Sluggish start, but Saints hit their straps
By Peter Hanlon
The Age
July 17, 2005
ST KILDA 1.4 6.5 9.8 16.10(106)
RICHMOND 3.2 4.4 4.6 5.7 (37)
GOALS St Kilda: Koschitzke 5, Milne 3, Gehrig 2, Peckett, Thompson, Jones, Powell, Ackland, Guerra.
Richmond: Hilton 2, Richardson 2, Deledio.
BEST St Kilda:Koschitzke, Hayes, Dal Santo, Maguire, Jones, Peckett, Fisher.
Richmond: Coughlan, Johnson, Deledio, Knobel, Tuck.
INJURIES St Kilda: Nil.
Richmond: Gaspar (hamstring), Campbell (calf/Achilles tightness), Simmonds (hip tightness)
UMPIRES: Margetts, Grun, Stevic
CROWD: 40,043 at the MCG
Rory Hilton kicked his team's fourth and fifth goals yesterday. In the yawning gap of two full quarters that separated them, the pre-season rating of these teams - St Kilda the contender, Richmond the as-yet unready pretender - was driven home with every one of the nine Saints goals.
St Kilda did not win in every position, nor did it win every statistical battle in the modern game of football by numbers. Trent Knobel's dominance of the many ball-ups gave the Tigers a thumping 60-14 hitouts advantage that translated into success at the clearances at a ratio of four-to-three. Yet never more can the stats cynics have been vindicated.
Winning first use of the ball was one thing, using it to advantage another altogether. The Tigers carried the mud-running form, but after a promising start as the rain tumbled down, they were switched off like a tap when it stopped. Simplistic it may be, but a heavy-hitting, hard-running opponent on a fast-draining surface sapped Richmond not merely of momentum, but the fundamental skills of the game.
Justin Koschitzke was again the game-breaker, his second-quarter shift from ruck to the attacking goal square giving his teammates eyes for someone other than Fraser Gehrig, and giving Richmond a mighty headache. He kicked a career-high five goals, exposed Ray Hall's dislike for life deep in defence, and made the Tigers realise again how much they will miss the injured Andrew Kellaway.
This was a tactical victory for a coaching staff not often lauded for its ability to walk and chew gum simultaneously on match days. Yet in another move of significance, coach Grant Thomas gave the credit to Luke Ball rather than mission control for cancelling out a telling Richmond win.
Ball had one kick to quarter-time and three touches for the first half as Mark Chaffey prepared to add his scalp to those of James Hird and Paul Williams tucked under his belt in the last fortnight. Underscoring his leadership credentials, Ball took himself to half-back, took telling marks and finished the day at his best - with a bandaged head and the ball at his fingertips.
Austinn Jones played forward and played as well as he has for some time, and the defence lost nothing in his absence. Matt Maguire dominated Troy Simmonds at centre half-back, Steven Baker shut out Andrew Krakouer, Max Hudghton curbed Matthew Richardson's dangerous opening, and a mixture of the Clarke brothers, Brett Voss and Sam Fisher were all too happy to get on the end of Richmond's forays forward.
The Tigers could not have asked for a brighter start, and went to the first break with Brett Deledio, Mark Coughlan and Shane Tuck having racked up 24 possessions between them, compared with Ball, Nick Dal Santo and Lenny Hayes with just 11 for the Saints; seven of those came from Hayes, as Coughlan dominated Dal Santo's wing.
On came Andrew Thompson, relishing the conditions and freeing up Dal Santo for an 11-touch quarter, and even as Ball's frustration with his minder led to two downfield frees, Hayes continued to send the Saints forward and Koschitzke assumed the position from which he would kick three goals in five minutes either side of half-time.
Joel Bowden was given the job and kept him to one more, but Koschitzke continued to contribute to a cause that already was won. By the last quarter, Richmond players struggled simply to win a possession; eight had one touch or less for the term.
At the other end, Stephen Milne emerged from hiding to kick three, and the sight of him celebrating in flea-in-a-bottle fashion provided a stomach-churning finish to a dirty day for the Tigers.
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