Author Topic: Richmond AFLW team [merged]  (Read 191668 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #255 on: February 06, 2020, 03:10:47 AM »
There's an Open Training session tonight for our AFLW team:

Thursday, February 6
Swinburne Centre, Punt Rd Oval
Gates open at 5:30pm
5:45pm - 6:30pm

https://www.richmondfc.com.au/football/open-training

Offline Rampsation

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #256 on: February 06, 2020, 08:24:38 AM »
Ill be happy if tney dont finish last

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #257 on: February 07, 2020, 01:54:19 AM »
From licence to debut: Inside the Tigers’ lair

Lauren Wood
Herald Sun
6 February 2020


They call it “The Dungeon” — a 3m x 3m windowless office for six.

It sits in the corner of Richmond’s Punt Road headquarters and it helped give birth to one of AFLW’s newest four clubs.

The first to inhabit The Dungeon were coach Tom Hunter, football boss Kate Sheahan, recruiter and now player Lauren Teseriero, player development manager Sarah Wyllie, high performance boss Matt Parker and part-time culture and leadership chief Liz Quinn.


Coach Tom Hunter watches on at training. Picture Jay Town

Those close quarters were a little too close at times, they laugh.

They lived on top of each other, Sheahan reveals, for more than 18 months.

If one had a headache, another seemed to cop one, too.

If one had a dream about a player, another seemed to, too.

They were working in such close quarters, for such long hours, in pursuit of the one goal — building an AFLW team from the ground up — they were just about becoming the same person.

“It was hilarious, and weird, but goes to show exactly how much we were all putting in,” she says.

THE COACH

Tom Hunter retired from AFL aged 20 after sustaining a serious neck injury as a Collingwood rookie in 2011.

He found himself as an assistant coach in Richmond’s VFL program, and was working as a primary school teacher at Keilor Views Primary School when he first answered the call of Tigers women’s football boss Kate Sheahan at the end of 2017.

“I’d never thought about coaching women,” Hunter admits.

“I didn’t think it was for me. Part of it was that I didn’t want it to be seen that I was using it as a pathway to get to the men’s.”

But then getting in, doing a few sessions and meeting Kate a few more times and talking about education – and helping the girls get that foundation of football knowledge, I was in … I was certainly unsure.

“But when I found out about how much scope and growth that the girls have in their game, that’s what drew me to it – you could be a teacher, but teach footy.”

THE TEAM

The licence was officially ticked on September 26, 2017.

Hunter was on board soon after, and Project VFLW began.

Some 130 women turned up for the talent identification day in November that year to form a VFL women’s side and while Hunter knew footy, he was a little unsure about what he was looking for.

“I’d never really watched women’s footy up until I knew I’d be doing it,” he says.

“I loved footy, but I didn’t think I’d love the women’s side of it as much. And I do.”

First they formed a VFL Women’s side, next would come the AFLW outfit.

Club president Peggy O’Neal this week spoke of the lengthy bidding process, and how the initial rejection felt “unjustified”.

When it was granted while Sheahan attended her uncle’s funeral, her immediate reaction was excitement, but frustration.


The Tigers hard at work. Picture Jay Town

“My genuine reaction when we got the licence was ‘we’ve got to wait, again?’,” Sheahan recalls.

“But I’m so grateful that we had that time to do what we’ve done.

“VFL team, based here, working in the Next Generation Academy zone. I’m impatient at the best of times, but it’s the best thing that happened to us.”

Hunter said leading Richmond’s VFL Women’s side through the 2018 was a good, learning experience.

“It taught me how to defend ... the good sides know how to attack,” he said.

“In 2019, we changed it and just taught ball movement and had a successful year in the VFL. That put us in good stead for this season.”

The 2019 season was then geared towards building an AFLW team.

“There was working out player lists, working out who we wanted to target through expansion … then our academy players and signing them,” Hunter says.

“And then once we did that, we had our season to worry about.

“And then once the season was done, we had the draft. We’ve been working for 18 months pretty much non-stop for this point.”

THE STARS

At the end of last year, the Tigers cast the net for some big fish, landing stars Katie Brennan, Monique Conti and Sabrina Frederick.

