Tigers' list is simply inferior
18 April 2007 Herald-Sun
Mike Sheahan
AT SOME point each year, pot shots on Punt Rd returns as Victoria's second-biggest winter sporting interest, Mike Sheahan writes.
It is back earlier than usual this year, but that's what losses in the first three rounds of a season will do to a club.
Richmond is under attack on all fronts: the coaching, recruiting and medical and conditioning.
On the surface, the queries seem reasonable enough, particularly in the fitness area.
Richmond has been in a winning position in all three games, yet has failed to finish off its work each time.
The Tigers were overrun by Carlton, outstayed by Sydney and embarrassed by Collingwood.
Maybe the problem is mental, yet the last quarter returns reflect a drop-off in both skill and intensity.
Maybe we should be addressing the most important aspect of all criteria: the talent?
Is the list good enough to carry the club anywhere forward from ninth in 2006 (11 wins)?
Or was coach Terry Wallace right to caution against high expectations this year, suggesting a holding pattern was more realistic?
The situation has been complicated by the failure of the team's most talented player, Nathan Brown, to play to this point, while 2003 best-and-fairest winner Mark Coughlan will miss the entire season, and the team's best ruckman Troy Simmonds missed the first two rounds and was underdone last Friday night.
The highly-rated Will Thursfield also is yet to appear.
However, only Sydney escapes injuries in the modern game. They are a fact of football life.
No, the damning reality for Richmond supporters is that its list probably isn't as good as the Carlton list.
The Blues, who finished on the bottom in 2005-06, seem to be making much better progress.
Apart from the Round 1 win, my rankings of Richmond's best 12 in comparison with their Carlton counterparts suggests the Blues are in front.
They win 7-5, with several line-ball calls: Pettifer/Simpson, Deledio/Murphy, Johnson/Scotland, Raines/Walker, Newman/Houlihan, Schulz/Whitnall.
The exercise suggests two things: Richmond supporters need to be patient -- yes, again -- and Carlton's solid start to the season is based on substance as much as confidence and enthusiasm.
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