Casey seeks to bury the hatchet
By Dan Oakes
The Age
December 20, 2004
As the dust settles in the aftermath of the struggle for control of Richmond, re-elected president Clinton Casey has extended the olive branch to his defeated foes.
Casey said yesterday he would meet members of the Charles Macek-led ticket that failed in its attempt to dislodge him from his position at the helm of the troubled club.
"We'll in some way, shape or form make contact with them during the week (but) it's not just them, there are former players we need to sit down with, the former players' association as well, there are former board members we need to talk to. We just really need to sit down and get a general feeling for who's feeling disenfranchised," Casey said. "We're all big boys and at the end of the day, this is a club. We don't need to be best friends, but we have to have the best interests of the club at heart and work out a way that we can all live together and, where possible, help each other out."
At times, the election was spiteful, with accusations of conflict of interest, arrogance, wedge politics and financial incompetence hurled around by various players in the drama. Both sides leaked material to journalists in efforts to discredit their opponents, notably in relation to Tigers legends Rex Hunt and Bill Barrot, who both entered the fray, only to retire licking their wounds.
At one stage, Casey suggested that material sent to members by Macek's ticket was defamatory of him and flagged the possibility of legal action, a course of action Macek lieutenant Brendan Schwab described as "ludicrous".
Macek said yesterday he expected to meet with Casey soon, but insisted the onus was on the president to organise a meeting. The two will certainly run into each other at the club's annual meeting on Wednesday.
"(The AGM) will be an interesting demonstration of any change in the attitude of the current board. The board now clearly has the responsibility for taking the club forward, so, I think any initiative needs to come from them," Macek said.
"I think the thing that has to happen now is that the club has to become united. It will be difficult for some people because there are aspects of the campaign that obviously some people will feel strongly about, but I think we've all got to be big enough and willing enough to see what can be contributed to help the club out of the very serious financial position it's in."
Macek again claimed that the popularity with the members of football operations manager Greg Miller had pushed Casey over the line. Casey's campaign appeared to be faltering before Miller made the extraordinary decision a month ago to abandon impartiality and run on Casey's ticket. Miller polled more votes than any of the other 19 candidates, including Casey.
Macek also said despite none of his team finishing among the nine highest-polling candidates, the result was not the crushing defeat it might seem to be.
"In a way, it is closer than it appears, even though it's a decisive victory, because it only needed 10 to 15 per cent of the people who voted for the Casey ticket to change and then you would have had a different result," Macek said.
"Clearly, given the enormous support that Greg Miller got, as evidenced by the fact that he out-polled everyone comfortably, that's not a bad result."
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