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question
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how long do you have to answer a question in family feud
Family Feud
[ "Family Feud\n\n\n\n\n\nGenre\nGame show\n\n\nCreated by\nMark Goodson\n\n\nDirected by\n\n\n\nPaul Alter (1976–85, 1988–90)\nMarc Breslow (1988–93)\nAndy Felsher (1990–95)\nLenn Goodside (1999–02)\nKen Fuchs (2002–present)\nHugh Bartlett (2013–14)\n\n\n\n\n\nPresented by\n\n\n\nRichard Dawson (1976–85, 1994–95)\nRay Combs (1988–94)\nLouie Anderson (1999–2002)\nRichard Karn (2002–06)\nJohn O'Hurley (2006–10)\nSteve Harvey (2010–present)\n\n\n\n\n\nNarrated by\n\n\n\nGene Wood (1976–85, 1988–95)\nBurton Richardson (1999–2010)\nJoey Fatone (2010–15)\nRubin Ervin (2015–present)\n\n\n\n\n\nTheme music composer\n\n\n\nScore Productions (1976–85, 1988–95, 2002–03, 2008–present)\nEdd Kalehoff (1994–95)\nJohn Lewis Parker (1999–2008)\n\n\n\n\n\nCountry of origin\nUnited States\n\n\nOriginal language(s)\nEnglish\n\n\nProduction\n\n\nProducer(s)\n\n\n\nHoward Felsher (1976–85, 1988–95)\nCathy Dawson (1976–85)\nGary Dawson (1984–85, 1994–95)\n\n\n\n\n\nRunning time\n\n\n\n22–26 minutes:\nABC (1976–85)\nCBS (1988–92)\nSyndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)\n42–44 minutes:\nABC specials (1979–84, 2015–present)\nCBS (1992–93)\nSyndicated (1994–95)\n\n\n\n\n\nProduction company(s)\n\n\n\nMark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions (1976–82)\nMark Goodson Productions (1982–85, 1988–95, 1999–2002)\nFremantleMedia (2002–present)\n\n\n\n\n\nDistributor\n\n\n\nViacom Enterprises (1977–85)\nLBS Communications (1988–91)\nTribune Entertainment (1999–2007)\n20th Television (2007-present)\nDebmar-Mercury (2007–present)\n\n\n\n\n\nRelease\n\n\nOriginal network\n\n\n\nABC (1976–85, 2015–present)\nCBS (1988–93)\nSyndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)\n\n\n\n\n\nOriginal release\nJuly 12, 1976 (1976-07-12) – present\n\n\nChronology\n\n\nRelated shows\n\n\n\n100 latinos dijeron\nCelebrity Family Feud\n¿Qué dice la gente?\n\n\n\n\n\nExternal links\n\n\nWebsite", "Family Feud", "Genre\nGame show", "Created by\nMark Goodson", "Directed by\n\n\n\nPaul Alter (1976–85, 1988–90)\nMarc Breslow (1988–93)\nAndy Felsher (1990–95)\nLenn Goodside (1999–02)\nKen Fuchs (2002–present)\nHugh Bartlett (2013–14)", "Paul Alter (1976–85, 1988–90)\nMarc Breslow (1988–93)\nAndy Felsher (1990–95)\nLenn Goodside (1999–02)\nKen Fuchs (2002–present)\nHugh Bartlett (2013–14)", "Paul Alter (1976–85, 1988–90)", "Marc Breslow (1988–93)", "Andy Felsher (1990–95)", "Lenn Goodside (1999–02)", "Ken Fuchs (2002–present)", "Hugh Bartlett (2013–14)", "Presented by\n\n\n\nRichard Dawson (1976–85, 1994–95)\nRay Combs (1988–94)\nLouie Anderson (1999–2002)\nRichard Karn (2002–06)\nJohn O'Hurley (2006–10)\nSteve Harvey (2010–present)", "Richard Dawson (1976–85, 1994–95)\nRay Combs (1988–94)\nLouie Anderson (1999–2002)\nRichard Karn (2002–06)\nJohn O'Hurley (2006–10)\nSteve Harvey (2010–present)", "Richard Dawson (1976–85, 1994–95)", "Ray Combs (1988–94)", "Louie Anderson (1999–2002)", "Richard Karn (2002–06)", "John O'Hurley (2006–10)", "Steve Harvey (2010–present)", "Narrated by\n\n\n\nGene Wood (1976–85, 1988–95)\nBurton Richardson (1999–2010)\nJoey Fatone (2010–15)\nRubin Ervin (2015–present)", "Gene Wood (1976–85, 1988–95)\nBurton Richardson (1999–2010)\nJoey Fatone (2010–15)\nRubin Ervin (2015–present)", "Gene Wood (1976–85, 1988–95)", "Burton Richardson (1999–2010)", "Joey Fatone (2010–15)", "Rubin Ervin (2015–present)", "Theme music composer\n\n\n\nScore Productions (1976–85, 1988–95, 2002–03, 2008–present)\nEdd Kalehoff (1994–95)\nJohn Lewis Parker (1999–2008)", "Score Productions (1976–85, 1988–95, 2002–03, 2008–present)\nEdd Kalehoff (1994–95)\nJohn Lewis Parker (1999–2008)", "Score Productions (1976–85, 1988–95, 2002–03, 2008–present)", "Edd Kalehoff (1994–95)", "John Lewis Parker (1999–2008)", "Country of origin\nUnited States", "Original language(s)\nEnglish", "Production", "Producer(s)\n\n\n\nHoward Felsher (1976–85, 1988–95)\nCathy Dawson (1976–85)\nGary Dawson (1984–85, 1994–95)", "Howard Felsher (1976–85, 1988–95)\nCathy Dawson (1976–85)\nGary Dawson (1984–85, 1994–95)", "Howard Felsher (1976–85, 1988–95)", "Cathy Dawson (1976–85)", "Gary Dawson (1984–85, 