Analysis Jon Ralph runs the rule over Richmond’s current group, its future and everything in between

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Norm Smith Medallist
Mar 22, 2009
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The List Manager: Jon Ralph runs the rule over Richmond’s current group, its future and everything in between​

On recent form, you could argue Richmond is a mediocre football team. So what – and who – are the problems? And how does Adem Yze fix them? Jon Ralph delivers extensive list analysis.
Jon Ralph Jon Ralph
October 31, 2023 - News Corp Australia Sports Newsroom

If you consider the evidence of the past three seasons, you could make the case Richmond is a mediocre football team.

The Tigers finished 12th with nine wins in 2021, scraped into finals in 2022 before a last-gasp elimination finals loss to Brisbane then finished 13th with only 10 losses in 2023.

And, yet, for Richmond, attempting to buck footy’s equalisation measures was vastly preferable to a 4-6 year total rebuild that would not guarantee a bounce back up the ladder.

Now a new coach (Adem Yze) enters Punt Road with a new aggressive corridor-based game plan he hopes will reinvigorate this group in the manner of Adam Kingsley at GWS.

The path could be rocky, and yet Richmond’s premiership dynasty has brought Yze and the club’s hierarchy patience from its fans ahead of the new coach’s own season of discovery.

[PLAYERCARD]Adem Yze[/PLAYERCARD] will lead the Tigers into a new era. Picture: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

Adem Yze will lead the Tigers into a new era. Picture: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

TRADE PERIOD

Rating: 6/10
Every move Richmond made in this trade period is conditional on the 2024 fortunes of a trio of experienced players.
If Toby Nankervis plays 23 games next year, getting 41 and a future second for 2024 free agent Ivan Soldo is a stroke of genius.

If Tom Lynch stays fit and Jacob Koschitzke becomes his trusty foil, it's the perfect trade given the loss of only pick 49.
It means Richmond effectively brings in a pack-crashing 23-year-old who could play 150 games at Punt Road for a 2024 free agent in Soldo AND gets Fremantle’s 2024 second-rounder.
And if Jacob Hopper bounces back with 20-plus games of real consequence, the lack of early picks in November 2023’s national draft is justified.

Jacob Koschitzke will be out to become the perfect partner for Tom Lynch in Richmond’s attack. Picture: Russell Freeman/AFL Photos

Jacob Koschitzke will be out to become the perfect partner for Tom Lynch in Richmond’s attack. Picture: Russell Freeman/AFL Photos

A year on there is more of a sample size to assess the Hopper and Taranto trades.
Richmond’s 2023 best-and-fairest winner Tim Taranto was secured for picks 12 (West Coast’s Elijah Hewett, some excellent first-year cameos) and 19 (GWS forward Max Gruzewski, 29 VFL goals) but critics are deluded if they believe that deal doesn’t favour the Tigers.

Hopper was secured for pick 31 (GWS mid-forward Toby McMullin) and a 2024 first-rounder (pick 7) but that selection will likely drift to pick 9 which is outside the top tier of players in this draft.
So for skills acquisition specialist Yze, tidying up Taranto’s disposal could turn his deal into a huge winner.
But Hopper finished only equal 14th from 16 games so needs to add durability, matchwinning impact, goal power (just seven goals) and tidy his kicking (54 per cent efficiency).

LIST HOLES

There are 14 of Richmond’s 2020 premiership side still on the Tigers list, but it’s possible to make a case none of them will be in this club’s next premiership side.
Dustin Martin is 32 but will hope to defy Father Time, Dylan Grimes is 32 and maybe in his final year in 2024, Marlion Pickett is 31 and with a serious court case approaching.
Dion Prestia is 31 and uncontracted at the end of 2024.

Will Lynch (31 on October 31), Nathan Broad (31 in April), Kamdyn McIntosh (30 in April) and Nankervis (29) get another crack at it?
The list is reasonably well-balanced positionally but lacks pure A-grade talent, which Richmond is confident it will unearth in coming years given so many youngsters who could blossom.
If Lynch stands up, Richmond can position an array of small and mid-sized stars around him and at his feet.
On paper, the Richmond defence is potentially elite – Noah Balta, Josh Gibcus, Tylar Young, Nick Vlastuin, Nathan Broad, Grimes, Daniel Rioli, Jayden Short.

