Close call a turning point in the Tigers' year
By Peter Hanlon
At the MCG
The Age
July 3, 2005
RICHMOND 2.4 8.8 12.12 12.13 (85) defeated SYDNEY 2.3 3.6 7.9 12.12 (84)
Goals:
Richmond: M Richardson 4, A Krakouer 3, J Bowden, M Chaffey, R Hilton, K Pettifer, R Tambling.
Sydney: N Fosdike 3, M O'Loughlin 3, A Buchanan, J Crouch, N Davis, A Goodes, J McVeigh, P Williams.
Best:
Richmond: A Krakouer, C Newman, W Campbell, D Gaspar, M Richardson, A Kellaway, M Chaffey.
Sydney: R O'Keefe, N Fosdike, J Crouch, A Buchanan, M O'Loughlin, B Kirk.
Injuries: Richmond: T Knobel (flu) replaced in selected side by G Stafford, C Hyde replaced in selected side by R Hilton, A Raines replaced in selected side by R Tambling. Sydney: Nil.
Reports: Nil.
Umpires: J Schmitt, C Kamolins, M Avon.
Official crowd: 34,572 at MCG.
Ultimately, Richmond had Rory Hilton's long point deep in time-on - the Tigers' only score of a remarkable last quarter that railed against the tide - to thank for its first winter win. Seasons turn on small margins, some as small as the turning of a calendar's page.
The Tigers were lucky, for sure, and would be roundly condemned this morning if the wet-sailing Swans had mustered just one more successful surge. Yet in the face of conceding the last seven goals of the match, and seeing a 45-point lead slashed to a footballing hair's breadth, there was renewed hope.
In part, it stemmed from the small things that helped prevent that "just one more" from happening - the cool and critical Joel Bowden clearance from half-back, the saving last-minute mark from the heroic Chris Newman, the timely spoil from impressive first-gamer Will Thursfield, whose fist regularly appeared between Michael O'Loughlin's outstretched hands.
And it came from the day's more enduring contributions. That of Darren Gaspar on Barry Hall, in keeping the colossal Swan goalless and frustrating him to the point that, when Hall was caught in a Newman-Andrew Kellaway tackle in the third quarter and pinged for holding the ball, all in Jolimont drew breath in anticipation of seismic activity.
Of Mark Chaffey on Paul Williams, in rarely giving one of the Swans' prime movers a centimetre. Of the veteran former captain Wayne Campbell, who won many of his 31 possessions in close and under fire, a skill that largely deserted Sydney's renowned onballers Brett Kirk and Jude Bolton. With Williams also becalmed, the Swans were thrashed out of the middle until it was too late.
Of Andrew Krakouer, in a performance that was committed as well as creative and clearly his best of the season. And of the left-footed Newman, who gave Nick Davis a lesson in desire that was best illustrated when the gifted but grating Swan meandered to a contest that Newman initially wasn't even in, yet won with a comfortable chest mark.
The game was a slow burner, but found some spark just before half-time. Sydney was reminded of the benefits of route-one football when Amon Buchanan kicked long to Hall, who followed suit to Adam Goodes to cut the margin to 14 points.
Richard Tambling and Krakouer formed an irresistible combination, and the latter fed Matthew Richardson with a deft tap. Richo, getting the better of an eccentric duel with Leo Barry, sank his fourth from outside 50 and invited the crowd to join the fun, and Tambling snuck another after the siren.
In less than two minutes, the Swans' impetus had turned to implosion.
With Richmond coasting, Nic Fosdike and O'Loughlin pinched late third-quarter goals and Davis one in the opening minute of the last to send a familiar shiver through the yellow and black. This became a shudder with a long goal from Jared Crouch, whose six final-quarter clearances turned Sydney's big failing into a 17-3 strength for the term.
Fosdike got another, Buchanan emerged from a pack unchallenged to turn shudder to hysterical wobble and Crouch burst through the middle to land a long kick in O'Loughlin's arms. If Crouch hadn't missed everything from 30 metres in the hair-raising final minutes, Richmond would still be shaking this morning.
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