- Apr 5, 2015
- 4,613
- 11,938
- AFL Club
- Richmond
- Other Teams
- Charlotte Hornets
I have no knowledge of the 70's or early 80's other than what I know from history.
The Richmond I have supported since I was 7 has been down and stomped on.
I can only speak from what I perceive and that is from a media point of view:
Richmond being down sells papers, the emotion and passion of long suffering fans and the inevitable board spill or coach sacking, pathetic drafting and recruiting, all creates sensation, sensation sells. Journos love(d) Richmond, it meant easy articles. The brief moments over the last 30 years Richmond have been up, it's been about the long suffering fans, almost setting them up for the inevitable heart-break that was coming.
From an opposition perception:
Richmond being the down and out "super power" of the VFL / AFL, the in-fighting, the instability, the coaching merry-go-round, the long suffering of the massive army of Tiger supporters makes others feel good about their own clubs position. Richmond being up and winning and playing decent football and being stable and having some form of a plan, suddenly the comfort zone of saying "well, at least we're not Richmond" is gone. The go to security blanket isn't so downtrodden at the moment, but be assured one loss, and it'll start up again.
For mine, this is a different Richmond to last year and 2015. The intensity level in 2017 is unrecognisable. We'll lose games, but last night was a game we drop our bundle and lose by 6 goals. I'm just happy we are playing for the f***ing jumper again and it's the kids who are getting it done right.
The Richmond I have supported since I was 7 has been down and stomped on.
I can only speak from what I perceive and that is from a media point of view:
Richmond being down sells papers, the emotion and passion of long suffering fans and the inevitable board spill or coach sacking, pathetic drafting and recruiting, all creates sensation, sensation sells. Journos love(d) Richmond, it meant easy articles. The brief moments over the last 30 years Richmond have been up, it's been about the long suffering fans, almost setting them up for the inevitable heart-break that was coming.
From an opposition perception:
Richmond being the down and out "super power" of the VFL / AFL, the in-fighting, the instability, the coaching merry-go-round, the long suffering of the massive army of Tiger supporters makes others feel good about their own clubs position. Richmond being up and winning and playing decent football and being stable and having some form of a plan, suddenly the comfort zone of saying "well, at least we're not Richmond" is gone. The go to security blanket isn't so downtrodden at the moment, but be assured one loss, and it'll start up again.
For mine, this is a different Richmond to last year and 2015. The intensity level in 2017 is unrecognisable. We'll lose games, but last night was a game we drop our bundle and lose by 6 goals. I'm just happy we are playing for the f***ing jumper again and it's the kids who are getting it done right.





