Hawthorn easily disposes of TigersBy Adam McNicol
10:00pm Fri 04 Mar, 2011HAWTHORN 3.5 8.10 10.13 12.17 (89)
RICHMOND 2.1 4.3 6.5 7.6 (48)
GOALS
Hawthorn: Osborne 3, Franklin 2, Roughead 2, Hale, Savage, Shiels, Young, Mitchell
Richmond: Vickery 2, Cotchin, Morton, Graham, Nahas, Miller
BEST
Hawthorn: Rioli, Osborne, Roughead, Hale, Mitchell, Cheney, Shiels
Richmond: Cotchin, Martin, Vickery, Conca, Graham, Foley
INJURIES
Hawthorn: Nil
Richmond: Farmer (ankle), McGuane (concussion)
Reports: Nil
Official crowd: 6,108 approx. at Deakin Reserve, Shepparton
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HAWTHORN has continued its impressive pre-season by easily accounting for Richmond by 41 points in a spirited NAB Challenge match in Shepparton on Friday night.
A crowd of 6,000 packed into Deakin Reserve and watched Hawks dynamo Cyril Rioli put on a superb show in the midfield.
Rioli more than ably filled in for missing teammates Luke Hodge, Chance Bateman, Shaun Burgoyne and Jordan Lewis as his team prevailed 12.17 (89) to 7.6 (48).
Hawthorn's Michael Osborne booted three goals, while Lance Franklin and Jarryd Roughead chipped in with two each.
Recruits David Hale, Cameron Bruce and Kyle Cheney were all impressive contributors for the Hawks. Hale booted a goal and took a number of strong marks up forward.
"In the last half, [Franklin and Roughead] were just rotating on and off," Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson explained after the final siren.
"Both of them weren't on the ground together at any stage. We tried Hale and [Brent] Renouf up forward a little bit more tonight. This period is really about trialling a few things and seeing how they go.
"Probably the most pleasing thing is when you get through these games reasonably unscathed.
"We didn't get any injuries, but we got a lot of good game-time into our players."
Trent Cotchin was clearly Richmond's best while the club's first pick in last year's NAB AFL Draft, Reece Conca, found plenty of the ball during stints in the middle of the ground.
Fresh from booting five goals against Port Adelaide last weekend, Tigers big man Tyrone Vickery bobbed up again with two majors, while former Carlton onballer Shaun Grigg gave his new team some grunt around the stoppages.
"I thought Ty was terrific - probably one of our better players again tonight," Richmond coach Damien Hardwick said.
"He looks damaging up forward, quite capable of taking a mark, and was composed at ground level as well."
Forgotten midfielder Nathan Foley, who has been sidelined for the best part of two years by a chronic ankle injury, was also a solid performer.
Brett Deledio spent time floating across half-back in his first game of the pre-season, but had little impact on the contest.
Another downside for Richmond was an ankle injury suffered by Mitch Farmer. The defender went down late in the first quarter, then aggravated the problem early in the next term and finished the game on crutches.
"We lost Mitch early then we lost Lukey McGuane with a little bit of concussion as well, which probably wasn't a great start for us," Hardwick said.
"But I'm pretty sure they'll both be fine for the next couple of weeks."
The Hawks dominated the opening stages of the match as the blustery conditions proved too much for Richmond to overcome.
It took the Tigers 12 minutes to record their first inside-50, and if not for Cotchin they would have trailed by far more than 10 points at the opening change.
Hardwick's team, which was missing reigning Coleman Medalist Jack Riewoldt and skipper Chris Newman, narrowed the margin to under a goal when Vickery started the second quarter with a strong mark and a straight kick.
However, Hawthorn pulled away thanks to the creative play of Osborne and Rioli and by half-time the difference had blown out to 31 points.
"[Rioli's] had a really good summer and a great block of training," Clarkson said. "Hopefully he can take some of that early season form into the early rounds."
The intensity dropped off in the second half, with Hawthorn looking in far superior shape than the Tigers as round one looms.
"We were really, really poor in the first half," Hardwick admitted. "I thought we were really, really flat.
"We gave them a slight bake at half-time and I think they came out and showed a little bit.
"We've got a bit of work to do. We gave the ball back far too easily at times."
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