Tigers recruits on show
Greg Baum | February 6, 2009
THE ball fell to Ben Cousins in the middle of the incongruously lush oval at Gosch's Paddock. He gathered, arched his back in that familiar way and ran in a wide semi-circle. Now in space, he paused momentarily, then accelerated again, on a new course, straight towards goal.
Ahead, other players hastily rearranged themselves. "Watch the dish," urged a man in the crowd of around 1500, standing three-deep around the fence.
Cousins' "dish" (that is, pass) began wide, but curved as if on an unseen wind, unerringly onto the chest of the helmeted Graham Polak, leading hard into the forward pocket.
It would be gilding the lily to say that the crowd roared, but it certainly clapped appreciatively.
Cousins and Polak played together for Richmond yesterday. It was an irresistible turn of events since one was a drug addict out in the football cold three months ago and the other was — and still is — rehabilitating from head injuries after being wrong-footed by a tram last June.
But it was qualified by all these certainties: it was February 5, too early even for March champions; it was 27 degrees, too sultry for football; the Nylex clock that formed part of the backdrop said so.
Cousins played half a game, then was whisked away by car, his now customary blaze of secrecy. Polak played about 40 minutes. Matthew Richardson was long gone, back, bare-chested, across the scorched parkland to the Tigers' Punt Road HQ; one, dominant quarter was enough to clear his few cobwebs.
Instead of yellow and black, Cousins and Polak wore white, for theirs was the team of the possibles, playing the probables. Among their instant teammates was Jamie Craker, a 19-year-old who plays for Bundoora, and three of his teammates, roped in to make up the numbers because of a long-standing friendship between Richmond coach Terry Wallace and Bundoora coach Phil Maylin.
The crowd, some of whom brought their own seats, was eager, but a little confused. Barracking for a football team necessarily means barracking against one, too, and here, all were on the same side. But there was much else to engage them. "Who's 27?" "Who's 42?" "Is that the bloke from Port Melbourne?" It was him, Robin Nahas, and he was eye-catching, too. So was Alroy Gilligan. Both are rookies.
This is as it must be in the pre-season. For Cousins, Polak and all the players, yesterday was one more measured step along a long, exacting and exact road; to get ahead of themselves now would be to trip in mid-winter.
Cousins showed glimpses of his old, jaunty self yesterday and Polak was robustly competitive in a way that surprised even the Tigers. But neither will play in the pre-season competition, which begins this weekend. In that sense, yesterday was not so much a new chapter as the turning of another page.
For the fans, it is different. The tennis is finished, the cricket is finishing and football is coming out of its brief hibernation.
Autumn looked to have come early at Gosch's Paddock yesterday, as elsewhere in Melbourne; it was strewn with prematurely fallen leaves. But to the football fan, autumn is a metaphorical spring, when the new buds are out. There is a longing that will not be denied, a season that cannot come too soon, a premiership that cannot be won too soon.
And it has to be said that because of the recruiting of Cousins, but now incidental to anything he might or might not achieve on the football ground, Richmond is buzzing. Tigers assistant coach Brian Royal said yesterday's crowd was larger than any he can remember for an intra-club match in Melbourne in his 25 years in football.
It also made for a propriety rarely observed in an intra-club game. When young star Brett Delidio missed a snap shot, one lapse in an otherwise silky display, he exclaimed: "Far out!"
After marking Cousins' dishy pass yesterday, Polak also dished, to a player on the run who may or may not have been on Richmond's list, who, from my vantage point, was obscured by a tree and could not be identified on replay as there wasn't one, who hit the post from point-blank range.
It is February; there is far to go.
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