Richmond has set an unwanted record for poor tackling as coach Damien Hardwick laments defensive woesThe Tigers slumped to 11th spot with their loss to Adelaide and they have a defensive problem that coach Damien Hardwick needs to fix.
Marc McGowan
HeraldSun
April 20, 2022 Richmond is making history for all the wrong reasons as it tries to return to the finals and prove last year’s tumble was an aberration.
The Tigers’ failure to capitalise after hitting the front in the third quarter against Adelaide owed to their leaky defence right across the ground, as coach Damien Hardwick pointed out afterwards.
Veteran recruit Robbie Tarrant and co’s job wasn’t made easy with the lack of pressure further afield, with Richmond’s tackle efficiency of 49.6 per cent the worst ever recorded through five rounds.
That alarming number is one of a series of key metrics the Tigers thrived in during their premiership golden era but that are now the reason why they are slumming it in 11th spot.
Nick Vlastuin (hamstring) made his first appearance of the season against the Crows but co-captain and fellow defender Dylan Grimes (hamstring) remains at least a fortnight away.
Four-gamer Ben Miller is playing in Grimes’ absence, while fellow young footballers Hugo Ralphsmith, Daniel Rioli and Josh Gibcus have also had significant responsibility down back in 2022.
Hardwick lamented Richmond giving up 10 goals from stoppage, saying his side had been “consistently poor” in that area this season and that “a combination of factors” was to blame.
“We’ve got to get better at contest behind the ball and in and around contest,” he said.
“Giving up 10 goals from stoppages is really, really poor ... we should be able to defend those better, especially when we’ve got a plus-one at most stages down there.
“I thought we got out-bustled down there. (Taylor) Walker and (Elliott) Himmelberg looked big and strong and we just couldn’t quite get the ball to ground.
“Some of that was on their direct opponents, but some of it was pressure up the ground.”
The Tigers traded for Tarrant to shore up their backline after David Astbury’s retirement last year but his 14 goals conceded are the third-most by any key defender.
Max King got hold of the former Roo in Richmond’s second-half collapse against St Kilda, while Adelaide’s Walker booted four goals on him in the 97 minutes they were direct opponents.
Only six teams have coughed up more goals to key forwards this season than Hardwick’s Tigers.
“Your defenders are vulnerable at various stages if they get the ball out, but we just managed to lose contest or give away free kicks,” Hardwick said.
“We gave away some ‘too highs’ and some sloppy stuff, so we have to get that part of our game better.”
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