The obvious choice for Richmond's next captain - and no, it isn't Dusty

By Dem Panopoulos / Expert

Toby Nankervis should be the next captain of the Richmond Football Club.

After Trent Cotchin stood down from his role as the club’s leader on Tuesday evening, the commencement of rumour, innuendo and social media campaigning came into play to advocate for his successor.

It became increasingly clear that there isn’t one standout candidate at the Tigers.

Of course, Cotchin’s captaincy legacy is legendary, if not divisive to those outside of the club’s stakeholders.

One-hundred and eighty-eight games in charge since taking over as a 22-year-old, eventually leading the club to three premierships is a record that very few players will be able to own.

In his prime, Cotchin was a star of the competition. In Richmond’s prime, he didn’t need to be. He became the inspirational type of player who’d do anything for his team.

Being impactful became the crux of his game, and he transformed into a strong facilitator when it came to the re-imaging of the Tigers as a family-oriented, all-encompassing club that focused on clear communications and nurturing the players, as realised by coach Damien Hardwick.

That, in the end, is quintessentially Richmond in the modern era where they’re one of the greatest teams.

Trent Cotchin. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Dustin Martin has long-held great weight in the argument for best player in the competition, and everyone else adds their value in many different ways, not needing to be stars.

The Tigers’ success was built on unity and strength, which no doubt will look to be maintained heading forward into a future that doesn’t demand immediate premiership favouritism.

The playing group, and the coaching staff, understand what the leader of Richmond should look like.

This is a team that even at their worst, play for each other and possess a number of strong leaders that simply don’t need the title to justify their status.

It’s times like these where the reverberations of success have an unexpected, positive influence on the chemistry of a group.

Really, there is no wrong choice for Richmond with their new captain. It may come down to where the club sees its own position heading into the next couple of seasons.

With a strong draft hand, featuring two first-round picks with potential for a third to be brought in during the trade period, a complete rebuild isn’t necessary.

There’s enough talent in this group to top up with elite youth to match the strong squad that exists, taking full advantage of the ageing, yet performing players that are committed to the cause.

It’s perhaps why Jack Graham mightn’t necessarily be the guaranteed option many believe him to be.

(Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

At 23 years of age, Graham’s a year older than Cotchin when he took over and has a strong resume having captained South Australia before being drafted.

Graham transformed his game from a pure inside midfielder to being one of the fittest players at Richmond, working hard on the spread to be more impactful on the outside, increasing his output to manage 11 goals and 15 goal assists in 2021.

There’s plenty of support for Graham to guide him along the way if appointed, but service as vice-captain or further opportunities in the leadership group wouldn’t go amiss either.

Stronger murmurings from supporters indicate that a preferred option would be to partner these opportunities for Graham with a temporary captain for a couple of seasons.

Dylan Grimes is the major name that comes up, having filled in on the odd occasion for Richmond, while Jack Riewoldt and Shane Edwards are two others who have been mentioned.

Grimes is one of the best and most unassuming defenders in the league with strong performances in the media. Despite public objections of his style of play from opposition fans, he is a well-respected part of the AFL community and would hold such a role with great respect.

Another candidate would no doubt be Dustin Martin, to hold the role on a short-term basis. This would ultimately be another example of giving the title to someone who is already seen as a leader within the tent.

Perhaps the coaching staff would like to use it to motivate the veteran further, to help him recapture his very best form.

Another AFL fan ‘favourite’, Tom J Lynch has held the role of co-captain at the Suns and is the first answer often given by veteran players at the Tigers as to who would be a natural fit for the role.

Perhaps on-field indiscretions are a blemish on how he is seen across the league, although he’d hardly be the first captain to be seen in that way, and he is a leader from the front.

Once upon a time, it was clear that Nick Vlastuin was destined to be lead the football club going forward, yet as time has gone on, the focus has seemingly shifted to be leading the defence and trying to curb undisciplined actions.

The 27-year-old has the qualities of a captain, yet he has moved from the consensus pick in the past, to perhaps an option if he chose to pursue it.

