Tigers on prowl for credibility
21 May 2005
Herald Sun
Mike Sheahan
BIT by bit, Richmond edges towards the credibility usually associated with teams sitting equal second after eight rounds.
We say "usually" because Richmond has a history of promising starts that develop into nothing more than despair.
The Tigers were 4-4 this time last year, 6-2 the year before, 4-4 in 2002, and missed the finals each time.
Wins and losses are merely vague pointers to Richmond's progress. The difference this year is the pattern of progress and how wins have been achieved.
A humbling first-up loss to Geelong was followed by three wins before a second reality check, at St Kilda's hands.
Unlike the Richmond we have come to know and loathe, it then responded with another three wins in a row.
In the process, the Tigers beat premier Port Adelaide, and then got home after starting a short-priced favourite against Collingwood, and Richmond and favouritism have a dark history.
In keeping with Terry Wallace's bold pre-season aim, the Tigers are averaging 104 points a week.
Mark Coughlan is back from a career-threatening injury, Darren Gaspar from oblivion, Nathan Brown and Matthew Richardson are second and third on the goalkicking table, and Shane Tuck is a virtual recruit, averaging 22 touches a game.
Life is just peachy at Punt Rd.
Now, to Round 9 and the start of the most searching three weeks of the season for the Tigers: engagements with the Brisbane Lions – at the Gabba – Melbourne and West Coast.
Is the progress real or imagined? Is Wallace a messiah? Can the Tigers make the eight for only the second time in 10 years?
As good as the form has been, the fact is four of Richmond's six victims occupy the bottom four positions on the ladder: Collingwood, Hawthorn, Carlton and Port Adelaide.
Fremantle is the only top-eight scalp, and Old Xaverians would start favourite against the Dockers in Melbourne.
Yet, like Freo, Richmond also has a strong aversion to leaving home.
A road trip and an opponent of genuine quality has proved a lethal combination in the past, with the Tigers winning just six of 24 interstate assignments this century.
A win tonight would go a long way towards silencing the doubters, even if Brisbane is a long way short of its standard of the past four years.
A loss would lead to renewed cynicism about a club that has floundered for more than 20 years.
Wallace will have them ready. Not only is he a good coach, he is a master psychologist.
He gets into people's minds. He did it at Footscray, he is doing it at Richmond, convincing everyone they will succeed if only they stay faithful to the plan.
He was proved correct again last Sunday when a lethargic group trailed Collingwood by eight points at three-quarter time and won by 35.
Pre-Wallace, everyone in the club would have been consumed by one thought: What if we lose to Collingwood in the shape it's in? We'll be a laughing stock . . . again.
The maturation process, though, is still in its early days.
No club in the competition has enjoyed a better draw: all eight games at the MCG or Telstra Dome. There have been no injuries to speak of, although David Rodan and Jay Schulz would be useful, and there was an ounce or two of luck against both Hawthorn and the Western Bulldogs.
While the Tigers will be nervous tonight, they shouldn't be overawed. They shocked Brisbane with their pace and aggression in a pre-season game the Lions thought would kick-start their season.
If they can hold their nerve and play to their strengths, they have to be a big chance.
Wallace will hammer home the message that they must run the Lions off their legs. No one is sharper in the mind and with their hands than the Brisbane boys, but the legs are heavy and tired.
The metaphorical weight of three premiership medallions grows heavier by the week in a season when things aren't going right. And the way Hawthorn and the Bulldogs upset Brisbane in the past month won't have escaped Wallace's attention.
But let's not get ahead of ourselves. The free-to-air TV networks haven't, again allowing Fox Footy exclusivity to another Richmond game.
Credibility: easily lost, damn hard to find.
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