Tigers maul diluted Dons
By Dan Oakes
Morwell
The Age
February 27, 2005
RICHMOND 8.6 11.10 18.13 20.18 (138)
ESSENDON 2.2 4.4 5.4 10.6 (66)
BEST Richmond: Richardson, Tuck, Brown, Gaspar, Knobel, Rodan.
INJURIES: Richmond: Rodan (knee).
CROWD: About 12,000 at Morwell.
It was only a practice game and against an Essendon team shorn of 18 first-team regulars, but Richmond coach Terry Wallace was not taking the trip down the Princes Highway to Morwell lightly.
He named a full-strength team and his players responded magnificently, thrashing the Bombers by 72 points on a billiard table-smooth ground in front of 10,000 people.
The win came at a cost, though, with battling onballer David Rodan helped from the ground in the last quarter with a knee injury. The Tiger was walking unaided after the match but will have scans on his right knee today for ligament damage.
Richmond's Joel Bowden missed the game with a rib injury.
The inexperienced Bombers were not awful but, spurred on by a rejuvenated Matthew Richardson, the Tigers were too skilful, too physical and too committed.
With the Terry Wallace train gathering steam, no one wants to be left at the station. Most encouraging for the Tigers was the link play between Richardson, Nathan Brown and Troy Simmonds. Between them, they kicked nine of Richmond's goals but they were just as impressive around the the 50-metre arc.
Richardson, in particular, often criticised in the past for his work ethic and attitude, revelled in bringing his teammates into the game, demonstrating he can be the source of hope as well as frustration for Tigers fans.
His day was summed up at the start of the third quarter when he reached the ball on the boundary line 70 metres from the Richmond goal and kept it in play under pressure. Rodan did some good in-and-under work and fed the ball back to Richardson, who set Brown up to goal from directly in front. Richardson ran straight to Rodan to congratulate him.
The Tiger defenders, particularly Darren Gaspar and Mark Graham, were solid against Essendon's pop-gun attack. Their only lapse came early in the final quarter, when the Bombers kicked five unanswered goals for a semblance of respectability.
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