Author Topic: Nine reasons fast-tracking the encroaching demise of the Tigers empire (HSun)  (Read 715 times)

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Nine reasons fast-tracking the encroaching demise of the Tigers empire​

The stats across the board are damning and the indignity of losing to the bottom-placed team paints a bleak picture of Richmond’s projected trajectory. Here’s nine disturbing facts.

July 19, 2022
News Corp


Every amazing dynasty has the moment.

That moment when the reality that life isn’t like what it once was anymore, that the superhero powers which had been evident for a number of years are gone and Father Time has caught up.

Richmond supporters have been praying to keep these moments away for one last roll of the dice this year. And at times there has been clear evidence that the Tigers can still beat anyone on their day.

But losing to the bottom-placed team who had only won one game for the season tells a very different story. With five matches remaining, the Tigers can still make the finals but will that just paste over some major issues which the decision-makers at Punt Rd must address over the summer.

1. Defence​

It‘s leaking like a sieve. The stats compared to Richmond’s premiership years are alarming. They are letting teams just waltz through and score at ease. Categories such as points against and opposition scores per inside 50s where they were ranked in the top three for most of the premierships years are now 12th and 13th respectively. And they are ranked 14th for opposition points from defensive half, a stat they were third in during 2020.

Surely it‘s not all because David Astbury and Bachar Houli aren’t there. The reality is it’s a team thing, the pressure certainly isn’t there further up the ground with the ball rebounding out of the Tigers forward half easily.

2. Offence​

If you’re a follower of the Champion Data stat about expected scores then the Tigers would have comfortably taken care of the Gold Coast and North Melbourne. Not having Tom Lynch is obviously a big loss and while we joked about Shai Bolton’s misses the other week, the reality is Damien Hardwick’s team is kicking themselves out of games (do we even have to mention Jason Castagna’s efforts against the Suns).

The forward pressure has also disappeared and it is in such a sorry state that three players who should be good at that — Castagna, Maurice Rioli and Jake Aarts (sub) — were left out against the Roos. That move backfired as evidenced by Jaidyn Stephenson strolling out of defence with ease on Saturday.

3. Discipline​

Is it the arrogance of being the best in the business over the last five years? There are two sides to the free-kick story with any team and the Tigers certainly haven‘t had the rub of the green from the umpires but even Hardwick’s admits his team doesn’t help their cause. The 50m penalty epidemic is now costing them games and they are clearly the worst in the comp at it, averaging at least one doozy a week.

4. Old guys​

Richmond have eight players over 30 years of age. While your birth certificate shouldn‘t dictate the future, the reality is the Tigers need to find a way to stagger the retirements of some of their premiership heroes. On the available evidence this year Shane Edwards and Kane Lambert (because his body is packing up) are probably at the front of the departure queue with former skipper Trent Cotchin and Jack Riewoldt possibly doing enough to go around again.

Players              Age  Games   Disposals    Goals
Shane Edwards    33     17          13.7          0.6
Jack Riewoldt       33     15          10.5          2.1
Robbie Tarrant     33      14          10.4          0.0
Trent Cotchin       32      13          21.8         0.2
Dylan Grimes       31      13         11.0          0.0
Marlion Pickett     30      13         16.9          0.5
Dustin Martin       31       8          18.8          1.4
Kane Lambert      30       7          12.9          0.1

5. The Dusty dilemma​

What if Dustin Martin does say at the end of the year he wants to get away from Melbourne and feels that Sydney would be better for his mental state. Do the Tigers dig in and pay him another $1.3 million plus cheque to run around next year or do they thank him for his amazing service and cash in their chips. Either get a bevy of good high end draft picks in the deal or use the big salary cap relief to get in a couple of ready-made midfield types from elsewhere.

6. Draft busts

When you‘re winning flags understandably the recruiting staff get lots of pats on the back for putting together an extraordinary team. However, when holes start appearing questions are asked. 2018 first-round pick Riley Collier-Dawkins clearly hasn’t developed as planned, Jack Ross hasn’t set the world alight while Thomson Dow is taking a while to find his feet. Last year’s crop is the best for years — Josh Gibcus the standout — but they will need time to fill up the void a few so-so picks may have created.

7. Buy a midfielder​

GWS gun Tim Taranto is exactly what Richmond needs and the word on the street has him wanting to move to Melbourne.

Two other Giants, Jacob Hopper and Tanner Bruhn, have also been mentioned as possible movers.

The Tigers need class and taller hardened bodies in the midfield because right now it doesn‘t have the depth to go with the best sides like Geelong and Melbourne.

8. Hunger​

It is always the first thing to go and while players tell themselves they‘re still invested in the hunt, the little things start to drop off.

The decline in the pressure around the ground is an indicator but probably the most damning for the Tigers is the last-quarter fade-outs.

When the heat has been piled on there are too many Tigers putting it in the too hard basket.
Richmond have led at three-quarter time in 14 of 17 matches this year and only have a record of 9-8 to show for it.

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/news/afl-2022-nine-reasons-fasttracking-the-encroaching-demise-of-the-tigers-empire/news-story/b3045928fc5e188a581248b62302e79c