Wakelin’s finale
Darryl Wakelin has announced 2007 will be his 13th and final season in the AFL.
"To be given that opportunity to play with the Port Adelaide Football Club as a junior, to go away, to realise how special the football club is, and then to come back has been a fairytale.“When Choco first spoke to me about coming back he said that we’ve got a young, exciting side and we have some really special times ahead of us in the next four or so years. He said he was going to make me a better player and looking back I guess we’ve ticked all the boxes.”Power coach Mark Williams said Wakelin’s contribution to the club extended beyond his outstanding form as full-back for the past seven years.“Trading a top draft pick for Darryl Wakelin back in 2000 was quite obviously one of the best decisions this club has made in its time in the AFL,” Williams said.“He became one of the real heart-and-soul people of the football club. He was a friend to everyone. He is such a personality around the place and a caring and responsible leader.“On the field he is reliable, he is very smart, he led the backline group, was a brilliant overhead mark, and you can barely remember the times his man influenced the result of the game.“He has a genuine passion for the Port Adelaide Football Club. Not just where the club is today but he is very proud of the club’s SANFL past and has a real care for where it is headed in the future.“The hours he has put into being a mentor to our young defenders is to his absolute credit and speaks huge volumes for his love of the team and selfless nature. What Troy Chaplin, Michael Pettigrew, Alipate Carlile and all the defenders that have played and trained around him have learnt from him is going to benefit Port Adelaide for years to come.“I’m sure his teammates and all at the club will be pushing him and willing him and maybe even saying a quiet prayer that he gets a fairytale finish.”Wakelin said he felt he was leaving the club in safe hands and hoped to stay involved with the club in an off field role.“(The form of the young defensive group) makes you feel very comfortable that at the end of the year you can walk away and know the club is in a really good position over all areas of the ground,” Wakelin said. “Selfishly, in the back half I think we have an exciting group there and a couple of others to come into the side. I’ll be watching to see how they develop.“I’m still looking at having an involvement at the club. Probably not in the football department but some sort of role we’re working through at the moment.“As far as business goes I didn’t study (pharmacy) for ten years for nothing I suppose. I want to really give that a good shot and I’ve been given some great opportunities. I look forward to taking some of my experiences from football across to pharmacy and learning more about that new life.“Probably more importantly, retirement means getting to spend a bit more quality time with your family. It’s quite a selfish life that you do live so it’s going to be nice to give a little bit back there.”