Richmond's talls feast on takeaways
Emma Quayle
The Age
August 21, 2006
RICHMOND 4.3 13.5 16.13 21.14 (140)
CARLTON 5.2 8.6 13.7 14.11 (95)
Goals:
Richmond: G Stafford 4 A Krakouer 3 M Richardson 3 K Pettifer 2 J Schulz 2 G Tivendale 2 B Deledio N Foley A Raines T Simmonds S Tuck.
Carlton: B Fevola 3 J Waite 2 L Whitnall 2 A Bentick E Betts C Bryan B French R Houlihan A Koutoufides A Walker.
Best:
Richmond: A Raines K Johnson B Deledio P Bowden J Bowden G Stafford.
Carlton: A Koutoufides L Whitnall A Walker B French.
Injuries: Richmond: G Tivendale (ankle). Carlton: S Wiggins (concussion).
Reports: S Wiggins (Carlton) reported by field umpire M Ellis for charging B Deledio (Richmond) in the fourth quarter.
Umpires: S Grun M Ellis C Hendrie.
Official Crowd: 37,094 at Telstra Dome.
TERRY Wallace was not entirely happy when he gathered the Richmond players together at three-quarter-time against Carlton at Telstra Dome yesterday.
The Tigers had started their afternoon desperate to match what they did last season — notch their 10th win, but this time with a younger, more future-driven side.
They had let Carlton take most of the ruck knocks, but thrashed the Blues when the ball came to ground, and carried the ball from half-back with relentless, "take-me-on" runs.
They had scored 16 goals, largely though a gigantic forward line that not only kept Lance Whitnall occupied, but let those Richmond runners kick long, and keep things simple.
They were also four goals up, but Wallace wasn't satisfied. The Blues had scrounged their way back, and he also wanted his side to keep making things happen, and not punish themselves for some missed chances, hurried snaps and occasional selfish acts.
"We thought in the third quarter we wasted opportunities. We were a little selfish in a couple of our actions with the footy, not centreing the ball and trying to kick goals from the boundary line," he said.
"We were four goals in front, so it was either going to be a little bit of panic stations, or be strong and confident enough to run the game out and do what you needed to do. I was pleased with the way they handled that."
The Tigers began to load their forward line early, sitting Troy Simmonds deep and alongside not only Matthew Richardson, but Jay Schulz and Greg Stafford.
It was Carlton, though, that made the quick start, partly through those players' opponents. Whitnall scored the first of the Blues' goals, then got the ball to Barnaby French for another, before Andrew Walker sneaked down and kept his side two kicks clear.
Richmond could have levelled the scores on the quarter-time siren had Richardson's shot not wobbled wide, but Stafford scored in the first minute of the next term, and the Tigers were away.
It began in the centre square, where the Blues got first touch, but watched Nathan Foley, Chris Hyde, Dean Polo and Shane Tuck gobble it up hungrily. Kane Johnson sat on Nick Stevens, and the Tigers scored three of their six straight goals from centre takeaways.
When the Blues got to half-forward, they either poked optimistic passes towards Brendan Fevola and his two or three opponents, or watched it get zoomed away by Brett Deledio, Matt White, Andrew Raines and others.
Carlton got better when Anthony Koutoufides and Heath Scotland clogged things up in the middle, and when Andrew Walker left Kayne Pettifer and moved to Deledio, denting some of his dash and providing one of the game's more entertaining duels.
The Blues needed Fevola to score twice from outside the 50-metre line to keep in touch at the big break but, while their goals arrived more easily in the third term, they came only after Richmond had raced away.
It wasn't only that Richardson and Stafford, who kicked three and four goals respectively, were worthwhile targets; when the ball fell to their feet, Andrew Krakouer and Richard Tambling ducked through their legs and created second and third scoring chances.
The Blues should have been gone, but weren't. Whitnall scored again, and a nimble Jarrad Waite roved a goal-square ball for another. From the bounce, the Blues rushed forward, the ball slipped through Chris Bryan's hands and was sharked by Koutoufides, who scored.
Wallace's three-quarter-time words must have worked, because the Tigers started strongly, goaling three times in the first nine minutes to kill off any chance of a third Carlton resurgence and satisfy their coach.
"I was really pleased that they were determined to have a nice, solid win," Wallace said.
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