Brennan — then skipper at the Western Bulldogs — recalls the “mean spread of food” at Sheahan’s place when she first met with her, Hunter and Tigers football boss Neil Balme.

“It was a really great meeting and I got a really good vibe from it all,” Brennan said.

“It was a tough decision, but since meeting the people and setting foot in the club, I haven’t looked back. I’ve really loved the journey.”

Sheahan – who also had baby Harry in that time, probably sharing “a bit too much” with those in The Dungeon, with dreams and ailments common among all becoming normality – knows more than anyone how long the wait has been, having been appointed before the club’s licence was even approved.


Star Katie Brennan was one of Richmond’s big signings. Picture Jay Town

THE RECRUITS

Fast forward to this week and young recruits Tayla Stahl and Iilish Ross sprawl over chairs in the new player lounge at Punt Road, all arms and legs and plates of peanut butter toast.

They’ve come straight from work – Stahl in warehousing and logistics – and admit the balance is tough.

“You have to pack your footy bag the night before and definitely can’t forget anything,” Stahl says.

Ross chimes in: “They’re long days, but so good.”

Tall Rebecca Miller lauds the employers and parents who are on this journey, too.

She has been allowed to take this day off work.

“I’ve got the best boss in the world,” she beams.

“There’s so many people who have gotten us here.”


Tayla Stahl s celebrates a goal during their recent practice game.

THE BONDING

At 5.32pm, it’s players-only to the theatrette, the walls emblazoned with the men’s team’s premiership glories of recent years.

The coaches can hear the laughs and screams from inside but have “no idea what goes on in there”, Sheahan says.

Teseriero steers this session, which kicks off with a prank on youngster Kodi Jacques.

Sabrina Frederick, Miller, Laura Bailey and Jacques are fitted with makeshift blindfolds made of towels under the charade of an eating challenge.

Little does Jacques know as she swiftly scoffs two bananas thinking she’s on the clock, the other three at the front of the room have removed their blindfolds and watch on laughing like the rest.

When Jacques catches on, it’s raucous.

“You could have the longest day, but within 10 minutes of being here, you can’t help but get up,” one player remarks.

Hunter and his fellow coaches arrive and the switch is flicked - it’s all systems go with a presentation and match vision of the Blues, the plan for training and a quick team-building exercise focused on positivity.

A warmup in the gym transitions to the track for about 90 minutes – contact-free for some, laps for others, a post-session extra for a few. Busy.


Richmond AFLW players take part in a team-building exercise at training.

THE SELECTION

As the team devours lamb wraps, Hunter retreats to The Dungeon to pick the side.

Ironically, the room has since been extended but he is the lone occupant.

Tonight he is joined around the whiteboard and its player magnets by specialist coach Nathan Chapman, forwards coach Jason Armistead, Tom Humphrey, backs man Sam Shaw, Sheahan, Parker and midfield boss Jacob Thompson.

As the team is picked, players gather downstairs to hand out their weekly “fines”, led by Teseriero.

The team is virtually set – a few already sidelined because of injury – but there’s one spot in particular that’s hot debate among the crew, who have their dinner delivered to the war room.

Sarah Sansonetti is coming back from a concussion – she’s passed all the tests, but is she up to a match?

How do they set about managing the Blues’ young star Maddy Prespakis?

Which midfielders will rotate forward?

Which player still needs to prove once more that they’re right, and who makes the final judgement call?

Hunter is contemplative, Chapman the rational realist, grabbing magnets off the board once they’re out of the mix. They delegate who is going to be the one to break the news.

“It’s a good team,” Townsend quips. “They’ll go well.”

Then it’s logistics. Buses to and from the ground, recovery schedules.

Media commitments, family wristbands, even discussions about the Round 2 trip to the Gold Coast.

It’s all new. Then they scatter. Home to their “real” families.


The Tigers listen in to coach Tom Hunter.

THE DAWN

Hunter is left standing alone at 9.35pm.

It’s been more than 18 months in the making but suddenly it’s here — 889 days after the licence was granted.

He’ll be nervous – he always is before games.

