The favourites to replace Zorko as Brisbane captain

By Tim O'Hare / Roar Rookie

Dayne Zorko’s captaincy of the Brisbane Lions has come under serious question after allegations surrounding his sledging of Harrison Petty in the clash against the Demons last Friday.

Some outside the club have called for Zorko to stand down as captain. Some reactive Brisbane fans echoed those sentiments.

As Mark Robinson wrote in the Herald Sun, “Zorko is a classic case of white line fever”. He plays on the edge, which has led him to butt heads with opposition players from time to time.

Some Lions fans and the commentariat have said that Zorko’s behaviour is unbecoming of a captain, and maybe they’re right, but the thing about footy, as in life, is you can’t have a person’s strengths without all their faults.

Zorko is a fierce competitor and a staunch defender of his teammates on and off the field. He’s a naturally high-energy and charismatic individual with a personality that can energise a group but also sometimes detract from the team focus.

Expansion clubs like Brisbane tend to need big and bold personalities like Zorko to cut through in a tough-going and sometimes apathetic market.

But at the same time there’s Zorko’s age – he’ll be 34 at the start of next season – which means that the question of leadership succession was always gonna come up at some point.

In the past few years, we’ve seen club legends like Travis Boak, Trent Cotchin, Jarryn Geary, Shannon Hurn, Nathan Jones, Marc Murphy, Taylor Walker surrender the captaincy but remain at the club for the transition period.

And this model has seemingly worked, with the likes of Boak and Walker rediscovering their form once relieved of their leadership roles.

It’s becoming increasingly rare for club stalwarts to retire as captain as Nathan Buckley and Michael Voss did in my childhood, although that may be on the cards for Scott Pendlebury and Joel Selwood – both in their mid-30s – who are still captaining their respective clubs.

(Photo by Albert Perez/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

Although currently unsigned, there’s every chance Zorko will play on next season, and so he should. Zorko has a record five Merrett-Murray Medals and has been a bright spot at the club during a turbulent decade. Plus, the romantic in me would love to see Zorko retire a one-club player and, if he could be sent off with 250-odd games and a premiership medal around his neck, he would almost certainly go down as the greatest Lions legend since Jonathan Brown hung up the boots in 2014.

Under ordinary circumstances it might have made sense for Zorko to hand over the captaincy a year or two ago – he is, after all, still captaining his club at an older age than when many of those aforementioned players handed over the captaincy – but his form has not wavered since assuming the captaincy and last season he won his fifth Merrett-Murray Medal.

What also shouldn’t be discounted is the exceptional circumstances of both Zorko’s path to the AFL and his later elevation to the captaincy.

It’s been well documented that Zorko came to professional football late, having been overlooked in four consecutive national drafts before being picked up by Gold Coast at the end of 2011 and immediately traded to Brisbane.

Debuting in 2012 at 23 years of age, it’s fair to say that conventional rules of football mortality do not quite apply to Zorko. Where many footy veterans who have debuted much earlier begin to slow down by their late 20s, Zorko came into his best form at this time, winning consecutive best and fairest awards between ages 26 and 29. Plus, with his Boomer Harvey-like build, there is reason to believe in Zorko’s longevity.

(Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

It’s doubtful that the Lions recruiters thought they were recruiting a future captain – or multiple club champion, for that matter – when Zorko was gifted to them by the Suns. Although quick to establish himself as a consistent member of the 22 once on the Lions list, Zorko would have been at best a left-field captaincy option a few years ago.

In different circumstances it’s easy to see Zorko going down as a cult hero of the club of the ilk of Jason Akermanis or Richard Champion rather than as a club statesman.

But, after missing the finals for seven seasons in a row, it’s fair to say that very few positions at the Lions were safe when Chris Fagan arrived at the end of 2016. Dayne Zorko’s was one of those relatively secure positions.

After the attempted exit of then skipper Tom Rockliff in that off-season, the club was at a crossroads and the captaincy was thrown open. Zorko, along with the incumbent Rockliff, was one of three viable candidates for the captaincy in the Fagan era and the club, perhaps rightly at the time, overlooked him in favour of Dayne Beams, who as a Collingwood premiership player had greater experience. Yet when Beams stepped down in mid-2018 for personal reasons and with Rockliff having already departed in that off-season, Zorko was the last man standing.

