Richmond's forward issues a familiar taleRohan Connolly
The Age
April 14, 2015Midway through this year's NAB Challenge series, Richmond coach Damien Hardwick conceded the dramatic contrast between the Tigers' first and second halves of season 2014 made it difficult even for him and his coaching panel to assess exactly where his side stood.
"You look at the win-loss and it says 12-10," he said. "If that was spread evenly across the course of the year rather than winning nine in a row on the way home, would it look different? I think it probably would."
Another insider was more blunt. "Look, we're not as good as nine in a row, but we're also a lot better than a 3-10 start, too."
The task for Richmond this year was, among other things, to perhaps trade in a few of the spectacular highs for some less devastating lows. Which might have happened to an extent already in 2015, but not in a way the Tigers would like.
Their first-round win over Carlton got the job done, but wasn't the sort of victory that fills season highlights tapes. Last Saturday's loss to the Western Bulldogs, meanwhile, was by no means a shellacking, but nevertheless a game any self-respecting top-order team would expect to win.
So what happened to the Tigers? What has tended to happen in many of their losses over the past couple of years. Despite plenty of work on the flaws: over-possession, slow ball movement and inefficiency going forward.
Richmond had 403 disposals on Saturday, close to 100 more than their opponents, 54 inside 50s, six more than the Bulldogs, and took 17 marks inside the attacking zone to the Dogs' seven, for the grand total of just nine goals.
It's not like the Tigers haven't been aware of the issues. "We're probably one of the better sides at controlling the ball," Hardwick said back in March. "What we weren't great at last year was the ability to finish off inside 50, which is something we've really worked on this pre-season."
But you have to say the results of that diligence haven't been immediately apparent. Even in a defensive sense, the Richmond forward line is still a problem.
On Saturday, it was unable to exert enough pressure to lock the ball in and prevent easy access out for the Bulldogs, who were able to conjure enough easy, open goals from running players and small forwards on transition despite having key targets Tom Boyd and Ayce Cordy both soundly beaten.
Hardwick wasn't slow to point out after the loss the damning inside-50 stats of just five tackles and only three loose-ball gets. Figures that may have looked better had Jake King still been part of the equation.
King played only two senior games in his final season last year, but the Tigers are yet to really replace his defensive pressure and crumbing ability, hence the experiment with regular defender Steve Morris up forward in 2015.
And it made the absence of both the suspended Brett Deledio and another handy crumber in Shane Edwards, a late withdrawal, more costly still.
Deledio has, in fact, become something of a barometer for the Tigers. Saturday's game was only the fifth he had missed since 2007. Richmond have lost four of those and their one win in his absence was against a hardly intimidating Brisbane.
Does Richmond still have an issue with depth? Former coach Terry Wallace thinks so. "I don't think they bat deep enough," Wallace said on SEN on Monday. "I think they've got maybe four or five guys in that line-up at the moment that are very good VFL players and only average when they hit the big league. They're sort of stuck in between and can't really impact games in the AFL."
Perhaps the lack of Deledio and Edwards, in particular, made the Tigers further afield more cautious about bombing the ball in, but their propensity to go this way and that looking for a safer option simply made the Bulldogs' defensive task easier.
Deledio, along with key forward Ben Griffiths, bobs up in another interesting Richmond statistic. While the scoreboard impact of the likes of Jack Riewoldt and Dustin Martin has dropped marginally in the Tigers' losses over the past two-and-a-bit seasons, that of Deledio and Griffiths has plummeted by around 50 per cent.
Which meant Griffiths' 1.1 on Saturday, with all those other factors stacking up against Hardwick in the coaching box, might well have been the final nail in the Tiger coffin.
Right now, it's not a disaster. On Saturday night, Richmond take on the out-of-sorts Brisbane at the Gabba, where they have won their past half-dozen games. Then comes Melbourne, so two very winnable assignments.
Fix the aimless meandering forward and convert better and Hardwick's side will be at short-odds in both games. But another recurrence of a familiar problem and even the Tigers themselves will again be left pondering just how good they really are.
http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/richmonds-forward-issues-a-familiar-tale-20150413-1mk6cx.html