Plenty to Crow about as Tigers tamedHerald-Sun
August 07, 2015 10:53PMTHIS was the tale of two AFL club captains on tough paths with similar missions.
Crows captain Taylor Walker last night led Adelaide to its 10th win from 17 games of an ultra-demanding season, a 36-point touch-up of Richmond at Adelaide Oval that stands as the Crows best against a top-eight rival this season.
Tigers captain Trent Cotchin today leads a Richmond team that looks less like a top-four contender, especially when it plays without Brett Deledio.
Walker, in his first year as Adelaide skipper, is holding together an emotionally battered group wanting to play AFL finals for the first time since 2012.
His work last night — as he carried his teammates on his back, particularly in the second term — explains why late coach Phil Walsh came from Port Adelaide in October already wanting Walker as his captain.
Cotchin, in his third year as Richmond captain, is leading a team fighting against self-fulfilling prophecies of doom at Tigerland.
No-one should say Cotchin’s mission to find Richmond’s first win in an AFL final since the 2001 semi-final against Carlton highlights a tragic history.
All use in football of the term “tragedy” has been put back into perspective by Walsh’s death last month.
Walker, 25, has seemed to carry not just his team but his emotions to the detriment of his form since his life was rocked on July 3.
Critiques of Walker’s work — in particular when the key forward managed just nine touches against Sydney at the SCG on Saturday when he played his 100th game — have had to be tempered with understanding.
This was the captain who before dawn on July 3 was knocking on doors of teammates such as key defender Daniel Talia in tears to break the news that they had lost their coach in the most unfathomable circumstances.
Walker last night — as interim coach Scott Camporeale had insisted — found that uncluttered head space to again be an imposing forward who shapes games, more often than not in Adelaide’s favour.
His second quarter ended with eight disposals and two goals, the second giving the Crows the lead (by six points) on the halftime siren — and confirmation he has crossed his toughest mental bridge.
They were again chanting “There’s Only One Taylor Walker” in the stands last night.
Cotchin, also 25, has a similarly massive emotional burden thrust on his shoulders.
There is that enormous Richmond tribe that has been told by club legend Kevin “KB” Bartlett that this is “Tiger Time”.
The old guard, such as Rex Hunt, keeps turning up at premiership reunions wondering when a new group of Richmond players will be inducted to an exclusive club at Punt Road where there has been no celebration since 1980.
Cotchin last night endured the demanding one-one-one battle in the midfield with Adelaide sensation Patrick Dangerfield.
Unlike Walker, Cotchin could not win the game off his own boot — and his support base was weakened by the loss of linkman Deledio, a constant thorn for the Crows, before the game started by illness or injury, whichever bulletin is right.
At the start, Cotchin had Dustin Martin and former Crows ruckman Ivan Maric tormenting the Adelaide defence while regular Richmond key forward Jack Riewoldt worked off the back of the centre square rather than at the front of the goalsquare.
But after initially threatening to expose the raw Adelaide defence with long kicking to tall forwards taking contested marks, the Richmond forward zone became a wasteland against the Crows’ system of team defence and its noted pressing game that stands at Walsh’s legacy.
Richmond went without a goal for 24 minutes, from time-on of the second term to the 19th minute of the third when Martin kicked his second goal — and Richmond’s sixth — from a free kick.
In that time Adelaide had its own waste — six consecutive behinds from the start of the third term in a sequence ultimately broken by key forward-ruckman Josh Jenkins’ brace of goals in time-on.
Dangerfield’s running goal from 50 with 53 seconds of the third term on the clock gave Adelaide a 25-point lead that made Walker’s mission to lead the Crows to September far more realistic today.
Walker and Cotchin could meet again next month, in a sudden-death final at the MCG. Their destiny as young captains loaded with big mission statements seems to be just on that path.
ADELAIDE 2.6 5.8 8.16 11.22 (88)
RICHMOND 3.1 5.2 6.2 8.4 (52)
BEST — Adelaide: Dangerfield, Walker, S. Thompson, Jacobs, Sloane, Henderson.
Richmond: Martin, Houli, Grigg, Hunt, Cotchin, Ellis.
INJURIES — Richmond: Grimes (upper leg), Deledio (illness, replaced by Lloyd).
UMPIRES: J. Bannister, J. Dalgleish, M. Nicholls.
CROWD: 50,094 at Adelaide Oval.
VOTES3. P. Dangerfield (Adelaide)
2. T. Walker (Adelaide)
1. D. Martin (Richmond)
FIVE THINGS WE LEARNTby Scott Walsh1. ADELAIDE has not given up on September. It wasn’t perfect, especially with execution, but there could be no question about the Crows’ desire. It was hungry, team-oriented and cohesive, proving they are worthy of major round consideration.
2. BAD kicking is bad footy. Heard that one before? Well, apparently Adelaide hasn’t. After forgettable disposal inside 50 and around the goals against Sydney a week earlier, they did themselves no favours again on Friday night.
3. RICKY Henderson on a wing is a superb asset for Adelaide. Has super composure, offers run outside and uses the ball efficiently. Best of all for Crows fans, he’s not afraid to go with instinct and kick instead of messing around with it.
4. RICHMOND relies too heavily on Brett Deledio. The 227-gamer, a withdrawal with the flu, has missed nine matches from the start of last season — and the Tigers have won just two.
5. KYLE Hartigan tries hard and is capable of the occasional great effort. But it’s a surprise when he pulls one off. As solid as Adelaide’s team defence was last night there just feels more reliability about Kyle Cheney, who is stuck in the SANFL with no injury concerns.
http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/afl-2015-adelaide-crows-defeat-richmond-by-36-points-at-adelaide-oval-in-round-19/story-fnelctok-1227474498537