And, to be fair, sometimes it’s easier to turn a ready-made champion into a leader – look at Trent Cotchin and Max Gawn – than it is to turn a natural leader into a champion. This is pertinent to an expansion team like Brisbane, where the club is dependent on marquee talent to fill promotional and ambassadorial roles off the field. If the average Queenslander circa 2018 could name any Lions player, it would have probably been Dayne Zorko, so why not have him as the face of the club?

And, to his credit, Zorko has stepped up, leading the team to four consecutive finals appearances. His on-field behaviour hasn’t been perfect, but that’s the same with most captains. Australian football is a highly physical game, and most captains are as guilty as any of getting into altercations and engaging in sledging.

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

The captaincy is, after all, a multifaceted job with a lot of interest groups having competing priorities. Coaches want a captain who can implement their game plan, teammates want a leader who will rally them out on the field and the club’s media team probably want a captain who stays on script and doesn’t generate any negative publicity for the club.

Zorko has managed these demands as best he can, and it’s fair to say that no-one else at the club from 2018 to now could have been as effective as him at energising a group during a period of intense change.

But time waits for no man, even if he’s had some mix-ups along the way.

His logical successor would be the incumbent vice-captain, Harris Andrews. I like Andrews, having attended the same primary school as him, though he’s no stranger to playing on the edge both physically and in terms of sledging his opponents on the field some of the time.

Probably the second player most likely to be the Lions’ next captain is Lachie Neale. Neale, having recently signed a monster contract extension that should make him a Lion for life, could be rewarded for his loyalty with the captaincy, similarly to what happened with Rory Sloane and Stephen Coniglio when they each re-signed at the Crows and the Giants.

Neale’s a top bloke and a solid citizen, so you couldn’t fault the Lions for going down that path. However, he’s come to the Lions as a mature-age superstar with a wife and now a young family, so his connection to the club may not run as deep as that of a player who was drafted there and got to know the players on the margins through time spent in the reserves.

Neale, unlike Andrews, is also not a Queenslander. It’s by no means a disqualification, but it means that he doesn’t have the automatic connection with grassroots Queensland footy or necessarily the passion for growing the game up here. As said earlier, there is an inevitable ambassadorial role associated with captaining the Lions.

If not Neale, the next options would be Jarrod Berry and Hugh McCluggage, who as first-round draft picks in 2016 – when Fagan arrived at the club – have been poster boys for the Brisbane rebuild.

I’m of the view that a player should come to the captaincy when they’ve realised their peak form – whatever that may be. For some like Collingwood’s Nick Maxwell, that may be being a good role-player for the team, while for others like Nat Fyfe, that was when he consolidated himself as one of the competition’s greats with the 2015 Brownlow Medal. Respectfully, McCluggage isn’t there.

He’s ticked just about every box since debuting in Round 3, 2017, with a rising star nomination, back-to-back Alastair Lynch trophies and a Nigel Lappin trophy, but he still has another level to go to establish himself with Lachie Neale, Patrick Cripps and Christian Petracca as one of the competition’s most damaging players.

That’s also not to say that the other leadership options are perfect; it’s more about creating an environment where your high-powered sports car (McCluggage) can race without being encumbered with mundane activities. I also think McCluggage’s softly-spoken and laid-back demeanour would put him at a disadvantage as captain.

Berry, conversely, seems a more natural fit as captain. He was elected to the leadership group in just his third year at the club and was quick to commit to the side with a long-term contract. He can get physical on the field, but off-field, he’s a great advocate for raising awareness against breast cancer.

Injuries and from inconsistency have hindered Berry’s development as a player, and he was notably absent from the leadership group this year, but after playing 19 of 22 games this season, there’s every reason that he can put his injury woes behind him and come back into the leadership group next season.

The only other name I’d throw in there is Jarryd Lyons. Having had a career resurgence since being delisted from the Suns in 2018 and established himself alongside Neale as one of the leaders in the Lions midfield, Lyons is absent from the leadership group this season and is now experiencing somewhat of a form slump. At 30 and contracted until 2024, Lyons may not be part of the club’s long-term plans – although he’s only a year older than Neale – and the fact that he’s been at the club for less time than some of his rivals may rule him out of consideration.

If Zorko did hand the captaincy over at the beginning of next season, perhaps his greatest legacy would be that he’s fostered an environment where multiple prospective leaders have been able to grow.

