Tigers push way into the eight Brad Elborough, Perth
The Age
June 4, 2013 RICHMOND 2.3 8.4 14.5 16.7 (103)
WEST COAST 3.3 3.6 5.9 8.14 (62)
GOALS
Richmond: Vlastuin 3, Newman 2, Riewoldt 2, Edwards 2, Vickery 2, Edwards, Jackson, Martin, King, White.
West Coast: Kennedy 3, Hill 2, Kerr, Darling, S. Selwood.
BEST
Richmond: Jackson, Vlastuin, Deledio, Grigg, Chaplin, Morris.
West Coast: S Selwood, Shuey, Naitanui, Masten, Cox, Priddis.
INJURIES
Richmond: King (leg), Edwards (eye).
West Coast: Brown (eye).
CROWD 37,781, at Patersons Stadium.
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The roller-coaster ride that comes with being a Richmond supporter in the modern era continued on Monday night when it produced its best performance this season to beat West Coast by 41 points.
The Tigers have struggled against teams in the eight this season, but produced a brilliant effort to win.
The continued emergence of rising star Nick Vlastuin would have those same people even more excited about the future.
The youngster booted three goals, including two in the second term, to help get his side going after the Tigers trailed by six points at quarter-time.
That Eagles' lead was due mainly to a one-sided hitout count in the home side's favour. With Nic Naitanui and Dean Cox working well in tandem, they led Ivan Maric 26-8 in getting their hands on the ball first.
Although that dominance continued for the entire game (81-27 to the Eagles), the Tigers managed to take advantage of it after the first break.
It wasn't Daniel Kerr, Luke Shuey or Matt Priddis getting their hands on the ball off the back of Naitanui and Cox's work. It was Richmond's Brett Deledio, Shaun Grigg and Shane Edwards.
The Tigers knew they weren't going to win the hitouts, so played smart football and manned up on their opponents.
The Tigers had averaged 51 tackles a game before round nine, yet had reached that number with two minutes to go in the third term on Monday night.
That work-rate and pressure was evident across the ground.
In defence, uncontested marks that the Eagles forwards were able to take in the opening term, particularly Josh Kennedy, dried up.
The Eagles went inside their attacking 50-metre zone 12 times in the second term and were kept goalless. They went in 15 times in the opening term for 3.3.
Troy Chaplin led the Tiger defence, while at the other end, Jack Riewoldt made his presence felt despite a quiet first quarter.
After a bye next week, Richmond has a six-week period where it can set up a legitimate run at a finals campaign.
The Tigers host Adelaide in Melbourne, before playing the Western Bulldogs, St Kilda, North Melbourne and the Gold Coast, before Fremantle heads to the MCG in round 17. Four wins out of that lot, added to the six they have, and September action is a possibility.
The run home is a bit tougher, with games against Sydney, Hawthorn, Carlton and Essendon, but they would back themselves to claim the points against Brisbane Lions (round 20) and GWS (round 22).
For West Coast, a win over St Kilda next week is essential. If it can't win at home, it has to start to find a way to win on the road.
The Eagles have now lost four games from six contests at Patersons Stadium, a ground that has been considered a fortress in previous years.
In the first term, it looked as though the Eagles were going to continue the form that had brought them consecutive wins over the Western Bulldogs, Brisbane Lions, North Melbourne and GWS.
But after the initial 15 minutes of dominance, the Tigers took control around the ground and shut off all avenues to goal.
West Coast was hapless to stop the Richmond midfield.
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