Richmond's 2004 report card
12 September 2004
Herald Sun
Jon Anderson
The season from hell,
LADDER POSITION: 16TH (4 wins, 18 losses)
COACHThe damning statistic for Danny Frawley has been his inability to arrest opposition run-ons in games -- sides regularly pile on six or more unanswered goals -- and losing streaks in seasons. For the past three years the Tigers have strung them together at will. This year it's a club record 14 and counting. 3/10
DEFENCEDarren Gaspar's struggles have been well documented. His year was awful but, standing 193cm and with a knee reconstruction, let's judge him after a full pre-season. Mark Chaffey and Andrew Kellaway, fourth and fifth in last year's B&F, dropped off. 3/10
MIDFIELDFair. Any midfield that has Nathan Brown and Kane Johnson starts ahead of the ledger. Against that 2003 B&F Mark Coughlan copped the dreaded osteitis pubis and Greg Tivendale, third in last year's B&F, was ordinary after a good start. Statistically, the Tigers were a respectable eighth in clearances in the AFL. 5/10
RUCK STRENGTHWhat should have been a strength bordered on a weakness. Brad Ottens' stats look fine but his matchwinning influence has been minimal. Greg Stafford was too often injured or suspended, Ray Hall is not big enough and Ben Marsh not good enough. 5/10
FORWARDSThere was Richo, Richo and Richo. He gave it his all and virtually won three of his club's four victories. But will he start in the goalsquare in 2005? Expect Terry Wallace to give him a taste of centre half-back. Shane Morrison was disappointing, but Jay Schulz showed glimpses. 4/10
LEADERSHIPThe number of natural leaders is small, with Johnson anointed to take over. Retiring captain Wayne Campbell is a passionate Tiger whose lack of a ``crash-bang'' playing style attracted unfair criticism. Coughlan is next in line. 4/10
LIST MANAGEMENTImproved in 2004 with young talent in Brent Hartigan, Daniel Jackson, Kelvin Moore, Thomas Roach and Andrew Raines. There are wraps on Alex Gilmour, but up to 10 senior-list players are in danger. 6/10
PROMOTIONIf you gauge it by news space, excellent. If you gauge it by positive stories, terrible. Watch for the media-savvy Wallace to turn this around.2/10
MEMBERSHIPA bright spot under the Clinton Casey regime. A rise of 2032, or 8 per cent, to 27,133. The problem is keeping them after this year. 6/10
FINANCESAppalling. We know the loss will be about $2 million, although some claim that's optimistic.0/10
SHINING LIGHTJOEL BOWDEN
Has been a revelation. He's always had his critics but Bowden has shoved it up them. His disposal and bravery have been highlights.
TRADE TEASERBRAD OTTENS TO ADELAIDE for picks No. 8 and 24 plus BRENT REILLY
The coat-tuggers are still jumping out of trees to say Brad Ottens, 24, will return to Adelaide. With Matthew Clarke nearing the end, and the Crows also needing key forwards, that is the most likely mix.
What would the Tigers require? Adelaide would be happy to give up its first two picks (No. 8 and 24) and probably a player. Young defender Brent Reilly from Gisborne might appeal.
ORDER OF DRAFT PICKS: 1, 4, 20, 36, 52 (subject to trades)
YOU'RE EXCUSEDMATTY RICHARDSON
Was a standout in an dismal season. Seventh in Coleman with 65, including a bag of 10. How many would he kick in a good side?
NATHAN BROWN
Silky early and clearly the Tigers' best until he was restricted by a calf injury. Still finished in AFL top 20 for disposals with 467.
MOST IMPROVEDCHRIS HYDE
The 22-year-old from Barooga was at the crossroads going into his third season. But he played every game and gave it his all as a tagger.
ANDREW KRAKOUER
Was a big improver early before a flat spot. Played more in the midfield, he kicked 20 goals and laid 95 tackles, seventh most in AFL.
YEAR TO FORGETJUSTIN BLUMFIELD
At halftime in the 2000 Grand Final he was staring at a Norm Smith Medal. Four years on and his injury-ravaged career is in tatters.
DARREN GASPAR
The two-time All-Australian went from the club's No.1 defender to a liability at full-back after a knee reconstruction.
SEE YOU LATERDUNCAN KELLAWAY
Could add only one game in 2004, the club favourite unable to get his body to do what his mind wanted after a series of leg injuries.
MATTHEW ROGERS
Ended three short of 200 after playing just one game in 2004. Best remembered for his two goals in final quarter of 1995 second semi-final.
CLUB LEADERSRanking points1 Joel Bowden 2631
2 Nathan Brown 2243
3 Brad Ottens 2113
4 Kane Johnson 2103
5 Wayne Campbell 1982
Goalkickers
1 Matthew Richardson 65
2 Nathan Brown 26
3 Andrew Krakouer 20
Kicks Joel Bowden 345
Marks Matthew Richardson 130
Handballs Kane Johnson 214
Clearances Kane Johnson 81
Clangers Nathan Brown 68
Tackles Andrew Krakouer 95
Goal assists Kane Johnson 16
Hitouts Brad Ottens 424
Marking spoils Ray Hall 78
Most benchings Chris Hyde 55
Most minutes Greg Tivendale 2490
Players used 39
VITAL STATSThe GoodThe Tigers cleared 40 per cent of throw-ins, ranked third in the AFL.
The BadThe Tigers' kicking efficiency of 76 per cent was the worst in the AFL. They ranked 14th for inside 50s and once there, scored a goal 24 per cent of the time, ranked 16th.
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