The Crowd Says:

2022-08-24T11:18:48+00:00

Jorge of Brisvegas

Roar Rookie


I think choosing club captain’s should either be choosing the obvious or choosing a good fit until the obvious become ready. This article displays to me that the Lions are in the second category. No option seems obvious and currently no one option seems convincingly a good fit. I think Neale may thrive on captaincy and that may be one of his aspirations. I think Tim is fair is his assessment about ambassador / grass roots etc etc but, if there is no obvious, a good fit means close enough. Lachie would be a great ambassador and not being a Qlder in AFL senior side means you are almost always in the majority. The other option which again is not ideal but may be best fit is co captains. I think Harris and Lachie would be a good partnership. They communicate regularly about team defence and would be well respected as a duo. You have the grass roots and the elite , all in a bundle. They are both All Australian members. My choice of the obvious captain in the future is not Hugh or Jarrod (who I greatly respect and think could do it) but an emerging star who could shine brightest of all. If Cam Rainer continues to blossom as a player and a man amongst men perhaps we may have found our new Lion King ( let the music rise in the background as the baboon cackles). You heard it hear first folks. CARN Lions !

AUTHOR

2022-08-24T11:16:03+00:00

Tim O'Hare

Roar Rookie


I would say this is a holistic analysis of Zorko's captaincy. It was never intended to be focused on who will succeed Zorko, that's just the title the editors gave it

AUTHOR

2022-08-24T11:14:28+00:00

Tim O'Hare

Roar Rookie


Best player does not necessarily become captain but the counter-argument is that Neale is 29, has two club Best and Fairests and a Bronlow Medal (maybe another one coming). His form is well and truly consistent. It's not like Melbourne when they appointed Jack Trengrove as captain for instance or, to a lesser extent, the Bulldogs picking Bontempelli.

2022-08-24T06:50:31+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


How was the Richmond pile-on after this? Oh dear!

2022-08-24T06:44:25+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Inciteful?

2022-08-24T05:56:03+00:00

1dawg

Roar Rookie


“a a”? Funsies?

2022-08-24T05:54:29+00:00

1dawg

Roar Rookie


Robbo :thumbup:

2022-08-24T05:50:11+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Long over due I like others have concerns of sticking the captaincy against Lochie, unless of course he wants it? I've felt for the last little while Daniel Rich should of been our captain... but rather pointless to do that now.

2022-08-24T05:28:07+00:00

1dawg

Roar Rookie


Still waiting for your follow up article :stoked:

2022-08-24T05:21:13+00:00

Alchemist

Roar Rookie


'Twas aimed at the English teacher

2022-08-24T05:14:19+00:00

Ross the Boss

Guest


My God I hope that spelling mistake was a a deliberate attempt at some fun.

2022-08-24T05:13:12+00:00

Ross the Boss

Guest


That's a waste of time for Don. When asked to put some substance for opinion...he disappears into fiction and lies. Don already thinks Freo won the flag this year.

2022-08-24T05:10:56+00:00

Scuba

Guest


Well, of the other suggestions by the author (once you get through the Zorko lovefest which is the first 75 percent of the article) Andrews is out of form, Berry is a plodder and Lyons won’t be best 22 next year (if he is now). If not Neale, it has to be Clug or Starcevich.

2022-08-24T01:40:48+00:00

The Sports Lover

Roar Rookie


My only concern with Neale as captain is would it diminish his on field contribution? The Lions rely so much on his mid field energy and enterprise. Even a slight dip in his form would hinder the Lions disproportionately. Travis Boak is the perfect example of a great player experiencing a reduction in form on being made captain. Obviously only the club insiders understand Neale’s personally style but we’ve seen many times in Australian sport that the best player isn’t necessarily the person you need as leader.

2022-08-24T00:35:08+00:00

Alchemist

Roar Rookie


The ordacity!

AUTHOR

2022-08-23T23:22:39+00:00

Tim O'Hare

Roar Rookie


It's as if freelance contributors write about the topics that interest them

2022-08-23T22:13:31+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Nup. I already know.

2022-08-23T22:06:38+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Don can you write a article about why Freo will beat Dogs & win premiership!

2022-08-23T22:02:54+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


A gripping pre-finals article. Get rid of the bye. This week should be full of finals conversation.

2022-08-23T19:47:09+00:00

Boo

Guest


The bootstudder Zorko needs a good kick up the bum .Family is off limits regardless of the truth in it or not .

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