Cuz and the Tigers a perfect fitrichmondfc.com.au
By Tony Greenberg 6:31 PM Tue 17 August, 2010In April 2009, leading football writer, Jake Niall, interviewed triple Brownlow Medallist, Ian Stewart, for an article in ‘The Age’ newspaper, comparing the man who won Richmond’s last Brownlow (back in 1971), with the Tigers’ then recently-acquired champion from West Coast, Ben Cousins.
Stewart, who arrived at Punt Road in 1971 with some personal issues that led to his departure from St Kilda, where he had won two Brownlows, had some salient advice for Cousins . . .
“He’s got to embrace them (Richmond) as well. I mean, just to go out and play good football, there’s got to be more than that. You know, he’s got to involve himself not only with training, which I know he does, I’ve heard he does, but he’s . . . got to get involved in the club,” Stewart said.
“Make sure that you embrace Richmond because you’ll never find yourself in a better club.
“I think that it’s the perfect club for Ben, perfect club. It’s been a wonderful club with a soul. Sometimes they lose their way. But I’ve never forgotten the time at Richmond and how they embraced me and that helped me, and I’m sure that spirit still exists . . .
“If I were coaching, I would have chased Ben. I feel that he is in their best players and to get a recruit that’s in your top six is good recruiting. I also feel that probably Ben won’t reach the heights, or the standard that he reached before, but I think that he’s a great asset for the Richmond Football Club.”
Well, 16 months on, Stewart’s words ring loud and true. The union between Cousins and Richmond has been short, but there can be no denying it’s been sweet. Richmond has provided Cousins with a safe haven to continue his league career. Cousins, in turn, has embraced Tigerland in a manner that would make fellow Brownlow Medallist, Stewart, proud.
At today’s packed media conference, in the gymnasium at Punt Road, announcing his retirement, Cousins repeated what he has said publicly previously: “I am forever indebted to the (Richmond) Football Club for the opportunity to play footy again”.
Nine months ago, I stood in the same area when Tiger great Matthew Richardson revealed that he was hanging up his boots after a wonderful career.
It’s hard to compare the various emotions attached to the two retirement media conferences . . . With ‘Richo’ there’s a myriad of magic memories from his 17 seasons, 282 games and 800 goals for Richmond. ‘Cuz’, on the other hand, will bow out with just 32 games in two seasons at the Club.
Yet, every player on the Tigers’ list, all the coaches, and just about every Club staff member, was crammed into the gym listening to Cousins’ retirement speech, and hanging off his every word, while, at the same time, trying to avoid being inadvertently belted by the somewhat frantic actions of the jostling TV camera-men in the room.
I vividly recall the rapture that engulfed Punt Road a week before Christmas 2008, when Ben Cousins was taken by the Tigers with the last pick in the Pre-season Draft. The scenes that greeted Cousins as he trotted out on to the hallowed turf of Punt Road Oval for his first training run, were quite remarkable, with about 2000 Richmond fans in attendance, some already with his No. 32 on the back of their Tiger jumpers.
Mark Opie has been Richmond’s Team Manager since the late 1990s. In that time, he’s witnessed a lot of players come and go through the door at Punt Road. There’s no doubt in his mind that Cousins is the best all-round leader he’s seen at Tigerland in terms of his ability to engender a spirit of unity.
“He sincerely incorporates everyone at the Club,” Opie said.
“I remember speaking to Craig McRae (three-time Brisbane premiership player and former Richmond development coach) out on the ground at the MCG just before a game last year. It was two o’clock and the players were warming up, with the match only 10 minutes away. ‘Cuzzy’ was buzzing around - literally getting to everyone out there, encouraging them.
I said to ‘Fly’ (Craig McRae) that he is the best leader I have ever seen in my time in football and his reply was: ‘He is the best leader I’ve seen in my playing and coaching career!’ Coming from a football person as well credentialed as Craig McRae, that’s really saying something . . .
“Cuzzy is polite, considerate and gives everybody - no matter what their role at the Club is - his time, whether that’s a few seconds or a few minutes.
“Last Saturday night was a classic example. We had a surprise fancy-dress function for the players and their partners, but Cuzzy got injured that afternoon, so he didn’t think he would get there, which was fair enough.
“Anyway, he did turn up and, as he walks into the place, he seems all these fancy-dress costumes. Cuzzy came up to me and said, ‘Listen, mate, I’m just staying for 10 minutes because I’ve got my dad and brother here with me and my leg’s bloody sore’. So, I said, ‘yeah, no worries, mate’.
“Four hours later, Cuzzy’s dressed up in some costume, showing off his biceps, his brother’s dressed up as a jockey, and his old man is dressed up as a judge . . . That’s Cuzzy for you - a real team player.”
Opie also recalled another Cousins incident, which highlighted his leadership and team-first mantra. It occurred following the Round 17 match against Essendon at the MCG last year, which Richmond won by five points, with Jack Riewoldt starring, kicking six goals.
“Jade Rawlings, who was coaching then, made mention in the post-game meeting of Jack’s great game. Cuzzy was obviously already thinking, don’t worry about today, worry about what’s going to happen next with Jack,” Opie said.
“So, he just took Jack quietly aside in the rooms and gave him some sound advice on how to prepare for the upcoming week, coming off such a good performance. He didn’t lay down the law to him, but just firmly advised what would be best for him.
“And, there was another example a few weeks ago, at the three-quarter-time break when we were getting pumped.
“The game was well and truly lost, but Cuzzy got all the playing group together and said, in inimitable style, ‘This is where you just bust your guts until you throw up’!
“The fact we were 70 points down, or whatever, was irrelevant - completely irrelevant - to him. It was just a matter of how the group responded.
“He’s an absolute star and he’s been very good for the Richmond Football Club. But, make no mistake, the Richmond Football Club has been very, very good for him. So, it’s been a great marriage, if you like . . .”
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