There hasn’t been much sleep in the lead-up to today.

“I’ll be nervous for the players – that’s the main one. Excited for them,” he said.

“I want them to do really well. I’ll be stressed that they’re going to be stressed.

“I can’t wait to see them on the ground – we’ve encouraged them to take it all in, embrace it, look around, smell it, touch the grass.”

It hasn’t dawned on him yet that this team they’ve built will be a part of Richmond’s history forever.

His partner Danielle will be there tonight, his family and hers.

He’s missed a lot, building this from the ground up – that’s been the hardest part.

“One day, it probably will dawn on me, and looking back and knowing that I had a hand in it will be exciting,” he said.

With the club now empty and the doors locked, an accidental pocket dial has led to four laughing mates in a group Facetime.

“Gotta go,” Hunter smiles.

“They want to see The Dungeon. See you at the footy.”

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/teams/richmond/from-licence-to-debut-behind-the-scenes-access-of-richmonds-aflw-journey/news-story/bf5fcc264385464511fa2dcf20c796a9

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #258 on: February 23, 2020, 02:38:49 PM »
Why Tigers enforcer has fallen in love with AFLW

Jon Ralph
Sunday Herald Sun
23 Feb 2020


Neil Balme spent a decade in the VFL as a Richmond enforcer whose attack on the man and ball often tipped from the robust to the outright violent.

Yet as Richmond’s AFLW team took to the field for its historic first game two weeks ago, Richmond’s staff spent the night pondering one question.

Had Balme, so integral to the formation of this team as footy boss and now senior club advisor, actually shed tears at the sheer emotion of it all?

Balme’s hearty laugh at the query this week shows he has regained his composure, and if he won’t admit to breaking down he does concede he has fallen head over heels for this new Richmond side.

The hardest man in footy now travels to every AFLW game, full of admiration for the stories of resilience that populate the Tigers’ start-up side.

“It has surprised even myself,” says Balme.

“It’s just their fantastic attitudes. They have so much gratitude, they love playing, and it’s not a competition because our boys are fantastic but boys can ask why. These women ask, “ What else can I do?”

“I didn’t actually shed a tear although as I get older I am quite sensitive to things so it’s possible, but it was very moving. The build-up was quite emotional and I didn’t think I would be experiencing that but I certainly did.”

This year Balme, renowned as the game’s best footy manager, has taken a slight step sideways as club advisor to allow staffers Tim Livingstone and Blair Hartley promotions in the football department.

It has allowed Balme, 68, more time with both programs and the bigger-picture perspective for women’s football.

“It will keep getting better. I have no doubt about that,” he says.

“Now footy has accepted it’s a reality and it’s going to be here forever and part of Richmond’s community responsibility is to women’s footy. Even the discussion around who will pay for it is a reality, but that’s OK. We will sort it out.

“ (AFLW) will just keep improving. Even watching last year’s Grand Final and the way Adelaide played, I thought, “This has taken a step very quickly in terms of how well they can play together”. That is an inspiration to all of us.”

The old-fashioned protector in Balme felt a flush of anger when the Herald Sun’s Mark Robinson criticised franchise star Katie Brennan this week but he is aware of the silver lining.

“My first reaction is to think, “Robbo, is that necessary?” but then you think, “She isn’t playing quite as well as she would like to and she will play better”.

“But it’s the same as the blokes, you live in a big world and Katie would know it’s really important we get our media talking about women's footy and the price you pay for that is there will be criticism potentially.”

Winless Richmond takes on much-fancied North Melbourne on Sunday, and yet while he knows this year is about small steps the competitor in him will never die.

“You look at a game of footy where you don’t play that bloody well and then you get disappointed and then you go, “Hang on a minute, this is the first of many, we can’t expect too much initially” … But of course we always do.”

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/aflw/richmond-football-boss-neil-balme-relishing-rise-of-womens-football-as-aflw-tigers-eye-maiden-win/news-story/948198e86396d3fa03b65d6fcf2aeb90

Offline one-eyed

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'Dear trolls, get with the program!' by Monique Conti (AthletesVoice)
« Reply #259 on: March 07, 2020, 04:59:58 AM »
'Dear trolls, get with the program!' by Monique Conti

Monique Conti
AthletesVoice
March 6, 2020


Fifteen years from now, I want to be remembered as a dual-sport athlete.

