Author Topic: Brendon Gale targeted for AFL's Chief Operating Officer role [merged]  (Read 17633 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Brendon Gale one of seven candidates for AFL CEO gig (Age)
« Reply #120 on: May 26, 2023, 05:15:00 PM »
From Barrett's 'Sliding Doors' column:


IF ...
Benny Gale, arguably more than anyone, shaped the Tigers' all-time great premiership dynasty ...

THEN ...
he's got one more important task: find the next Damien Hardwick. And the moment he's done that, he needs to head to the AFL to oversee its entire football operations. Seemingly every club is screaming for this to happen, too.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/932556/if-2002-and-2003-ended-with-lions-pies-grand-finals-then

Offline Gigantor

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Re: Brendon Gale one of seven candidates for AFL CEO gig (Age)
« Reply #121 on: May 26, 2023, 10:34:29 PM »
I couldn’t care less if they are screaming for this to happen..Stay where you are Benny , religions will be formed in your honour in the years to come.

Offline the claw

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Re: Brendon Gale one of seven candidates for AFL CEO gig (Age)
« Reply #122 on: May 26, 2023, 11:33:58 PM »
From Barrett's 'Sliding Doors' column:


IF ...
Benny Gale, arguably more than anyone, shaped the Tigers' all-time great premiership dynasty ...

THEN ...
he's got one more important task: find the next Damien Hardwick. And the moment he's done that, he needs to head to the AFL to oversee its entire football operations. Seemingly every club is screaming for this to happen, too.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/932556/if-2002-and-2003-ended-with-lions-pies-grand-finals-then

Barrett doesnt get it a lot of our own supporters dont get it. Damien Hardwick was and always has been just a cog in a wheel.

I still look at the way he coached from 2010 right up to the end of 2016 and then came the club review. All assistant coaches changed and Hardwick probably hung on by the skin of his teeth.
Come 2017 and all of a sudden with a huge influx of new coaches and ideas we play a different way.

The review pointed out deficiencies right thru the club from recruiting, list management, development,fitness. mental fitness recovery everything and credit where its due they bought in 100%.

That all happened what 7 or 8 years ago and we have hit a wall. It is time to evolve Gales job is not to just replace Hardwick as i said he was just a small cog in a big wheel. Gales job is to ensure we well evolve and change and have the best people in place to take us forward maybe its time for another review we all see how insular and protective we have become when it comes to everyone who has bought success. Time for an outside independent review to open up the eyes and set us on an unbiased path just like 2016.

I dont think tiger supporters or the footy world appreciate just how important that 2016 review was.

Offline georgies31

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Re: Brendon Gale one of seven candidates for AFL CEO gig (Age)
« Reply #123 on: May 27, 2023, 01:47:14 PM »
From Barrett's 'Sliding Doors' column:


IF ...
Benny Gale, arguably more than anyone, shaped the Tigers' all-time great premiership dynasty ...

THEN ...
he's got one more important task: find the next Damien Hardwick. And the moment he's done that, he needs to head to the AFL to oversee its entire football operations. Seemingly every club is screaming for this to happen, too.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/932556/if-2002-and-2003-ended-with-lions-pies-grand-finals-then

Barrett doesnt get it a lot of our own supporters dont get it. Damien Hardwick was and always has been just a cog in a wheel.

I still look at the way he coached from 2010 right up to the end of 2016 and then came the club review. All assistant coaches changed and Hardwick probably hung on by the skin of his teeth.
Come 2017 and all of a sudden with a huge influx of new coaches and ideas we play a different way.

The review pointed out deficiencies right thru the club from recruiting, list management, development,fitness. mental fitness recovery everything and credit where its due they bought in 100%.

That all happened what 7 or 8 years ago and we have hit a wall. It is time to evolve Gales job is not to just replace Hardwick as i said he was just a small cog in a big wheel. Gales job is to ensure we well evolve and change and have the best people in place to take us forward maybe its time for another review we all see how insular and protective we have become when it comes to everyone who has bought success. Time for an outside independent review to open up the eyes and set us on an unbiased path just like 2016.

I dont think tiger supporters or the footy world appreciate just how important that 2016 review was.

Yeah good points and I tend to agree. I agree we have let standards slip since 2020 clearly evident from player development to fitness and medical and recruitment at times to.

