What's up with the Tiger Kings?Howard Kotton
OPINION
June 22 2020 - 6:00PMAs Richmond dismantled Carlton in the first quarter of the opening round, the 2020 season appeared destined to take a familiar path.
The Tiger Kings of the MCG would be hard to stop again and the dream of emulating the legendary Tom Hafey's 1973-74 premiership heroes was alive.
But suddenly there are question marks after Richmond's underwhelming performances in the past two games, having drawn in a dour struggle with Collingwood and then being thrashed by Hawthorn on their favourite patch of turf.
After winning two of the past three premierships, the Tigers' form since the season's resumption has raised doubts about their motivation and hunger. While it is premature to make a definitive judgment after their first defeat in a year last week, the recent signs have not been good.
There are several factors to ponder for their army of fans. Richmond's pressure in their forward half and slick ball movement, trademarks in the club's incredible success in the past three seasons, have fallen away and the Tigers' capacity to score freely has dried up, having kicked a paltry 19 goals in their past 11 quarters.
Potent key forwards Jack Riewoldt and Tom Lynch are out of touch and smaller forwards Daniel Rioli and Jason Castagna are also struggling.
Inexperienced Richmond ruckman Ivan Soldo was thrashed at the stoppages and had no influence around the ground against Hawk Jonathon Ceglar. The Tigers' much-vaunted midfield without the dynamic Dustin Martin did not work hard enough, turning the ball over continually with uncharacteristic skill errors.
The Tigers had just nine tackles in the first half and it was the ease with which Hawthorn slipped through and created space to set up multiple scoring opportunities that would have concerned Damien Hardwick and his coaching staff.
The Hawks' forwards applied immense pressure on Richmond's back half and cracks were exposed. Bachar Houli's run and creativity were stymied and Sydney Stack's fumbles were costly.
The shorter quarters and longer breaks are also not benefitting the Tigers, given their renowned ability to wear down opposition teams and outscore them in time-on of quarters.
Hawthorn bounced back from a disastrous defeat at Geelong to thrash Richmond. Now the onus is on the Tigers to show they remain one of the contenders for the 2020 crown.
https://www.portnews.com.au/story/6800986/whats-up-with-the-tiger-kings/?cs=258