1994–95)", "Running time\n\n\n\n22–26 minutes:\nABC (1976–85)\nCBS (1988–92)\nSyndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)\n42–44 minutes:\nABC specials (1979–84, 2015–present)\nCBS (1992–93)\nSyndicated (1994–95)", "22–26 minutes:\nABC (1976–85)\nCBS (1988–92)\nSyndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)\n42–44 minutes:\nABC specials (1979–84, 2015–present)\nCBS (1992–93)\nSyndicated (1994–95)", "22–26 minutes:", "ABC (1976–85)", "CBS (1988–92)", "Syndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)", "42–44 minutes:", "ABC specials (1979–84, 2015–present)", "CBS (1992–93)", "Syndicated (1994–95)", "Production company(s)\n\n\n\nMark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions (1976–82)\nMark Goodson Productions (1982–85, 1988–95, 1999–2002)\nFremantleMedia (2002–present)", "Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions (1976–82)\nMark Goodson Productions (1982–85, 1988–95, 1999–2002)\nFremantleMedia (2002–present)", "Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions (1976–82)", "Mark Goodson Productions (1982–85, 1988–95, 1999–2002)", "FremantleMedia (2002–present)", "Distributor\n\n\n\nViacom Enterprises (1977–85)\nLBS Communications (1988–91)\nTribune Entertainment (1999–2007)\n20th Television (2007-present)\nDebmar-Mercury (2007–present)", "Viacom Enterprises (1977–85)\nLBS Communications (1988–91)\nTribune Entertainment (1999–2007)\n20th Television (2007-present)\nDebmar-Mercury (2007–present)", "Viacom Enterprises (1977–85)", "LBS Communications (1988–91)", "Tribune Entertainment (1999–2007)", "20th Television (2007-present)\nDebmar-Mercury (2007–present)", "Release", "Original network\n\n\n\nABC (1976–85, 2015–present)\nCBS (1988–93)\nSyndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)", "ABC (1976–85, 2015–present)\nCBS (1988–93)\nSyndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)", "ABC (1976–85, 2015–present)", "CBS (1988–93)", "Syndicated (1977–85, 1988–95, 1999–present)", "Original release\nJuly 12, 1976 (1976-07-12) – present", "Chronology", "Related shows\n\n\n\n100 latinos dijeron\nCelebrity Family Feud\n¿Qué dice la gente?", "100 latinos dijeron\nCelebrity Family Feud\n¿Qué dice la gente?", "100 latinos dijeron", "Celebrity Family Feud", "¿Qué dice la gente?", "External links", "Website", "Family Feud is an American television game show created by Mark Goodson where two families compete to name the most popular responses to survey questions in order to win cash and prizes. It is considered a spin-off of Match Game, whose panel included original host Richard Dawson.", "The program premiered on ABC on July 12, 1976, and ran as part of its daytime schedule until June 14, 1985. The program was re-launched by CBS on July 4, 1988, and ran until September 10, 1993. Three separate editions for syndication were also produced. The first aired from September 19, 1977, to September 6, 1985. The second aired from September 19, 1988, to September 8, 1995. The current syndicated series premiered on September 20, 1999.", "The ABC network version of the show and the first syndicated series were hosted by Richard Dawson. Ray Combs hosted the CBS series and the first six seasons of the accompanying syndicated version, then was replaced by Dawson for the final season. The 1999 syndicated series has been hosted by Louie Anderson (1999–2002), Richard Karn (2002–06), John O'Hurley (2006–10), and Steve Harvey (2010–present). Announcers for the series have included Gene Wood (1976–85, 1988–95), Burton Richardson (1999–2010, syndication; 2015–present, ABC), Joey Fatone (2010–15), and Rubin Ervin (2015–present).", "The program has spawned multiple regional adaptations in over 50 international markets outside the United States. Within a year of its debut, the original version became the number one game show in daytime television; however, as viewing habits changed, the ratings declined. Harvey's takeover in 2010 increased Nielsen ratings significantly and eventually placed the program among the top five most popular syndicated television shows in the country. In 2013, TV Guide ranked Family Feud third in its list of the 60 greatest game shows of all time.", "Two family teams of five contestants each compete to win cash and prizes. The original version of the show began with the families being introduced, seated opposite each other as if posing for family portraits, after which the host interviewed them.