Richmond end-of-season report
06 September 2005
Herald Sun
Jon Anderson
Attacking plan reaps rewards.
LADDER POSITION: 12th (10 wins, 12 losses)
COACHHe came promising a more attacking game plan and delivered. Players were encouraged to run and carry the ball and Terry Wallace was able to rejuvenate some ailing careers (Andrew Kellaway and Darren Gaspar).
Richmond's hierarchy right now would be happy with its decision to offer Wallace five years. 13/20
DEFENCEGaspar returned to the form that made him an All-Australian in 2000-2001. Rarely beaten and kept Barry Hall to just three marks in Round 14. Kellaway was also back to his best at age 29 before injuring himself in Round 16. Chris Newman was solid, Joel Bowden prolific and damaging. 5/10
MIDFIELDShane Tuck was the revelation, his form a constant embarrassment to Hawthorn, which shunned him under the father-son rule. Kane Johnson was his usual consistent self, brave and prolific but lacking in goals (five), while Mark Coughlan returned to his 2003 B&F form. But they need more and should get them through Brett Deledio, Richard Tambling, Danny Meyer and Nathan Foley. 5/10
RUCK STRENGTHTrent Knobel did what was expected of him in the first half of the season with some handy tap work.
Troy Simmonds lifted when he went into the ruck and played some good football intermingled with some not so good. 4/10
FORWARDSBatman and Robin (Matthew Richardson and Nathan Brown) became Batman after the sickening broken leg to the sublimely talented left-footer in Round 10. At that stage he was second only to Ben Cousins as the best player in the competition. Kayne Pettifer was a bonus with 31 opportunistic goals, Andrew Krakouer in and out for his 23. 5/10
LEADERSHIPThey have leaders in the undemonstrative Johnson, extroverted Brown, maturing Joel Bowden and the born-again Richo. Deledio, just 18 in April, is as natural a leader as there is in the competition. 10/20
LIST MANAGEMENTAfter stuffing around for years when deluding themselves that they had a premiership side after the highs of 2001, the Tigers went young and reaped the benefits. Deledio we know all about. Tambling will be better for a frustrating year. Adam Pattison shows real signs as a centre half-forward and Meyer just needs the strength to go with real talent. 12/20
OVERALL GRADE 54/100Off-field performanceRecord membership and a financial turnaround of more than $2 million, much of it based around the arrival of Wallace and the breath of fresh air from the kids.
WHAT RICHMOND NEEDSThe Tigers have to look at key-position players, with Richardson, Gaspar and Kellaway all getting on. Fremantle's Graham Polak is an unfulfilled talent who is contracted but would be available for the right trade.
It would have to involve at least Richmond's first-round draft pick given Polak, an East Fremantle product, was taken at No. 4 in 2001.
Draft picks: 8, 24, 40, 56 (subject to trades)
SHINING LIGHTSHANE TUCK
The best-and-fairest should come down to a red-hot go between Tuck and Matthew Richardson. Tuck came from nowhere to become a genuine elite midfielder.
THE GOODThe Tigers averaged nine more contested possessions than their opposition, the second-best differential in the league. They kicked 294 goals, their highest since 2001.
THE BADRichmond cleared 39.3 per cent of centre bounces, ranked 14th in the league. Averaged 23.8 disposals a goal, ranked 14th.
THE VITAL STATSCLUB LEADERSGoals Matthew Richardson 65
Kicks Joel Bowden 324
Marks Matthew Richardson 166
Handballs Mark Coughlan 235
Clearances Shane Tuck 114
Clangers Matthew Richardson 57
Tackles Mark Coughlan 99
Hitouts Troy Simmonds 304
Goal assists Matthew Richardson 15
Inside 50s Kayne Pettifer 94
Spoils Darren Gaspar 60
Benchings Wayne Campbell 72
Game time Chris Newman 2639 min
Played every game 9 of 34
YOU'RE EXCUSEDM. RICHARDSON
Had his most consistent season since 1999. His body language was positive after one-on-one coaching from Brian Taylor.
JOEL BOWDEN
Was unlucky to miss out on the captaincy. He is a mature young man who has found his niche in the game as a running defender.
MOST IMPROVEDCHRIS NEWMAN
He looked a real player two years ago before marking time in 2004. Newman took the next step this season under Wallace.
KAYNE PETTIFER
Picked at No. 9 in the 2000 draft, Pettifer's average 2004 form was one reason recruiting manager Greg Beck was cut. Made big amends.
YEAR TO FORGETGREG TIVENDALE
Has been one of those players who fans can quickly turn on, and sometimes unfairly so, but he turned it over too often.
GREG STAFFORD
Athletic big man, can play forward as well as in the ruck, yet never really got kick-started in 2005 in a year of much frustration.
WILL THEY BE BACK?SHANE MORRISON
Not without talent, but at 24 years of age, he has reached the crossroads and is currently behind Adam Pattison and Jay Schulz.
RORY HILTON
The fact that Wallace played him late in the season could be a positive for a player who has fought bravely against constant injury.
Other possible delisting: Kyle Archibald
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