Ray of hope at TigerlandBy JIM MAIN
Inside FootballWipe away the tears, Tiger fans. Yes, you are likely to drown in a sea of sorrow this year, but there is hope, be it ever so slight.
On what the football world saw against Carlton last Friday night, it would not be stretching the imagination to suggest that Richmond might not win a game this season.
It sometimes is necessary to be cruel to be kind but, in Richmond’s case, it is difficult to know where to start in listing the Tigers’ faults and limitations.
The simple and inescapable truth is that the Tigers have the most undermanned (read “worst”) list in the competition, even if they do have future stars in Trent Cotchin, Brett Deledio and newcomer Dustin Martin.
Richmond also has the big-hearted Daniel Jackson, the energetic Jack Riewoldt and the dangerous Mitch Morton. Otherwise, the cupboard is about as bare as Mother Hubbard’s.
To start with, the club does not have a ruckman worth a knob of goat droppings. Yes, Tyrone Vickery has youth on his side, but he has a long way to go, and Carlton toyed with the Tiger rucks.
It was sad for Tiger fans to count the number of time Robert Warnock and Matthew Kreuzer had no opposition – literally – in many ruck contests. Unforgiveable!
Tiger fans could be forgiven for thinking that the days of a big, lumbering ruckman who could not keep up with the play were gone. Apparently not, however.
Elsewhere – and this is sad to note – the Tigers have several players who look out of their depth at the elite level and others who appear to be going through the motions.
A quick glance through the list of players who could not make the Tiger side for the opening round makes sorry reading as there is little left in the tank.
Jayden Post and Alex Rance are promising, and it seems the only other rucks option are Graham Polak and Angus Graham.
This might sound like a fearful bake of Richmond and new coach Damien Hardwick, but that is not my intention.
Rather, it is a comment on the sad mismanagement of the Tiger list over the past few years when, surprisingly, the usually ferocious Richmond faithful sat on their hands after being fed great dollops of spin.
A premiership window in 2011? Who was kidding whom? Did Terry really believe that himself? And the chickens – if not the chicken pooh usually dumped at Punt Road in times of despair – has come home to roost, with Richmond in a terrible pickle.
Hardwick has the toughest job in football, but he accepted it knowing the reality of his task and will not make excuses.
He has said the Tigers will infuriate and excite in equal measure because he is rebuilding the list, the side and its style of play.
But, before he does anything else, he has to do something about the appalling lack of skill at Tigerland. How did senior players get to develop such bad habits that they couldn’t hit a barn with a bazooka from five paces?
Tiger fans know the answer to that. But Hardwick and the Tiger hierarchy now have to clean up the mess.
And they will!
The reference earlier in this column on “hope” was not a snide reference of the old cliché about the light at the end of the tunnel being the train coming the other way.
No, the word “hope” was used in the genuine context of Richmond now having everything in place to rectify years of sad disillusionment.
New CEO Brendon Gale knows what he is about, is passionate about lifting the Tigers and is a career achiever. He will get the job done, or else.
Hardwick has made a great impression, even if his team has been unable to translate this into action because of a lack of talent.
The Tigers are on the right track but, unfortunately, those tracks might lead nowhere through no fault of Gale, Hardwick or anyone else at Tigerland.
I am referring now to the admission of the Gold Coast next season, which means the lower AFL clubs this year will find it very difficult to build their depth because of the wealth of young talent flowing north.
St Kilda, Carlton and, to a lesser extent, Melbourne have been able to build their lists over the past decade through early and concession draft picks.
Richmond will not have this luxury so most of the improvement necessary to climb the ladder will have to come from within.
The Tigers will have to retain the likes of Deledio, Cotchin and Martin and draft with remarkable insight to get anywhere near their stated aim of three of the next 10 premierships.
The Tiger faithful have to stick fast more than ever and put the (frankly) bulldust era behind them.
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