Is Dangerfield the best pick for Cats captain?

By The Sporting Observer / Roar Rookie

The 2022-23 AFL offseason has been unique on the captaincy front. So far, seven of the 18 AFL clubs have made changes to their captaincy position.

Typically club captaincy is a long-term position, meaning that these roles infrequently change hands. However, due to a range of retirements and other reasons, several new captains have already been announced for the upcoming season.

Collingwood’s Scott Pendlebury handed the position over to Darcy Moore. Ben McEvoy’s retirement paved the way for James Sicily to be announced as Hawthorn’s new captain. Jack Ziebell’s six-year captaincy tenure at the Kangaroos has been succeeded by the co-captaincy of Jy Simpkin and Luke McDonald. Away from the eastern seaboard, Alex Pearce has replaced Nathan Fyfe as Fremantle’s captain, while Jordan Dawson has replaced Rory Sloane as captain of the Adelaide Crows. Toby Greene has been announced as the sole Giants captain after sharing the position with Stephen Coniglio and Josh Kelly in 2022.

Another club requiring a new captain was the Geelong Football Club. Geelong’s captaincy position was left vacant after the club’s longest serving captain, Joel Selwood, retired post a premiership in 2022.

The abundance of experience on Geelong’s 2023 playing list meant Selwood’s successor was not a simple choice. While their 2022 leadership group only officially comprises three members – Selwood (captain), Patrick Dangerfield (vice-captain) and Tom Stewart (vice-captain) – there are a handful of other players who are more than capable of leadership positions (Tom Hawkins, Mark Blicavs, Mitch Duncan and Tom Atkins, to name a few).

(Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images)

Over the weekend, the Cats announced that Dangerfield would take over the captaincy in 2023, while Stewart would remain as vice-captain.

From the outside it seemed that the 2023 vacancy would be filled by either Dangerfield or Stewart. Both options were low risk due to their local upbringing, All-Australian playing qualities and squeaky-clean off-field records. The key difference was the stages of the careers that the individuals were at.

Dangerfield, at 33 this year, has begun to feel the effects of injury and of a career spent as a battering ram. This has led to a significant reduction in playing time and impact over the last two seasons. Dangerfield played 35 of a possible 50 games (70 per cent) in the last two seasons, recording six Brownlow votes in each of the last two campaigns. The Cats have also shifted Dangerfield from a bustling inside midfielder to an explosive forward who spends more time around goals as his career reaches its twilight.

Conversely, Tom Stewart is a man at the peak of his footballing powers. Turning 30 this year, Stewart is defined as one of the top three defenders in the AFL. He’s been selected in the last two All-Australian teams. He has played 40 of a possible 50 games (80 per cent) in the last two seasons and polled an impressive eight Brownlow votes in 2021 and nine Brownlow votes in 2022.

Dangerfield’s election as captain seems inconsistent with trends that other clubs have demonstrated this off-season. Of the five other clubs with brand-new 2023 captains, all have replaced an older, seasoned captain with a younger, fresher replacement (Collingwood, Hawthorn, Kangaroos, Fremantle and Adelaide). These changes will allow these clubs to retain one player as captain for a longer period, leading to greater stability while also giving a new captain enough time to make his mark on a team.

While there’s no question that Dangerfield is a brilliant leader, his reign will likely be short-lived due to his age and eventual retirement in the medium term.

Would the Cats have been better positioned with a long-term captaincy replacement? Would a dual captaincy with Dangerfield and Stewart have worked? Or does Geelong’s unique captaincy transition suit the reigning premiers perfectly as they head into season 2023?

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-13T10:58:46+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Grass doesn’t grow on busy streets :stoked:

2023-03-05T01:00:20+00:00

TheCatMan

Roar Rookie


As a Cat supporter, I don't mind the Dangerfield/Stewart combination. But I think a better combination would have been Stewart/Blicav or Blicav/Stewart.

2023-03-02T10:57:34+00:00

The Ghost

Guest


Yes like Cotch, Dangerfield will be remembered for his greatness and the fact he was left in Dusty’s wake in the 2020 penultimate game. But he had an important role in one of the great Grand Final goals in modern footy. It was settled that night, Danger is great but Dusty is the Goat :thumbup:

2023-03-02T09:03:37+00:00

Dougs

Roar Rookie


He deserves to be captain, even if not for long. Leads by example. A champion. Mind you I wish he was captain of the Crows. Que sera.

2023-03-02T08:51:41+00:00

Mark

Roar Rookie


Right now, there is only one club like that,......and that's Freo! Both here and in the stadiums.

2023-03-02T08:44:58+00:00

Rob

Guest


Previous short-stint older captains include Tom Harley (07-09, 2x flags), Cameron Ling (10-11, 1x flag). Worked out just fine. Chris Scott mentioned there’s much more off field stuff required of captains these days which suits danger. Geelong’s not short of on-field leadership.

2023-03-02T08:37:19+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Like JL; a crew cut. The pub-coup crew cut him.

2023-03-02T08:28:18+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


No.

2023-03-02T08:28:01+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I know, and you know, we are talking about those on The Roar. Right now, there is only one club like that and I am responding to the comment of one of them.

2023-03-02T08:26:28+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Most weeks we experience success. New to AFL?

2023-03-02T06:39:55+00:00

Mark

Roar Rookie


Flopperfield/Stagerfield is how most will remember him. Cotchin will be remembered as one of the greatest and most successful Captains to have played the game.

2023-03-02T06:16:37+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


Just remember, you flinched first in this exchange by sidestepping to some weird Your scars run deep line. I'd say Danger will be remembered as one of the all-time great players with the individual accolades he's received. Trent Cochin will be forgotten in about 5 years to those outside Richmond. Had Danger not won a premiership, I'd almost agree with you but you're not even close on this one when comparing the success of the two players, both collectively & individually.

2023-03-02T05:47:18+00:00

pickles2781222

Roar Rookie


If Danger can replicate Ling's 50% Premiership success rate as Captain I'd be happy

2023-03-02T05:14:29+00:00

berrlins

Roar Pro


It'll be a bald statement pretty soon by the sounds of it :silly:

2023-03-02T04:47:19+00:00

Mark

Roar Rookie


Your scars run deep, Diz!

2023-03-02T04:46:12+00:00

Mark

Roar Rookie


Yeah, I guess with that description Cotchin is more like Dangerfield….but much more humble and definitely alot more successful!!

2023-03-02T04:38:54+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


I think the thing for Geelong is there are a number of players who could have done the role and have earned the right to be considered but all of them are the older players. Stewart is a couple years younger than Danger but not enough to say he’d be a long term captain. Paddy may be short and Stewy medium. Had there been a clear cut candidate young player such as when Selwood was named captain who could fill the role for a decade perhaps that may have been the way to go but it isn’t the case - yet. Before Selwood Cam Ling captained Geelong for all of two years so its not unheard for a future club legend to take over for a short period.

2023-03-02T04:32:57+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


I agree that it was out of character for Stewart. It was a brain fade. Cotchin, however, is a sniping thug. Nothing wrong with that but he is nothing like Stewart.

2023-03-02T04:02:43+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


My hair is getting less apparent. A bold statement I know.

2023-03-02T03:45:50+00:00

george

Roar Rookie


And they all have one thing in common. They are yet to experience any success . . . at all.

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