There are a lot of girls in the AFLW who used to play basketball, soccer or netball, but I don’t think there are many that have tried to do both at the same time. Eventually, most of them drop their initial sport.

From afar, I can see how people might think I have done the same with the Melbourne Boomers this season. But for me, it’s different.

There was a two-week break in the WNBL season, and I wanted to play round one of the AFLW during that time. I was put into a position where I had to decide between the two sports and that’s what I did.

I grew up thinking ‘basketball first’, so sitting out the WNBL playoffs was tough. If it was up to me, and that simple, I would still be doing both, and balancing both sports right now.

I could see myself playing a huge role at Richmond in our debut season, whereas I felt that my role could be filled at the Boomers.

In the future, I honestly believe I can juggle careers in both basketball and footy.

Erin Phillips is my idol in that way. I see her as a mentor, as someone who played both basketball at the highest level and footy in the AFLW. I talk to her whenever I can, for advice.

In basketball, I’ve played in a WNBL grand final series with the Boomers, but there’s so much more I want to achieve in that sport. I still see myself as a basketballer and I have dreams of playing for the Opals one day. I would love to represent Australia at an Olympics.

Footy-wise, I’ve experienced ultimate success in the AFLW, with the 2018 Western Bulldogs premiership-winning team. Now, I’d love to win one at Richmond.

The Move I Didn’t See Coming

The decision to join Richmond was tough because I loved the Western Bulldogs, and my time there. It was a great club to be a part of.

Before I first spoke to the Tigers, I didn’t see myself coming out of a meeting and wanting to move. I just wanted to see what they had to say.

The Tigers didn’t try to sell me anything, they just told me about their program and how I’d fit into their plans – not just as a footballer, but as a long-term athlete. I liked what they had to say.

I decided to make the move and I’m loving life here so far. Finding success on the park is going to take some time, but eventually we’ll get there because we have so much talent in the squad.

Taking the step up to such a professional competition like the AFLW, it was hard to know how the team would go. It’s going to be a process and every week we are showing improvement.

I want to be a part of building the Tigers into a successful AFLW team. It might take a little time, but we’re optimistic.

As a young footballer I look up to the game’s pioneers, like Erin and Daisy Pearce, for inspiration. Being able to compete with them in the AFLW is such an honour, because they paved the way for young athletes like myself. Soon it will be up to my generation to push the game even further and I want to be someone that shows young girls they can excel in multiple sports.

‘I Mean, Get With the Program!’

We get a lot more attention in the AFLW than we do in the WNBL. There’s always something new – a new headline and news story every day.

There are also people out there who aren’t fans of women playing footy. There are people that don’t agree with AFLW at all. Trolls that sit behind computers or on their phone, writing negative comments. And they aren’t going anywhere.

It’s kind of funny, in a way. To think that it’s 2020 and there are people that still think women shouldn’t be playing football; I mean, get with the program!

We are playing footy and we are semi-professional in that area. It’s a real thing, we’re women playing AFL.

In 10 years, I think the structure of the league will be mirrored to the men’s competition. We’ll be playing a lot more games and not just through the summer. The future is bright.

https://www.athletesvoice.com.au/monique-conti-dear-trolls-get-with-program/

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #260 on: March 07, 2020, 09:19:45 AM »
Mon Conti will be the best player in the comp within the next 2 years

Mon Conti thank you for your courage  ;)

Mon Conti is a star on and off the field
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #261 on: March 07, 2020, 09:56:38 AM »
Pity she doesnt have enough talented team mates to help her.

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #262 on: March 26, 2020, 05:42:15 PM »

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'I know who I am': lunch with Akec Makur Chuot (Age)
« Reply #263 on: March 28, 2020, 03:22:19 AM »
'I know who I am': lunch with Akec Makur Chuot

Duska Sulicich
The Age
27 March 2020


There is a joy to Akec Makur Chuot. She laughs mid-sentence during stories, freely and regularly, caught in the fun of the recollection, delighting in its telling.

