Tiger's talent shines in gloom
03 July 2006 Herald-Sun
Comment by Mike Sheahan
ONE team came in search of redemption, the other came simply to meet a commitment.
From the moment Richmond coach Terry Wallace publicly humiliated his players after they had humiliated themselves in Launceston on June 18, the Tigers have been hell-bent on restoring honour.
Wallace had accused his players of ``getting ahead of themselves'' after the shock 41-point loss to Hawthorn, and he continued to make them pay for their sins.
Ruckman Troy Simmonds said after the game: ``The boys couldn't wait to get out there.''
One of Wallace's key assistants, David King, reinforced the message on 3AW on Saturday. King said he couldn't promise a win over Collingwood the next day, but he could guarantee a far more honourable effort.
Wallace, a three-time premiership player at Hawthorn, and King, a dual premiership player at North Melbourne, come from cultures where lapses like the one in Launceston demand a statement in response.
They know the cynics love to say nothing much changes at Richmond after every unexpected lapse.
Wallace's teams, originally at Footscray and now at Richmond, are building a reputation of almost always rebounding after a bad loss.
The Tigers, remember, lost to Sydney by 118 points at Telstra Dome in Round 7 and beat Adelaide at the same venue seven days later.
They were excellent from the opening minutes yesterday in conditions made to order for a team with honour and pride at stake.
Opinion is divided on whether wet grounds and a slippery ball help or hinder the better players.
I share Ron Barassi's view that the tougher the conditions, the better the good players perform.
If Barassi is under attack on this one any time soon, he might rest his case on Richmond's Nathan Brown.
No player in the competition, none, is more skilled than Brown with the ball loose in his area.
He had 11 possessions to halftime, when the contest was all over, and had kicked 2.3. His awareness, clean ball-handling, ability to keep his feet, and delivery off either foot, is unsurpassed.
Early in the third quarter, he ran towards the bouncing ball with the competition's pre-eminent defender James Clement on his hammer, won possession, turned and delivered neatly to a teammate off his right side.
He was the superior player in the contest in the first half, his job done with Richmond going to the interval 9.9 to 1.2.
Clement reduced Brown's efficiency, prompting many to wonder why he, not Tarkyn Lockyer, hadn't started on the Richmond star, but Brown ripped into Clement with a match-turning last quarter last year so the gamble was understandable.
So, the Tigers are in the eight into the second half of the season, sitting 7-6 but with a testing five weeks ahead.
They must travel to Adelaide to play Port, then front Melbourne, Sydney, St Kilda and the Western Bulldogs.
The one certainty is that whatever they achieve this year, they will improve on it next year.
Brett Deledio, Andrew Raines, Dean Polo, Richard Tambling, Jay Schulz and Nathan Foley all look like becoming fixtures in this team for many years.
Raines was the best of them yesterday in just his 20th game. The No.4 guernsey, the extraordinary similarities with his famous father, Geoff, coupled with his poise, made you wonder whether it actually might have been Raines Sr churning through the rain.
Andrew Krakouer also produced two or three reminders of his famous father, Jim, with masterly work in front of goal.
He's hardly a youngster any more at 23 and with 86 games to his name, but he revelled in the conditions and looked to enjoy his work more than he has been.
It was a much different story for Collingwood, which produced probably its worst performance of the season.
It was as if the Magpies had never previously experienced a wet ground and slippery ball, and, unlike Richmond, they weren't prepared to do what has to be done on wet days.
Collingwood players weighed up the situation far too often, and paid the consequences.
They were too tall, too, with Shane Wakelin, Travis Cloke and Scott Pendlebury all spending large chunks of time on the bench.
The Maggies obviously are better this year, but the depth of the improvement remains uncertain.
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