Young Tigers starting to sharpen clawsRohan Connolly
April 2, 2011ST KILDA 4.6 7.10 9.12 13.17 (95)
RICHMOND 2.4 9.5 10.9 14.11(95)
GOALS
St Kilda: Milne 4, N Riewoldt 3, Goddard, McEvoy, Armitage, Ray, Blake, Gamble.
Richmond: Martin 3, King 2, Vickery 2, Deledio, Helbig, Jackson, Morton, Edwards, Grigg, Cotchin.
BEST
St Kilda: Milne, Armitage, Fisher, Gram, McEvoy, Dal Santo.
Richmond: Deledio, Martin, Cotchin, Newman, Grigg, Vickery.
INJURIES St Kilda: Hayes (knee). Richmond: Riewoldt (concussion).
REPORTS Richmond: Luke McGuane (high contact on Farren Ray)
UMPIRES Hayden Kennedy, Scott Jeffery, Robert Findlay.
CROWD 41,465 at Melbourne Cricket Ground.
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RICHMOND will feel like it lost this morning, for this was a clear moral victory over a respected opponent, if not one actually realised on the scoreboard.
But the second draw of the AFL season from just nine games played represents an important moment in the Tigers' climb back to respectability.
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So dramatic was the manner in which the Tigers overcame their poor start, the speed with which their confidence grew, and the promise shown by some young midfield stars who just keep getting better and better, that the chances missed to clinch a famous victory last night will be realised soon enough.
You probably could have written your own ticket on Richmond about 15 minutes into last night's game. By that stage, St Kilda had three goals on the board to zip, had completely dominated possession, and wouldn't have been too upset by the sight of opposition dangerman Jack Riewoldt whacking has head on the turf and being subbed off with concussion.
Stephen Milne was torching newcomer Reece Conca, booting two of those first three - the second a classic piece of front and square crumbing.
All over the ground the Saints looked grateful to have had the shackles removed that made last week's opener such a slog. St Kilda took just five marks inside its forward 50 in round one. Last night, it had racked up nine before quarter-time.
But the Saints still had themselves to beat, too, thanks to some wayward kicking. Last week, it was 6.11. Last night, Milne missed his share; Nick Riewoldt and Nick Dal Santo a couple each. And that left Richmond with at least a sniff.
Certainly, the Tigers were quick to pick up the scent. Trent Cotchin's ice-breaker seemed to stun the faithful and everyone else. But when Tyrone Vickery converted a free kick just on siren time, St Kilda - despite having had 32 more disposals and nearly double the amount of scoring shots - led by only 14 points.
Even so, you couldn't have foretold what was about to happen. Richmond slammed on seven goals in the second term, five out of the first six kicked. And it had key men bobbing up everywhere to play their part, even if their Riewoldt couldn't play his.
Dustin Martin was everywhere, nine disposals and two goals his second quarter work. Brett Deledio shrugged off his ordinary start to the season with a fine shadowing effort on Brendon Goddard, relatively subdued by his lofty standards. Meanwhile, Daniel Jackson managed to quell the influence of Lenny Hayes before what looked a serious knee injury to the St Kilda heartbeat finished him off altogether, and Matt White kept Leigh Montagna honest.
And while the Richmond Riewoldt was out of the equation, the St Kilda version, in effect, was as well. The taller, blonder Nick was marked tightly by Luke McGuane, but was held completely statless in the third quarter as much through simple lack of opportunity.
Goddard had just two disposals for the term, Dal Santo four, Sam Fisher, who had cleaned up with 11 first-quarter touches, earning just three in the third.
Indeed, the third term was something of a mirror of the first. Now it was the Tigers looking harder at it, winning more of the ball, more stoppages, pumping it inside 50 more often, but not converting that dominance where it counted most.
There were a couple of gettable chances missed, a howler of an umpiring error when a bona fide mark by Mitch Morton right in front wasn't paid by an umpire who guessed he'd spilled it, and the Saints' nasty habit of hanging around the mark even when things aren't going well.
St Kilda won the quarter, despite booting just two goals for the quarter, none between Milne's third goal a minute in and Ben McEvoy's crucial conversion of a mark with only 12 seconds left on the clock.
That set the scene for another Friday night nail-biter, and the final term didn't disappoint for quality of football, drama and plenty of controversy. Deledio, now with the whip hand on his champion opponent, slipped forward to give the Tigers a seven-point buffer. Nick Riewoldt finally got a touch, and a big one, gleefully banging through some goal square crumbs.
Martin replied, then higher drama still as Luke McGuane was inexplicably pinged for a deliberate out of bounds despite fierce pressure from two opponents, Riewoldt doing the business again. Milne appeared to give the Saints the points; Shaun Grigg kept the Tigers in it; Jason Blake, briefly, seemed the man who'd gone from a critical error in the last minute last week to the man who won it last night. But that was before Daniel Jackson staked his claim for hero status with just over two minutes left on the clock.
First-game Archer missed his shot, Milne another with just 41 seconds left, and the final, definitive smother came, fittingly by Tiger skipper Chris Newman.
Great stuff. And the signs are for the Tigers, it's going to get greater.
Riewoldt and RiewoldtJack Riewoldt was in trouble 14 minutes in when he flew for a mark and crashed back to earth. The Coleman medallist was helped from the ground, but the Tigers did not immediately activate substitute Brad Helbig. Eight minutes into the second term Riewoldt was ruled out. Two minutes later his cousin, St Kilda's Nick, marked and kicked his first goal, steadying his side after the Tigers surged within two points. Nick Riewoldt finished with three goals.
Long live the KingRichmond's Jake King returned from suspension to spark his side. The Tigers trailing, King emerged from the centre with a free kick and sent his team into attack. Again when the Saints had the upper hand in the second term, he kicked a goal to put his side in front and 10 minutes later slotted his second goal, again putting the Tigers in front. Late in the game, he pumped the ball forward, Jackson goaled and Richmond hit the front.
New facesSaints rookie Daniel Archer, 19, made his debut but managed just a couple of touches and a mark in the first term. In the dying stages, he had a chance to win the game off his own boot. Welcome to the big time.
- MARTIN BOULTON
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