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The Blueprint being used against us.

How Richmond’s defence broke down against Hawthorn
There were signs of this last week. Collingwood jumped out in the first quarter and while it was playing well, in large parts it was assisted by some surprisingly lax Richmond defending.
The ship was straightened by about halfway through the second quarter, the game tightened up and much was forgotten.
This time there’d be no reprieve. Hawthorn brutally exposed what happens when Richmond is off its game totally, so surprising to watch given how rare it has been over the last three to four years. What we’ll try to do here is explain the main areas which broke down and led to the 32-point margin.
A couple of housekeeping points before we continue – this is purely a Richmond-focused post which means all the good done by Hawthorn won’t be included, largely because there are only so many hours in the day. For Hawks content and how their pressure forced changes in Tiger ball movement, stay tuned for the Notebook piece on Monday night. If you missed that concept and the Round 2 edition, you can catch up here.
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Around The Ball, Exhibit A
From a Richmond perspective, Thursday night’s theme was reliable methods breaking down horrifically.
Even when play set up in a favourable situation, Hawthorn was still able to have its way far too easily. It’s likely what prompted Damien Hardwick to say ‘a lot of the things that we’re not executing are in our control’ during his post-match press conference.
It started right from the outset – the first kickout of the game to be exact. James Sicily was forced into a long, high ball; exactly what the Tigers thrive on. From this situation, they normally get numbers to the drop, control the ground ball and dictate terms:
8

Here, they’re slow to arrive and Hawthorn players have all the prime positions. It’s simple, bread and butter type actions which were sorely missing.
9

That’s all it takes for Hawthorn to get out back, combined with some clever work from Shaun Burgoyne (hanging back from the pack), Tom Scully (drawing Dylan Grimes away from the intended forward 50 target) and Jack Gunston (opposite side of the ground to the kickout) to provide further options and complete the move.


Around The Ball, Exhibit B
Luke Breust, closing in on 400 career goals and 10 years after his debut, is well established as a rather dangerous forward.
In this play, Hawthorn has earned a 50-metre penalty and decide to pump it long inside 50 – far from a quick passage.
As O’Brien is about to be spoiled, here’s Breust cruising into the most dangerous space with barely an eye on him, let alone an opponent.
11

Behind the goals vision (!!) takes it to another level. To an extent it’d be understandable if a rookie was allowed that space, perhaps thinking he isn’t at the stage worthy of respecting. But this is Luke Breust, a player who’s kicked 30+ goals in each of the last nine years.
12

Failure To Execute, Exhibit A

When applying pressure, Richmond – like most sides – aims to squeeze in like a boa constrictor, forcing progressively less and less space to work in until there’s either a stoppage or turnover.
The Tigers have done it so flawlessly in recent times it’s easy to forget how difficult it can be to pull off. All it takes is the slightest miscue with effort and positioning and suddenly things look shambolic.
Using Jaeger O’Meara’s goal in the first quarter as an example, as the ball is punched forward everything looks relatively in order:
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Then, in the blink of an eye – because Richmond players are slow to react and Hawthorn is the exact opposite – the whole defensive structure falls apart. To be able to constrict, the Tigers need to be close enough to apply pressure in the first place:
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One easy handball and O’Meara has plenty of time to bang it on the boot and snap truly.
4

It all happens in the blink of an eye, but this type of defending is normally second nature for Richmond.
5 Gif

Failure To Execute, Exhibit B

The most egregious example came from Hawthorn’s penultimate goal of the evening. Forced deep into a back pocket, Ollie Hanrahan attempts the risky in-board kick. Although Burgoyne wins the one-on-one contest – because he’s Shaun Burgoyne, what else were you expecting? – it’s still open play in a dangerous area close to Richmond’s goal, normally the sort of situation the Tigers thrive on.
Instead Burgoyne can turn, wheel away and be met with … not a lot in terms of defensive resistance.
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It’s hard to overstate how stunning that image is. It’s more likely to be seen in a young, bottom-four team still learning the ropes, but this is Richmond. Over the last three years, we’ve seen an opponent gather on half back, instantly be swarmed and turn it over for a simple Tigers goal. Instead, this:


Richmond being off in its basic areas for so long – in its favourite conditions no less – is such an anomaly there shouldn’t be panic stations yet.
Although as we’ve covered at length in previous posts on this blog, there is a method for how to beat Richmond. Normally it hasn’t mattered because Richmond’s been too good and thwarted all comers.
But if this defensive slippage continues, even slightly, oppositions come into matches with renewed confidence and it’ll be harder for Richmond to wear down sides to the point of helplessness as it’s so accustomed to. Then suddenly the top of the league is wide open.



This shinboner bloke does some good analysis, helped with behind the goals vision that we don't get access to. A few things really stand out to me:
1. In the gif of O'Meara's goal, Short makes the rookie error of getting sucked towards a contest he has no chance of affecting. He's meant to be the mop - the punch forward should have hit him on the tit if he'd held position, and bang! he uses his long leg to launch a counter attack straight up the guts.
Tigga and Houli got drawn in as well, DTLD was facing the wrong way, Marlion was slow to close space and his tackle attempt was poor, and Chimp was flat-footed in no man's land. All easy to fix.

2. The video of the Hawks' transition from back pocket to Gunston. Sooo much wrong:
a. Lambert not quite positioned right to deter the attacking centering kick to Burgoyne.
b. Marlion cruising towards the contest but not getting there.
c. Hardwick starting level with Rioli, simply running harder and getting the ball 10m clear of Daniel.
d. Scully leaving Edwards in his dust. Shedda never breaks out of a jog.
e. Houli doesn't guard the corridor, lets Wingard sneak behind him.
f. Ross can't go with Worpel.
g. Match-ups wrong, meaning Tigga is on Patton and DTLD on O'Meara. Tigga gets drawn to the ball but doesn't affect it, O;Meara runs away from Dave and gets the ball sans pressure.
h. Instead of backpedalling to remain a long kick behind the play, Grimes gets drawn in by Patton, meaning Gunston is one-out with Broad in acres of space deep, and with no pressure, O'Meara puts it to his advantage.

The efforts or lack thereof of Marlion, Rioli, Shedda and Ross (and even Lambert not quite getting to Wingard when he hesitates) scream 'heavy legs', which vibes with the word we've been in a heavy training phase.

Analysis of what Hawthorn did here:
 
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Nice work Spook. All makes sense and all fixable, with effort and drilling. Or maybe a slap over the ears for some.

Will read the Hawthorn notes next.
 
I'll add, in the 'Hawthorn transitioning' vid, Cotch is waaaay too slow to push over to the contest. First couple of minutes of the game. Jogs. Likewise Houli, who should have been at the back door cutting off Wingard's exit. Prestia gets there late too. Stacky the only one there on time, but he makes a rookie error by waiting for the ball to come to him, while Mitchell moves into the contest and gets it (watch Stack's resultant defensive running though, h8ers). Broad gets caught in no-man's land here too, not closing up on Wingard and putting himself out of play.
 
Hawthorn simply has more numbers at that contest. On second look, Stack comes under the ball a bit. He's looking for an intercept mark, leaving Wingard completely unmanned at the contest. Stack picks up Mitchell because where's Dion, but gives up initiative, Mitchell gets the ball and gives it to Stack's man Wingard. Teachable moments.
 
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Good post.

No doubt the shorter quarters are working against us to an extent, but I don't believe it's the whole story. Last year we blasted Brisbane (MCG), Collingwood, GWS, Port, Carlton early and essentially maintained the break for the rest of the game. Carlton in Round 1 this year, also.

Conditions are what they are and Hardwick is on record as saying he embraces the challenges, which is sensible. If it's as simple as finding stride earlier in the match, then work on it. If we're not capable then so be it, but I think it's a little bit of a cop-out. We aren't just grinders, we're dynamic enough to adjust.

As Dimma said in the press conference last week, we were not playing like Richmond should be playing. It is about the way the team are playing not the short quarters.

DS
 
Hawthorn simply has more numbers at that contest. On second look, Stack comes under the ball a bit. He's looking for an intercept mark, leaving Wingard completely unmanned at the contest. Stack picks up Mitchell because where's Dion, but gives up initiative, Mitchell gets the ball and gives it to Stack's man Wingard. Teachable moments.

You always know you are in trouble when you are outnumbered at all the contests. Against Hawthorn it was really noticeable we were outnumbered everywhere.

DS
 
Hawthorn simply has more numbers at that contest. On second look, Stack comes under the ball a bit. He's looking for an intercept mark, leaving Wingard completely unmanned at the contest. Stack picks up Mitchell because where's Dion, but gives up initiative, Mitchell gets the ball and gives it to Stack's man Wingard. Teachable moments.

Intercept marking was a strength for Stackman last year in defence... maybe its touch and timing?
 
You always know you are in trouble when you are outnumbered at all the contests. Against Hawthorn it was really noticeable we were outnumbered everywhere.

DS

yeah.. it was clear early and I know from bitter experience that once that is a clear pattern you are probably not going to have a good day at the office
 
Yeah,, good point. In both games, the other team ran the ball along the boundary while we tried to guard the corridor. Then they stopped us using the corridor and forced us wide, which we did not want to do.
When life is normal we shut down the corridor and short kicks to force the other team to go down the line.
The last 2 weeks they outran and pinpointed the longer wide kicks.
We need to adjust the zone, slightly.

Super analysis Tots
 
Hawthorn simply has more numbers at that contest. On second look, Stack comes under the ball a bit. He's looking for an intercept mark, leaving Wingard completely unmanned at the contest. Stack picks up Mitchell because where's Dion, but gives up initiative, Mitchell gets the ball and gives it to Stack's man Wingard. Teachable moments.
Thanks for your insights!!
 
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