Tigers keep marching onDateApril 6, 2013
Michael Gleeson
Sports Writer for The Age
RICHMOND 4.5 8.10 12.12 14.15 (99) ST KILDA 3.1 6.6 11.7 12.10 (82)
GOALS - Richmond: Riewoldt 7, McGuane 2, Newman, Maric, King, Conca, Vickery.
St Kilda: Riewoldt 4, Saad 2, Maister 2, McEvoy, Stanley, Gilbert, Milne.
BEST - Richmond: Riewoldt, Cotchin, Morris, Grimes, Conca.
St Kilda: McEvoy, Riewoldt, Jones, Gilbert, Montagna.
UMPIRES Donlon, Mollison, Foot.
CROWD 56,783 at MCG.Previously Richmond didn't win these games. Twice now it has. Last week the Tigers won a game as underdogs, this time they were expected to win. On both occasions they toughed it out for victory.
Not for some time has Richmond been a side about which the word consistency would be used. If two weeks marks consistency then it is at least getting to that point. But like last week it made this a hard proposition, which is not intended to under appreciate St Kilda's diligence.
The Saints were well organised and found ways to think their way through and open up the Richmond defence with slingshot play and small forwards. Or they did the traditional approach - kick it to Nick Riewoldt. It was a game plan that had a familiarity for both sides, the cousins Riewoldt each having a night out.
In the head-to-head battle little cousin Jack had the better. He booted seven, his last the goal to steady his side after Ahmed Saad had threaded a fine, dead straight set shot from the boundary to give the Saints a sniff.
Richmond, as it did last week, had the better of the general play but was unable to press the advantage. Dustin Martin was superb for a half then faded, his captain Trent Cotchin had the opposite experience, being unable to shake clear of Clint Jones until it really mattered in the last quarter. The Tigers seemed likely to kick clear during the second term through Riewoldt.
But they did not partly because of Leigh Montagna and Nick Dal Santo in the middle.
The ins for St Kilda were at the least on paper impressively credentialled - Sam Fisher, Leigh Montagna, Adam Schneider and Sean Dempster - two All-Australians and two premiership players. How fit they were for a high-energy early round match was another query.
Richmond meanwhile has reached a point of finding selection a difficulty. Previous first-choice players are now latter thoughts. The Tigers midfield lacks only Nathan Foley, its forward line with Ty Vickery and the weekly surprise of Luke McGuane more varied, while its defence, with the inclusion of Dylan Grimes, is more balanced. Or at least its defence should have been more balanced but for the fact St Kilda made it look top heavy. At one point Troy Chaplin was left to stand Terry Milera. It was not a prospect he would have relished.
Richmond's close-checking forced some errors. On the occasions they were able to think their way through it or win the critical contest that could get the ball over the back they found open space to run into and were able to hurt Richmond with fast play into their forward line. In the first quarter that twice saw them goal when Saad, Milera and Stephen Milne were able to get involved.
These forays were unreliable and the more familiar - and reliable - avenue through Nick Riewoldt was preferred to almost game-changing effect. Richmond had fought to its four-goal lead late in the third quarter but the elder Riewoldt halted their advance. The St Kilda captain marked on the lead and goaled, then a moment later had another when he found a ball over the back and the Tiger lead was halved. Saad's goal at the start of the last gave them a sniff which Jack Riewoldt did his best to extinguish.
Each contest had about it the tension of the idea that it could turn the game, such as when with only three minutes remaining St Kilda trailed by 12 points yet had the ball in hand. The Saints were searching for a way forward and appeared to have found one when they changed direction and an opportunity opened up on the far side of the ground near their forward line. A long ball searched for Ben McEvoy. Tiger Reece Conca had a stay-or-go decision. He went. He left his man and backed himself to get to the ball before McEvoy, knowing they were likely to collide and he risked the ball falling free to his now unmanned opponent. He won the ball. It was a significant. Soon after Ivan Maric made a certainty of the result. The Tigers won a game they should. Finally.
KING OF THE TIGERSSeven minutes into the final quarter, Tiger Jake King sprung from the ground, seemingly out of nowhere, to sit on Rhys Stanley's shoulders. Nearly horizontally. Sadly, he couldn't quite hold onto the mark. It was eerily similar to Gary Moorcroft's stunning mark at Docklands in 2001. For a man known as the ''push-up king'', he went oh so close to putting his contention in for a new nickname. To cap off a night of highlights for the Tiger, he managed a beautiful checkside goal in the second quarter, splitting the sticks from 30 metres out on the boundary.
FLYING TIGER HIDDEN FORWARDLuke McGuane is warming by the week to his forward shift. He kicked two first-quarter goals and, OK the first was a gift from a relayed free down the field, but the second one was a genuine forward's speccy. It was a mark the like of which has been hitherto unseen from McGuane at AFL level - he sprang high above a pack so that he ended up taking it at his waist above the other players' heads. Pleasingly, he kicked the goal. Not so pleasingly, at the start of the third he sprayed a snap at goal when he appeared to have ample time.
TAG TIMELast week, St Kilda sampled Sam Gilbert as a tagger and ran him with Gary Ablett for periods. Suffice to say that experiment has been shelved for now. Clint Jones returned to a more familiar barnacle role, latching himself to Trent Cotchin's shoulder and shadowing him around the ground. He held Cotchin to just nine touches to half-time.
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