The also-ransBy Leigh Matthews
Tue 22 Mar, 2011ALTHOUGH every media outlet asks its commentators to make pre-season predictions, I'm not going to try and have a stab at where each club will finish in 2011. That's for the clairvoyants. It's slightly educated guesswork at best.
Today I'll start with the three teams who I cannot see have any chance of winning the 11 games necessary to play finals - Gold Coast, West Coast and Richmond.
RichmondRichmond had a reasonable mid-season spell in Damien Hardwick's 2010 debut season when they went 6-3 after a 0-9 start and before an 0-4 finish.
This was built largely on the back of Jack Riewoldt's emergence as a high-class full-forward but as good as he was, the Tigers' reliance on the young Tasmanian to kick 78 of their 246 goals (32 per cent) was unhealthy. This situation had too much of the unsuccessful Fevola at Carlton look - a terrific forward but few wins.
For Richmond to push up out of the bottom four this year Trent Cotchin, pick two in the 2007 NAB AFL Draft and now going into his fourth year, needs to find another gear. He's shown glimpses but must develop the hard running to get involved in the play more often.
The Tigers fielded 12 debutants last year in a continued search for quality talent, with Dustin Martin a standout in his first year. A big positive could be the return from injury of high quality mid-fielder Nathan Foley, who played only four games last year.
The draw has been quite kind to them. The Tigers don't play any of the top four from last year twice, although this is offset a bit by the fact that they play only one of the 2010 bottom group twice, the Brisbane Lions.
The irreplaceable must be Riewoldt, although a repeat of his 2010 season is the best that can be expected, and the big improver, if not Cotchin might be Daniel Connors, who as a ball carrier off half-back looks to have the raw talent if he can learn to consistently apply himself to his footy.
But overall there is no logical reason to think that Richmond can make significant improvement, and that target of 11 wins for a finals berth looks well beyond the Tigers.
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