[1]", "Unlike most game shows, there is no minimum age necessary to participate in Family Feud. Each round begins with a \"face-off\" question that serves as a toss-up between two opposing contestants. The host asks a survey question that was previously posed to a group of 100 people (e.g., \"Name the hour that you get up on Sunday mornings.\").[2] A certain number of answers are concealed on the board, ranked by popularity of the survey's responses. Only answers said by at least two people can appear on the board. The first contestant to buzz-in gives an answer; if it is the most popular, his/her family immediately wins the face-off. Otherwise, the opponent responds and the family member providing the higher-ranked answer wins. Ties are broken in favor of the contestant who buzzes-in first. If neither contestant's answer is on the board, the other eight contestants have a chance to respond, one at a time from alternating sides, until an answer is revealed. The family that wins the face-off may choose to play the question or pass control to their opponents (except on the Combs version, when the family who won the face-off automatically gained control of the question).[2]", "The family with control of the question then tries to win the round by guessing all of the remaining concealed answers, with each member giving one answer in sequence. Giving an answer not on the board, or failing to respond within the allotted time, earns one strike. If the family earns three strikes, their opponents are given one chance to \"steal\" the points for the round by guessing any remaining concealed answer; failing to do so awards the points back to the family that originally had control.[2] Any answers on the board that have not been guessed are then revealed.", "While a family has control of a question, the members are not allowed to discuss possible answers with one another; each person must respond individually. However, the opposing family may confer in preparation for an attempt to steal, and their captain must respond for them when such an attempt is made.", "Answers are worth one point for every person in the 100-member survey who gave them. The winning family in each round scores the total points for all revealed answers to that question, including those given during the face-off but excluding the one used to steal (if applicable). The number of answers on the board decreases from round to round, and as the game progresses, certain rounds are played for double or triple point value. The first family to score 300 points wins the game and advances to the Fast Money bonus round for a chance to win a cash bonus. Until 1992, both teams received $1 per point scored.[1]", "Prior to 1999, the game continued as normal until one family reached the necessary total to win. Since then, if neither team reaches the goal after four rounds (or, from 1999 to 2002, if both teams were tied with the same score after the final round), one last question is played for triple value with only the #1 answer displayed.", "The goal of 300 points has been in place in the rules of almost every version of the show. However, when the program premiered in 1976, the goal was 200 points. For the 1984–85 season of both the daytime and syndicated program, the goal was increased to 400 points.[3] For several seasons after the 1999 return to syndication, there was no specific point goal. Instead, four rounds were played, with the last for triple points and only one strike. The family with the most points after the fourth round won the game.", "Two members of the winning family play Fast Money for a chance to win a cash bonus. One contestant is onstage with the host, while the other is sequestered backstage so that he/she cannot hear the first portion of the round. The first contestant is asked five rapid-fire survey questions and has a set time limit in which to answer them (originally 15 seconds, extended to 20 in 1994). The clock begins to run only after the first question is asked, and the first contestant may pass on a question and return to it after all five have been asked, if time remains.", "After the first contestant has either answered all five questions or run out of time, the host reveals how many people in the survey matched each of his/her answers. The board is then cleared except for the total score, and the second contestant is then brought out to answer the same five questions. The same rules are followed, but the time limit is extended by five seconds (originally 20, then extended to 25); in addition, if the second contestant duplicates an answer given by the first, a buzzer sounds and he/she must give another answer. If the two contestants reach a combined total of 200 points or more, the family wins the bonus. If not, they are given $5 per point scored as a consolation prize.