The thing is you fail to recognise that dynasties always come to a end how many times we have seen it , the club needs to involve and rebuilt, and bottoming out is inevitable. We need to review the football department and raise our standards again, or will it take us another 30 plus years like previously.Under Gale and Balme, I'm confident.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Brendon Gale one of seven candidates for AFL CEO gig (Age)
« Reply #124 on: June 13, 2023, 11:20:40 PM »
Gale has not received a phone call from the AFL despite speculation he is a wanted man at league headquarters as it searches for a new football boss.

“I’m the CEO of the Richmond Football Club,” Gale said.

“We’ve got to find a new coach, we’ve got to build a $93 million incredible facility at Punt Rd, we’ve got to find a lot of money still, there’s a lot of work to do here.

“There’s a lot of speculation going on, but it’s news to me.”

https://www.codesports.com.au/afl/richmond-ceo-brendon-gale-provides-update-on-search-for-new-coach/news-story/579c53c855a7bb9ac82f9f42b54df725

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Brendon Gale one of seven candidates for AFL CEO gig (Age)
« Reply #125 on: June 16, 2023, 02:12:43 PM »
From Barrett's 'Sliding Doors' column:



IF ...
Brendon Gale was acting purely as Richmond CEO when outlining on Tuesday the developments around the serious WA police charges against Marlion Pickett ...

THEN ...
it may have doubled as another audition for the vacant AFL football operations role. Calm, measured, thoughtful, diplomatic, experienced, confident, hard, and always fair.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/950142/if-grumpy-ross-has-morphed-into-cuddly-ross-then

Offline one-eyed

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Brendon Gale targeted for AFL's General Manager of Football role (SEN)
« Reply #126 on: July 12, 2023, 06:35:08 PM »
AFL SET TO APPOINT GENERAL MANAGER OF FOOTBALL SOON, RICHMOND BOSS TARGETED

Tom Morris
SEN
12 July 2023


LIKELY POST-MCLACHLAN/AULD STRUCTURE

Chief executive officer: Andrew Dillon

Executive general manager: Likely Brendan Gale. If not, Ameet Bains, Tom Harley or Simon Garlick

General manager: Jimmy Bartel, Josh Mahoney, Dan Richardson or Laura Kane

Football operations manager: Laura Kane (if she's not GM)

-------------------------------------------------------

The AFL will appoint an executive general manager (EGM) of football in the coming weeks and the job is Brendon Gale’s if he wants it.

If he rejects it, the league will then look to a raft of other club CEOs, such as Simon Garlick (Fremantle), Tom Harley (Sydney), and Ameet Bains (Western Bulldogs) to fill the void.

It’s understood second round interviews are being conducted this week with an AFL commissioner involved in each of them.

The EGM of football will be incoming CEO Andrew Dillon’s right-hand person and carry more responsibilities than the traditional footy boss role, which Brad Scott held in 2022.

It will encompass not just football, but also fixturing, concussion, broadcast, Tasmania, and other key responsibilities currently spread across Dillon, Travis Auld and Laura Kane.

The delay in hiring a club CEO to this role, which has frustrated clubs, is for a variety of reasons.

One, Auld – who is the AFL’s chief financial officer and manager of broadcasting, clubs, and fixtures - is currently tied up thrashing out a new pay deal with the AFL Players’ Association.

He is wanted by the Australian Grand Prix Corporation and sources expect him to accept the CEO job there, but not before the next collective bargaining agreement is finalised.

Two, with Auld still at the AFL, the league cannot give complete certainty over what areas of his portfolio will be transferred to the new EGM, or someone else at AFL HQ.

And three, none of the league’s first choice candidates – Gale, Harley, Garlick and Bains, plus some footy bosses – would leave their clubs for anything less than the senior EGM job.

As one senior club official said this week: “Gale is not leaving Richmond to take a step backwards into a footy operational role.”

Gale has also made it clear his immediate focus is on appointing a full-time successor to Damien Hardwick.

In recent times, Dillon has canvassed the views of presidents and club officials on what the EGM role should look like.

The transition period between AFL CEOs has been used to work out the best structure of a new-look AFL in the post-McLachlan/Auld era.

The conclusion? The incoming EGM will ideally be a current club CEO – with Gale at the top of the list – supported by a general manager of footy in the Brad Scott mould, plus another position assisting with administration and day to day operations.

The GM of footy role, which the AFL would like to fill with a footy person (as opposed to a CEO-type) that can connect with clubs, will not be finalised until the AFL has an EGM.

Clubs believe Dillon is keen to appoint someone who has a strong profile and confident media presence to complement his skillset to the GM role.

Candidates floated for this position have included Josh Mahoney, Jimmy Bartel, Dan Richardson, and current interim footy boss Laura Kane.

