Three straight wins for Tigers
4:50:55 PM Sun 17 April, 2005
Paul Gough
Exclusive to afl.com.au
The sleeping giant of the AFL is beginning to awake.
Richmond, last year's wooden spooner which only recently ended a club record 15-match losing streak, has suddenly won three matches in a row after Sunday's 14.16 (100) to 7.10 (52) demolition of a disappointing Fremantle at a windswept MCG - the highlight of which was a six-goal-to-nil third term.
And the Tigers now find themselves in the lofty heights of fifth place on the AFL ladder with only one less win already than they managed for the whole of 2004.
The Tigers might have beaten Hawthorn and the Western Bulldogs in the past fortnight but there were still plenty of skeptics about whether or not Richmond had actually improved ahead of Sunday's meeting with the Dockers.
After all the Tigers had only beaten the two teams that finished immediately above them on the ladder last season and had won both games in close finishes when the result could easily have gone the other way.
But against a Dockers' side that most people believe are genuine top eight contenders, surely the Tigers' brief taste of success would have come to an end on Sunday - even with the game being played at the MCG.
However the Tigers responded by producing their best performance probably since their preliminary final year of 2001 as they not only beat the Dockers but humiliated Chris Connolly's side, which produced the kind of performance on the road that everyone connected with Fremantle hoped was now a thing of the past.
The Dockers, for so long renowned as a touch soft on the road, had actually won three of their past four games at the MCG - including this corresponding clash last year - but save for a brief period in the second term were simply uncompetitive against the Tigers on Sunday.
While the Dockers continually overused the ball and wasted possession, the Tigers hunted in packs and continually won the all-important stoppages and loose ball gets.
And unlike the Dockers, the Tigers had plenty of options in attack with Matthew Richardson continuing his magnificent start to the season with another dominant display.
Richardson was simply too big and too strong for Shane Parker and put the game beyond doubt with four goals in the third quarter alone to finish with six.
And this on a day when the Dockers did not have a single multiple goalkicker as Matthew Pavlich was well beaten by Ray Hall, the revival of Darren Gaspar's career continued as he produced another assured performance.
Richardson was brilliantly supported by Nathan Brown, who produced a best-on-ground performance with 34 touches, 12 marks and two goals with his superb use of the ball really standing out on a day when a gusty northerly wind made even committing the most basic of kicks a difficult task.
But despite the extreme conditions there was still no excuse for the Dockers' dreadful performance - which was best summed up when Scott Thornton tripped over his own feet and lost possession of the ball while running on his own on the outer wing.
The Dockers have now lost their past three games since a surprise first-up win over reigning premiers Port Adelaide and on this performance look anything but top eight material.
And while long-suffering Richmond fans, who have seen their team make the finals just twice in the past 23 years, will be just happy to see their side back on the winning track - there are growing signs that Terry Wallace's Tigers might just be a handy side.
Not only are Richardson and Brown looking more menacing by the week in attack and Gaspar is getting better and better each week in defence but the Tigers' midfield - so long their Achilles heel - is clearly improving.
This is not only due to the huge improvement of Chris Hyde, who dominated against the Dockers, but the return of 2003 best and fairest winner Mark Coughlan - who played his best game of the season on Sunday - from a serious groin injury which ruined his 2004 season while the addition of Shane Tuck and youngster Andrew Raines has also added more pace and grunt to the Tigers' midfield.
RICHMOND: 5.5, 7.7, 13.9, 14.16 (100)
FREMANTLE: 1.4, 4.5, 4.6, 7.10 (52)
GOALS – Richmond: Richardson 6, Brown 2, Stafford 2, Knobel, Deledio, Simmonds, Pettifer Fremantle: Farmer, Hasleby, Murphy, Johnson, Pavlich, Medhurst, Schammer
BEST – Richmond: Brown, Richardson, Hyde, Coughlan, Kellaway, Gaspar, Hall, Knobel Fremantle: Black, McPharlin, Cook, McManus
INJURIES – Richmond: - Fremantle: Dodd (knee)
CHANGES – Ricmond: - Fremantle: Matthew Carr, Graham Polak and Des Headland replaced in the selected side by Michael Johnson, Luke Webster and Dion Woods
REPORTS - -
UMPIRES - James, Grun, Jeffery
CROWD - 24,242 at the MCG
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