Saturday farewell for Chaffey and Stafford
Martin Boulton
The Age
August 30, 2006
RICHMOND players Mark Chaffey and Greg Stafford will play their 166th and 204th games respectively at the MCG on Saturday, then leave the ground and the game forever.
After 10 years of AFL football, Chaffey said injury had forced him into retirement, while Stafford, who came to Punt Road from Sydney in 2001, simply decided it was time to draw the curtain on a 14-year career.
Meanwhile, the playing future of defenders Darren Gaspar and Andrew Kellaway remained uncertain, with coach Terry Wallace saying the club would "make decisions on players" at the end of the season.
"We'll do that once the season is finished, it won't be any different to any other year," he said.
Wallace admitted he was "a little surprised" when Chaffey told him on Monday he was hanging up his boots.
Chaffey, 29, told his teammates of his decision yesterday, just before announcing his retirement publicly.
"It was a difficult decision … but I've struggled getting my body to a level where it needs to be to compete at the highest level," he said. "I've had a lot of problems with my groins (and) this year was always going to be a pivotal year in my career."
Chaffey's game against West Coast this weekend will be just his sixth for the year. He said as the season unfolded he'd hoped to "get back and play some solid senior footy and gone on for another year" but injuries had restricted his training and forced his hand.
Wallace said Chaffey had given the club great service and was a highly respected part of the team.
Stafford, 32, said he was several years into playing with the Swans before deciding to "play seriously", following former coach Rodney Eade's decision to make him the team's main ruckman.
"When I first started in footy I didn't have any real connection with the game … it was all new and I didn't really take it seriously for a long time," he said. "I'd hate to think what I would have missed out on, had I not knuckled down at some point."
Stafford reached the 200-game milestone in round 18 against the Western Bulldogs. He played 130 games with the Swans, including their 1996 grand final loss to the Kangaroos.
Asked if his image as a "tough guy" of the AFL was justified, Stafford said "that's a myth … there's tougher guys than me going around and 'Chaf' is one of them".
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