cont.
CULTURE SHIFTThe holes left by retired champions Houli and Astbury will transcend their places in the backline.
Houli was like a moral compass at Punt Rd while Astbury was this salt-of-the-earth boy from Tatyoon who was impossible to dislike.
Teammates say Astbury’s legacy will be unforgettable and up there with former captain Chris Newman.
Footy empires crumble through a variety of different reasons, and the Tigers seem to have had a bit of everything in 2021.
The shock retirement of Alex Rance was like losing two players and Astbury said the defenders felt naked playing without him.
It required him and Dylan Grimes to produce career-best seasons in 2019.
But Astbury entered this season fulfilled as a player and then had moments in games where he felt like a liability.
“I’ve actually just got off the phone with a good mate of mine, Truck (Ben) Rutten,” Astbury said on SEN on Friday.
“He said to me quite a while ago when you feel yourself starting to avoid situations in games where you might get exposed or feel vulnerable I reckon it’s a good time (to retire).
“I’ve done that a couple of times this year and actually had a laugh to myself.”
Footy empires crumble for several reasons, but injuries and age seem to be the common denominator.
Jason Akermanis said bulk retirements equalled the end of Brisbane Lions’ rein in 2005 … and then they were showed no mercy.
“Everyone in the comp had been waiting four and a half years to make us pay,” Akermanis said.
“I’m sure they said in their huddle, ‘They’ve been flogging us for how long? Now it’s our turn, don’t ease up – put the foot on the throat’.
“We did the same to teams coming off their peak.”
THE DRAFT HANDHardwick has long had a golden rule for his recruiters.
Players chosen in the first round of the draft should be ready to play AFL in round 1 unless they are key-position.
Well, the Tigers entered round 23 with picks 8, 17, 26, 27, 41 and 45.
To remain a premiership force the Tigers need to replace their big boys – Martin, Riewoldt, Cotchin and Edwards.
Shai Bolton has the talent to become a player of that ilk. Who will join him?
In 2018 Port Adelaide reloaded with Connor Rozee (pick No. 5), Zak Butters (12) and Xavier Duursma (18). The one-two-three punch turbocharged its premiership push.
The Tigers have cooled on Adam Cerra and appear likely to invest most of their draft hand in teenage talent.
It’s not the hottest draft this year and development has been impacted by Covid.
But the Tigers should be able to find some nice players with their picks.
CAPTAIN COTCH?The captain’s form spike in his last five games doused growing concerns over his playing future.
But Cotchin will spend the summer deciding whether he wants to lead the Tigers for a 10th season.
“Trent’s very much a selfless leader so he’ll probably determine himself whether he’s the best man to take us forward,” Hardwick said.
“What he brings off field can’t be really seen or measured by people outside our club and the way he operates and brings our group together is really important.
“That’s generally a position we’ll leave up to Trent and how he thinks it’ll operate moving forward.”
There’s no dearth of leadership despite the club’s old-school set up of only appointing a vice-captain (Riewoldt).
Jack Graham, Nick Vlastuin and Dylan Grimes would all make fine captains.
CAN THEY WIN IT IN 2022?Leppitsch says the Tigers will enter next season genuinely unsure where they fit in.
Are they a top-four team? Top eight? Or was this season an accurate reflection?
There have been plenty of positives. Liam Baker the Firestarter has become Mr Fix It and a fresh halfback line of Sydney Stack, Daniel Rioli and Rhyan Mansell only scratch the surface.
The Tigers have found that Rioli was built with plenty of defensive bones in his body and so Bachar Houli has actually been teaching the natural goalkicker to bring a sharper offensive edge to the backline.
Jack Graham’s evolution as a damaging midfielder was another tick for 2021.
Every word coming out of Richmond indicates that obituaries should be written in pencil.
Astbury: “I’m not jumping off the gravy train because I think it’s dried up. I really think we can rebound really strongly, really quickly”.
Riewoldt: “We look at this year as a step back unfortunately, but we know we certainly can take two or three steps forward in the very near future”.
Hardwick: “Without season 2016 we don’t get 2017. Without season 2018 we don’t get 2019 and 2020. Without this year, well, who knows what we get next year. A lot of people will write us off and say we’re over – but the fact of the matter is people have written those stories before. The challenge is firmly set, we accept that, but it’s one we look forward to. If our guys do refresh, regenerate a couple of things, get some young talent in and invest in the talent we’ve already got I think we’ll be reasonably placed to have another crack.”
Club great Matthew Richardson was singing the same tune.
“I don’t think it’s all doom and gloom,” Richardson said.
“They’ve got a good hand at the draft. I think they can easily bounce back and play finals – and once you’re there, who knows?
“I don’t see any great emerging team that’s going to win two or three flags in a row.”
The empire might be crumbling, but the Tigers are adamant it has not yet crumbled
Can the empire strike back?
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/afl-news-richmond-dynasty-under-coach-damien-hardwick-over-after-2021-season/news-story/2b413742dd06cd32866b1d38179f65e1