The one-on-one Dustin Martin moment that helped to erase 16 years of pain for the TigersGLENN McFARLANE,
Herald Sun
September 10, 2017 IT WAS the one-on-one Dustin Martin moment that helped end 16 years of finals heartache for the Tigers.
Richmond was leading by seven points with about 30 seconds left in the third quarter when a clearing kick brought about a desperate contest between Martin and Geelong’s Tom Stewart.
They both flew for the ball and for a fleeting moment it seemed as if Stewart had the drop on the footy before he overran it slightly. Then Martin pounced. The Brownlow Medal favourite gathered, pushed off Stewart’s chest in typical fashion and burst down the outer wing in a race against the clock.
Teammate Jack Riewoldt knew it was coming in his direction long before the Stewart fendoff.
“He (Martin) is a big-time player and big-time players step up at the important moments,” Riewoldt said. “Tom Stewart is a handy player in one-on-ones. He probably had a few moments with Dusty down in Geelong (in Round 21). But I knew (Martin) would win it.”
So, too, did Dion Prestia, who found himself loose in attack with no one around him, knowing the Martin steamtrain down the wing was bringing the ball closer by the ticking second.
“I just backed him to win the one-on-one,” Prestia said, sensing the opportunity that was coming. “I was about 30 metres out when Dusty got it and I just ran towards the goal square.”
Martin was motoring along the wing at 25.9km/h, according to Champion Data’s new Super Tracker measurement. It was his maximum speed for the quarter, which by then was more than 30 minutes long.
Martin’s kick into half-forward came with 20 seconds left, but his drop punt didn’t have its usual penetration. The ball bounced in front of Zach Tuohy and Riewoldt, and the Richmond forward read the bounce perfectly, took possession and turned towards goal without knowing what was in front of him, even though he knew Lachie Henderson was bearing down on him from behind.
“It came out to me ... I didn’t know Dion was there,” Riewoldt said. “I just turned and rolled and he was in the right spot. He (Prestia) must have worked hard to get there.”
As Riewoldt wheeled around to take his kick, the crowd realised there was a Richmond player all alone at the top of the goalsquare. Prestia knew once Riewoldt won his contest with Tuohy that the ball was coming to him, even though he wasn’t sure how much time was left on the clock.
“I just kind of backed them (Martin and Riewoldt) in to win the ball,” Prestia said. “Maybe I was cheating a bit, or maybe I was being smart, but we’ve been good at winning the one-on-ones this year. That’s where we have improved.”
By the time he marked Riewoldt’s kick at the top of the square, there were only 15 seconds left in the term. Mitch Duncan gave chase, but there was never going to be a Heath Shaw 2010 moment. Prestia dribbled the ball through from point blank range to put his team 13 points in front.
The roar reverberated around the ground like it used to when the “Tigers of Old” dominated the MCG more than a generation ago.
Richmond’s players headed back to the middle for the last 10 seconds of the term, then strode with purpose to the three-quarter-time huddle emboldened by what had just occurred, and sensing there was more to come.
It was a massive lift for a club haunted by failed finals appearances and a lack of September action this century.
Chief executive Brendon Gale, who played in Richmond’s last finals win in 2001, knew what a team-inspiring moment it had been and the raucous Richmond faithful vindicated that.
President Peggy O’Neal, who 12 months ago shoved aside a flawed reform group called “Focus on Football” with the same purpose and power as a Dustin Martin “Don’t Argue”, smiled at Martin’s moment and the team-first attitude that followed.
She explained: “A Geelong supporter in front of me turned around (after the recently re-signed $8 million-plus Tiger’s extraordinary passage) and said: ‘I think you’ve made a very good investment.’ And I said, ‘Tonight it is paying off’.”
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