[2]", "The grand prize for winning Fast Money has varied. When the program aired in daytime, families played for $5,000.[4][5] The grand prize for syndicated episodes was $10,000 for much of its existence. In 2001, the prize was doubled to $20,000 at the request of then-host Louie Anderson.[6]", "When Family Feud premiered on ABC, network rules dictated how much a family could win. Once any family reached $25,000, they were retired as champions.[7] The accompanying syndicated series that premiered in 1977 featured two new families each episode because of tape bicycling (a practice then common in syndicated television).", "The CBS daytime and syndicated versions which began airing in 1988 also featured returning champions, who could appear for a maximum of five days.[8] For a brief period in the 1994–95 season which aired in syndication, there were no returning champions. For these episodes, two new families competed in this first half of each episode. The second half featured former champion families who appeared on Family Feud between 1977 and 1985, with the winner of the first half of the show playing one of these families in the second half.[9]", "From 1999 to 2002, two new families appeared on each episode. The returning champions rule was reinstated with the same five-day limit starting with the 2002–03 season.[10] Starting with the 2009–10 season, a family that wins five matches also wins a new car.", "In June 1992, the CBS daytime edition of Feud expanded from thirty to sixty minutes and became known as Family Feud Challenge. As part of the change, a new round was added at the start of each game called \"Bullseye\". This round determined the potential Fast Money stake for each team.[11] Each team was given a starting value for their bank and attempted to come up with the top answer to a survey question to add to it. The Bullseye round was added to the syndicated edition in September 1992.", "The first two members of each family appeared at the face-off podium and were asked a question to which only the number-one answer was available. Giving the top answer added the value for that question to the family's bank. The process then repeated with the four remaining members from each family. On the first half of the daytime version, families were staked with $2,500. The first question was worth $500, with each succeeding question worth $500 more than the previous, with the final question worth $2,500. This allowed for a potential maximum bank of $10,000. For the second half of the daytime version, and also on the syndicated version, all values were doubled, making the maximum potential bank $20,000. The team that eventually won the game played for their bank in Fast Money.", "When Richard Dawson returned as host of the program in 1994, the round's name was changed to the \"Bankroll\" round.[12] Although the goal remained of giving only the number-one answer, the format was modified to three questions from five, with only one member of each family participating for all three questions. The initial stake for each family remained the same ($2,500 in the first half of the hour and $5,000 in the second). However, the value for each question was $500, $1,500 and $2,500 in the first half, with values doubling for the second half. This meant a potential maximum bank of $7,000 in the first half and $14,000 in the second.[12]", "The Bullseye round temporarily returned during the 2009–10 season. It was played similarly as the format used from 1992 to 1994 on the syndicated version, with five questions worth from $1,000 to $5,000. However, each family was given a $15,000 starting stake, which meant a potential maximum of a $30,000 bank.", "The ABC and first syndicated versions of Family Feud were hosted by Richard Dawson. As writer David Marc put it, Dawson's on-air personality \"fell somewhere between the brainless sincerity of Wink Martindale and the raunchy cynicism of Chuck Barris\".