And the midfield can break open games if Shai Bolton and Martin get to work at their explosive best.

Will next season be [PLAYERCARD]Dylan Grimes[/PLAYERCARD]’ last? Picture: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Will next season be Dylan Grimes’ last? Picture: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

So Yze has twin missions in his debut year – play a game style that brings back the kinetic energy and pressure so badly missing last year, while trying to find 3-5 potential A-graders.

Can he do that in quick time to blend those kids in with Rioli (all Australian upside), 25-year-old Taranto, 27-year-old Jayden Short, 26-year-old Hopper, who all have five or more years at their absolute peak?

Bolton is 25 in December and Balta (88 intercept marks, some brain fades) just turned 24 last week.

Of the 17 listed players younger than Balta, Gibcus is the pick of them as a potential 200-game intercept defender, but Richmond has high hopes it can develop some of the others into A-graders.

Mid-forward Noah Cumberland has huge talent but has been given tough love, inside mid Thompson Dow has played 17 games in four years, Maurice Rioli has 18 goals in 27 games after three seasons and isn’t fit enough.

Midfielder Tyler Sonsie has 10 games in two years, wing-halfback Sam Banks is much-hyped but has six games in two years and half-back Tom Brown one game in two years.

Half-forward Judson Clarke kicked 11 goals in 13 games this year and has a touch of class and poise, while Samson Ryan is a gangly ruck-forward with real potential.
All have shown glimpses, none have put together a run of 6-8 weeks of consistent form yet apart from Cumberland’s 19 goals in eight weeks in the back-end of 2022.

So the challenge is to develop what on paper is an excellent midfield into an on-field weapon, while also unearthing Richmond’s next batch of champions.

DRAFT STRATEGY

Richmond has picks 29, 41, 65, 68 and 86, and has had success taking picks in that range before (Bolton, pick 29 in 2016).
Recruiter Matt Clarke will take a maximum of three selections in the national draft.

Don’t be surprised if the Tigers take a young key tall as a Lynch successor, with no father-sons, but Duncan Kellaway’s son Louis eligible next year.
The Tigers’ picks are modest but last year they got the hugely impressive Tylar Young as pick 26 in the rookie draft and are excited by mid-season rookies Matthew Coulthart and James Trezise.

2024 is a big year for Maurice Rioli. Picture: Michael Klein

2024 is a big year for Maurice Rioli. Picture: Michael Klein

WHO’S UNDER THE PUMP

Maurice Rioli. Own your career. Get into the best fitness of your life. Hire a trainer.
Revamp your lifestyle. Do whatever it takes. Your AFL career can pass you by in a flash.
Rioli told the club in his exit meeting he would come back in elite shape given his fitness battle so far so must back up words with action as he enters a contract year.

PREMIERSHIP WINDOW

3-5 years away. It would take something herculean to fast-track the kids quickly enough to allow Dustin Martin to get another crack at the title.

THE TOP 100

PLAYERS WHO MADE THE TOP 100 IN THE AFL PLAYER RANKINGS IN 2023 AND A 2024 BOLTER
Shai Bolton (20th), Dustin Martin (33rd), Toby Nankervis (52nd), Jayden Short (68th), Nick Vlastuin (74th), Tim Taranto (90th), Dion Prestia (96th).
Daniel Rioli (145th) can jump into the top 50 with an injury-free run under Yze’s promised attacking game.

TRADE TARGETS FOR 2024

Could the Tigers target a Sam Durham type as an aggressive half-forward and wingman as Kamdyn McIntosh’s successor or can Banks organically develop into that player?
Lynch will enter 2025 as a 32-year-old so Richmond will need to consider how to acquire its next star forward.
Clubs will keep an eye on two 2024 free agents – Geelong’s unrestricted free agent Tyson Stengle and Gold Coast’s goal-a-game half forward Ben Ainsworth.

