This is a very interesting article that was written by one of the posters on "Yellow & Black Info" site (well done Chris
). It's been published on the RFC site this morning - I thought I'd post it here. It is a good read
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Richo confirms superstar status
9:20:30 AM Thu 14 April, 2005
Chris Riches
richmondfc.com.au
‘Richo’ kicked another four goals last Sunday. In fact, just a “lazy” 4.4 from 15 marks and 19 possessions – an effort which went a long way towards winning Richmond the match against the Western Bulldogs at Telstra Dome.
Matthew Richardson must seem like a recurring nightmare for Bulldogs’ fans, who, over the 13 seasons, have watched him jump, run and gallop all over various backmen wearing the red, white and blue.
Some of Richo’s best ever games have been against the boys from Whitten Oval – witness his 25-possession, 17-mark, two-goal extravaganza in a win over the Bulldogs in 2003, or his 11 marks and 6.5 in early 1997.
My personal favorite was his 8.1 in a loss in Round 1, 1994, where every one of his 10 marks seemed to involve him standing on someone’s shoulders. That remained his best ever goalkicking effort – until last year’s 10.3 virtually single-handedly delivered the Tigers what would be their last win in a dismal 2004 season.
In 15 games against the Bulldogs, Richo has kicked 52 goals at an average of almost three-and-a-half a game. He has averaged 14.6 possessions and just over 9.5 marks. In his last three games against them, Richo has averaged 5.3 goals, 15 marks and 20 touches.
Compare these to his career per-game averages of three goals, 13.4 possessions and 7.63 marks per game, and you can see why Bulldog fans must reckon Richo saves his best for them.
Matthew Richardson has now kicked 590 goals, and will reach 600 in the coming month if all goes well. In the entire history of VFL/AFL football, only 23 players have kicked 600 or more goals. And, only two of them are currently playing – Sav Rocca and Matthew Lloyd.
Richo’s marks per game average of 7.63 is higher than any other player in the top 20 marks in the AFL since 1993, which was his debut season. From ‘93 until the end of last season, he averaged more than half-a-mark per game better than Kangaroos star Wayne Carey averaged during the same period.
In fact, from when Richo started his career in 1993, until the end of the 2004 season, only Carey and Bulldog Chris Grant took more marks than him. Richo, however, played significantly fewer games in that period due to missing large chunks of two seasons with injury.
All this has been done in a side which has made the finals only twice in his career – in 1995 (when he was out injured) and 2001 – and while umpires watch dispassionately as defenders hold, hit, push, scratch and claw him in various desperate efforts to stop him dominating.
Add to this the fact that for most of his career teammates further afield have never been able to supply the football to him with any consistent skill or accuracy via foot, and that he has often been left one-out against two or three opponents, and it’s a wonder sometimes that he ever gets the ball.
Yet, despite these compelling statistics compiled in efforts for a mostly sub-par side, Richo still doesn’t get the plaudits from many football fans, or the football media. He is still an easy target – the dummy spits, the berating of teammates, dodgy kicking, dropping his lip – all get played up and highlighted by the media, opposition fans and even some Richmond supporters.
The term “flawed genius” is used when people talk about Richo, but more and more I wonder why he is damned with faint praise through the use of this phrase.
I mean, aren’t the vast majority of geniuses – like the majority of people in general – flawed in some way? Haven’t there been times where the great goalkicking geniuses of the AFL have made on-field errors?
Gary Ablett played in four Grand Finals, but showed his genius in only one. I’m pretty sure Daicos didn’t kick all those skidding, dribbling, impossible goals he attempted, nor I’m sure did any of the high-marking forwards of decades past take every grab they laid hands on. Even the seemingly infallible – guys like Lockett, Carey and Dunstall – missed easy goals and dropped chest marks during their time.
Is it that we edit our memories of these past greats, conveniently forgetting they were human on the field and not everything they touched turned to gold? Or is it that everyone highlights Richo’s negatives, simply because it’s easier to tear someone down rather than build them up? Maybe it’s a bit of both.
Richo has, for 13 years, played through continuous serious injuries in a largely sub-par side, weathering all those factors I’ve mentioned previously, to take more marks than anyone else in his era, and to be among the greatest of goalkickers in not only this era, but AFL history. In addition, he is a genuinely great bloke off the field – humble to the point of self-effacing, articulate and funny.
As Richo enters his 30s and nears his 200th game in his 13th season at Punt Road, the thought that he will one day, in the not-too-distant-future retire, starts playing on a Richmond supporter’s mind.
Unfortunately, Richo is going to get “old”, lose that leap, and that explosive first step. He may even lose that streak of “mad” genius and – shock horror - start playing the percentages to stay in the game.
Some day, Richmond will run out on the field without that reassuring figure of Richo in the forward line. And, that will be a sad day.
I wonder how we will replace him, this genius, who we’ve been blessed enough to watch since 1993?
The answer is that we may never replace him – or at least not see his like again for a long time.
So, maybe it’s time for a bit of revisionist history when it comes to Richo. Time for people to take a step back and appreciate this genius who wears number 12, who does the unbelievable every week – against the odds – and who bleeds Yellow and Black.
Maybe it’s time we dropped the idea of “Richo: Flawed Genius” and instead gave him the label he so richly deserves – “Richo: Tiger Superstar”.
The statistics quoted in this article were sourced from
http://stats.rleague.com/afl/afl_index.html.
Chris Riches
www.yellowandblack.infohttp://richmondfc.com.au/default.asp?pg=news&spg=display&articleid=196007