[13] Dawson showed himself to have insistent affections for all of the female members of each family that competed on the show, regardless of age.[13] Writers Tim Brooks, Jon Ellowitz, and Earle F. Marsh owed Family Feud's popularity to Dawson's \"glib familiarity\" (he had previously played Newkirk on Hogan's Heroes) and \"ready wit\" (from his tenure as a panelist on Match Game).[1] The show's original announcer was Gene Wood,[14] with Johnny Gilbert and Rod Roddy serving as occasional substitutes.[15]", "In 1988, Ray Combs took over Dawson's role as host on CBS and in syndication with Wood returning as announcer and Roddy, Art James, and Charlie O'Donnell serving in that role when Wood was not available.[15] Combs hosted the program until the daytime version's cancellation in 1993 and the syndicated version until the end of the 1993–94 season. Dawson returned to the show at the request of Mark Goodson Productions for the 1994–95 season.[16]", "When Feud returned to syndication in 1999, it was initially hosted by Louie Anderson,[1] with Burton Richardson as the new announcer.[17] Richard Karn was selected to take over for Anderson when season four premiered in 2002,[1] and when season eight premiered in 2006, Karn was replaced by John O'Hurley.[1] In 2010, both O'Hurley and Richardson departed from the show; comedian Steve Harvey was named the new host for season twelve,[18] and a pre-recorded track of former 'N Sync member Joey Fatone's voice was used until 2015,[19] when Rubin Ervin, who has been a member of the production staff as the warmup man for the audience since Harvey took over, became the announcer. (Richardson still announces for Celebrity Family Feud.)", "The first four versions of the show were directed by Paul Alter and produced by Howard Felsher and Cathy Dawson. For the 1988 versions, Gary Dawson worked with the show as a third producer, and Alter was joined by two other directors, Marc Breslow and Andy Felsher.[15] The 1999 version's main staff include executive producer Gabrielle Johnston, supervising producers Kristin Bjorklund and Brian Hawley, and director Ken Fuchs; Johnston and Bjorklund previously worked as associate producers of the 1980s version.[20] The show's classic theme tune was written by an uncredited Walt Levinsky for Score Productions. The themes used from 1999 to 2008 were written by John Lewis Parker.[20] The production rights to the show were originally owned by the production company Goodson shared with his partner Bill Todman, but were sold to their current holder, FremantleMedia, when it acquired all of Goodson and Todman's works in 2002.[20]", "Mark Goodson created Family Feud during the increasing popularity of his earlier game show Match Game, which set daytime ratings records in 1976, and on which Dawson had previously appeared as one of its most popular panelists. Match Game aired on CBS, and by 1976, CBS vice president Fred Silverman (who had originally commissioned Match Game) had moved to a new position as President of ABC. The show premiered on ABC's daytime lineup at 1:30 p.m. (EST) on July 12, 1976, and although it was not an immediate hit, before long it became a ratings winner and eventually surpassed Match Game to become the No. 1 game show in daytime. Due to the expansion of All My Children to one hour in April 1977 (taking up the entire 1 pm. to 2 p.m. hour), the show moved to 11:30 a.m., as the second part of an hour that had daytime reruns of Happy Days (later Laverne & Shirley) as its lead-in. When $20,000 Pyramid was cancelled in June 1980, it moved a half-hour back to 12 noon. [21] It remained the most popular daytime game show until Merv Griffin's game show Wheel of Fortune surpassed it in 1984.[2] From 1978 until 1984, ABC periodically broadcast hour-long primetime \"All-Star Specials\", in which celebrity casts from various primetime lineup TV series competed instead of ordinary families.