Already there are plenty of justifiable options the Tigers could go with to meet their cultural and playing desires. These are players who have helped build the club into a juggernaut in the past, no doubt seeking similar glory in the future.

Yet we must once again reflect on what is quintessentially Richmond.

We see the term “spiritual leader” bandied around in an almost obsessive manner when describing certain players, but for what the Tigers have built, a leader at the club should possess the intangibles.

Most of the aforementioned players have what it takes to be skipper, but we simply should not overlook the power of Toby Nankervis, who himself owns the spiritual tag at Tigerland.

(Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

His impact on Richmond has been incredible since moving across cheaply from the Sydney Swans, perhaps being the single most important cog in the Richmond machine across the three premierships, save for the magnificence of the No.4.

Nankervis isn’t a quantity player, but rather an impactful, quality type who possesses the ‘do what it takes’ attitude that Cotchin showcased in the Tiger era.

The 27-year-old will hunt the ball in a similar manner to his former skipper, he’ll fight hard in ruck contests and lay tackles to hold the ball in and is one of the league’s premier rucks in terms of defensive work ethic, to have an impact as an interceptor.

Since 2017, Richmond has won 68.38 per cent of their total games. With Nankervis in the team, they’ve won 72.09 per cent of their games.

The ruckman isn’t the club’s best player, but he is vitally important and it’s as much to do with his passion and on-field leadership, as it is to do with his talent.

He owns the intangibles Richmond live for and is the perfect leader to motivate using actions, rather than words that his colleagues can fill the gaps with.

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Nankervis doesn’t do much media at all, just ask Brian Taylor, but that hasn’t been required of him to this point in his career.

Perhaps his disdain for it is slightly inhibiting, but not having done media is hardly a cross against his name when others have had similar experiences pre-captaincy; Hawthorn’s Ben McEvoy springs to mind.

The triple-premiership player’s fitness is the only real sticking point, having played just 39 of a possible 68 games in the last three seasons, but decisions cannot be based on unpredictability.

Perhaps the club splits the role across a couple of people, or they assign specific roles within the leadership group to accommodate for the various figures that are inevitable candidates for the position.

Maybe they choose to go with the younger option, or they let Graham grow further and go with a shorter-term appointment.

If the Tigers are seeking the best possible representative to showcase Richmond and what the club is to its core, there is no better man for the job than Toby Nankervis.

The Crowd Says:

2021-09-19T08:05:23+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


I thought you meant that he consoled them! Mixed emotions, big deal.

2021-09-19T07:23:38+00:00

Ron The Bear

Roar Rookie


Grimes hasn't led Richmond in a match for premiership points. Graham still a bit young and finding his way as a player. Vlastuin for me.

2021-09-19T07:08:34+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


It was live on TV! “So, Brandon, how does feel beating your old team and putting them out of finals?” “I’ve got MIXED EMOTIONS.” You cannot spin that. He’s a genuine bloke. Your club doesn’t deserve him.

2021-09-19T05:17:49+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


Yeah I'm sure the Suns players were whispering sweet nothing's into Lynch's ear. As for Ellis feeling sorry for the Tigers, I've heard it all now. Players regularly chat after the game when one has moved to the opposing club. You certainly like to put a Suns spin on things but you're clutching at straws with that.

2021-09-19T01:35:22+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


The club relented and allowed him to return for the B&F. I can’t stress enough that his departure left a bad taste. He could have dealt with in a number of ways that left fans and the public feeling respectful of his decision. Instead the just took a crap from a great height and has been less than dignified since he left. Brandon Ellis had the insight to feel sorry for his old teammates when he beat them. Tom Lynch punched our vice-captain in the guts in order to beat the Suns and rubbed their noses in it.

2021-09-18T14:31:01+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


When I am looking for a new job, I am not telling my employer or colleagues. He wasn't the first and won't be the last player to lie under those circumstances. Stripping him of his captaincy when he was leaving and injured was fair enough, but exiling an injured player was unprofessional by the club, regardless of what some players thought.

