Go now, rebels demand of Casey
27 July 2004
Herald Sun
Trevor Grant
THE long-awaited battle for power at Richmond ignited yesterday when former director Brendan Schwab demanded the resignation of current president Clinton Casey.
Schwab, 36, who plans to run for president, announced a rebel team of seven to challenge Casey, including former premiership players Bryan Wood and Peter Welsh.
As soon as Schwab announced his ticket to bring change to the embattled club, Welsh left a message on Casey's mobile phone late yesterday.
Schwab said he and his group wanted to meet Casey this week to ask him to go quietly.
If he doesn't, they plan to organise an extraordinary general meeting to force a full-scale election before the end of August.
"Our immediate objective is to have a short-term, very smooth transition to a new board," Schwab said.
"We need to act. The financial position is dire. I am genuinely concerned about the club's capacity to continue to trade as a going concern."
Casey immediately signalled he was digging in for a fight.
He said he was happy to meet Schwab's group but had not changed his belief, stated last weekend, that any election should wait until January.
"My reaction really hasn't changed, whether it's Brendan Schwab, Peter Welsh or Michael Pahoff, my view is it's not the right time for a spill of the board," Casey said.
"At the very least I'm pleased they are out in the open and talking about whatever it is they have to offer.
"We will listen to what they have to say but unless there is something compelling in what they have to offer, we would not be in favour of anything to do with board changes until the end of the year."
Schwab said there were a number of "important reasons" why his group would not wait until January.
"At the moment we have a football club that is haemorrhaging," he said.
"The worst-case scenario is a $2 million loss. By January the club's trading performance for 2005 will be pretty much settled. If we wait until then it would delay our capacity to address the financial problems not by six months but 18 months.
"We want to get in and administer the medicine as soon as we possibly can."
The rebel ticket contains three former board members – Michael Humphris, Schwab and Welsh – and four newcomers – Trevor Barrot, Robert Edgley, Colin Radford and Wood.
The club has a board of nine but Schwab said two places had been left open in anticipation of discussions with current board members and others.
If Casey decides to fight, the rebels will nominate two further candidates to fill a ticket for the elections.
Schwab, son of famous Richmond and AFL administrator, the late Alan Schwab, said it was a group decision that he stand for president.
"I have never coveted the presidency but I've always been prepared to play whatever role is needed to turn the club around," he said "The view of the group is that I'd be the appropriate person to be president."
Schwab said he would seek to have Wood, who is the nominated football director, and Welsh added to the coach selection panel of football boss Greg Miller and consultant David Parkin.
"What we will be suggesting to Clinton is that Peter and Bryan join the process. Peter has continued to have a terrific relationship with Greg," Schwab said.
"We have also been very deliberate in asking Bryan to become football director, having had the experience in a culture of success under Kevin Sheedy at Essendon for a number of years."
Schwab says his group would have no trouble working with the recently appointed chief executive, Steven Wright, who is due to start next month.
He also rejected the club's argument that his push was creating a difficult environment in which to search for a new coach.
"There's a suggestion there's an instability around the coaching appointment. What we need to understand is the cause of the instability. It is the trading performance of the club," he said.
"Richmond is a big club. We have a massive support base. So essentially we now have a business which is failing simply because it hasn't engaged that huge mass of people that support the club.
"That is the principal cause of our problems."
The group says plans were well under way to secure the necessary 100 signatures from members to initiate an extraordinary general meeting. Even though they have had discussions with lone dissenter, Michael Pahoff, they do not plan to use the petition he has assembled.
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,10256506%255E19742,00.html