Gritty win a boost for Richmond
Martin Boulton | June 14, 2009
RICHMOND showed glimpses last night of what could be achieved in the second half of the year with a gritty 15-point win against West Coast at Etihad Stadium.
In caretaker coach Jade Rawling's first game, the Tigers played with confidence and dash, with former Eagles star Ben Cousins collecting 28 touches in his best game since arriving at Punt Road.
Cousins shone in his 244th game, while top-10 picks Tyrone Vickery and Nick Naitanui were unveiled for the Tigers and West Coast respectively.
Eagles forward Josh Kennedy kept his side in the contest with four crucial goals, including three in the second term, but the Tigers were desperate to chalk up a win and breathe life into the rest of the season.
On last night's evidence the past few days had a profound impact on the players.
The Tigers dominated the opening stages and had 14 possessions before West Coast even touched the football.
Mitch Morton kicked three goals and had six marks in the first term, while Brett Deledio had five marks and a goal at the first break.
Richmond went into quarter-time with 41 more disposals, 25 more marks and nine more tackles than the Eagles, who within minutes looked like returning home with their 17th consecutive loss away from Subiaco.
Rawlings' first game started well, but the stand-out statistic was the 14 disposals Richard Tambling accumulated in the first term.
The much-maligned 22-year-old started forward, pushed into defence and sprinted up the wings, picking up touches and using the ball cleanly.
His teammates played the early stages with confidence, desperate to shake off the disappointment of 11 miserable weeks.
Will Thursfield was an early casualty after clashing heads with Eagle Mitch Brown. The Tigers defender was helped from the ground by two trainers and looked likely to remember little of the club's third win this year.
Naitanui, the highly rated No. 2 pick, started on the bench in his debut and jogged to centre half-forward 11 minutes into the game. The 19-year-old, wearing the No. 9 jumper previously worn by Cousins, misjudged his first marking attempt, but used the ball cleverly and took a screamer in the goal square in the final quarter.
At the other end, Vickery, in Tiger legend Kevin Bartlett's old No. 29, had five disposals by half-time and kicked his first goal in the third term. Vickery is 27 days younger than Naitanui and their arrival last night heralded new beginnings at both clubs.
In his sixth game this year Cousins started on a wing. The 2005 Brownlow medallist has averaged 23 disposals over the past month and quickly set about building his numbers. His first quarter laid the foundation and his influence grew as the match unfolded.
In just his 15th game Scott Selwood started on Cousins and worked hard to limit his impact.
By contrast former midfield mate Daniel Kerr, back for the Eagles after a one-match suspension, had little impact and looked frustrated.
The Tigers opened a 19-point lead with Morton's second goal before Kennedy's first goal cut the margin back to 14 points. A four-goal lead at the first break could have been greater if Richmond was more accurate — Deledio and Morton both missing set shots before Morton kicked his third goal for the term.
Just before the quarter-time siren sounded, Rawlings strode purposefully to the boundary line, where he met Cousins and back-up ruckman Adam Pattison. Spirits were high, the signs were all good, but it was "old" Richmond that turned up in the second quarter. The clean delivery by hand and foot dropped away as the Eagles tightened up. Kennedy was strong overhead and showed good composure in front of goal.
Matt Priddis' eight disposals (and 33 for the game) kept West Coast in striking distance, but in the final term Richmond's determination was enough to fend off the challenge and it heads to the break with a morale-boosting win.
RICHMOND 5.6 8.8 10.12 13.14 (92)
WEST COAST 2.0 6.2 9.7 11.11 (77)
GOALS Richmond: Morton 5, Edwards 2, Hislop 2, Graham, Deledio, Riewoldt, Vickery. West Coast: Kennedy 4, LeCras 3, Selwood, Brown, Priddis, Rosa.
BEST Richmond: Foley, Tambling, Cousins, Morton, Deledio, Tuck, McGuane, Hislop. West Coast: Priddis, Kennedy, Masten, Wirrpanda, LeCras, A Selwood.
INJURIES Richmond: Thursfield (concussion).
UMPIRES Jeffery, M Nicholls, Margetts.
CROWD 30,197 at Etihad Stadium.
MAIN MENRichard Tambling's 14 disposals in the first term would have given caretaker coach Jade Rawlings, the fans at the ground and the player enormous satisfaction after months and years of talk outside the club about his ability. Former Carlton forward Josh Kennedy kicked three crucial goals in the second term when the Eagles desperately needed a target up forward.
TURNING POINTTen minutes into the first term the Tigers led by 19 points, Tambling had already had six touches, Ben Cousins was dominating the midfield and the fans were ready to start singing the song. The Eagles fought back bravely, but it was those opening 10 minutes that set the stage for victory.
THE UPSHOTRawlings emerges from his first test with a valuable win under his belt and two weeks to plan for one of the toughest assignments in football — the undefeated Saints. The Eagles head home with 17 consecutive losses on the road, but at least play reigning premier Hawthorn at Subiaco next.
THE REACTION"The most pleasing thing for me was we were challenged a couple of times, particularly in the second half, and we were able to react. I thought we looked a bit shaky in the third quarter and at three-quarter-time we said to the players we need to score. We weren't going to hang on to the game because they (West Coast) were coming with a rush." JADE RAWLINGS (Richmond)
"We didn't get our hands on the ball early. They thrashed us at stoppages. We've been pretty good in that area." JOHN WORSFOLD (West Coast)
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