Author Topic: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'  (Read 6911 times)

Offline julzqld

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Re: New Richmond History Book in December 2007
« Reply #30 on: December 23, 2007, 11:53:54 AM »
My brother, who is a Demons supporter, had a squiz at my copy last night and was very impressed.

Offline rbartlett

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Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers'
« Reply #31 on: December 23, 2007, 03:09:41 PM »
My brother, who is a Demons supporter, had a squiz at my copy last night and was very impressed.


Thanks for the kind works julzqld and mightytiges. the response has been really impressive from the richmond supporters, current and former players.
Anyone who ever played with the club- gets a mention in the book in some capacity, and every premiership team photo appears as well.

Cheers
Rhett Bartlett

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #32 on: December 24, 2007, 05:09:31 PM »
Not sure how many copies they originally started with but the Tigen Den only had 3 copies of the book left on the shelves on Friday.
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #33 on: December 24, 2007, 08:07:14 PM »
Not sure how many copies they originally started with but the Tigen Den only had 3 copies of the book left on the shelves on Friday.

Well I know a Dawks supporter who went to the Den on Thursday arvo to pick up a copy for a mate for Xmas  :santa

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from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

Offline rbartlett

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #34 on: December 24, 2007, 11:45:55 PM »

the club has been very suportive of the whole book concept from day one. which is great for supporters

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #35 on: December 27, 2007, 05:50:24 PM »
Tommy recalls the day the Tiger drought broke
Tony Greenberg
richmondfc.com.au

Richmond’s drought-breaking 1967 Grand Final triumph over Geelong is, not surprisingly, indelibly etched in the mind of the Tigers’ four-time premiership coach and Club ‘Immortal’ Tommy Hafey . . .
 
“I’ve got so many memories of the 1967 Grand Final,” Hafey told Rhett Bartlett, author of the recently-published book, ‘The Tigers – a Century of League Football’.
 
“I can remember before the game talking to the players in the room. There were only the 20 players, the runner and the coach. Nobody else was there, never ever was. And we were talking about different players that we had to be aware of.
 
“I remember saying to Billy Barrot, looking right into his face in front of all the players, ‘What’s going to happen when they put Denis Marshall on you, how do you feel about that?’ Because he usually played on a boy called Wayne Closter, who was a very good player, but Billy used to beat him. After 10 minutes they used to take Wayne Closter out of the centre and put in Denis Marshall, who had actually done very well on Billy.
 
“Billy didn’t say anything for a long time, he just was thinking. I then remember Michael Patterson breaking the silence saying, ‘He can’t wait to get at him!’ and everybody practically at once said ‘Yeahh!’ And that’s what happened; Billy was nearly best man on the ground. He probably played better when Denis Marshall went onto him than what he had played on Wayne Closter.
 
“I remember Polly Farmer having cramp at a vital time. And I often used to think about that because a racehorse hangs under pressure, a pacer gallops under pressure, and obviously cramping could be something like being under pressure.
 
“I remember Michael Patterson doing such a good job because he had to replace Neville Crowe in the first ruck. I remember the goals that big John Ronaldson kicked and I remember us giving away a couple of silly free kicks, and Kevin Bartlett kicking that very vital goal right at the end of the game, which more or less sealed the whole thing.
 
“And, of course, we all remember Fred Swift taking that mark behind the goal, in front of the goal, on the line, whatever. When I coached Geelong, somebody mentioned that mark every day for the entire three years I lived down there.”
 
* ‘The Tigers – a Century of League Football’ is available through the Tiger Den for $50 (RRP is $54.95) with a further 10% discount applying for 2008 RFC members. You can purchase in-store, order on-line, or call the Tiger Den on (03) 9426 4419 and have the book mailed out to you.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/tabid/6301/News/NewsArticle/Default.aspx?newsId=54381

Offline rbartlett

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #36 on: January 05, 2008, 12:48:59 PM »


 There are some extracts of other chapters on the Richmond website- in particular on Bartlett and the 1980 GF

Offline one-eyed

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How Disco dazzled (RFC)
« Reply #37 on: February 01, 2008, 03:12:40 PM »
How Disco dazzled
2:01 PM Fri 1 February, 2008
Tony Greenberg
for richmondfc.com.au

One of Richmond’s all-time goalkicking greats has revealed the secrets of his sharpshooting success in the recently published book ‘The Tigers – a Century of League Football’.
 
Michael ‘Disco’ Roach, who kicked 607 goals in 200 games for Richmond from 1977-89, and won the Club’s Leading Goalkicker award on seven occasions, told the book’s author, Rhett Bartlett, that he largely owed his impressive career conversion rate of 66% to six key points scrawled on a piece of paper and handed down to him by another legendary Tiger forward in Royce Hart . . .
 
“I was always a reasonably long kick, but had no set routine until Royce Hart got hold of me,” Roach said.
 
“When I started to kick goals in 1979, Royce got me to set a routine up to kick for goal. I basically kept that routine all through my football career.
 
“Royce had six points:
 
   1. Make sure after you have taken the mark that you get back far enough from the man on the mark, because you don’t want the man on the mark to interfere with your concentration.

   2. Pick a spot to kick at behind the goals.

   3. Have a certain number of steps when coming in. I never ever knew how many until in my routine I counted them. I took 11 steps when kicking for goal, so I knew how far to get back.

   4. Keep your head down until after you kick the ball. Don’t look up to see where the ball is gone.

   5. Last two steps, watch the ball onto the boot.

   6. Kick with enough power.

 
“I never changed it. I had that bit of paper that Royce had written out for me and I had it in my sock before a game.
 
“If I missed a couple early, I usually knew what I would have done wrong and then at half-time I’d head off to the toilet and read it.
 
