Author Topic: 2023 - Best 22  (Read 21632 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #120 on: January 26, 2023, 06:04:37 PM »
Every AFL team’s best 23 for ’23: Richmond Tigers

Richmond were one of the big players during last year’s trade period to keep themselves in the premiership window.

Juri Bilcich
zerohanger.com
January 26, 2023


After missing out on finals in 2021, Richmond made a return to the September action in 2022 only to fall at the first hurdle. Although the journey couldn't mirror the standard that saw them claim three flags in four seasons from 2017-2020, the yellow and black are still firmly in contention.

Last season saw the emergence of Shai Bolton, who is arguably the side's X-Factor player after stepping up when superstar Dustin Martin was out due to personal reasons and injury. Richmond potentially found another crafty forward with Noah Cumberland cementing a place in the Tigers' side. Young midfielder Tyler Sonsie made an immediate impression in the middle with his competitive desire to win the ball. To solidify their midfield, the Tigers secured GWS star midfield duo Jacob Hopper and Tim Taranto to long-term deals.

Their ability to get their hands dirty and hurt the opposition, whether by hand or foot, makes the Tigers even more dangerous. Taranto, in particular, can shift forward as he did in Toby Greene's absence late in 2021, booting four goals against his new team. With the right ingredients in place, there is no reason why Richmond can't claim a fourth flag in seven seasons.

Ins:
Seth Campbell (Rookie Draft), Steely Green (No.55 draft pick), Jacob Hopper (trade, Greater Western Sydney), Kaleb Smith (No.49 draft pick), Tim Taranto (trade, Greater Western Sydney), Tylar Young (Rookie Draft)

Outs:
Jake Aarts (delisted), Josh Caddy (retired), Riley Collier-Dawkins (delisted), Shane Edwards (retired), Kane Lambert (retired), Will Martyn (delisted), Matthew Parker (delisted), Sydney Stack (delisted)

Defenders

In the first half of 2022, Richmond had its fair share of defensive inconsistencies, giving up 100 points on four different occasions. From there, however, the side only gave up 100 points once as the backline began to mould similar to the one from three years ago.

Robbie Tarrant had a solid first season in the yellow and black, featuring in 20 games and getting the task of shutting down the opposition's number two forward. After starting last season up forward, Noah Balta swung back to the defensive end, giving the back six stability with his intercept marking. His closing speed is another asset where he excels.

The calm heads of premiership players Dylan Grimes, Nick Vlaustin and Nathan Broad allow for the defence to repel seamlessly. The trio being one of the reasons why Richmond, when they are at their best, are extremely difficult to score against. Not to mention their versatility to play on taller players and smaller players.

With Tarrant, Balta, Grimes, Broad, Vlaustin and sophomore Josh Gibcus being the defensive negators in minimising opposition forwards, its attacking half-backs fully complement the spine. Daniel Rioli, Jayden Short, and Liam Baker are the architects for a plethora of the side's counterattacks from its defensive 50.

After spending time in 2021 in the VFL, Rioli embraced a new lease by switching from a pressure small forward to an attacking half-back flanker. And it has been a success.

Rioli was brilliant in 2022 averaging 20.5 disposals, with his metres gained and excellent kicking skills setting up many Richmond forays. For his efforts, Rioli finished runner-up in the club's best and fairest behind Tom Lynch.

Like Rioli, Baker is another attacking defender not afraid to be daring. His clean crisp kicking is crucial to the Tigers' attacking gameplan. Having spent the first six rounds last season as a forward, Baker's move back to defence helped his production, and with it, the Tigers' turnaround.

Short is also important to the side's structure and at every opportunity, the Tigers look to get the ball in his trusty hands in the defensive arc to kickstart an attack.

Midfielders

Richmond's midfield spine stacks up as one of the best. And it only gets stronger. During last year's trade period, the Tigers made two major acquisitions by bringing in hard-nosed ball winners Jacob Hopper and Tim Taranto. The duo were integral to GWS, and now it is to the yellow and black's benefit.

Hopper's 2022 campaign never got going after injuring his knee in the opening round against Sydney, only seeing him feature in seven games. Although we didn't get to see the best of the 25-year-old, his hard competitive edge and unrelenting tenacity to extract the ball from the clinches is an element Tigers' fans are eagerly awaiting.