CAP SPACE FOR 2025

WAR CHEST, RETENTION, CLEVER ACQUISITIONS
Bolton, Martin and Lynch represent at least $3.6 million of the club’s wage bill in 2024 and Taranto and Hopper both arrived on deals north of $700,000.
But with the champions retiring (Jack Riewoldt, Trent Cotchin), Soldo departing and the CBA uptick, Richmond will again have cap space to get aggressive leading into 2025 if the right opportunity presents.

[PLAYERCARD]Jack Graham[/PLAYERCARD] is out of contract at the end of 2024. Picture: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

Jack Graham is out of contract at the end of 2024. Picture: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

Richmond was assured by Dion Prestia’s management that speculation about him wanting out in the trade period was incorrect, but will wait until after the pre-season to consider deals for five free agents – Nankervis, Martin, Cumberland, Jack Graham and Prestia.
The club’s belief is that Martin plays better with certainty over his career so is keen to re-extend him past 2025 but he is in no hurry.
Rivals will scrutinise Graham given he is a free agent at the end of 2024 and his elite two-way running would be a virtue in 17 rival sides.

RICHMOND CRYSTAL BALL​

2014 FINISH
14th.
Could easily surprise but they are deep in the chasing pack that includes Essendon, St Kilda, Gold Coast, Adelaide and Fremantle. Others better placed.

2024 BEST AND FAIREST
Tim Taranto.
He tailed off in his last five weeks yet still won the Jack Dyer Medal in a canter.

2024 LEADING GOAL KICKER
Shai Bolton.
60 scoring shots last year after 84 the previous year. Can win a Brownlow if he kicks straight.

PLAYER ON THE RISE
Sam Banks.
Two years learning the caper. Now time to break out with his dash and hard running.

PLAYER ON THE EDGE
Dylan Grimes.
Played 22 games but only averaged nine touches, one intercept mark. Can he return to the defensive rock he was in the premiership years?

 

The List Manager: Jon Ralph runs the rule over Richmond’s current group, its future and everything in between​

On recent form, you could argue Richmond is a mediocre football team. So what – and who – are the problems? And how does Adem Yze fix them? Jon Ralph delivers extensive list analysis.
Jon Ralph Jon Ralph
October 31, 2023 - News Corp Australia Sports Newsroom

If you consider the evidence of the past three seasons, you could make the case Richmond is a mediocre football team.

The Tigers finished 12th with nine wins in 2021, scraped into finals in 2022 before a last-gasp elimination finals loss to Brisbane then finished 13th with only 10 losses in 2023.

And, yet, for Richmond, attempting to buck footy’s equalisation measures was vastly preferable to a 4-6 year total rebuild that would not guarantee a bounce back up the ladder.

Now a new coach (Adem Yze) enters Punt Road with a new aggressive corridor-based game plan he hopes will reinvigorate this group in the manner of Adam Kingsley at GWS.

The path could be rocky, and yet Richmond’s premiership dynasty has brought Yze and the club’s hierarchy patience from its fans ahead of the new coach’s own season of discovery.

Adem Yze will lead the Tigers into a new era. Picture: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

Adem Yze will lead the Tigers into a new era. Picture: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

TRADE PERIOD

Rating: 6/10
Every move Richmond made in this trade period is conditional on the 2024 fortunes of a trio of experienced players.
If Toby Nankervis plays 23 games next year, getting 41 and a future second for 2024 free agent Ivan Soldo is a stroke of genius.

If Tom Lynch stays fit and Jacob Koschitzke becomes his trusty foil, it's the perfect trade given the loss of only pick 49.
It means Richmond effectively brings in a pack-crashing 23-year-old who could play 150 games at Punt Road for a 2024 free agent in Soldo AND gets Fremantle’s 2024 second-rounder.
And if Jacob Hopper bounces back with 20-plus games of real consequence, the lack of early picks in November 2023’s national draft is justified.