[1] The popularity of the program inspired Goodson to consider producing a nighttime edition, which launched in syndication on September 18, 1977. Like many other game shows at the time, the nighttime Feud aired once a week; it expanded to twice a week in January 1979,[2] and finally to five nights a week (Monday through Friday) in the fall of 1980. However, the viewing habits of both daytime and syndicated audiences were changing.[2] When Griffin launched Wheel's syndicated version, starring Pat Sajak and Vanna White, in 1983, that show climbed the ratings to the point where it unseated Feud as the highest-rated syndicated show;[22] the syndicated premiere of Wheel's sister show Jeopardy! with Alex Trebek as host also siphoned ratings from Feud with its early success. With declining ratings, and as part of a scheduling reshuffle with two of ABC's half-hour soaps, the show moved back to the 11:30 a.m. timeslot in October 1984, as the second part of a one-hour game show block with Trivia Trap (later All-Star Blitz) as its lead in, hoping to make a dent in the ratings of The Price is Right.", "Despite the ratings decline, there was some interest in keeping the show in production. In a 2011 interview, Dawson recalled a meeting with executives from Viacom Enterprises about keeping the show for one more season. Dawson was growing tired of the grueling taping schedule and initially wanted to stop altogether. After discussing the situation with ABC and Viacom, Dawson said that he would return for a final syndicated season of thirty-nine weeks of episodes but would not continue doing the daytime series. After this, Dawson did not hear from Viacom for approximately a week and once they contacted him again, Dawson was told that Viacom was no longer interested in continuing the syndicated Feud beyond the 1984–85 season.[23] Viacom made this official in January 1985 ahead of that year's NATPE convention, and within a few weeks, ABC decided that it too would not renew Feud for the 1985–86 season.[24] The daytime version came to an end on June 14, 1985.[2] The syndicated version aired its last new episode on May 17, 1985, and continued to air in reruns after that until September 6, 1985.[2]", "Family Feud moved to CBS with Combs hosting on July 4, 1988 at 10:00 a.m. (EST), replacing The $25,000 Pyramid. Like its predecessor, this version also had an accompanying syndicated edition which launched in September of that year. It moved to 10:30 a.m. in January 1991 to make room for a short-lived talk show starring Barbara DeAngelis. At that timeslot, it replaced the daytime Wheel of Fortune which moved back to NBC. [1] In June 1992, the network version expanded from its original half-hour format to a full hour from 10 a.m.-11 a.m., and was retitled The Family Feud Challenge;[1] this new format featured three families per episode, which included two new families competing in the first half-hour for the right to play the returning champions in the second half. The Family Feud Challenge aired its final new episode on March 26, 1993, with reruns airing until September 10.[25] The syndicated Feud, meanwhile, remained in production and entered its sixth season in the fall of 1993.", "However, the ratings picture was not particularly good for the syndicated edition. For much of its run to this point, the syndicated Feud had to deal with stations dropping the series or moving it to undesirable time slots such as overnights. By 1992, the ratings had hit a low point and by the time the sixth season premiered, distributor All American Television was threatening to cancel the series unless ratings improved and changes were made. The responsibility for this fell on Jonathan Goodson, who had taken over his father's company when Mark Goodson died in 1992. One of the options considered was a host change.[16]", "When the revival launched in 1988, Mark Goodson had not even considered former host Richard Dawson to return due to lingering bad feelings between Dawson and the production team. After hiring Ray Combs, Goodson threw his loyalties behind him and refused to consider changing hosts despite the slipping ratings. However, the younger Goodson did not have the ties to Combs that his father did and felt that a change would at least require consideration. After meeting with his staff, Goodson offered Dawson a contract to return as host of the syndicated Feud and the semi-retired Dawson agreed to return. Combs finished out the remainder of the season but, upset by the decision to replace him, he departed from the studio as soon as he signed off on the final episode of his tenure.