Like Hopper, Taranto further adds to the Tigers' midfield depth. The 24-year-old was one of the Giants' best in a rocky campaign, averaging 25.4 disposals despite missing seven games. Whilst his hardness around the contest is what he prides his game upon, Taranto also has the attributes to be dangerous up forward.

Not one, not two, but three conundrums opposition coaches are going to face on shutting down - Shai Bolton, Dustin Martin and Taranto.

Former Skipper Trent Cotchin had a bounceback season averaging 22.7 disposals in 2022. Late in the year is when the joint 2012 Brownlow medallist was important in securing the Tigers a finals spot with back-to-back 30-disposal outings against Port Adelaide and Hawthorn. Expect him to have another even year as he is only 13 games away from becoming the fifth Tiger to play 300 matches.

Dion Prestia was one of Richmond's best last season in Martin's absence, registering seven 30-disposal games to feature among the highest Brownlow vote-getters across the competition.

Complementing Richmond's spine in the middle are important wingers Kamdyn McIntosh and Marlion Pickett. McIntosh's running ability is a crucial cog to the side, likewise Pickett despite the wing pair not accumulating major numbers.

With the midfield loaded with class, a young player in Tyler Sonsie made an instant impression late in the season. Making his debut in Round 18, the 20-year-old featured in the side's final seven games, including the elimination final, proving he belongs at the highest level.

Their ruck options remain the same for 2023, with co-captain Toby Nankervis seen as the first-string option while Ivan Soldo rotates as either a depth option or second tall depending on the selection for particular opponents.

Forwards

Richmond's forward mix is dangerous and lethal. That being the reason why they led the league for most points scored (98.4 per game). Since its drought-breaking flag in 2017, scoring has not been an issue, apart from 2021. 2022 showed why Richmond, when they get a run on, are hard to stop with their marking power and nippy small forwards ready to pounce on the crumbs.

Tom Lynch is one of the premier key forwards with his vice-like hands and athleticism for a big man. His 2022 season saw him take home the club's best and fairest (Jack Dyer Medal) after kicking 63 goals. His partner-in-crime, Jack Riewoldt, isn't slowing down with his unselfish play being a major aspect of his game. The Lynch-Riewoldt tandem has been a major success for the Tigers, and you can expect them to fire again come March 16 against Carlton.

A string which is a benchmark of Richmond's forward stocks are their small to medium forwards. Shai Bolton is arguably one of the most enthralling players to watch with his uncanny ability to do the impossible.

Noah Cumberland is another find who made a seamless transition to AFL level. His goal sense would be in full effect, kicking 19 goals from 9 matches, including a five-goal haul in the side's seven-goal comeback against Brisbane last year.

Maurice Rioli jr. will again offer plenty of pressure in attack, while questions will be asked about Jason Castagna's prospects after a difficult 2022 campaign.

There are no players more important to the team's overall nucleus than the mastery of Dustin Martin. The three-time Norm Smith medallist endured a difficult 2022, but expect the superstar to weave his unparalleled class at stoppages - with his trademark one-hand fend-offs to his dangerous one-on-one matchups deep in the goal square.

Best 23

FB: Dylan Grimes, Noah Balta, Nathan Broad
HB: Daniel Rioli, Robbie Tarrant, Liam Baker
C: Kamdyn McIntosh, Dion Prestia, Marlion Pickett
HF: Shai Bolton, Jack Riewoldt, Tim Taranto
FF: Dustin Martin, Tom Lynch, Maurice Rioli Jr
FOL: Toby Nankervis, Jacob Hopper, Jayden Short
I/C: Trent Cotchin, Noah Cumberland, Tyler Sonsie, Nick Vlaustin
Sub: Hugo Ralphsmith

Emerg: Ivan Soldo, Jack Graham, Josh Gibcus

https://www.zerohanger.com/every-afl-teams-best-23-for-23-richmond-tigers-132420/

Online Tiger Khosh

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #121 on: January 26, 2023, 07:47:58 PM »
Missing Miller or atleast someone to give nank a chop out.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #122 on: January 26, 2023, 11:29:25 PM »
Spoilt bastards. Looks one too many talls on paper but Gibcus injury kicks that problem down the road.


Yeah a bit of a worry about Grimes and Tarrant going over the edge but they might just kick 18 goals every week and it won't matter.

