Sports
Jeff Browne affirmed as Collingwood’s new president before the 2022 AFL season
Jeff Browne has been affirmed as Collingwood’s new president at a board meeting in Melbourne, following months of in-fighting at the AFL club.
The previous Nine Network manager was delegated president in a unanimous vote at Friday morning’s board meeting, with existing directors Jodie Sizer and Paul Licuria to serve as VPs.
It follows Thursday night’s club annual general meeting, where it was declared that Browne and his ticket had been elected to the board.
Barry Carp and Renee Roberts were likewise chosen from the 11 competitors and Christine Holgate was reappointed, joining Sizer, Licuria, and active president Mark Korda on the board.
Browne’s appointment implies Collingwood will have its fourth president in under a year, later his close friend Eddie McGuire finished his 22-year reign in February.
McGuire remained down later a backlash to his comments about the “Do Better” report into systemic racism at the club.
Korda and Peter Murphy at first took over as co-presidents, with Murphy deciding not to look for re-election.
The past few months have been set apart by dangers of board challenges and member-led emergency general meetings, however, the final steps of Browne’s takeover this week were eventually direct.
Browne — who served the AFL for 22 years as its external lawyer and is a life member of the league — has a few key areas to address right away.
On the field, the Magpies are hoping to bounce back from a tragic 2021 season that cost club extraordinary Nathan Buckley his job as a coach.
New coach Craig McRae and the club are managing the eventual fate of star Jordan De Goey, who has been remained down later an incident at a New York club in late October.
List management is one more ongoing worry amid pay cap pressure, which caused the notorious trade time frame fire sale a year ago.
In the background, Browne faces a confrontation with the AFL over cuts to the football department soft cap and annual financial distribution to clubs.
The AFL has diminished its minimum distribution to clubs from $10 million to $8 million, with the well-off Magpies, Hawthorn, Richmond, and West Coast to get the bare minimum amount.
At Thursday night’s AGM, Korda reprimanded the league over the move, which will cost Collingwood $2 million every year.
“We are bitterly disappointed in that and Mark Anderson and I strenuously argued it was unfair,” Korda said.
“We are bitterly disappointed that the faster we run and the faster we cycle, the quicker the AFL takes it from us.”
Browne is the fourteenth president in Collingwood’s history.
His residency is probably not going to keep going anyplace close as long as McGuire’s rule, given the Collingwood board is reviewing its constitution during a transition to have the president serve a maximum of six years.
Directors could likewise have their time covered at three terms of three years.
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