It is there, too, in the tales of risk and audacity — a kind of belated acknowledgement to herself that, hell, yes, she really did do that. It's in her smile.

We meet at Platform 28 in Docklands, a bar and restaurant close to AFL headquarters, her workplace. It's a perfect spot to eat lunch and manage her time efficiently. Because time is all-important to this Richmond AFLW player. When she's not training at Punt Road late into the evening and playing and recovering on the weekend, she works four days a week as a multicultural development officer, bringing footy to Victoria's migrant communities.

It makes perfect sense. At 27, the South Sudanese-born Makur Chuot is a striking AFL ambassador. There is such power in her experience, importance — and she understands that better than anyone. She embodies how this sport can change a life.

But it wasn't – and isn't – an easy path for her. There is the racism, casual and obscene. Now, as a black woman in Melbourne, and before that, as a teenager in Perth.

The setback, too, of being delisted after her first season in AFLW. Grasping the dream and then watching it slip away. Both have been met with remarkable clarity and an enduring resilience.

But that discussion comes later. Food decisions first. I ask if she is on a special diet. There is immediate laughter. "Nah, I'm going to have a parma. I love a good parma." (We both stand on the "parma" side of the debate. "Parmie", we agree, is an aberration.)

Platform 28's looks like a solid version of the pub classic: free-range chicken schnitzel, topped with leg ham, Napoli sauce and mozzarella, served with chips and house salad.

Makur Chuot adds she has trouble putting on weight and can eat anything. I let her know I hate her (she laughs heartily) – and I opt for the super salad. It has mixed rice and quinoa, seeds, dried cranberry, chickpeas, spiced roasted cauliflower and herbs, and finished with goat's curd. Sounds great. (I really want the parma.)

She orders a chai latte with soy, and we both order starters.

Makur Chuot grew up in a refugee camp in Kenya. Her mother Helena Yar Enoch, recently widowed and in need of medical treatment, had taken her there as a baby from their village in South Sudan. It was some years before she was able to bring together all her children – Akec's seven siblings – and some more years again before they were finally granted visas to Australia.

But she is sanguine about her time there. For a child, surrounded by her tribe, her cousins and her siblings, it was not the horror existence of today's tent cities.

"We had permanent buildings where you could have your own house. It wasn't as bad as now where there are so many crises around the world ... it was a lot different," she says. "And I find we were so lucky to be there at the time we were because we were able to go to school … The person who had to deal with the bulk of the problems was mum because she was the adult."

A few months before Makur Chuot 12th birthday, the family landed in Perth. It was something of an accidental destination. The original plan was Melbourne. Life's little kinks that can change everything.

"I was really lucky we went to Aranmore Catholic College. It was a very positive and encouraging environment, where the teachers were so invested in what we did outside of school, not just at school," she says.

"I was very lucky again I had two best friends – two girls that made my whole transition at school really easy. I still keep in touch with them now."

We talk about footy over entrees – salt and szechuan pepper squid with chilli jam for me, southern fried chicken ribs with a honey mayo for Akec. She giggles. "They're going to laugh (my teammates) when they see the chicken – I am obsessed with chicken. I have chicken wings before a game."

Makur Chuot's first game of Aussie rules was at a gala day in East Perth. The teenager was awarded most valuable player. But the thing that stayed with her was the sense of community. "I remembered all the strange parents – parents I had never met before, parents of my teammates – just the way they welcomed me, just the way they made me feel that day."

It is something she has held onto in a profound way – it shapes her life. Building connections within communities, being a proud, visible member of her own community. Learning from her own mother, whom she adores. Being a role model.

At 17, she and her cousin were told by a stranger at a petrol station that they were sluts, that they should go back to where they came from, that if he had a gun he would shoot them.

It was, as she describes, "just so random". Just so shocking.

"That day I remembered I had to forgive him. I didn't know how he woke up that morning, what he was going through – it doesn't excuse that but it gives me the opportunity to forgive him and be able to move on," Makur Chuot says.

