Loading
Clearly over-stretched, she was given the chance to share the load with the experienced Geoff Walsh but rejected that solution and enraged the clubs by instead bringing in the inexperienced former real estate executive Nick Carah who had worked part-time as a match day manager.
That was followed by the bungled handling of Willie Rioliโs alleged threats, and the Lachie Schultz concussion saga exposed just how disconnected the gameโs football operation and media department had become. Not to mention the gameโs general counsel Stephen Meade, who lost the integrity portfolio from his remit. Co-existing with self-interested club presidents and CEOs is difficult enough but Meadeโs predecessors โ including Dillon back in the day โ have all enjoyed congenial relationships with the clubs, even if punctuated by the odd stoush.
Significant penalties and sanctioning โ such as the $20,000 fine handed to Ken Hinkley, which immediately followed a similar penalty handed to Jason McCartney for making body contact with a player during a quarter-time break โ would fall to Harley, should he take on the job.
Judging by the media rounds he undertook on Friday, Dillon appears willing to turn over a new leaf in terms of communication, but lack of transparency remains a big problem for the AFL. It is one thing to defend your staff, quite another to not acknowledge the big problems facing head office.
Brian Walshโs impending departure โ which is his call after long and distinguished service โ will hopefully lead to a reshaping of how the administrative game presents itself.
Now that Dillon has started his reforms, he has already made AFL House a more attractive proposition for the likes of Harley, whom to date has indicated a preference to remain in Sydney where his family is settled and where his wife Felicity is employed.
But should the league chief target him โ and in a more meaningful manner than it did Brendon Gale or Graham Wright โ there is a genuine chance Harley could depart the club he has driven so successfully since 2019 and before that as its effective football boss.
To draw a bow, the AFLโs challenge is not dissimilar to that faced by former Geelong boss Brian Cook in 2006. Cook knew he had the makings of a champion team among the Catsโ squabbling team of champions, and key among the 20 recommendations he put to his board after a lengthy review was to make the 28-year-old defender Harley captain.
Joel Selwood, Tom Harley, Steve Johnson and Cameron Ling in the rooms after Geelongโs 2007 qualifying final win.Credit: Sebastian Costanzo
Harley was nowhere near Geelongโs best player, but he led the club to a flag the following year and retired a two-time premiership captain who was named All-Australian vice captain in 2008 and the gameโs best captain by his peers. Cook at the time singled out Harleyโs leadership in the clubโs handling of the errant Steve Johnson in early 2007. A five-week suspension enforced by the leadership group culminated in a Norm Smith Medal for Johnson. Harleyโs captaincy was not the primary reason for the flag, but he played a key part.
Loading
With Tasmania looming and the gameโs development in New South Wales still floundering, Harleyโs pedigree is impeccable. He has experienced start-up clubs โ he worked part-time at the fledgling GWS โ and is steeped in the complexities and challenges the game faces in Sydney, its toughest market. A South Australian who became an inaugural Port Adelaide AFL player, he spent his early senior years predominantly at Norwood before moving to the Cats. Coincidentally, he is an old boy from St Peterโs in Adelaide โ Gillon McLachlanโs old school.
And he doesnโt seem to have a detractor, let alone an enemy in the game; he enjoys a strong relationship with Giants boss Dave Matthews despite the two clubsโ dislike of each other. Matthews appointed Harley boss of AFL NSW after a short media career with the Seven Network.
Harley became the Swansโ football boss under Andrew Ireland almost 11 years ago before succeeding him in 2019. In that time, the Swans have missed the finals twice and reached three grand finals.
On each occasion Harley has picked up the pieces and late last year he led the shattered club in overseeing another seamless succession, which ended John Longmireโs 14-year coaching career with the dignity it deserved.
Loading
Given Irelandโs influential and long-overdue role on the commission, the fact that Harleyโs chairman Andrew Pridham has strong support in the AFLโs search for a new commission chairman, and that Longmire is a popular choice to take on the newly created executive football role, the league suddenly seems overwhelmed with Sydney Swans candidates. All three would prove formidable and effective choices.
But they canโt all come on board โ certainly not at the same time. This is nothing against Simon Garlick or Ameet Bains, nor any left-field candidates perhaps on Dillonโs radar, but Harley is the standout. The executive needs to create a more effective working relationship between head office and its disenchanted clubs. He looms as the unofficial No.2 to the CEO and long-term successor for which the game is crying out.
If Dillon reaches the same conclusion, he needs to launch a direct hit and bypass the procedures that let him down in the past.