Expensive contracts will limit Tigers' 2010 cullingJon Ralph | August 21, 2009
RICHMOND'S new coach will start his tenure at Punt Rd saddled with nearly $1 million of contracts for players who normally would have their papers stamped.
Borderline Tigers Jordan McMahon, Adam Thomson, Jay Schulz and Jake King are all contracted for next season, limiting the club's options of a wide-scale cleanout.
McMahon is in the last season of a three-year deal worth $1 million in total, and already has been linked to a trade with St Kilda next year.
But if that deal was clinched, Richmond would likely have to pay a substantial slice of his wage at the Saints.
Even on conservative estimates - if Thomson, Schulz and King are on $180,000 a year each - the club will have to pay $850,000 of its $7.95 million salary cap on the quartet.
Richmond drafted Thomson as a hard-as-nails 22-year-old from Port Adelaide, giving up selection 42.
He will make his Richmond debut tomorrow night, but has rarely been in the selection mix for his new club.
Schulz played the most recent of his 71 games in Round 7 but the No. 12 draft pick can scarcely figure in the club's plans. Both Port Adelaide and the Western Bulldogs have showed interest in him in the past two seasons, but his market value has faded considerably.
King's position is more polarising, with caretaker coach Jade Rawlings using him successfully in run-with roles.
But King's future will depend on the opinion of the next coach, with skill errors likely to hamper his progress.
King won't have another chance to push his case after accepting a two-week suspension for striking Magpie Alan Didak last Saturday.
While the futures of the foursome are problematic, at least Richmond has plenty of space in its salary cap with veterans Kane Johnson and Joel Bowden both retiring.
Others who will feel nervous include Nathan Brown, Troy Simmonds, Adam Pattison, Cleve Hughes, Jarrad Oakley-Nicholls, Kayne Pettifer, Graham Polak and Mark Coughlan.
While more than a dozen players deserve to go, the Tigers cannot replace that many in one cycle.
And while rookies Robin Nahas and Andrew Browne should be upgraded to the primary list, most clubs have only three to five selections at each national draft.
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