76woodenspooners
Brownlow Medallist
It's worth thinking about what the role of the President is, before thinking about who would be a suitable candidate.
Fundamentally the President represents the interests of the (voting) members of the Collingwood Football club.
This is something that Eddie reminds us of when he starts any phrase with the words "On behalf of the members of the Collingwood Football club, I ..."
In the interests of egalitarianism, he'll usually add "supporters" to that, and won't make any distinction between voting / non-voting members.
And so the President is a political role where their job is to deliver to the fan base what they want.
And what do the fan base want?
Well, to win Premierships of course ...
... but that's only one part of it. There is something even more fundamental than winning Premierships, that is this:
"The role of President is to ensure that the Collingwood Football Club is a footy club that its fans can be proud of"
Eddie does a fantastic job of that. He makes us all walk tall when he waxes lyrical about "the biggest club in the country" and "the best facilities in the AFL", etc, etc ...
You see those things quoted with pride in this forum and elsewhere. How much of that stuff is true or matters? - who cares? - it's not as if Eddie's constuents are going to question it.
Sure, there are some folks who couldn't give a stuff about any of that, they just want to win Premierships every year. But they'll be balanced out by those folks who only care about flogging Carlton every year. The bottom line is about fans and pride.
Think about that scene a few weeks ago of Eddie and Camplin standing on the boundary line at the end of the Essendon game, their faces as dark as storm clouds. They made you feel like somebody was going to be in deep trouble - exactly what the fans wanted to see from their leaders after a performance like that.
Who gives a stuff if the President is a shrewd businessman, or a pillar of society, or had been a fine athlete - if they had been seen with a glass of Moët in hand, laughing with their buddies while their footy team gets flogged ... well, that would be a President who has forgotten why they were elected and what their role was.
The President is a political role, and the way they handle the politics is critical to their (and their club's) success.
Fundamentally the President represents the interests of the (voting) members of the Collingwood Football club.
This is something that Eddie reminds us of when he starts any phrase with the words "On behalf of the members of the Collingwood Football club, I ..."
In the interests of egalitarianism, he'll usually add "supporters" to that, and won't make any distinction between voting / non-voting members.
And so the President is a political role where their job is to deliver to the fan base what they want.
And what do the fan base want?
Well, to win Premierships of course ...
... but that's only one part of it. There is something even more fundamental than winning Premierships, that is this:
"The role of President is to ensure that the Collingwood Football Club is a footy club that its fans can be proud of"
Eddie does a fantastic job of that. He makes us all walk tall when he waxes lyrical about "the biggest club in the country" and "the best facilities in the AFL", etc, etc ...
You see those things quoted with pride in this forum and elsewhere. How much of that stuff is true or matters? - who cares? - it's not as if Eddie's constuents are going to question it.
Sure, there are some folks who couldn't give a stuff about any of that, they just want to win Premierships every year. But they'll be balanced out by those folks who only care about flogging Carlton every year. The bottom line is about fans and pride.
Think about that scene a few weeks ago of Eddie and Camplin standing on the boundary line at the end of the Essendon game, their faces as dark as storm clouds. They made you feel like somebody was going to be in deep trouble - exactly what the fans wanted to see from their leaders after a performance like that.
Who gives a stuff if the President is a shrewd businessman, or a pillar of society, or had been a fine athlete - if they had been seen with a glass of Moët in hand, laughing with their buddies while their footy team gets flogged ... well, that would be a President who has forgotten why they were elected and what their role was.
The President is a political role, and the way they handle the politics is critical to their (and their club's) success.
Last edited:





