The Good Old Days (Hafey and Hart in the AFL Record) | PUNT ROAD END | Richmond Tigers Forum
  • IMPORTANT // Please look after your loved ones, yourself and be kind to others. If you are feeling that the world is too hard to handle there is always help - I implore you not to hesitate in contacting one of these wonderful organisations Lifeline and Beyond Blue ... and I'm sure reaching out to our PRE community we will find a way to help. T.

The Good Old Days (Hafey and Hart in the AFL Record)

Rosy

Tiger Legend
Mar 27, 2003
54,348
32
There's an article in the AFL Record called "The Evolution of Football-Part 2.  Boomerangs, Drop kicks and Hafey's Tigers." I've typed the Richmond related parts in case some PREnders who don't read the AFL Record might be interested.

Tommy's predictable, irresistible Tigers

Richmond coach Tom Hafey instilled a long and direct style that was as predictable as it was successful, with his Tigers winning flags in 1967, 1969, 1973 and 1974

Tom Hafey:  “Every one of our players knew what was required because the game plan was simple and basic.  One handpass, run with the ball, take a bounce if you can and kick it long and direct to a big forward target.  We kicked as many goals from crumbs as we did from marks, and that comes back to the predictability factor.  The opposition knew what we were going to do but they still had to beat us at it.  That was the way Norm Smith won six premierships in a ten year period, and I felt that style had so much common sense about it.  In my first coaching job at Shepparton in the country, we tried to play the same way.  That also included things like keeping our eyes on the ball, our heads over it and running straight at it; busting your gut, picking up opponents when we lost possession, and applying pressure when chasing, tackling and smothering.  A lot of clubs played a similar way but there were also a lot who didn’t because of the different beliefs and styles of the various coaches.  Some teams would kick the ball all over the place and when your players didn’t have their minds completely on the job, those types of sides would occasionally beat you.  But you didn’t have to worry about these teams in finals because they were sitting in the grandstand.”

Royce Hart (Richmond captain and champion centre half-forward) : “Our game plan wasn’t always conducive to a big game from the centre half-forward.  All Tommy was interested in was moving the ball quickly and playing efficient football.  Line (Denis) Pagan these days-it was all about goals per possession.  In the ’67 grand final, Geelong had more of everything (16 more kicks, 21 more marks and five more handballs) but we won the premiership.  We didn’t have to drill anyone on the chest with a pass; we just had to get it in long and quick.”

Hafey: “From the time I started coaching Richmond, a couple of major statistics we counted were how many times we played on from a mark or a free kick, and how many handpasses we received, and by that I don’t mean hanging out on the side but running hard to receive.  I might say to the players at half time; ‘We’re supposed to be a running team, yet we’ve only played on seven times in the first half’.”

Hart:  “Tommy’s philosophy was; ‘All the players between the kicker and receiver should run to the contest and be at the fall of the ball if it comes to ground and then you kick to the next contest and do the same thing.”

Hafey: “We trained harder than any other club, and I was always criticised for that, but I felt it was important for the style of play we had- and any style for that matter.”

Hart: “With Tommy’s game plan, I’d be contesting packs a lot.  Just about every mark was a contested one-that was the only kind of mark you could take.  When I hear commentators say “He’s forced to kick to a one on one,” I have to laugh because I hardly had a one-on-one my whole career!  I would’ve loved that.  Normally a teams best and most valuable players are on the forward line, so you only need a 50-50 chance to get the ball.”

Hafey:  : “A lot of people think you need a Royce Hart, as Stephen Kernahan or a Wayne Carey at centre half-forward to be successful, but that’s not necessarily the case.  We did have Royce Hart but all I wanted out of that position was a strong contest.  I reckon a lot of coaches think you have to take a mark to kick a goal.  Our game plan was predictable, but it’s not predictable when it hits the hands of the pack.  That’s where players like John Northey and Kevin Bartlett were so dangerous.  ‘KB’ couldn’t mark over (jockey) Darren Gauchi, so how did he get all his goals?  As a former back pocket player, if I was playing on a Kevin Bartlett or a Leigh Matthews or a Peter Daicos, I’d be worried like hell because they’re ball magnets and when they get the ball they kick goals.  A second rover might kick 1-3 but a Bobby Skilton or a Johnny Birt would kick 4 goals.  That’s why I think it’s useless taking a player like Chris Judd off the ground when he could be kicking goals from a forward pocket.”

‘The Boundary is your friend’

Hafey: “It was an unwritten law that you didn’t kick across goal.  One of our team rules was that in a tight situation in defence, go for the boundary-the boundary is your friend-so that if we lose possession they don’t get a simple shot at goal.  The same rule applied to our ruck work.”
 
Just wanted to highlight this again Rosy to show the younger PREnders what made the awesome Tiger dynasty tick in the sixties and the seventies.....Bloody great read this post again thanks! :hearton