And she refused to allow the incident to shake her self-esteem.

Makur Chuot was drafted by Fremantle in the inaugural AFLW competition in 2017. She was delisted at the end of the year, but didn't lose faith.

"Someone had just said no. I thought, I am still physically able. I can still work really hard and get back into the system. I just need to be positive. And I just need to have the determination and the strength to just keep going.

"And so I moved to Melbourne with $20 in my account."

She starts laughing. It really is lovely.

"I just trusted and I went 'you know what, I have nothing to lose'."

Carlton had expressed interest. They wanted her to play in the VFLW. And so she took a punt and packed her bags. She played with them for a year.

But it opened so many other doors. She landed at the AFL, starting in their sports-ready traineeship before completing a Certificate IV in business and taking on the development role. And then she was picked up by the Tigers, becoming a part of their debut AFLW team this year. She has such passion for the yellow and black, a true believer.

Our main meals arrive — they are enormous. There is more laughter.

Joy is never too far from the surface. It seems to thread through Makur Chuot's life, so often entwined with hope. "I just want to give young women hope to know that they can do whatever it is they want to do."

It only dims when we talk again of bigotry.

She says she doesn't want to take public transport in Melbourne any more because of the dirty looks she gets when she's not in her corporate gear.

"Nobody wants to sit next to you. And you are just like 'what is wrong with people?'. You go to shops sometimes and you have a backpack on and everyone else walks out and you get searched. Just small things like that. I just can't believe we are still in this."

But then she also knows she may be able to help change that. It's about visibility, the visibility her playing career and her role at the AFL is giving her. It is crucial for Victoria's African communities to see such success, to see her face. Like Majak Daw, like Aliir Aliir. They give hope.

But more broadly, it is also what Australia needs to see.

"It is that representation that is just really important," Makur Chuot says. "People ask me what I want to do after footy and I say I want to get into the media industry. I think it is really important that my family and other cultures wake up in the morning and see a reflection of themselves on their national television.

"That's the reason why we are still having the problems we are having. In 2020, we are not a reflection of what Australia is."

And she wants those faces on commercial mainstream channels – not just SBS, not just ABC.

''I know who I am and my skin colour – the fact that I am a black woman – I love that."

And there, just like that, the joy is back.

THE BILL PLEASE,
Platform 28, 82 Village St, Docklands. 9670 9933.
Mon-Fri 8am-9pm; weekends midday-9pm.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/i-know-who-i-am-lunch-with-akec-makur-chuot-20200319-p54bo6.html

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #264 on: March 31, 2020, 03:32:48 AM »
'By the Numbers' Team Assessment: Richmond Tigers

Callum O'Connor
thewomensgame.com
31 March 2020

 
2020 finish: 7th (Conference A)

Grade: E
 
In a Nutshell

Richmond’s maiden AFLW season closed with many questions to be answered before 2021. The Tigers endured six consecutive defeats as the inexperience and unevenness of its list, even in comparison to rival expansion sides, was exposed.

Fans could be forgiven for pointing the finger of blame at Head of Football Kate Sheahan and recruiter Lauren Tesoriero. The pair were part of Collingwood’s inaugural season and their list structure at Punt Road was very similar to the Magpies’ initial launch: the signature of high-profile names like Katie Brennan, Monique Conti and Sabrina Frederick came first and the foot soldiers were built around them.

Had the marquee signings fired, Richmond might have gotten away with such a top-heavy approach. Alas, everything that could go wrong for the Tigers did.

Conti (20 disposals a game) and ex-Giant defender Phoebe Monahan (17 disposals and three intercept marks) had brilliant seasons and are in the mix for All-Australian guernseys, but the move of Brennan to the midfield only robbed Richmond of a dangerous key forward. An obviously unfit Frederick managed three goals and the other high profile GWS recruit Christina Bernardi was stretched as a high forward.

Alarm bells were ringing by Round 2 when Richmond capitulated to a Gold Coast side that looked every bit as hungry as the Tigers did incohesive. Thrashings against North Melbourne and GWS followed and the patterns of weaknesses were established.