“I haven’t got that bit of paper, I don’t know where it has gotten to, but I have re-written the steps of kicking for goal.”
 
* ‘The Tigers – a Century of League Football’ is available through the Tiger Den for $50 (RRP is $54.95) with a further 10% discount applying for 2008 RFC members. You can purchase in-store, order on-line, or call the Tiger Den on (03) 9426 4419 and have the book mailed out to you.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Default.aspx?tabid=6301&newsId=54384

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Re: How Disco dazzled (RFC)
« Reply #38 on: February 01, 2008, 03:38:48 PM »
He should give his piece of paper to Richo.

Offline rbartlett

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #39 on: February 02, 2008, 03:14:02 PM »

He actually did.
And Richo kicked 94 goals in a season.
He talks abut that in the book too.

Rhett Bartlett
www.rhettrospective.com

Offline mightytiges

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Re: How Disco dazzled (RFC)
« Reply #40 on: February 02, 2008, 11:35:24 PM »
   1. Make sure after you have taken the mark that you get back far enough from the man on the mark

   3. Have a certain number of steps when coming in. I never ever knew how many until in my routine I counted them.
Richo needs to fine that piece of paper again especially for points 1 and 3.
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline one-eyed

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In praise of the Dean of Tigerland (RFC)
« Reply #41 on: February 06, 2008, 12:40:28 PM »
In praise of the Dean of Tigerland
12:08 PM Wed 6 February, 2008
Tony Greenberg
for richmondfc.com.au

Francis Bourke, or St Francis as he’s affectionately known, is one of the most revered figures in the history of the Richmond Football Club (and VFL/AFL football for that matter).
 
So, when the 300-game, five-time Tiger premiership player and Grand Final coach offers an opinion about the player he admired most during his long, successful stint at Punt Road, you sit up and take notice.
 
Bourke tells of his admiration for another embodiment of the Tigerland spirit – 1969 premiership captain Roger Dean – in the recently published book ‘The Tigers – a Century of League Football’.
 
“. . . the player I admired most was Roger Dean. He had such an impact as a player, Bourke said.
 
“I was aware growing up that Roger was a bit of a cheeky sort of player, and that Ron Barassi got rubbed out for belting him in the last game of the year (1963???) and missed the finals.
 
“When I got to Richmond, I saw just how good he was. In my first year, he played back pocket and I also saw how small he was. But Roger could mark with the big blokes – he was strong for his size.
 
As a back pocket player, his racket was cutting across the leads of the full-forward and taking his run. I can remember in 1967 he took a spectacular mark just jumping on someone’s back.
 
“. . . he was only 5ft 8in (173cm) and genuinely tough. Now, he was tough by any definition. In the 1969 Grand Final, Roger was running down the ground bouncing the ball, heading towards our goal, and Kevin Hall, who is 6ft 3in (191cm) and about 14 stone (90kg), was coming at him. And Roger got his kick away so late that Hall was always going to collide with him, so that we got a penalty kick down the ground – wow, that’s real tough.
 
“And he continued on longer than the others of that era. Paddy Guinane had retired after 1968, Fred Swift had gone after 1967, ‘Patto’ went to coach North Adelaide in 1970, ‘Bull’ Richardson had gone to South Melbourne, Crowe retired, but Roger was actually still a good player. Captain of 1969, he played until 1972 and went out captain of Richmond’s seconds premiership team.
 
“He got full marks from me for doing that, so this just added to all the reasons why I like Roger and admire him. For Roger, it was ‘win at all costs’ and it was his own costs, too.”
 
Dean, who played 245 games with Richmond from 1957-73, was a member of the 1967 premiership side and captained the Club from 1968-71 (including the ’69 premiership), provided the book’s author, Rhett Bartlett, with an interesting insight into what motivated him during his playing days.
 
“Francis (Bourke) was probably similar to myself in some way, we probably hated the thought of getting beaten,” Dean said.   
 
“Even in the early stages, when we were second last or last, it could be the last game of the year and we could be 15 goals down, and I still wanted to get another kick. It was pride.
 
“I never ever wanted to be beaten; even if we were beaten, I still wanted to get another kick . . .
 
“Every time I went onto the field I wanted to be best on the ground. I didn’t care about anybody else, I couldn’t control them. I wanted to be best on the ground because I didn’t want to be beaten.
 
“If I could play well, that meant it could help the side anyway.”
 
 
* ‘The Tigers – a Century of League Football’ is available through the Tiger Den for $50 (RRP is $54.95) with a further 10% discount applying for 2008 RFC members. You can purchase in-store, order on-line, or call the Tiger Den on (03) 9426 4419 and have the book mailed out to you.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Default.aspx?tabid=6301&newsId=54383

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond History Book- 'The Tigers- A Century of League Football'
« Reply #42 on: February 07, 2008, 02:25:11 AM »
For the record
The Age
Geoff McClure
February 7, 2008

THIS for the "better-late-than-never" file. Richmond legend Jack "Skinny" Titus has always been credited with having played 204 consecutive games but the new Richmond history book, The Tigers, written by club historian Rhett Bartlett, reveals that what was one of the game's great records which stood for so many years — he retired 65 years ago — was incorrectly counted at the time. His tally of games without a miss was in fact 202.

Link

Offline one-eyed

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Rhett's RFC Book Signing tomorrow
« Reply #43 on: February 14, 2008, 04:28:20 PM »
RFC Book Signing - Tomorrow Feb 15th with KB and Tom Hafey
 
The book signing will occur at the Angus and Robertson Bookstore on the corner of Elizabeth St and Bourke St from 12.30pm - 1.30pm on February 15th.

http://www.rhettrospective.com/

Offline one-eyed

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Rhett Bartlett coming up on SEN
« Reply #44 on: February 17, 2008, 02:34:37 PM »
Rhett coming up after the break on SEN