Jacob Koschitzke will be out to become the perfect partner for Tom Lynch in Richmond’s attack. Picture: Russell Freeman/AFL Photos

Jacob Koschitzke will be out to become the perfect partner for Tom Lynch in Richmond’s attack. Picture: Russell Freeman/AFL Photos

A year on there is more of a sample size to assess the Hopper and Taranto trades.
Richmond’s 2023 best-and-fairest winner Tim Taranto was secured for picks 12 (West Coast’s Elijah Hewett, some excellent first-year cameos) and 19 (GWS forward Max Gruzewski, 29 VFL goals) but critics are deluded if they believe that deal doesn’t favour the Tigers.

Hopper was secured for pick 31 (GWS mid-forward Toby McMullin) and a 2024 first-rounder (pick 7) but that selection will likely drift to pick 9 which is outside the top tier of players in this draft.
So for skills acquisition specialist Yze, tidying up Taranto’s disposal could turn his deal into a huge winner.
But Hopper finished only equal 14th from 16 games so needs to add durability, matchwinning impact, goal power (just seven goals) and tidy his kicking (54 per cent efficiency).

LIST HOLES

There are 14 of Richmond’s 2020 premiership side still on the Tigers list, but it’s possible to make a case none of them will be in this club’s next premiership side.
Dustin Martin is 32 but will hope to defy Father Time, Dylan Grimes is 32 and maybe in his final year in 2024, Marlion Pickett is 31 and with a serious court case approaching.
Dion Prestia is 31 and uncontracted at the end of 2024.

Will Lynch (31 on October 31), Nathan Broad (31 in April), Kamdyn McIntosh (30 in April) and Nankervis (29) get another crack at it?
The list is reasonably well-balanced positionally but lacks pure A-grade talent, which Richmond is confident it will unearth in coming years given so many youngsters who could blossom.
If Lynch stands up, Richmond can position an array of small and mid-sized stars around him and at his feet.
On paper, the Richmond defence is potentially elite – Noah Balta, Josh Gibcus, Tylar Young, Nick Vlastuin, Nathan Broad, Grimes, Daniel Rioli, Jayden Short.

And the midfield can break open games if Shai Bolton and Martin get to work at their explosive best.

Will next season be Dylan Grimes’ last? Picture: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Will next season be Dylan Grimes’ last? Picture: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

So Yze has twin missions in his debut year – play a game style that brings back the kinetic energy and pressure so badly missing last year, while trying to find 3-5 potential A-graders.

Can he do that in quick time to blend those kids in with Rioli (all Australian upside), 25-year-old Taranto, 27-year-old Jayden Short, 26-year-old Hopper, who all have five or more years at their absolute peak?

Bolton is 25 in December and Balta (88 intercept marks, some brain fades) just turned 24 last week.

Of the 17 listed players younger than Balta, Gibcus is the pick of them as a potential 200-game intercept defender, but Richmond has high hopes it can develop some of the others into A-graders.

Mid-forward Noah Cumberland has huge talent but has been given tough love, inside mid Thompson Dow has played 17 games in four years, Maurice Rioli has 18 goals in 27 games after three seasons and isn’t fit enough.

Midfielder Tyler Sonsie has 10 games in two years, wing-halfback Sam Banks is much-hyped but has six games in two years and half-back Tom Brown one game in two years.

Half-forward Judson Clarke kicked 11 goals in 13 games this year and has a touch of class and poise, while Samson Ryan is a gangly ruck-forward with real potential.
All have shown glimpses, none have put together a run of 6-8 weeks of consistent form yet apart from Cumberland’s 19 goals in eight weeks in the back-end of 2022.

So the challenge is to develop what on paper is an excellent midfield into an on-field weapon, while also unearthing Richmond’s next batch of champions.

DRAFT STRATEGY

Richmond has picks 29, 41, 65, 68 and 86, and has had success taking picks in that range before (Bolton, pick 29 in 2016).
Recruiter Matt Clarke will take a maximum of three selections in the national draft.

