Richmond goes down fighting
By Emma Quayle At Telstra Dome
The Age
April 8, 2006
ST KILDA 4.1 9.4 11.6 13.10 (88)
RICHMOND 3.2 6.4 10.7 11.11 (77)
GOALS - St Kilda: Gehrig 3, Riewoldt 3, Clarke, Dal Santo, Goddard, Harvey, Montagna, Fiora, Hayes. Richmond: P Bowden 3, Pettifer 3, Jackson 2, Richardson, Tivendale, Simmonds.
BEST - St Kilda: Riewoldt, Dal Santo, Hayes, Maguire, Harvey, Hamill. Richmond: P Bowden, J Bowden, Johnson, Tuck, Coughlan, Jackson.
INJURIES - St Kilda: Ball (stomach) replaced in selected side by Peckett. Richmond: Stafford (leg) replaced in selected side by Jackson.
UMPIRES: Margetts, McLaren, McInerney.
CROWD: 40,740 at Telstra Dome.
ABOUT an hour before Richmond sought redemption against St Kilda last night, Terry Wallace was asked how he had managed to rally so many badly beaten teams in his coaching career.
But bouncing back from 115-point floggings and worst-ever days at the office, said the Tigers coach, was not about instilling anything new in players. Instead, it depended on how many of them already cared about their football club.
"There are certain games in the year where you get an opportunity, under pressure, to just find out a little bit about the group," Wallace told a pre-match sponsors' function.
"Our journey's just begun, but what I'll find out tonight is the blokes who actually want to come along for the journey."
Not long after 10pm, Wallace would have been imagining a more enjoyable trip. His players lost, and remained in search of their first four points this season. But the Tigers were beaten only by 11 points, by an opposition side also on the rebound, and they lost only bit by bit.
St Kilda was weakened when new captain Luke Ball withdrew from last night's side with what the club described as an abdominal injury, not a recurrence of osteitis pubis.
Down by five points at quarter-time, the margin slipped to three goals at the big break. A Robert Harvey goal started the quarter, but then Kayne Pettifer kicked two goals, and Patrick Bowden kicked two more.
Fraser Gehrig kicked his third goal to wrench back a bit of space, but had Bowden's third shot not slammed into the post, the Saints would have had some chasing to do.
That said, there were more things to deal with before they could secure their first points. The Tigers dominated the first eight minutes, stopped to watch Will Thursfield get taken off on a stretcher, then dominated a little bit more.
Richmond hit its first lead in more than an hour, 12 minutes into the final term, after Max Hudghton's arm sneaked over Troy Simmonds' shoulder, but as they had done all night, the Saints did just enough, at just the right times.
Nick Dal Santo found Nick Riewoldt, whose even steadier kick got the lead straight back. Lenny Hayes added another, and then the Saints' defenders spoiled and cleared a final few dangerous balls.
That this Richmond side would take a little beating became clear in the first 30 seconds of both the first and second quarters.
In the first, Greg Tivendale snaffled a mark beside the boundary line, and threaded the game's opening goal.
Gehrig sat deep in the St Kilda forward line, with Riewoldt just a little higher up, and both were significant in bridging the gap, then stretching it. Two Gehrig goals had the Saints in front 11 minutes in, and the 100-gamer with his second club then ushered through a running Dal Santo goal.
Richmond interchanged Riewoldt's opponent, Thursfield, for Daniel Jackson halfway through the quarter, and Jackson scored the first of his two first-half goals by sprinting to the forward line, before Riewoldt had sussed out who his new opponent was, and drifting into mark.
Riewoldt, with Joel Bowden alongside, marked and got a quick one back, but the Tigers held in and kept creative minds creative.
Darren Gaspar's decision to run Gehrig up-field did not quite pay off. Gaspar marked and chose to run around the Saint, but was bailed up, and coughed up a handball.
Aaron Hamill missed the shot on the rebound, before Matthew Richardson slid into his first grab at the opposite end, cutting the margin to five on the cusp of quarter-time.
Richmond got going first in the second term, too, Bowden delivering off an even more impressive angle than Tivendale had.
Having nudged a loose ball to Nathan Brown, Bowden ran on for the handball, then a checkside goal from tight in the forward pocket brilliantly stole the lead.
That was only temporary. Aaron Fiora and Xavier Clarke snaps restored the order, before Leigh Montagna waltzed with ease into goal. Brett Voss and Justin Peckett missed three shots between them, but it was the Tigers who had to keep chasing.
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