Geelong Advertiser

NO RISKS WITH DANGER MAN

- SCOTT GULLAN HIS OWN MAN UNEXPECTED

THE drinks were flowing as anxious AFL officials started to look at their watches.

It was 10pm and the best players in the game had gathered for dinner ahead of the following night’s pre-season extravagan­za AFLX.

Buses to take them back to their respective hotels were scheduled to leave in half-anhour but the room was buzzing as players from different teams got the rare opportunit­y to catch up over a beer or two.

Patrick Dangerfiel­d, who was the captain of Team Bolts, rose from his chair and briefly called for quiet before delivering a thankyou speech to the AFL for the evening.

“Let’s play well, give the fans a really good showing, let’s respect it and finish up in the next hour or so,” Dangerfiel­d said.

He then added: “I’m going to bed.”

A few metres away at the bar, his Geelong teammate Mark Blicavs was watching the speech surrounded by 60 shots of various alcoholic substances. In his mind — and that of almost every other player in the room — the party was just starting.

Dangerfiel­d knew that but he’s never followed the pack. The 2016 Brownlow medallist has always walked to the beat of his own drum.

It’s not that he’s a partypoope­r; the Cats star loves nothing more than holding court in the locker room, revving up teammates or engineerin­g the odd practical joke.

But he is different.

ONE of his best mates Josh Jenkins describes him as a unicorn, which can have a number of definition­s but the relevant one here is “a mythical creature, someone amazing who is hard to catch or simply a very rare find”.

Jenkins met Dangerfiel­d when they played together at the Adelaide Crows. Along with Tom Lynch, the trio were inseparabl­e.

Last year Jenkins followed him to Geelong and on the club's website to celebrate his mate’s 250th game, Jenkins provided a glimpse into the world of Dangerfiel­d

“Pat has always been mature — or boring — beyond his years,” Jenkins wrote.

“At age 23, we spent most training-free afternoons at his place drinking cups of tea and watching him clean up after us before we’d even left the premises.

“Patrick Dangerfiel­d would rather launch his boat into the waters off Geelong’s Surf Coast than down a few beers at the pub.”

Geelong coach Chris Scott enjoys sitting down for a cuppa with his superstar midfielder because he will most likely learn something new from the conversati­on.

“We are very different, almost completely opposite when it comes to a lot of things,” Scott said.

“He's got a quirky sense of humour and some of the things he does publicly … any sort of criticism he gets is water off a duck's back.

“I'm pretty private and don't put myself out there much deliberate­ly, but that's not Patty. I just don’t think it’s my role to change that, he is who he is.

“I can’t think of an example where I've thought, ‘Patty, you’re putting yourself in front of the footy club’, or the selfpromot­ion is detrimenta­l to the rest of it.”

The only time Scott has been slightly concerned was when Dangerfiel­d was recently copping heat in his role as the players’ associatio­n president.

“He’s a really courageous ambassador, not just for the footy club but even for the players' associatio­n,” Scott said.

“My position is, ‘We have to protect you and you have to protect yourself more’ but in true Patty style he says, ‘Don’t worry about me, I’ll be fine, if I have to take one for the team I’ll take it. They’re not going to get me down, I'm going to stand up for what I believe is right’.

“You can’t undersell how tough he is and how strong in his conviction­s he is.”

TWO things surprised Scott when Dangerfiel­d arrived at Kardinia Park in 2015 after 154 games with the Crows — his durability and the way he bonded with Geelong captain Joel Selwood.

While he can throw in the odd theatrical midgame resurrecti­on after looking to be wounded, his ability to play through injury and front up week after week gets him a lot of credit with his coach. Dangerfiel­d, 30, has missed just 11 games in 11

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