Richmond skipper Trent Cotchin says excellent contested ball work gives club hope going forwardGlenn McFarlane
Herald-Sun
July 27, 2014 IT’S been Richmond’s Achilles heel for much of the season, but Trent Cotchin believes the stat that has caused so much internal angst is the thing that gives him the most hope going forward.
The Tigers controlled the contested possession count at Pattersons Stadium on Friday night, and that was the elixir of their 17-point win over West Coast.
Cotchin said the differential of almost 30 in terms of contested possessions between the two teams made coach Damien Hardwick, who has endured a long and frustrating season, as happy as he has been all year.
“He was pretty proud of the way we went about it,” Cotchin told SEN. “We obviously won the contested possessions by plus 30-odd (it was actually 28), which was really important, especially in those conditions.
“That is something we base our game around. To win it (contested possession count) gets the score on the board for us.
“And in the end, with the scoring shots we had, we should have won by a couple more (goals).”
In many ways, contested possessions have been dirty words around Punt Rd for a fair chunk of this season.
Just 12 months ago the Tigers were sailing along towards a finals appearance off the back of their hard work around the contests, and that was the trademark that their coach wanted them to live — or die — by.
Overall, the Tigers were ranked 3rd in the AFL in 2013 in terms of the contested possession differential — at plus 7.7.
But just as we thought Cotchin and his teammates would head back for another finals appearance, the contested possession count collapsed in the first half of the season, and with it went the Tigers’ own finals hopes — not to mention the confidence of the group.
They slumped to 14th overall in the measurement in the first half of the season before Hardwick rammed home the importance of a second half of the home-and-away fixture that was dedicated to winning that count more often than not.
And that’s what’s happened since Round 13, with Richmond once more pushing themselves to third in the AFL in that measurement, and that’s why the Tigers have been able to turn a lamentable season into one that is reaping a few small gains in the back end.
“The thing that has been encouraging inside our four walls is that we want to the hunters, not the hunted,” Cotchin said.
“You can only start that with intensity from the get-go, and once you have set that standard the precedent is set for the game.”
Cotchin said it was hard to put his finger on why the Tigers had failed to get out of the blocks for much of the early part of the season.
But he is confident what the club is doing now will stand it in good stead as it gears up to chase more scalps in the last five games of the season.
“There were just moments in games (early in the season) where we let ourselves down,” he said. “I think we have come back with a little bit more of a steely resolve.
“The challenge for us is to take that bar to a new level for the rest of the season and carry that into the pre-season, so that we do start better than we did this year.”
http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/richmond-skipper-trent-cotchin-says-excellent-contested-ball-work-gives-club-hope-going-forward/story-fndv8t7m-1227002587717