ANDREW BEWS: The rebirth of Tiger Matthew Richardson
Geelong Advertiser
14May08
IT'S taken too long for the penny to drop at Punt Rd.
Watching Matthew Richardson rekindle his career out on the wing this year has been one of the feel-good stories of the AFL. But the fact that it has taken until he was 34 for the Tigers to allow the big thoroughbred a free rein through the midfield will always leave us wondering what could have been.
Richo is one of the game's great enigmas.
He is one of the most athletic and talented players to have pulled on a Tigers jumper.
Whether at centre half-forward or full-forward, he has spent his career always commanding the best defender, plus another couple to chop him out.
The Richmond forward line has therefore been one-dimensional, to the point where Richo himself has demanded the perfect ball lace-out to get his kicks. Otherwise he has spat the dummy, which is why football supporters, not just Tiger fans, have had a love-hate relationship with him.
Richo came to Richmond as a big key forward in 1993 from Devonport in Tassie. His old man, Bull, played for the Tigers in the '60s, so he came to the club as a prized father-son recruit.
He was the club's leading goal-kicker in his second year of AFL footy and has achieved that feat 11 times since, amassing a record 767 career goals along the way.
Given that he is such a big man and has a great pair of hands, it would make sense to play somebody like Richo at full forward.
The bizarre thing, though, is that with him there, the Tigers have been almost the worst-performed AFL club throughout his time at Punt Rd.
I am certainly not pointing the finger at Richo for the Tigers' woes. In fact, if anything, his brilliance has worked against the club.
Let me explain myself there.
Richmond has for a long time banked on Richo being its lone saviour.
The club's recruiting and coaching staff tended to overlook recruiting key forwards given that they felt they had someone there who could do the job for them by himself for 10 years.
But, you only need to look at history to realise that successful teams are not built on one lone forward.
Think Hawthorn in the '80s and you talk of Dermie and Dunstall, plus the support staff of Peter Curran, Russell Morris and co.
Think Brisbane in the '90s and you talk of Alastair Lynch and Jonathan Brown, plus the support staff of Daniel Bradshaw and pinch-hit ruckmen such as Clark Keating and Beau McDonald.
I could go on. Hird, Lucas and Lloyd spring to mind with the Bombers in 2000.
Richmond has never provided Richo with the same sort of support staff, except for the year when the Tigers made the preliminary final.
Guess who was at the club then? Brad Ottens. The Tigers traded Otto soon after.
The Tigers have failed to support Richo with the right sort of player at the draft table time and time again.
It is a well-worn tale that Richmond chose Richard Tambling ahead of Buddy Franklin, but it also chose skinny outside player Aaron Fiora - no longer at the club and now running around for Casey in the VFL - ahead of Matthew Pavlich a few years earlier.
Buddy has turned out to be a sensation, but his success is built around a strong support base of Jarryd Roughead, Mark Williams and Tim Boyle.
The Dockers tried to support Pavlich by recruiting Chris Tarrant, but realistically he is playing a lone hand and look where Freo is on the ladder right now.
Although it is hard to predict just how a player from the draft will turn out, Richmond has neglected to pick the type of player who could have ably assisted Richo and provided opposition defences with more than the one headache to worry about.
This year, the Tigers have finally restructured their forward line, with Richo out of there in a bid to give opposition teams more to think about.
This has worked well on two fronts: it has given Richo the freedom to use his big engine up in the midfield, and it has also given the Tigers more avenues to goal.
Last year, Richmond was far too predictable in that it always looked for Richo. And given its game style of slow possession this made stopping him, and Richmond, a lot easier.
In his new role, Richo is like a kid in a lolly shop. He has been given freedom to roam all over the ground, use his height to advantage in marking contests and drift forward when he wants.
Players such as Nathan Brown, Jack Riewoldt, Brett Deledio, Graham Polak and Matt White are benefitting from his work up the ground.
They simply have to stand up and kick goals without Richo in the forward line - and they are doing it.
The reliance on him is gone.
It's as though the coaching staff at Tigerland has finally seen the light.
'Plough' Wallace has been bold enough to do what a lot of others have always thought, so credit to him.
But is it too late?
Unfortunately for Richo, I think it is.
As a 34-year-old, switching his game to midfield, with the way the game is being played these days, will be a big test on his body long-term.
It will probably bring about his retirement sooner rather than later.
So we should soak up the now.
For however long it lasts, I am going to keep enjoying the Richo show.
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