After clawing Cats, Tigers ready to roarMatt Murnane
The Age
March 12, 2012RICHMOND coach Damien Hardwick said yesterday his team is better placed than at any other time during his tenure to attack its difficult early draw and overcome its round-one hoodoo against Carlton.
Hardwick said Saturday's win against reigning premier Geelong was a step in the right direction and that the players are more confident about testing themselves against the Blues and other premiership-contending teams in the first five rounds.
The Tigers will be aiming to beat Carlton for the first time in round one since 2008 when the arch-rivals meet at the MCG on March 29, beginning a season-shaping stretch that includes games against Collingwood, Geelong and West Coast.
''We're very much looking forward to the first five rounds. Whatever will happen, will happen, but we're a lot more confident this time this year, than we have been the three years previous,'' Hardwick told a big gathering at yesterday's family day.
''You only have to look at the depth of our players, the quality of our players, I think they've improved enormously from a development point of view - from a size and a physicality point of view.
''Our first two years was all about transforming the list. We had a pretty solid aim of getting 500 games into those under-23 and unders.
''But now is when it does heat up, there's no doubt about that.''
The popular opinion among 8000 Tigers supporters at Punt Road yesterday was that if Richmond can beat Geelong by 10 goals, albeit in the NAB Cup, then finally upstaging the Blues on opening night of the real season should be the achievable next step.
That the Blues have stumbled through the NAB Cup, in terms of results, has no bearing on how confident the Tigers are about knocking off their arch rivals, veteran Brad Miller added yesterday.
Carlton is the only team yet to win a game in the NAB Cup and, while the pre-season has uncovered the quality of its depth at both ends of the ground, the Blues have a few injury concerns and key players still needing more game time heading into round one.
The Tigers, in the meantime, have beaten Hawthorn and Geelong in the NAB Cup and had nearly all of its stars fit and in good form, including Trent Cotchin, Dustin Martin and Jack Riewoldt, while recruits Ivan Maric and Steven Morris as well as draftee 2011 Brandon Ellis, could all have an impact.
More importantly, it is the way the Tigers steamrolled the Cats on Saturday that Hardwick wants to take into round one.
The Tigers beat Geelong in the clearances, both at centre bounces (16-9) and overall (32-21), and its revamped defensive structure limited the undermanned Cats to six goals.
''We've worked on a lot of things over the course of the summer and a lot of those things came to fruition yesterday,'' Hardwick said of the 59-point win over Geelong. ''Our defensive formation was good behind the ball, our centre bounce and clearance work was a lot better.
''It is a small step, we still realise that we've got a hell of a long way to go. But if we can keep taking those steps, it will get us back to where we need to belong.''
Expectations surrounding Richmond were underscored by yesterday's huge turnout and president Gary March revealed the club was on track to reach 50,000 members this season - having already passed the 40,000 mark.
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