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No Oppo Supporters OPPOSITION OBSERVATION XLII

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17. RICHMOND (5-18, 66%)

Three word analysis


Better than expected

What went right

Some suggested Richmond wouldn’t win a game, or at least very few as one of the wooden spoon favourites. Yet the Tigers claimed five victories — four more than West Coast. Adem Yze sure blooded young talent in a youthful exuberance at Tigerland and reason for excitement. Richmond was the league’s least-experienced side based on average games played this year (52.7), while its average age was 23.9 years; the fourth-youngest in the competition behind only North Melbourne, West Coast and Essendon. Of Richmond’s eight draftees from last November, all but No.7 pick Josh Smillie got a taste of AFL this year. Luke Trainor played 21 games, Jonty Faull played 16, Sam Lalor and Tom Sims 11, Harry Armstrong 8, Taj Hotton 7, and Jasper Alger 4. Yze’s Punt Road tenure will be judged largely on how he’s able to develop and utilise last year’s draft class, and it’s clear that the likes of Lalor, Faull and Hotton in particular have bright AFL futures. And as it pertains to on-field progress, as much as the Tigers had to cope most weeks with barrages of forward entries, towards the end of their campaign, they actually stood up well behind the ball. Across the last six rounds, Richmond sat ninth for points against, seventh for score-per-inside-50 against, and eighth for points against from turnover, while Nick Vlaustin produced an All-Australian caliber season.

What went wrong

Richmond’s midfield combinations were problematic all season, as it sought to occasionally inject more pace into a core mix that is generally one-paced. Tim Taranto, Jacob Hopper and Dion Prestia were the most frequent centre-bounce attendees, and while Hopper is capable of being explosive from stoppage, they all lack overall speed and have the tendency to slouch when it comes to charging back in defensive transition. This year, Richmond ranked 17th for clearance differential, 17th for points from clearance differential, and 16th for contested possession differential. Forward stability is another thing the Tigers will look to improve on next year, with leading spearhead Tom Lynch missing seven games. Meanwhile Noah Balta, who had a tumultuous season, continued to be swung between attack and defence — neither of which helped young talls Faull, Sims and Armstrong in getting comfortable at the top level. For all the excitement of the youth coming through, it’d be fair to say they still relied on their stalwarts for the most part.

What they need

The Tigers would benefit greatly from a two-way midfielder — one who runs both ways — after conceding the third-most goals to opposition midfielders this season. And while they haven’t been one of the teams recently reported as in pursuit of him, out-of-contract Saints midfielder Marcus Windhager is a player in that aforementioned mould. They need Sam Lalor to be free of soft-tissue injuries in year two after showing tantalising glimpses in his rookie season, and they need fellow top-10 pick Josh Smillie to get on the park after he failed to make his senior debut this year. As the playing group buys more into Yze’s style of play, it’d be fair to expect another jump in 2026 — 6-8 wins isn’t out of the realm of possibility if their veterans stay healthy and their up-and-comers continue to take strides.

What time is it on the premiership clock?

(2pm):
The Tigers took another step in year two under Yze, and it means they’re one step closer to returning to contention. Winning five games was something very few pundits expected of Richmond this year, and its crop of exciting 2024 draftees should continue to inspire hope in the club’s fans that another era of premiership contention isn’t as far away as some might think.


Season grade

B

— Jack Jovanovski
 
Love how they can’t get around scats having to play home finals at the g and not at their cheat ground

Only thing cfl cares more about than them is $$
Geelong fc and their fans need to get over it. The rule states home “State” final lol
 
We are only 4 th youngest , hmmm thought we were like youngest or second youngest . Did I hear correctly that bears had 10 players that were 22 and under playing last night ?
 

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Scats only complaining cos they play Brions and the MCG will be barely half full. They want to avoid that embarrassment.
If they get home finals at kitty litter I stop following the AFL. This is because they will literally get an amplified top 4 finish every year due to how they play the ground, then they will get two home finals. They would then only need to win at the G and they play well there anyway.

Teams who are Non-Melbourne and don't have the G as their home ground need to accept that they have a disproportionate advantage for their own home games which they exclusively train on and also play (knowing wind patterns, everything). The G, conversely whilst favourable for a GF for a home G team, other teams play proportionately better there given how many teams share the ground.

As a result, Geelong suck a big one.
 
