Author Topic: Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy (Australian)  (Read 1746 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy (Australian)
« on: September 15, 2018, 12:41:41 PM »
Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy

Andrew Faulkner
The Australian
September 15, 2018


Last spring, the Tigers closed Swan St an hour or two after they shut down their Adelaide opponents.

Might as well close the hipster enclave right now. Raise the bunting, erect the barricades and hose down the streets — another premiership party awaits.

A bit of preparation might save Victoria Police blowing another year’s budget on capsicum spray.

It might as well close now for another reason. It’s already a dead zone. Nothing but tumbleweeds blowing through Richmond in week two of the finals.

Swan St is the main artery of Richmond’s steady beating heart. No palpitations here; just a calm, quiet, confidence.

Their first final won, their rest earned, the Tigers are lying low. At the time of writing, the lead item on their website was a segment featuring Shaun Grigg and Brendan Fevola watching TV. Nothing to see here.

But wait. Underworked and ravenous newshounds bounded into action yesterday when news broke that Dustin Martin, wait for it, left training early.

It was a cruel hoax. Forward Daniel Rioli later revealed Martin sustained a “little corkie” in the Hawthorn match last week. After training, Rioli sent a shudder through the Tigers camp when he went for scans … for a jarred finger.

“It’s just a sore finger mate … just a jarring,” Rioli was quoted as saying in the afl.com.au exclusive.

While the Tigers are dealing with their sore fingers and little corkies, the few challengers that remain are plotting their demise. Still.

Chaos ball is the description de rigueur for Richmond. Finding order in the Tigers’ chaos is the challenge for they who would usurp the Richmond reign.

Everyone seems to understand the way the Tigers play. But no one seems to know how to counter their old-fashioned, get-the-ball-forward style.

Ex-Saints coach Grant Thomas said that’s partly a product of ­opposition coaches overcomplicating an uncomplicated game. The platoons of assistants spilling out of coaches’ boxes want to play chess, Thomas said. But the Tigers prefer darts or an impromptu game of hoops.

He said the Tigers play “manic, unconditional, keep-the-ball-alive” football against “conservative, methodical, considered, risk-averse ball movement”.

It’s Richmond’s “belief and trust” versus everyone else’s ­“system and structure”.

“People focus on how to beat Tigers instead of focusing on playing to your very best,” Thomas says. The Tigers can’t be beaten tactically because they are driven emotionally and spiritually.

“Coaches don’t get it. Let your players go — unleash their talent. That’s where Tigers can be beaten.”

Perhaps football — which we’re told is always evolving — has devolved. While the rest of the competition was looking forward, Damien Hardwick was looking back.

Perhaps we’ve reached a saturation point where no amount of tactics and strategy can beat getting the pill and playing in front.

“Sure they’ve got their core foundations,” Thomas told SEN. “Ball movement, plans, structures in front of the ball, behind the ball … they’ve got all that sort of stuff, but more than anything else they just love playing together.

“They actually enjoy the contest. They keep the ball alive. It’s perpetual motion. Richmond ­actually use possession of the footy as a pressure tool.

“They keep it alive and they keep it going their way, so the opposition is continually under pressure. I think that’s the most amazing thing about their footy.”

Thomas likens it to the mad scramble at the end of any close game. When tactics and structure and order are replaced with a raw will to win.

If the Tigers have any strategy, it’s just that — playing without strategy. Thomas says the best way to beat them is to do the same..

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/afl/richmonds-winning-strategy-is-to-have-no-strategy/news-story/b5dc813928014e6d00be1963c6b3ebef

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy (Australian)
« Reply #1 on: September 15, 2018, 03:52:28 PM »
But it is a strategy as all 22 who take the field know what they themselves and each other need to do. There's roles within the team structure. If it was all just random or we're imitating the final 5 mins of a close finish for all 4 quarters then we'd lose roughly as many games as we would win. It may look like "chaos" to the untrained eye but getting more numbers to the ball, applying pressure and all the little taps and knock-ons is still risk aversion as it creates forward momentum and gains territory until the next stoppage or until we score a goal. There IS a method/strategy to the perceived "madness".

It would be nice for a change for the mainstream media and other footy commentators on social media who treat last year's premiership as a "surprise" victory to finally acknowledge the individual talent on our list which extends beyond the fab-4 of Dusty, Cotch, Rance and Jack. It allows us to not only play this strategy but also counter and repel what opposition tactics have been thrown at us. I'm guessing only us winning back-to-back flags in two weeks time will finally silence the doubters.
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Online JP Tiger

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Re: Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy (Australian)
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2018, 04:26:17 PM »
Maybe Thomas should borrow our strategy & start writing his articles by not actually writing anything!     :wallywink
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Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy (Australian)
« Reply #3 on: September 15, 2018, 06:57:05 PM »
maybe you should actually read what he said and while doing so, you may realise he didn't write that article.

spot on GT :clapping i'm sure people will say he's hating on us but they've just got NFI :shh
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Online Hard Roar Tiger

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Re: Richmond’s winning strategy is to have no strategy (Australian)
« Reply #4 on: September 15, 2018, 10:16:56 PM »
maybe you should actually read what he said and while doing so, you may realise he didn't write that article.

spot on GT :clapping i'm sure people will say he's hating on us but they've just got NFI :shh

Nothing to see here folks, sychophantic ex-employee who can’t distinguish his floggish football scribing from whatever else he did that made him someone’s boss
"The money might have been better. But, at the end of the day, Richmond showed faith in me. It's only fair that now we're 18th on the ladder, I show the faith back in the club and do everything I can to put them in front. In the end, I'm stoked I made the decision to stay. I f***ing love this club”