Don’t be surprised if the Tigers take a young key tall as a Lynch successor, with no father-sons, but Duncan Kellaway’s son Louis eligible next year.
The Tigers’ picks are modest but last year they got the hugely impressive Tylar Young as pick 26 in the rookie draft and are excited by mid-season rookies Matthew Coulthart and James Trezise.

2024 is a big year for Maurice Rioli. Picture: Michael Klein

2024 is a big year for Maurice Rioli. Picture: Michael Klein

WHO’S UNDER THE PUMP

Maurice Rioli. Own your career. Get into the best fitness of your life. Hire a trainer.
Revamp your lifestyle. Do whatever it takes. Your AFL career can pass you by in a flash.
Rioli told the club in his exit meeting he would come back in elite shape given his fitness battle so far so must back up words with action as he enters a contract year.

PREMIERSHIP WINDOW

3-5 years away. It would take something herculean to fast-track the kids quickly enough to allow Dustin Martin to get another crack at the title.

THE TOP 100

PLAYERS WHO MADE THE TOP 100 IN THE AFL PLAYER RANKINGS IN 2023 AND A 2024 BOLTER
Shai Bolton (20th), Dustin Martin (33rd), Toby Nankervis (52nd), Jayden Short (68th), Nick Vlastuin (74th), Tim Taranto (90th), Dion Prestia (96th).
Daniel Rioli (145th) can jump into the top 50 with an injury-free run under Yze’s promised attacking game.

TRADE TARGETS FOR 2024

Could the Tigers target a Sam Durham type as an aggressive half-forward and wingman as Kamdyn McIntosh’s successor or can Banks organically develop into that player?
Lynch will enter 2025 as a 32-year-old so Richmond will need to consider how to acquire its next star forward.
Clubs will keep an eye on two 2024 free agents – Geelong’s unrestricted free agent Tyson Stengle and Gold Coast’s goal-a-game half forward Ben Ainsworth.

CAP SPACE FOR 2025

WAR CHEST, RETENTION, CLEVER ACQUISITIONS
Bolton, Martin and Lynch represent at least $3.6 million of the club’s wage bill in 2024 and Taranto and Hopper both arrived on deals north of $700,000.
But with the champions retiring (Jack Riewoldt, Trent Cotchin), Soldo departing and the CBA uptick, Richmond will again have cap space to get aggressive leading into 2025 if the right opportunity presents.

Jack Graham is out of contract at the end of 2024. Picture: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

Jack Graham is out of contract at the end of 2024. Picture: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

Richmond was assured by Dion Prestia’s management that speculation about him wanting out in the trade period was incorrect, but will wait until after the pre-season to consider deals for five free agents – Nankervis, Martin, Cumberland, Jack Graham and Prestia.
The club’s belief is that Martin plays better with certainty over his career so is keen to re-extend him past 2025 but he is in no hurry.
Rivals will scrutinise Graham given he is a free agent at the end of 2024 and his elite two-way running would be a virtue in 17 rival sides.

RICHMOND CRYSTAL BALL​

2014 FINISH
14th.
Could easily surprise but they are deep in the chasing pack that includes Essendon, St Kilda, Gold Coast, Adelaide and Fremantle. Others better placed.

2024 BEST AND FAIREST
Tim Taranto.
He tailed off in his last five weeks yet still won the Jack Dyer Medal in a canter.

2024 LEADING GOAL KICKER
Shai Bolton.
60 scoring shots last year after 84 the previous year. Can win a Brownlow if he kicks straight.

PLAYER ON THE RISE
Sam Banks.
Two years learning the caper. Now time to break out with his dash and hard running.

PLAYER ON THE EDGE
Dylan Grimes.
Played 22 games but only averaged nine touches, one intercept mark. Can he return to the defensive rock he was in the premiership years?


Mid table finish is on the cards IMO, we still have a talented list, but I don't think they are good enough to get the job done. If Lynch plays the whole season then final 8 is a possibility.