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Online Andyy

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #123 on: January 26, 2023, 11:46:59 PM »
Cumberland won't be missing.

Baker on the bench, Ross out, Cumberland forward.
Probably prefer Miller to Soldo.

That's about it for me.

Offline Fluffy Tiger

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #124 on: January 27, 2023, 06:17:26 PM »
Isn't it a nice problem to have. Is just not easy to pick a best 23 as there are so many that  could grab a spot. I like where we are ATM but injuries and form could change it in a flash. One thing I love though is that Castagna doesn't get a mention.
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Offline Damo

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #125 on: January 27, 2023, 08:05:50 PM »
I notice neither of those teams have Graham, Jack Graham that is

Must be a mistake

Machine said he’s a certain best 22 player

Offline Tigeritis™©®

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #126 on: January 27, 2023, 09:01:20 PM »
I’d have Graham in my team.

Graham is ahead of Ross by a country mile.
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Offline Damo

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #127 on: January 27, 2023, 09:13:28 PM »
I’d have Graham in my team.

Graham is ahead of Ross by a country mile.

I’ve got no problem with Graham
More the overstating of his position

I would suggest he’s right on the fringe of best 22 and would be best 22 in nearly every other team

Good player who will play a lot of games this year

Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #128 on: January 27, 2023, 09:27:50 PM »
I’d have Graham in my team.

Graham is ahead of Ross by a country mile.
Must be why Ross was picked over him in the final last year...played well too  ;D

Neither of them are in the best 22, both are in the best 25
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Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #129 on: January 27, 2023, 09:44:14 PM »
I’d have Graham in my team.

Graham is ahead of Ross by a country mile.
Must be why Ross was picked over him in the final last year...played well too  ;D

Neither of them are in the best 22, both are in the best 25

Ross was fit

Graham was carrying an injury. You know the injury that required surgery that he is still recovering from. Might have something to do with why he didn't play the final
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Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #130 on: January 27, 2023, 10:11:37 PM »
I’d have Graham in my team.

Graham is ahead of Ross by a country mile.
Must be why Ross was picked over him in the final last year...played well too  ;D

Neither of them are in the best 22, both are in the best 25

Ross was fit

Graham was carrying an injury. You know the injury that required surgery that he is still recovering from. Might have something to do with why he didn't play the final
Ross was picked over him. If a mid was a late out, Graham would have played.

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Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #131 on: January 27, 2023, 10:19:42 PM »
Ross was picked over him. If a mid was a late out, Graham would have played.

Ross was picked over him because he was fully fit and not a risk

Dimma said he could not risk playing both an 80% fit Martin and Graham who was carrying and had carried a pretty serious injury into a final

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Online Tiger Khosh

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #132 on: January 27, 2023, 11:45:17 PM »
Ross was picked over him. If a mid was a late out, Graham would have played.

Ross was picked over him because he was fully fit and not a risk

Dimma said he could not risk playing both an 80% fit Martin and Graham who was carrying and had carried a pretty serious injury into a final

I think you’re both right. Ross was picked ahead of him but Graham not being 100% right would have atleast had some bearing on the choice. Butttttt if Dimma couldn’t risk playing both dusty and graham then graham wouldn’t have even been named an emergency. I  bet he would have been next man should someone have pulled out late. In saying that I also think that if graham was in any sort of form he would have picked him regardless but the combination of not being 100% + being in poor/avg form previously meant he didn’t make the cut.

Personally I would pick graham ahead of Ross if both 100% fit. Neither are in my 22 though.

Online camboon

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #133 on: January 29, 2023, 05:05:21 PM »
Graham steps up in big games and can restrict the best opposition mids ,
Ross has a bit more work to do , Graham every time gets the nod ahead of Ross if fit on what I’ve seen so far

Offline the claw

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Re: 2023 - Best 22
« Reply #134 on: January 29, 2023, 09:56:07 PM »
cannot see either getting a gig in front of 23 others  and especially mids  Taranto, Hopper, Prestia, Bolton, Cotchin, Martin, Sonsie and Baker and Short will play in front of them because they are more flexible.

No way should we be picking them in front of specialist forwards Rioli Cumberland and Clarke. If honest we dont need em to play fwd with a shed load of very good mids who can go thru there in Taranto, Martin, Bolton Sonsie.

Simply put there are just too many better options to go with than Graham and Ross.