Brown gives Tigers hope
Garry Lyon | June 10, 2008 12:00am
THERE has not been much for Richmond fans to be excited about recently.
Two wooden spoons in the past four years and, despite early-season optimism, the Tigers have managed just three wins this year.
Mind you, Trent Cotchin may anaesthetise some of the pain from last year's dismal showing. The kid is a gilt-edged beauty.
At the other end of the age spectrum, there has been a quiet metamorphosis taking place that could sustain the Tiger faithful while they wait for elusive, enduring team success.
Nathan Brown has enjoyed his best six weeks since breaking his leg in the middle of 2005. It has been a long road back for the man who, at the time of his injury, was arguably the competition's most skilful.
His move from the Western Bulldogs to Punt Rd was always going to be controversial.
His reunion with coach Terry Wallace, who departed in somewhat acrimonious circumstances from Whitten Oval, was enough to rile the Doggies faithful.
Bulldogs fans thought Brown had deserted them; the Dogs had finished on the bottom of the ladder in 2003 and then had to endure their star heading to, of all clubs, Richmond, coached by the man who left them with a game to go in 2002.
But it didn't always promise to be this way.
The union between Wallace and Brown looked set for a "happily ever after" finish halfway through 2005. After nine rounds, the Tigers had won seven games and were third.
They had just beaten the Brisbane Lions at the Gabba for the first time in five years, had defeated premier Port Adelaide by 56 points and enjoyed successive wins against Carlton and Collingwood by a combined 120 points.
Life didn't get much better as a Tiger fan.
Leading the charge was Brown, who had kicked 34 goals that year, was in career-best form and, along with Matthew Richardson, who had 28 goals, looked certain to drive the Tigers deep into September.
The next week, Brown broke his leg; the Tigers lost 10 of their last 13 games, finished 12th and have not been nearly as imposing since.
Understandably, neither has Brown. He battled through 10 games in 2006 and 11 last year, and while there were flashes of brilliance, they were punctuated with long stints on the sideline.
For those who know Brown well, his frustration was obvious and enormous.
Playing with limitations and reduced to scrounging for kicks was like throwing a prince on the streets and making him beg for food.
Brown turned 30 in February. If his body and his previous couple of years weren't telling him it was time to turn it back on, then any birthday starting with a "3" certainly was.
While his career was not at the crossroads, his standing as an elite performer was.
The good news for Richmond fans, Wallace and, no doubt, Brown, is that the wheel has started to turn.
It hasn't come in large bags of goals, freakishly manufactured from the boundary or over his head.
He has enjoyed a stellar six weeks because of, one suspects, a greater fitness base, renewed faith in his body, a chance to push into the midfield, and a willingness to incorporate a more accountable, defensive side to his game.
He averages 24 disposals a game - greater than at any stage of his career. And while modern-game touches are not as hard to gather as they once were, it is significant that he has won more contested ball than he has since he broke his leg.
And while some clubs are prepared to concede uncontested possessions to opponents who tend to turn over the footy, Brown doesn't fit into that category.
Wallace has pushed Brown into the middle because he is the Tigers' best decision-maker and one of their best ball users.
His disposal efficiency is 75 per cent - compared with a career-high 86 - but the move is essential in light of 55 team clangers against Adelaide on Saturday.
Brown's defence has also improved. It is not too harsh to suggest he previously hadn't embraced tackling and chasing as essentials.
But 15 tackles in the past month, committed chasing and covering for teammates, and a willingness to encourage and support, rather than berate and brood, all indicate a change in mindset.
Often it takes the realisation that the end is near - and the possibility of an unfulfilled career - to push a player to a new level.
Brown has taken steps to ensure he doesn't leave the game with the reputation of a prodigious talent, struck down in his prime, unable to scale the heights that once appeared his destiny.
Hopefully he can inspire others in his team out of the realms of mediocrity. It is one thing to arrest an individual slide, but another to motivate others to join you.
He will have willing lieutenants in Cotchin, Nathan Foley, Brett Deledio and Will Thursfield, but can the rest of the Tigers jump on board?
It's not impossible.
The Bulldogs finished last in '03, passed the spoon to the Tigers the following year and are now a premiership chance.
Don't think that irony has been lost on anyone.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,23838468-19742,00.html