Fighting Tigers fall just short
By Geoff Dodd
richmondfc.com.au
Friday, May 17, 2007
THE TIGERS have finished their double-road trip to Adelaide still winless but with pride restored after a gutsy nine-point loss to the Crows at AAMI Stadium tonight.
In Terry Wallace’s 200th game as a senior AFL coach, Richmond lost on the scoreboard but not in the eyes of football fans, in the 14.15 (99) to 14.6 (90) defeat.
A first half shoot-out saw Richmond down by just two points at half time, but even more impressive was the young Tigers’ ability to hang in and slug it out with one of the competition heavyweights throughout a high-pressure second half.
Fielding 13 players aged 22 or under in front of the 40,742 crowd, the Tigers challenged the Crows all the way to the last quarter, levelling the scores with about 10 minutes to go, but the home team showed its experience to steady and ice the game.
In a sharp contrast to last year’s infamous ‘basketball’ game, both sides backed their skills, but in the end the Crows were the more polished, their extra experienced heads and hard bodies making the difference when push came to shove.
The game threatened to be over when the Crows had three unanswered goals on the board after six minutes of the first quarter, but the Tigers hit back through a goal to Matthew Richardson, before the Crows added two more through Nathan Bassett and Jonathon Griffin.
Staring at a five goal to one deficit and with the Crows rampant, the example was set for the Tigers by two young players with six games between them – 18-year-old Shane Edwards and elevated-rookie Jake King.
In the back half, King stood tall against the Crows onslaught, hoovering the loose ball, while Edwards - whose dad Greg starred on this ground for Central District in the SANFL - was prepared to back himself at every opportunity. While this sometimes ended in error, it more often led to opportunity.
Edwards’ spark was infectious, and classy goals to Nathan Foley on the run and Kayne Pettifer from a tight angle had the Tigers back within 10 points.
The good work was undone in the last minute of the quarter, however, when young Adelaide ball-magnet Chris Knights was allowed to goal after an undisciplined free, and then Simon Goodwin goaled on the run to have the home team 22 points up at the first break.
The Crows started the second term fast again, taking the margin out to 30 after four minutes with a snapped goal to Scott Welsh following some classic ruckwork from Ben Hudson.
But Richmond kept coming.
A goal to Richo after some nice lead up work from Andrew Krakouer - a late inclusion at the expense of Chris Hyde - was followed by another to Dean Polo, and the Tigers refused to say die.
A super goal soon after to Jake King - showing older Tiger heads again how to back themselves - reduced the margin back to 12, and then a passage to gladden Richmond hearts - Foley, Deledio, Meyer, goal - had the visitors back within a goal, and it was ‘game on’.
The game had turned to a shoot-out, and the Tigers were more than holding their own.
By half time a five goal to one second term had the Tigers back within two points.
Challenged, the Crows came out after half time and turned the game into the sort of high pressure football that’s seen them reach the past two preliminary finals.
The Tigers held on through a combination of grit and inaccurate kicking from the Crows, but by three-quarter time the margin had eked back out to 19 points.
The Tigers refused to lie down, however. A goal to Richo (his third) kept them in touch, and when Chris Knights ran too far under pressure in defence, and Brett Deledio calmly slotted home the free from 50, the Tigers were back within five points.
A frenetic 10 minutes followed, during which the Tigers lost Dean Polo (arm) and Richo (cut eye), but a goal to Cam Howat saw scores level after 13 minutes.
From that point on the Crows were able to steady, with goals to Bock and two to Scott Welsh, to put the game out of the Tigers’ reach.
There were great signs from a stack of the fledgling Tigers, with Nathan Foley continuing his stellar season with another 27 possessions; Danny Meyer (2 goals) displaying strong hand at times up forward; and Cam Howat impressive.
Of the older heads, Kane Johnson led from the front, while Chris Newman celebrated his 25th birthday with a night out in defence, gathering 20 disposals.
Richmond fans have, of course, never before suffered a 0-8 start to the season. The last club to experience it was Fremantle in 2001, on the way to a horrific 0-17 start. Two years later they were playing finals.
Tigers fans can take heart from that, but more so from tonight’s performance, and look forward to hosting Essendon at the MCG next Saturday night, against whom they’ve won their last three matches.
ADELAIDE 7.1 8.5 11.10 14.15 (99)
RICHMOND 3.3 8.3 9.3 14.6 (90)
GOALS
Adelaide: S Welsh 5 J Griffin 2 N Bock 2 S Thompson N Bassett C Knights S Goodwin R Douglas.
Richmond: M Richardson 3 D Meyer 2 C Howat 2 B Deledio J King G Polak D Polo K Pettifer N Foley D Jackson.
BEST
Adelaide: S Welsh, J Griffin, S Goodwin, S Thompson, N Bock.
Richmond: N Foley, A Pattison, M Richardson,J Bowden, B Deledio.
INJURIES
Adelaide: Nil.
Richmond: M Richardson (fractured eye socket); D Polo (dislocated shoulder); C Hyde (back) replaced in selected side by A Krakouer.
Reports: Nil.
Umpires: B Rosebury D Sully S Ryan.
Official crowd: 40,742 at AAMI Stadium.
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