We need a young key forward, that has to be our priority, they are so hard to obtain in the current footy environment. If there is no chance our pick next year is high enough (assuming there is a talented youngster available) then we need to trade one in. Once that's resolved then we can go about fixing our midfield and inject pace.
 
Blah blah blah, no one knows how next season is going to play out.

GWS finished 16th in 2022 and most thought they were destined for the bottom 6 again but lo and behold they were one putrid kick away from a possible flag in 2023.

We were 2 points off 5th spot with five games to go this year despite all the crap that went on, finals in 2024 is a big possibility.

And by the way, how does one scrape into finals. Always though a team had to win more than they lost to make it which means you are playing well.
 

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Mid table finish is on the cards IMO, we still have a talented list, but I don't think they are good enough to get the job done. If Lynch plays the whole season then final 8 is a possibility.

We need a young key forward, that has to be our priority, they are so hard to obtain in the current footy environment. If there is no chance our pick next year is high enough (assuming there is a talented youngster available) then we need to trade one in. Once that's resolved then we can go about fixing our midfield and inject pace.

Unfortunately, media types more times than not cast doubt when a club finishes outside the 8 of the previous year. Pies 2021, finished 17th, all articles stated they would finish bottom 4 but they in fact finished top 4. Then won the flag this year.

GWS finished 16th in 2022, most pundits had them not making the 8 this year, guess what they were one point off making a GF.

The tigers "cross fingers" they can remain relatively injury-free and imo will make the 8. I am bullish on Yze, very tactical, and will fine-tune the player's skill set at Punt Road.
Also, bringing back the pressure, and forward handball game plan which made us a great team and some other clubs have copied, notably Pies and GWS.

Kosi could well be that key forward who takes the next step at a new club. Lynch, Kosi, and perhaps Cumberland could well shape that forward line along with dusty and bolton and another who takes that small forward spot, either clarke, coulthard, junior etc
 
Blah blah blah, no one knows how next season is going to play out.

GWS finished 16th in 2022 and most thought they were destined for the bottom 6 again but lo and behold they were one putrid kick away from a possible flag in 2023.

We were 2 points off 5th spot with five games to go this year despite all the crap that went on, finals in 2024 is a big possibility.

And by the way, how does one scrape into finals. Always though a team had to win more than they lost to make it which means you are playing well.
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I don't really agree with Jon's assessment
It's difficult to assess Richmond’s performance this year considering hardwick quit early in the season and we had a care taker coach.

We have a new coach , wait and see what happens next year
He's saying with the addition on kozi, a fit Lynch and Prestia and the natural progression of youngsters we'll go backwards. But he hedges his bets by saying 'but anything can happen', basically this article is a waste of time.
 

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Seems to be a Richmond pile on the past few days. Here is a journo from out in the West reckons we are heading down the same path as West Coast
What being incredibly unfit (will never happen) not retiring your premiership players fast enough (didn't happen) and having the worst medico staff in the entire League....... well he might have a point there.

We finished above both Perth teams this year, maybe some wishful thinking there from little Ryan. Freo & WC didn't do anything this off-season besides lose players but we're the ones who are going backwards?
 
Don't mind the assessment. Doesn't sugarcoat things to make it seem better than they are and addresses the concerns a lot of us have with regards to everything that went wrong in 2023, needing to go right in 2024 for us to be back in contention.

That means:
Lynch Hopper & Nankervis playing 20+ games
Gibcus getting back to playing regular footy
A majority of youngsters in Clarke Banks Sonsie Cumberland Ralphsmith Ryan Dow Trezise Brown Bauer Coulthard Koschitzke & Maurice stepping up to the level and doing so consistently.

Then there is nailing the game plan that Yze introduces and having it work well from early in the season rather than having teething issues where it doesn't quite work and we lose too much ground early in the season to then make up once we do get it right.
 
I would like to hear the expertise of terry wallace … he was always the designated list manager on trade radio a few years ago when I listened …. He is a fountain of knowledge when it comes to this kind of stuff
he built our dynasty list

dumma just added 15 half back flankers
 

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