The Tigers lost clearances by an average of seven and averaged 169 disposals (14th) and just over two goals a game (13th), with their nadir coming in their Round 6 trouncing against fellow expansion side St Kilda, when they became the first side to finish a match goalless.

For 2021

The future depends on the Tigers’ competitiveness.

Under the weight of relentless defeats, few Tiger cubs were able to gain constructive experience, which goes a long way to explaining why Tom Hunter’s side was outworked and caught off-guard in its set-up.

Key players will include the powerful Grace Campbell, who became Conti’s second-in-command in the midfield, while Gabrielle Seymour and Kodi Jacques loved the scrap in the congestion. Courtney Wakefield’s strong hands and straight kicking were highlights up forward.

A kinder injury run would certainly help: train-on players were named as emergencies as early as Round 3 with AFLW-experienced players Iilish Ross and Holly Whitford combining for just five matches.

https://thewomensgame.com/news/by-the-numbers-team-assessment-richmond-tigers-543645

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #265 on: March 31, 2020, 07:54:30 AM »
Sheahan and Hunter should accept responsibility for the failure of the womens program. Performance in list management was simply disgraceful.

Online Andyy

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #266 on: March 31, 2020, 08:39:35 AM »
I watched more AFLW this year than any prior year with a Tigers team in the competition and I have to say I was disappointed.


The game is ugly.


I think and hope it will get better in time (probably a decade?) but there are glaring issues for me:
- lack of grassroots which clearly results in a low level of ability at an older age in basic skills, game instinct/footy smarts etc. Most adults that learn AFL will never be more than competent. These skills need to be learned young or they will never be mastered.

- lack of fitness. Obviously this will be hard to achieve until the women are earning more money and able to devote themselves entirely to the sport, but there was a huge lack of fitness for some of the players lumbering around and laboring like unfit rucks after half time.

- congestion. I think this has a lot to do with the players being mostly unable to kick the ball more than 25-30m. Maybe that will get better with time if they are fitter, stronger and more skilled. But it causes terrible congestion when no player can actually clear the ball out of the area and they fight over it like seagulls over a chip. This is one of NSW/QLD's biggest criticisms/jokes about AFL and it is significantly worse in the women's version. I do wonder if the AFLW would be better served having less players on the field and zones etc.

- not enough talent. The league has expanded far too quickly and there really isn't enough talented players to make a league this big. When you are recruiting players who are 30+ from other teams and other sports you know you are scraping the bottom of the barrel. Less players on the ground, less players in the team and less teams in the league would improve the standard until the grassroots can lead to a higher quality of draft.


Despite this there was plenty I did like. The women legitimately have a hard crack at it. They hit and tackle well also (although again, probably too much congestion). There's definitely a place for a women's league but I fear the AFL has tried to build it too quickly without the foundations it needs, and with the impending financial strain they would be well-served to scrap it because it won't be making them any money - but we know they won't do that!

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #267 on: March 31, 2020, 09:46:25 AM »
Recruiting in the womens game is simple.
Recruit girls who can run the lines and have some speed. The skills are rubbish in the comp. You just need girls who can get the footy and run. The ideal player tupe for us is patrikios who plays for st kilda. In tbe next draft we should pick 10 girls who can run quick and run through the lines. Thats all.

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #268 on: March 31, 2020, 11:19:01 AM »
Sheahan and Hunter should accept responsibility for the failure of the womens program. Performance in list management was simply disgraceful.

I think you can leave Hunter out of the majority of list recruiting decision. We had a recruiting manager in Tesorierio and Sheehan who scouted across the country

His role is alot like Hardwick's goes with the recruiting team.

I also suggest you have read of what the Club's recruiting and list build was aiming to achieve. Which was (and I am well aware this not acceptable to many) a long term vision not a first successful season and then dropping away. Much like the Bulldogs have in the last 2 years
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

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Re: Richmond AFLW team 2020 [merged]
« Reply #269 on: March 31, 2020, 01:55:06 PM »
What they aimed to achieve and what they achieved are two different things. The womens recruiting program has been diabolical. A complete and utter failure. Has sheahan been given the arse yet? She should have been sacked by now or stood down indefinately.