Franklin just getting started
19 June 2006 Herald-Sun
Mark Robinson
LANCE Franklin's star sparkled yesterday as brightly as it has in a season-and-a-half as his career-high six goals kicked Richmond back into reality in Launceston.
The tantalising Franklin, in just his fourth game this season, and Ben Dixon (three goals) booted nine of their team's 16 goals in a match that looked Hawthorn's for the taking from quarter-time.
The Hawks, with a rediscovered free spirit, took risks, ran hard and negated a Tigers group which, other than skipper Kane Johnson, Kane Pettifer and Troy Simmonds, seemingly waited for the footy to be delivered to them on a platter.
Instead, the platter was delivered to Dixon and to the prodigious talents of ``Buddy'' Franklin who, coach Al Clarkson hopes, will use the day to launch a superstar career.
Franklin beat three opponents _ Ray Hall mainly, then Andrew Kellaway and Joel Bowden _ and booted goals in each of the first two quarters, and two each in the third and fourth.
Unlike the league's other power forwards, Franklin's freakish mobility allows him to extricate the ball and himself from traffic and find the goals. Yesterday he was a giant running excitement machine that the Tigers couldn't contain.
``He was terrific, he seems to like playing against us, his best game early last year was against us as well, '' Tigers coach Terry Wallace said. ``We tried a couple on him, and he was too good for them.''
Clarkson says yesterday's performance might announce Franklin's revival, much the same way a match in 1999 signalled the arrival of a young Warren Tredrea.
``I can remember in 1999, Tredrea kicking eight goals against Carlton at Princes Park, he just showed he was going to emerge as a really important player for Port Adelaide,'' Clarkson said.
``What it (yesterday) does do is show our supporters, the rest of our players and shows us as a coaching group, that he is capable of doing it at senior level of AFL footy.
``He's got a long way to go, and he knows that, and he's going to probably draw a little more attention to himself over the next few weeks, but it's a really important step in his belief as an AFL footballer.
``That he's not just making up the numbers, that he can have enormous influence on the way games unfold.''
He did yesterday, not so much in a completely dominant performance, but more an audacious opportunist feasting on the strong work ethic of the midfield and a sometimes sloppy Tigers defence.
Sam Mitchell (31 touches), Tim Clarke (27), a blinder from Rick Ladson (26), and Jordan Lewis (24) made a mess of the Tigers, only Johnson's effort on Luke Hodge (12) robbing the Hawks of a lay-down misere in the middle.
In contrast, Mark Coughlan did a knee and was off in the first quarter, Shane Tuck was beaten badly, Greg Tivendale was OK but missed gettable goals, Brett Deledio tried to at least run, and Chris Hyde, Dean Polo, Andrew Krakouer, Danny Meyer, Richard Tambling and Nathan Foley were only so-so, although Polo and Chance Bateman had an even contest.
All of them, Johnson aside, were not nearly accountable or hungry enough for the pill.
A sub-standard first quarter gave way to Dixon's three goals in the second and Hawthorn's four unanswered goals from the ninth minute to the 19th opened up a 29-point lead.
The Tigers gathered, briefly, for a challenge midway through the third quarter, when they kicked two in a row, but the Hawks responded with three of their own.
Crucial to victory was forward Luke Brennan's shut-down job on defender Joel Bowden _ a huge tick for Clarkson and Brennan _ Brad Sewell on Nathan Brown (just one goal), Jarryd Roughead's ability to hold down full-back on the big boys _ Greg Stafford, Adam Pattison, Troy Simmonds _ and Campbell Brown's maturity to attack and defend at the right time.
Combine the four wins in the defensive 50, the dominant midfield, Franklin and Dixon up forward and a want to run, and you get the picture of how surprisingly inept the Tigers were against a team that hadn't won in six weeks.
Worse still, when the Tigers got into their forward 50m _ they did 48 times, the same as the Hawks _ they butchered the ball.
Wallace was perplexed post-match. ``Our blokes didn't come to play,'' he said. ``We never got our game going at all, the worst element was that we didn't put our head over the ball and win it.''
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