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Alas, the chasm in disposal skills, cohesion and defensive capability was a genuine reflection of each teamโs personnel, and Collingwood spared the Tigers by sitting Nick Daicos down midway through the third quarter.
The Richmond exodus is a dramatic example of player power. It is a scenario that this column finds troubling, and which should prompt unease at AFL headquarters and within certain clubs.
Players have always left for money, for family and opportunity. What is striking about the Richmond exodus is that the players have left precisely at the time when the club is flatlining on the field.
Richmond insiders maintain that Bolton and Baker had compelling personal reasons for heading home to Perth; Bolton having two young kids and desiring family support. Baker, who was misty-eyed about leaving, was out of contract and wouldโve been difficult to hold. He contemplated leaving two years earlier.
Damien Hardwick and Brendon Gale are no longer at Tigerland.Credit: Getty Images
Rioliโs exit, though, can be read as a direct consequence of Richmond a) falling far from contention, and b) Damien Hardwick signalling the end of the era by stepping down and beginning a new life on the Gold Coast.
If the Hardwick era had a Mount Rushmore, almost everyone whose face might have adorned the rock has gone: Dusty Martin, Trent Cotchin, Jack Riewoldt, Shane Edwards, president Peggy OโNeal and Brendon Gale. The key survivors are football bosses Blair Hartley and Tim Livingstone, who are as crucial to the near ground zero rebuild as anyone, Hartley having already presided over that exodus and the astonishing draft haul (eight picks) that followed.
The Tigers will gain more serious top-end talent at seasonโs end, too, given they are literally Winx odds ($1.20) to finish bottom and hold North Melbourneโs first pick, which should be inside the first five or six.
Dustin Martin farewelled the Richmond faithful last year.Credit: AFL Photos
Richmond fans, on the whole, accept the boom-bust cycle, the middle-aged supporter having endured yellow and bleak times often since the โ80s and โ90s. It is much easier to suffer through a 2-20 season โ and I doubt it will be much better this year โ when the club has banked three premierships.
Adem Yze has the task of rebuilding the Tigers.Credit: Wayne Taylor
Richmondโs large supporter base, brand strength, MCG tenancy and financial resources render the recession less dangerous than for half the clubs; unlike the Tigers of old (โ80s and โ90s), this version wonโt find fiscal quicksand, albeit their Punt Road redevelopment will consume much of their cash. Whenever they do vault the ladder, free agents and quality recruits will be keen to jump onboard (see Hawthorn).
The exodus is worrisome, not so much for the Tigers themselves but for the competition. It bespeaks a culture that is edging closer to the NBA, where the sportโs generational performer, LeBron James, shifted teams three times: from Cleveland to Miami, back to Cleveland and then on to Hollywoodโs Lakers.
The AFL doesnโt want or need the NBAโs club-hopping LeBronomy, in which players and clubs are empowered to leave each other, at short-notice, when either party feels their title chances are teetering.
Richmond have traded Bolton and Rioli with their eyes open, cognisant of what will happen this year and next. They didnโt have to let Rioli and Bolton go and have stockpiled picks for the Tassie Devilsโ evisceration of future drafts.
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Consider, though, what would happen to the Giants, North Melbourne, St Kilda, Gold Coast, Port Adelaide or Melbourne, should four or five key players suddenly become homesick โ or sick at the prospect of losing โ once their team crashes. Or, as in Gold Coastโs case, if they never rise.
Richmondโs freefall arguably compromises the fixture, in a season in which the gap between first and 14th has never been so narrow; those who play the Tigers twice have a leg up over those who donโt.
Brisbane had a major exodus in 2013, when Elliot Yeo and Sam Docherty headlined the young players who bailed from a leaky ship. The Sunsโ failure over a decade is largely due to their inability to exercise border control.
Increasingly, this NBA culture of self-fulfilment โ move to the contender if you can โ is accepted and even promoted as desirable by ex-players in the media.
The Richmond quartet, though, werenโt necessarily chasing success and I would contend that, having played in multiple premierships, they didnโt need that motivation.
Coincidentally or not, theyโve left โ be it for family, friends, financial security or to reunite with an old coach โ at the instant when the club that delivered for them has fallen into hard times.
One hopes that this does not become standard.
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