Tiger whispers with deafening roar
11 August 2007 Herald Sun
Mark Stevens
ALL week, the jungle drums were beating. The Tigers had set themselves.
There were whispers about bruising training sessions, player pacts and a resolve to make a statement on the Friday night stage.
Inside two minutes at the MCG last night, it was obvious the scuttlebutt was spot-on.
Richmond coach Terry Wallace made his intentions clear, signalling all-out attack by throwing defender Graham Polak forward as a marking target.
Nathan Foley won the first clearance, Polak marked 30m out and threaded the goal.
A minute later, Polak marked again. As untidy as the set shot looked, it sailed through from 40m.
Richmond 2.0, Collingwood 0.0. Wallace, under the pump for weeks, would not have dreamed of a sharper start.
And from that moment on, the Magpies found themselves in a dangerous game of catch-up.
The Tigers set the tempo, won much more of the ball and dominated, for all but a wobbly patch either side of the halftime break.
After opening up a 19-point break at quarter-time, Richmond led by 22 as the clock ticked past 24 minutes in the second term.
Then came the only burst from a generally flat Collingwood outfit.
Goals to Scott Burns and Leon Davis cut the deficit to just eight points at the long break.
Understandably, the doubters began to predict the brave Tigers would fall over.
And 12 minutes into the third term, the Pies were a goal up after slotting the first two of the third term.
But that is where Collingwood's fight ended.
The Pies, who started as short as a $1.11 favourites, looked second-rate from then on.
The Tigers kicked three of the last four goals of the term, taking a 13-point lead into the three-quarter time break.
From there, the kill was quick.
Brett Deledio, a constant threat all night, beat James Clement on the lead and kicked truly from 45m four minutes into the final term.
A minute later, Foley accepted a handball from Shane Tuck in the middle, took two bounces and drilled it at full-tilt from 40m.
When Kayne Pettifer snapped a goal on his left seven minutes in, the Tigers led by 32. Game over.
Given Pettifer celebrated with an audacious high-step run, it must have been.
The Magpies managed the last two goals of the match and were flattered by the 20-point margin.
For a side once talked about as a premiership threat, it was a horrible performance.
Apart from the dash of Dale Thomas and moments of brilliance from Davis, there was little to excite Magpies supporters.
Again, the Pies looked slow in the midfield. And with the Tigers loading up with Matthew Richardson and Polak in the forward half, they struggled to defend in the air.
At the other end, Anthony Rocca and Travis Cloke had nights to forget.
Collingwood needs two wins from its last three to book a certain finals berth. On last night's form, that looks a monumental task.
But as much as the serious news story was the ramifications of the Pies' stumble, Richmond was magnificent.
Not only did every Tiger go to the boundary to hand out balls, but they also gathered as a group to thank the cheer squad.
Extraordinary celebrationIT WAS probably the longest on-field celebration for a side with two wins after 19 rounds, but why not?
Fans were still singing the song half an hour after the game and no doubt revelling in Foley's heroics.
Foley not only kicked a telling goal, but won the ball 27 times. Throw in nine clearances (including six of the golden centre variety) and you have a clear winner for best-on-ground honours.
Deledio kicked five goals on five different opponents – Tyson Goldsack, Harry O'Brien, Alan Toovey, Clement and Nick Maxwell.
Give Brett a handIT WAS just Deledio's second game back from a broken hand, yet it was arguably his best performance since being taken at No. 1 in the 2005 national draft.
Joel Bowden stitched up Rocca and set up attacks, Richardson presented all night up forward and Jake King provided grunt and run down back.
The Tigers finished with a whopping 119 more disposals.
Sure, they made mistakes, but at least they dared to win.
The jungle drums are still ringing.
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