Key events
Footy celebrates these moments and creates lasting memories as well as any sport. It’s always a treat to see a new player, especially one who grew up a fan of the club.
Channel Seven welcomes the 2023 season with an intro package to the soundtrack of some Motley Crue noise from 1989. Don’t change Straya.
Carlton XXII
Ollie Hollands and Lachie Cowan will make their AFL debuts for their boyhood team, while Blake Acres lines up in navy for the first time since his switch from Fremantle.
“I think we had multiple conversations last year about being able to sustain what we do and play the way we need to be able to play,” head coach Michael Voss told the media this week. “There’s an intensity that we need to match to be consistent but there’s also a style that we want to play against – we have to be able to replicate that no matter the opposition we’re playing no matter what we’re challenged with. We want to bring a really contested style of game and we want to bring that consistently and that’s an expectation we should have of ourselves more than anything else.”
B: Le. Young, J. Weitering, A. Saad
HB: S. Docherty, M. McGovern. L. Cowan
C: B. Acres, P. Cripps (c), O. Hollands
HF: J. Martin, H. McKay, J.Silvagni
F: M. Owies, C. Curnow, Z. Fisher
FOLL: T. De Koning, M. Kennedy, G. Hewett
I/C: N. Newman, A. Cerra, E. Curnow, J. Motlop
Sub: L. O’Brien
Richmond XXII
All eyes will be on gun recruits Tim Taranto and Jacob Hopper as the Tigers unveil their new look midfield. “We have been really impressed by what both can bring,” gushed Damien Hardwick during the week. “They are both different. They complement each other. They complement us.”
Injury doubts Dion Prestia and Jayden Short both make the 22, one brimful of experience.
B: N. Balta, N. Vlastuin, D. Grimes (c)
HB: N. Broad, L. Baker, D. Rioli
C: K. McIntosh, D. Prestia, J. Short
HF: M. Rioli, J. Graham, S. Bolton
F: J. Riewoldt, D. Martin, T. Lynch
FOLL: T. Nankervis, T. Taranto, J. Hopper
I/C: B. Miller, M. Pickett, T. Cotchin, R. Mansell
Sub: J. Ross
Jonathan Horn has tipped Collingwood for the flag. I can only presume this is for the maximum wind-up value. He was on superb form last season, and I can’t wait for more of his weekly columns this year.
After three chaotic years, where Covid-19 caused the competition to be relocated to Queensland and then Western Australia, and where the AFLW season was bounced from the start of the year to the end, the league has had a chance to regain its breath.
Preamble
Jonathan Howcroft
Hello everybody and welcome to live coverage of Richmond v Carlton on the opening night of the 2023 AFL Premiership season. The opening bounce at the Melbourne Cricket Ground is 7.20 pm AEDT.
Footy’s back; if it ever truly went away? Almost six months on from Geelong’s catwalk to the 2022 flag the 18 challengers are back to do it all again. And as has become traditional, the curtain is raised by the Tigers and Blues on a balmy Thursday night at the G.
Both sides arrive with high ambitions. Richmond won their third flag in four years as recently as 2020, and the offseason recruitment of Jacob Hopper and Tim Taranto demonstrates a belief that the premiership window remains open at Punt Road. However, after consecutive mid-table finishes and eight players already in their 30s, it is a delicate balancing act in Tigerland.
Following an injury-interrupted 2022 Dustin Martin is back in the starting line-up and ready to return to his Brownlow Medal winning form. “He has had a great pre-season,” according to Damien Hardwick. Martin is set for a different role this year with the Tigers now stacked in midfield and more in need of his game-breaking talent further towards goal. “It will be a slightly different role for him,” Hardwick said. “He has normally gone between midfield and forward. This year he will probably be more forward, less mid. What we do know, I think from a Richmond point of view, and an AFL community point of view is that we just love having him back, and we look forward to him having his best season because he is the sort of guy you come and watch play.”
The lot of a Bluebagger over the past couple of decades has been nothing but misery, but after so much darkness, the dawn could finally be approaching. Michael Voss’s first year as head coach began promisingly, and an 8-2 record after ten rounds set the Blues up for a first crack at September since 2013. But a sequence of four wins and 12 defeats exposed the work that still needed to be done at Ikon Park.
On form, the spine of the team rivals all comers, the product of a group of players in their late 20s with over 100 first grade appearances under their belts (the likes of Jacob Weitering, Adam Saad, Sam Docherty, Patrick Cripps, and Jack Martin) and a tier behind them nearing similar milestones (I’m thinking of Jack Silvagni, Zac Fisher, Adam Cerra, Harry McKay, and Charlie Curnow) so the foundation feels solid. But around them things need to fall the right way, which means they can ill-afford the year-ending injury to Zac Williams and delayed season-start to Sam Walsh.
After tonight Carlton face the reigning premiers, before a trip to western Sydney. Failure to earn at least one win from these three tricky encounters would heap pressure on Voss, and we know that tends not to end well for coaches at such a demanding club.
I’ll be back shortly with more build-up. In the meantime, feel free to send me an email or fly a tweet to @JPHowcroft.
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