Saints are hot
30 July 2006 Sunday Herald Sun
Rod Nicholson
AFTER a fortnight of nail-biting anxiety and lucky wins against Essendon and Port Adelaide, St Kilda fans yesterday relaxed, cheered and drooled as their warriors went on a warpath.
The Saints went on a spree of huge dimensions against a devastated Richmond combination.
They piled on a club record score against their opponents, a record goal-kicking spree by full-forward Fraser Gehrig and a percentage-boosting 103-point win that may yet land a top-four finals spot.
In an avalanche of goals, the Saints kicked 27.12 (174), beating the 165-point highest score against the Tigers, at Moorabbin in 1972.
Gehrig was the main contributor with 10 goals, thereby becoming the first Saint to kick double figures against Richmond.
And, most importantly, the massive victory catapulted its percentage well above Collingwood and into third place on the ladder overnight.
The Saints have won - although not handsomely in recent weeks - all five matches since the break and are in shape to tackle West Coast at Telstra Dome on Friday to lay genuine claims to a premiership challenge.
They were slick yesterday after a few early inaccuracies. They kicked 2.5 by the 20-minute mark of the opening term and then three consecutive goals to finish the quarter.
They then enjoyed their best second term against the Tigers with 9.1 and followed that with another nine straight. A final term fall away of 4.6 hardly mattered.
The reasons for the onslaught were double edged: the Saints played crisp and direct football, and the Tigers were cruelled by injuries and are a shadow of the team that threatened finals footy a month ago.
The writing was on the wall when Jason Gram, playing on a half-back flank, dashed forward in the opening term for three goals from five shots.
When Gehrig took control in the second term, kicking five goals, any suggestion of a contest was over with the margin already 47 points. Leigh Montagna was outstanding with 34 disposals and three goals. He had great support from Luke Ball (29 disposals).
Nick Riewoldt was a handful and he was one of the players who made life so easy for Gehrig, who was rarely challenged on the lead or standing his ground in the goalsquare.
The Saints' only concern was a blow to Brendon Goddard, who was shirt-fronted by Greg Stafford during the second term. But he returned after half-time and finished with 22 disposals, eight marks and two goals.
Richmond was pitiful but, to be fair, it had no chance before the opening bounce.
It lost key defenders Darren Gaspar (knee) and Andrew Kellaway (hamstring) as well as elusive forward Andrew Krakouer (finger) from the selected team.
Worse, Nathan Brown hurt his hamstring taking an easy chest mark at the 12-minute mark of the second term and limped off. His season is now in jeopardy. And forward Jay Schulz, who kicked two goals in the opening term, also hurt an ankle to further blunt the attack.
The good news for Richmond was the continued improvement of Matthew Richardson, who has a broken finger and sorely needs quality time on the field. He kicked four goals and showed signs of the benefits of match time.
Young Brett Deledio tried hard, as did Andrew Raines, while Stafford did well in the ruck with 18 hitouts and 15 disposals.
But the Tigers were training session obstacles for the Saints, who ruthlessly slipped into top gear.
Gram, a long and accurate kick, caused havoc running off the half-back and finished with four goals, 29 disposals and nine marks.
He took the ball inside the team's 50m arc a staggering nine times for a defender, as did the elusive Montagna.
A pleasing aspect for coach Grant Thomas was that 10 players shared in the goal feast, despite Gehrig kicking 10.
While St Kilda's attack was the attraction, the defence was also solid and aggressive. Sam Fisher is in the best form of his career, while Stephen Powell and Matt Maguire were tough and innovative.
Too few opportunities came the Tigers' way, and too often they were wasted. Richard Tambling managed only 1.4 and needs to convert to justify his task.
This was a day to savour for Saint supporters, but the day Richmond fans conceded an end to this year's finals.
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