17. RICHMOND (5-18, 66%)

Three word analysis


Better than expected

What went right

Some suggested Richmond wouldn’t win a game, or at least very few as one of the wooden spoon favourites. Yet the Tigers claimed five victories — four more than West Coast. Adem Yze sure blooded young talent in a youthful exuberance at Tigerland and reason for excitement. Richmond was the league’s least-experienced side based on average games played this year (52.7), while its average age was 23.9 years; the fourth-youngest in the competition behind only North Melbourne, West Coast and Essendon. Of Richmond’s eight draftees from last November, all but No.7 pick Josh Smillie got a taste of AFL this year. Luke Trainor played 21 games, Jonty Faull played 16, Sam Lalor and Tom Sims 11, Harry Armstrong 8, Taj Hotton 7, and Jasper Alger 4. Yze’s Punt Road tenure will be judged largely on how he’s able to develop and utilise last year’s draft class, and it’s clear that the likes of Lalor, Faull and Hotton in particular have bright AFL futures. And as it pertains to on-field progress, as much as the Tigers had to cope most weeks with barrages of forward entries, towards the end of their campaign, they actually stood up well behind the ball. Across the last six rounds, Richmond sat ninth for points against, seventh for score-per-inside-50 against, and eighth for points against from turnover, while Nick Vlaustin produced an All-Australian caliber season.

What went wrong

Richmond’s midfield combinations were problematic all season, as it sought to occasionally inject more pace into a core mix that is generally one-paced. Tim Taranto, Jacob Hopper and Dion Prestia were the most frequent centre-bounce attendees, and while Hopper is capable of being explosive from stoppage, they all lack overall speed and have the tendency to slouch when it comes to charging back in defensive transition. This year, Richmond ranked 17th for clearance differential, 17th for points from clearance differential, and 16th for contested possession differential. Forward stability is another thing the Tigers will look to improve on next year, with leading spearhead Tom Lynch missing seven games. Meanwhile Noah Balta, who had a tumultuous season, continued to be swung between attack and defence — neither of which helped young talls Faull, Sims and Armstrong in getting comfortable at the top level. For all the excitement of the youth coming through, it’d be fair to say they still relied on their stalwarts for the most part.

What they need

The Tigers would benefit greatly from a two-way midfielder — one who runs both ways — after conceding the third-most goals to opposition midfielders this season. And while they haven’t been one of the teams recently reported as in pursuit of him, out-of-contract Saints midfielder Marcus Windhager is a player in that aforementioned mould. They need Sam Lalor to be free of soft-tissue injuries in year two after showing tantalising glimpses in his rookie season, and they need fellow top-10 pick Josh Smillie to get on the park after he failed to make his senior debut this year. As the playing group buys more into Yze’s style of play, it’d be fair to expect another jump in 2026 — 6-8 wins isn’t out of the realm of possibility if their veterans stay healthy and their up-and-comers continue to take strides.

What time is it on the premiership clock?

(2pm):
The Tigers took another step in year two under Yze, and it means they’re one step closer to returning to contention. Winning five games was something very few pundits expected of Richmond this year, and its crop of exciting 2024 draftees should continue to inspire hope in the club’s fans that another era of premiership contention isn’t as far away as some might think.


Season grade

B

— Jack Jovanovski
the rebuilding dons were younger than us
 
We are only 4 th youngest , hmmm thought we were like youngest or second youngest . Did I hear correctly that bears had 10 players that were 22 and under playing last night ?
we're fukt m8

dons were younger than us and had a better season
 

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Suns will go on drier against the bombers then they did against us. They’ll win by 80 points. bombers are sending a B grade ammo team up there last game of the season. Most of them will be already on the piss and have the bar booked at Star for afterwards. They’ll have no interest in even playing.
The Essendon boys will be having late night kebabs on the Gold Coast strip the night before the game. What could possibly wrong.......

Jim Carrey Lol GIF
 
i dont mind reminding folks whom wish we had this player n that player from oppo clubs RFC won 3 flags in 4 seasons most recently and were the envy of every campaigner that followed the game,its elementary that it cant last forever,geesook n brisbane havent had a reign,not in the last 13 years anyway,2 flags btwn them,whop ti do....personally i dont wish for any player from any club to be playing for RFC right now unless their actually pulling on the jumper next game,tiges in a few years will once again rise to the top as they always have with the crop of youngsters recently recruited n those still to be pivotal in the next tilt,its not gonna be the recruiting that'll be the concern over the next few years,its gonna be the coaching n usage of incoming and recently recruited elite talent
 
Everyone hated Richmond didnt they during their dynasty reign.

Yet when Richmond were struggling (and did so for many years) they were like non Richmond's fans second team or "we have a soft spot for Richmond"

When Richmond rise up they were hated. Particularly by Collingwood fans.
 
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