Brett Deledio leads Richmond captains race
Jon Ralph | November 13, 2008
RICHMOND'S search for its next captain will centre on whether 21-year-old Jack Dyer medallist Brett Deledio is ready to step up to the task.
Kane Johnson's decision to give up the position and No. 17 jumper has set up a captaincy race that is wide open.
Johnson, 30, spent his off-season break confirming that his gut feeling to concentrate on football only next year was the right one.
The players will vote for their next captain before a decision is made by the football sub-committee within a fortnight.
The contenders seem likely to come from Deledio and this year's vice-captains Chris Newman and Nathan Foley.
Matthew Richardson would be a popular choice, but the Tigers are determined to promote what Johnson yesterday called "generational change".
Similarly, ruckman Troy Simmonds is 30, and likely future captain Trent Cotchin just 18.
The club has done a huge amount of work cultivating what it calls its 15 "potential leaders", enlisting them in a battery of leadership courses over the past 12 months.
Richmond believes it has enough young leaders to compensate for the lack of experienced 26 to 30-year-olds at the club.
Johnson said he knew it was time to hand over the captaincy.
"I have really enjoyed it. It's been four years now and I have learnt a lot about myself and my teammates and what it is to be a leader of a football club," he said.
"But I think there comes a time when you have to stand aside and let the club go forward in a new, fresh direction. I think it's perfect timing.
"I just feel it inside that it's the right time for me to move on and concentrate on my footy and for the new generation of Tiger to come on."
Tigers coach Terry Wallace yesterday said Johnson had done an exceptional job.
"As I said to the blokes yesterday when he told the group, it is a hell of a lot easier to lead successful teams than unsuccessful teams," Wallace said.
"For him to go through the transition period the club has gone through over the past four years, he has been really strong in the manner in which he has led the side."
He said the romantic notion of Richardson as the new captain was just that.
Johnson said 2007 was his toughest as captain, labelling it harder even than his self-imposed suspension this year for public urination.
He will return to the No. 28 jumper he wore as an Adelaide premiership player, with Richmond's captain automatically assuming Jack Dyer's No. 17.
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