Sources are hopeful Kane, who is highly regarded, will stay in a footy operations role even if she misses out on the GM of football position.

There has been a private acknowledgement from the AFL that under this new and improved structure, the EGM will focus on high level matters in conjunction with Dillon.

Meanwhile the GM of footy and position that accompanies it will have a portfolio that essentially keeps the game running.

It will be a heavily front-facing role, dealing with key issues in the game such as match review controversies and working with clubs to clarify concerns.

One of the main gripes clubs have since Scott left is there is nobody in this position to explain important matters.

Local football, umpiring, laws of the game, MRO, Tasmania, NSW and Queensland footy, pathways for girls and boys and game development will be some of the areas that require close attention and a more cohesive staffing approach.

The league understands the current structure – where a variety of silos report into an acting GM of football – is not sustainable or practicle long-term.

Dillon is said to be keen to streamline the organisational structure and in a bid to get it right, has been in no rush to settle on which people should fill the three key roles.

The AFL is also on the lookout for a football director for the commission. Matthew Pavlich and Leigh Matthews are two names which have been mentioned.

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2023/07/12/afl-set-to-appoint-general-manager-of-football-soon-richmond-boss-targeted/

Offline one-eyed

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Brendon Gale targeted for AFL's Chief Operating Officer role (7news)
« Reply #127 on: July 12, 2023, 07:08:44 PM »
Tom Browne on 7news tonight reckons Dillon wants to make Benny Gale his second in command as the Chief Operating Officer of the whole AFL competition with Laura Kane as general manager of football.

WATCH HERE: https://twitter.com/7NewsMelbourne/status/1679051017315553282

Offline Gigantor

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Re: Brendon Gale targeted for AFL's Chief Operating Officer role [merged]
« Reply #128 on: July 12, 2023, 08:02:35 PM »
Dimma and Peggy have left a hole to fill.
Not sure if Benny leaving can. Be adequately replaced.. for me this is the most worrying of issues

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond CEO Brendon Gale could accept new role at league HQ (HeraldSun)
« Reply #129 on: July 13, 2023, 07:53:14 PM »
Richmond CEO Brendon Gale could accept new role at league HQ

Brendon Gale might soon be the AFL’s second-most powerful man, with the league confident he is considering a new super portfolio.

Jon Ralph
HeraldSun
July 13, 2023 - 4:48PM


Brendon Gale would be footy’s second-most powerful man if he accepted a role that would effectively make him the AFL’s chief operating officer.

Chief financial officer Travis Auld’s official announcement as the Grand Prix’s new chief executive clears the path for the Richmond chief executive to be handed a new super portfolio running many of footy’s most important departments.

But with Auld and Gillon McLachlan leaving the league this year, Gale’s responsibilities could be separate to the football portfolio, which would be taken in by an executive general manager of football.

Gale, who is well aware of the league’s interest, could take in an operating portfolio including the implementation of Tasmania, stadiums, infrastructure, total player payments and salary cap.

It would mean his day-to-day portfolio did not include football, umpires and the tribunal.

AFL clubs continue to urge the league to find more staffers with football experience, so the league could then hand the executive general manager role to another senior club staffer.

The league is increasingly confident Gale is considering the beefed-up role, despite his significant reservations about the AFL overlooking him in a bruising, and prolonged search, for Gillon McLachlan’s replacement.

The league could also farm off Auld’s broadcast responsibilities to another AFL executive member, given a deal has been struck with Seven and Fox Footy through to 2035.

Auld will leave AFL headquarters on August 4 and take up his new Grand Prix role on August 14.

This masthead reported on the day McLachlan announced his departure Gale was the preferred candidate for a new AFL role, followed by Sydney’s Tom Harley and Fremantle’s Simon Garlick.

The league could appoint Gale, as well as an executive general manager of football and still have space for a football boss to fill the role vacated last year by Brad Scott.

Clubs are incredulous that the league has not given more support to its football department, with competition management GM Laura Kane now the acting executive general manager of football.

If Kane was overlooked for that role, she could still take up the football operations role which Scott was in before leaving to coach Essendon.

The league paid tribute to Auld on Wednesday as he continues to work on the new AFL collective bargaining agreement before his departure.

The league said on Wednesday, Dillon continues to work on his “future structure, with a process of appointing an EGM Football in its final stages and to be announced shortly thereafter”.

https://www.codesports.com.au/afl/afl-2023-richmond-ceo-brendon-gale-could-accept-new-role-at-league-hq/news-story/ddd546e534cc156a7f8083e23553be6b