2021-09-18T09:25:01+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


It wasn’t the fact that Lynch wanted to leave, it was the manner in which he went about it. First, he said that in order to stay he wanted to be captain. Done. He then demanded Gaz’s ambassador payments, which are a forgotten little perk for prominent players at expansion clubs that the AFL pays outside of the salary cap. Done. He then decided to stop playing through PCL issues in order to be right for the 2019 season. Done. When in Melbourne recuperating from his season ending operation, he got busted having a secret meeting with Collingwood. The entire episode was an embarrassment for the club and the media went to town. When he returned to the club to address the leadership group about his decision to leave, several younger players insisted on attending. They asked him why he’d gone back on his word and lied to them. They repeated his words to him “If you leave now then anything you achieve at a new club won’t have been early.” He expressed a wish to end the season with the team and they rejected him, stripping him of the captaincy on the spot and exiling him from the club. This isn’t sour grapes, it is a warning that the guy isn’t captaincy material. I wouldn’t even keep him until the end of his heavily backended deal. From years of observation, I feel like he’s been stunted by nobody ever telling him no. While Richmond’s good, he’ll be good, but he isn’t dependable and if your club makes him captain it won’t end well.

2021-09-18T04:48:46+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


The Suns treatment of Lynch in his last year was embarrassing (for them) and they backtracked to a degree. Up there with Tex and co. wanting Lever out of the 2017 Grand Final side for Adelaide. 8 years sticking with a rubbish club without asking to be traded seems pretty loyal to me. Lynch said he wanted to head back to Victoria to play in a big club with big crowds. After 8 years at the Suns, how could you blame him?

2021-09-18T04:41:26+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


When Gold Coast win the flag in 2035 I am sure they will point to that line in the sand as the day the flag was won.

2021-09-18T03:38:06+00:00

Philby

Guest


Yes, perhaps. As you say, impactful at the right times - a real heart and soul player. Absence forced through injuries may be an issue, and there is the issue of what Nank would think about it. For me, Dusty is definitely out as captain, as he is one who slowly builds towards the finals - albeit with many of his performances during H&A being super as well.

2021-09-18T01:31:29+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


If Richmond make Tom Lynch captain I will laugh until my sphincter blows out. The bloke held the Suns to ransom over his desire to be captain and then he did a terrible job at it, not to mention actively pursuing a new contract at another club. No heart. No loyalty. Just ask the Suns players who exiled him from the club and stripped his captaincy when he announced he'd be leaving for money and flags.

2021-09-18T01:13:16+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


The media are the worst witch hunters but they won’t attempt to dig their heels & irk Martin it would be a false dawn !

2021-09-17T23:48:56+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


I’d just want my match winner only worrying about footy. First average game as captain, the media will start at him and at the decision.

2021-09-17T10:51:22+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Don’t agree Peter let’s say for interest sake it makes him an even better player plus his teammates will enjoy the ride especially early in season he wins a few close games fist pumped & the players gather the urgency they lacked this year thus the hunger returns & the Tigers return serve :boxing:

2021-09-17T10:47:19+00:00

pablocruz

Roar Rookie


Hadn't heard that one. He's probs a better age for Geelong though to be fair he'd cover an immediate problem area for us.

2021-09-17T10:42:51+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Pablo heard you have offered Robbie Tarrant a two year deal not a bad ploy!

2021-09-17T06:57:13+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Yet we have RCD and Ross and others coming through. Be good for them to feel like they can win a spot and keep it if form allows (Ross especially always the first dropped). (It will be less crowded when Cotch retires. And I feel like Dusty and Meatball won’t be too far behind him, possibly Cotch end 22, Prestia 23 and Dusty 24.)

2021-09-17T06:06:35+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


I agree there's still some way to go for Graham in terms of a finished product- but purely being in this discussion- for me indicates to me that he's already in the un-droppable domain.

2021-09-17T03:41:49+00:00

Eddie from Elwood

Roar Rookie


If you can't see Duz doing it, the you're even less likely to The Tank doing it..................you think Dusty dislikes media appearance's, Nank, tenfold!

2021-09-17T02:26:37+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Yea but Cotchin was a star early eg Brownlow winner 2012 Graham is way off that standard. He is about the 15th best player in the team, and not undeoppable

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