Tigers search for rare gemsJon Ralph | August 28, 2009
RICHMOND's recruiting team has been told to scour the land for Australia's best mature-aged recruits in a bid to find the next Greg Broughton or Liam Anthony.
While Richmond will take an A-grade midfielder with its first selection in the national draft - probably pick No. 3 - the club is desperate to find inventive ways to replace players it will inevitably cull.
The Tigers would like to end the careers of as many as 12 players, but only 4-6 of the replacements will come via a national draft short on depth.
After the success of VFL recruit Robin Nahas from Port Melbourne, the club is investigating whether it can bring in players in the 19-21 age bracket who are flourishing in state-based competitions.
Broughton, 22 has been a rookie revelation for Fremantle, while Anthony, 21, has dominated in the midfield for North Melbourne.
Richmond is not interested in washed-up 25-year-olds, but rather players who can emerge and forge 10-year careers.
The club yesterday confirmed it was thinking left of centre, given the national draft is thin and picks over 50 will be highly speculative.
As reported in yesterday's Herald Sun, midfielder Brett Deledio is being keenly sought by rivals including Hawthorn, and was holding out while he assessed the club's direction.
While insiders privately worried about his leadership qualities early this year, Deledio has been a breathe of fresh air since the change of coach.
He is on around $300,000-$350,000 a season and after last season's best-and-fairest win and an expected strong finish this year, deserves a hefty pay rise.
While he will take up a chunk of the club's salary cap, the more critical issue is how Richmond fares tonight against West Coast at Subiaco Oval.
The Tigers cannot afford to win.
They has pick No. 3, and given Fremantle will probably lose to Geelong tomorrow, they would likely forfeit it if they beat West Coast and leapfrog the Dockers.
In this year's draft there are three dominant midfielders - Victoria's Tom Scully, South Australia's Jack Trengove and West Australia's Anthony Morabito.
Given Melbourne - with picks one and two - will probably take two of those players, Richmond must be in a position to snare the third.
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