Signs of a Richmond form drop surfaced after elimination final loss to Carlton in 2013Sam Edmund
Herald-Sun
May 20, 2014 DAMIEN Hardwick sat in the bowels of the MCG and talked tough.
His side had just been sent packing from the finals at the hands of Carlton, but Hardwick said Richmond had only “scratched the surface” of what it was capable of.
The coach said the Tigers’ “two normal strengths” — contested ball and scores from stoppages — had come from nowhere to cost them the game.
But little did Hardwick know, the rot had only just set in.
The footy world is searching for clues on how a side which won 15 games and finished fifth can plummet to 16th after one summer.
The truth is that the signs were there in that elimination final loss to the Blues.
In that pulsating contest Carlton thrashed Richmond in contested situations inside the Blues’ attacking 50m and almost scored at will from stoppages.
At the time it was out of the blue. Last season, before that crucial contest, Richmond was a very good stoppage team, both offensively and defensively.
The Tigers ranked sixth for clearances, but they scored from those clearances 28.9 per cent of the time — ranked second in the AFL behind premier Hawthorn.
Last year they outscored the opposition by 321 points from stoppages. This was a side as dangerous as it got at ball-ups or boundary throw-ins.
Even when the opposition won a clearance, Richmond was only scored against 23.4 per cent of the time — the fourth-least in the competition.
Richmond also thrived on contested ball, averaging 7.7 per game more than its opposition, good enough for third in the league.
But comparing these 2013 numbers with the first eight games of this season makes for frightening reading.
The Tigers have fallen away at scoring from stoppages, going from differential rank of second in the AFL to 12th.
That percentage of scores from clearances has plummeted from second-best to 14th.
Ditto with contested possession differential, which has sunk from third to 14th and now when the opposition wins a clearance Richmond is only so-so (9th) at preventing a score.
And all the things that made this side so great to watch last year have faded to black.
Scoring (5th to 15th), mark and play-on (7th to 15th) and scores once inside 50m (4th to 15th) have all dropped.
Hardwick knows what’s wrong. He’s repeated himself to the point of frustration and, after the loss to Melbourne, exasperation.
“We’ve got to take some steps and get our game back up and going, but unfortunately I’ve been saying this for six or seven weeks and I’m sick of talking about it,” Hardwick said at the weekend.
But this was no summer of change. That elimination final loss may have left scars that extend beyond the mental.
http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/signs-of-a-richmond-form-drop-surfaced-after-elimination-final-loss-to-carlton-in-2013/story-fndv8t7m-1226923213133