Damien Hardwick says he is unconcerned about the Tigers lack of finals experience Jay Clark
From: Herald Sun
August 31, 2013 11:42PMRICHMOND coach Damien Hardwick wants his troops to enjoy the finals spotlight that will fall on the club for the first time in 12 years this week.
The Tigers will break their long-time September drought most likely against bogey side Carlton on Sunday after easing past the Bombers by 39 points at the MCG on Saturday night.
Hardwick was unconcerned by the lack of finals experience the Tigers will take into the cut-throat final, with four Tigers boasting in total 13 only games of September action.
The coach said he wants his players to embrace “the great feeling” surrounding a blockbuster finals match-up against the Blues, hopeful it will last beyond next weekend.
“We do, because you never know when you are going to be back,” Hardwick said.
“You look at our side in 2001 was the last time we appeared, do you think it was going to be 12 or 13 years until they got back?
“You’d hope not, so, you’ve just got to make the most of your opportunity, they don’t come around that often.
“We have had a good season but a new one starts.”
Former captain Chris Newman is expected to return from three weeks out with an ankle injury, while spearhead Jack Riewoldt will also come back in after missing with a back injury.
But Matt White is in doubt after suffering back tightness which forced him to be subbed off against the Bombers.
Newman holds the record for most regular season games (232) without a finals match.
Hardwick said the club isn’t daunted by its lack of experience on the big stage and the attention that comes with playing finals.
“The ground stays the same, the ball stays the same,” Hardwick said.
“It’s going to be a big crowd, there’s no doubt about that. Richmond versus Carlton, it’s going to be an enormous crowd.
“It’s going to be great feeling, so it will be a great build up to the week, we’ve just got to deliver when it matters.”
Richmond has only beaten Carlton once from their last 11 meetings.
Hardwick said he was happier with the second half of Saturday night’s contest when the Tigers began to stamp their authority in the midfield.
He praised captain Trent Cotchin and the leadership group for helping keep the team focussed despite playing against Essendon, which had already had its finals hopes crushed by the AFL as punishment for the supplement scandal.
“I though the first half was a little bit scratchy,” Hardwick said.
“It was a funny old game to start with but we addressed a few things at half time.
“We thought our intensity and overall physicality was a lot better after the half and I think our contested ball numbers would indicate that also.”
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