|
The
Day Punt Road Nearly Burned Down
“The
seed of revolution is repression.”
Woodrow Wilson said that and
he was only one of many politicians, playwrights, philosophers,
revolutionaries and rascals quoted
in Richmond last Sunday afternoon. Chairman Mao, Che Gueverra,
Fidel Castro, John Kennedy, Tom Stoppard, Napoleon; their
spirit and words were well and truly channelled in the heart
of Tigerland in the lead-up to Richmond’s clash with
the hapless Melbourne Demons.
The sentiment was clear: a loss to the Demons and Punt Road
would burn. The bayonets would be out and scalps would be
had. The mob would not quieten until total control had been
wrestled from the oppressors. The white picket fence palings
would be the tools of impalement. The clubhouse would be
nothing but smouldering cinders and rubble. The roads would
be lined with bones and the streets would be red with blood.
The Bastille would be stormed, the General Post Office would
be taken and a great leader of men would declare a new dawn
for the Richmond Football Club.
At the very least, it would be Lahore after a Pakistan World
Cup failure with poorly constructed effigies and an angry
mob demanding change.
Clusters and posses formed
across the many hotels and public houses throughout Richmond
in the lead-up to a clash that
should have been a nothing match but all of a sudden was
one that would have significant ramifications. At the All
Nations, Mick Molloy held court. The London was filled with
a wild-eyed crew in yellow and black demanding Terry Wallace
be driven out of town if the Tigers were not ahead on the
scoreboard at around five o’clock that afternoon. Caroline
Wilson scouted out the score at the Cricketers Arms and secretly
wished all those keen to see the blood flow the best of luck.
George Pell sent his blessing through an emissary at the
early St. Ignatius Sunday morning mass. Even at the Royal,
attention was turned away from the junkie strippers passing
the jug around, the skimpy version of the collection plate,
to talk Wallace and Richmond and the consequences of defeat.
Tensions were high and were increasingly fuelled by alcohol,
frustration, the mob mentality, the Sunday sun and the nearing
of The Hour.
By two o’clock, most of the Tiger faithful had gathered
at the MCG. Few seemed particularly happy. There was plenty
to lose and not a lot to gain. The Tigers were winless through
three matches and had shown very little in the way of improvement
outside of a solid effort in the middle two quarters against
Geelong. Terry Wallace was reported to be on “Death
Row” and most Richmond fans were not particularly upset:
the club seems to have made little progress in his four years
at the helm. The optimism that overcame most Richmond supporters
following the fine finish to 2008 and the signing of Ben
Cousins had once again turned into yet another false dawn.
Another year was headed for failure and the success promised
under Terry Wallace would never eventuate. Five wasted years
and the need to start all over again…
A win against Melbourne was merely expected. A loss and
the catastrophic days of 2009 would reach a new depth of
despair. It was not an ideal situation for the Tiger faithful
but it was not a position totally foreign to those who called
Punt Road home.
The game did not go as expected, at least according to the
betting, though many sitting in the Richmond Members precinct
would tell you the match went exactly as expected.
The Tigers kicked the opening
two goals of the match but were behind at quarter-time
after another pathetic display
of poor decision making and basic football skills. The second-quarter
was worse, the Demons kicking 8.1 to 3.3 as the Tigers continually
ran themselves into trouble with an inane display of handballing
and poor kicking. Matthew White continually took the wrong
option and should have been dragged but Wallace persisted
with the player he called “the most improved in his
five years at the club”. Jordan McMahon continually
sent the ball away from what can only be assumed was his
intended target and then showed no hustle in the recovery.
Troy Simmonds allowed the Demons to win virtually every ruck
contest. The entire Richmond backline with the exception
of Joel Bowden looked so bad that it appeared as if the ball
would never leave the Tiger half. Often, it didn’t.
Terry Wallace instituted a plan to make the Tigers an agile
and skilful unit. What he has achieved is sending a team
onto the paddock who, for the most part, cannot kick, handball,
run, make decisions or use the ball.
The Tigers were so bad in that second quarter-and, for most
of the day, truth be told- that sixteen random men aged between
eighteen and thirty could have been plucked from the stands
to join Richo and Joel Bowden and they would have turned
in a performance at least on par with what was shown in the
first half by these so-called professional footballers.
The faithful were restless
by this stage and when any form of comeback looked hopeless
in the third quarter, plenty
of anger and frustration was let go. Labourers who had had
their balls busted by their boss all week, literary types
who had been dumped, housewives who had received little attention
from their husbands…they all stood up and vented and
pointed fingers and demanded answers.
By the fourth term the situation appeared dire. And it was.
The Tigers provided a snifter of hope but once again that
hope was dashed. Sadness and anger were etched on the faces
of all those who had attached themselves to the football
club. Melbourne had defeated Richmond by eight points.
The revolution seemed inevitable.
When the fulltime siren sounded, however, the anger dissipated
into a resigned sadness. Why had we chosen to attach ourselves
to such mediocrity, such despair, such misery? The Tigers
faithful just rose lethargically and gathered their belongings
and shuffled out of the MCG. Few eyes were raised, most feet
were shuffling. Plenty of bottom lips bounced off the concrete.
Nobody charged the centre square or stood proud and tall
demanding change.
The Tigers weren’t even
booed off for their insipid display.
There were no riots, no effigies
burned. Nobody stormed the Punt Road offices and demanded
action, no hostages were
taken. Terry Wallace made it out alive as did the Tigers
brass. Revolution certainly wasn’t in the air.
The faithful then shuffled back to the Cricketers Arms and
the All Nations, the Swan and the Spread Eagle, the Mountain
View and the London Tavern, the Corner and the Royal, where
the junkie girls once again had their collection plates quickly
filled and their tops swiftly removed as the numb Tigers
fans went through the well-known motions of trying to forget.
The closest the planned uprising got to reality were a few
angry phone calls to talkback radio and the bitching that
took place over the many tear-stained pots consumed at the
local public houses.
It wasn’t an apathy born
out of indifference but out of futility, the air of hopelessness
that a serf or slave
feels after generations of servitude with the thought of
emancipation nothing but a wistful dream that will never
be realised.
Those who call Tigerland home expect mediocrity, failure,
disappointment, stupidity and frustration. It has been beaten
into us all over a quarter of a century. Whenever hopes are
raised, as they were when Ben Cousins arrived, they are inevitably
dashed. That is how the scene rolls down at Punt Road. It
always ends like Annie Hall. The Richmond Football Club and
success appear mutually exclusive, so fundamentally different
in nature that they can never coexist.
Alvy, when it was all over with Annie, said:
“There’s an old joke-um…two elderly women
are at a Catskill mountain resort and one of them says ‘Boy,
the food at this place is really terrible’. The other
one says, ‘Yeah, I know; and such small portions’.
Well that’s essentially how I feel about life- full
of loneliness and life and misery and suffering and unhappiness.”
He may have been talking about life but he could very easily
have been talking about the life of a Richmond Football Club
supporter.
To discuss this article on our forums, click
here.
© 2008 PuntingAce.Com
|