; time for a credible alternative to be given an opportunity.
Macek and Humphris both are professionals in the fields of finance and governance.
There's no doubt many disaffected Richmond people, some willing to inject big money, would return under a new administration.
Macek and company also showed their good faith by promising Miller he would have their support if he withdrew from the election.
What the challengers offer is hope. How could things become any worse, many supporters ask.
It's a fair question.
The other relevant question for members is whether they can be content with the level of change being effected from within.
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