[16]", "A revamped Family Feud returned for a seventh season in September 1994 with Dawson in his role as host. The show expanded from thirty to sixty minutes, reinstated the Family Feud Challenge format, and did various other things to try to improve the ratings of the show such as build a more modern-looking set, feature families that had previously been champions on the original Feud, and have more themed weeks. Although Dawson did bring a brief ratings surge when he came back, the show could not sustain it long term and Feud came to a conclusion at the end of the 1994–95 season.", "Family Feud returned in syndication on September 20, 1999, with comedian Louie Anderson as host.[26] After Richard Karn took over the show, the format was changed to reintroduce returning champions, allowing them to appear for up to five days. However, even after Karn's takeover, Anderson-hosted episodes continued in reruns that aired on PAX TV/Ion Television.[1] In John O'Hurley's later days, the show's Nielsen ratings were at 1.5 (putting it in danger of cancellation), but when comedian Steve Harvey took over, ratings increased by as much as 40%,[27] and within two short years, the show was rated at 4.0, and had become the fifth most popular syndicated program.[28] Fox News' Paulette Cohn argued that Harvey's \"relatability,\" or \"understanding of what the people at home want to know,\" is what saved the show from cancellation;[29] Harvey himself argued, \"If someone said an answer that was so ridiculous, I knew that the people at home behind the camera had to be going, 'What did they just say?' … They gave this answer that doesn't have a shot in hell of being up there. The fact that I recognize that, that's comedic genius to me. I think that's [made] the difference.\"[29]", "Since Harvey became host, Family Feud has regularly ranked among the top 10 highest-rated programs in all of daytime television programming and third among game shows (behind Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy!); in February 2014, the show achieved a 6.0 share in the Nielsen ratings, with approximately 8.8 million viewers.[30] In June 2015, Family Feud eclipsed Wheel of Fortune as the most-watched syndicated game show on television.[31]", "Reruns of the Dawson, Combs, and Anderson hosted episodes have been included among Buzzr's acquisitions since its launch on June 1, 2015.[32] On June 13, 2016, American episodes hosted by Harvey began airing on the UK digital terrestrial and satellite channel Challenge.[33]", "Production of Family Feud was shifted from Universal Orlando to Harvey's hometown of Atlanta in 2011, primarily at the Atlanta Civic Center. Harvey was also originating a syndicated radio show from Atlanta, and the state of Georgia also issued tax credits for the production. In 2017, production moved to Los Angeles Center Studios in Los Angeles to accommodate Harvey's new syndicated talk show Steve, returning production of the regular series back to Los Angeles for the first time since 2010.[34][35][36][37]", "Family Feud won the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Game/Audience Participation Show in 1977, and the show has twice won the Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Game Show Host, once with Dawson (1978) and again with Harvey (2014) and (2017).[38][39] Feud ranked number 3 on Game Show Network (GSN)'s 2006 list of the 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time,[40] and also on TV Guide's 2013 list of the 60 greatest game shows ever.[41]", "Tara Ariano and Sarah D. Bunting, founders of the website Television Without Pity, wrote that they hated the 1999 syndicated version, saying \"Give us classic Feud every time\", citing both Dawson and Combs as hosts. Additionally, they called Anderson an \"alleged sexual harasser and full-time sphere\".[42]", "It was reported that the public responded negatively to several videos posted on the official Family Feud web site in September 2015 in which contestants on the current version gave sexually explicit answers to survey questions.[43] Dan Gainor of the Media Research Center suggested that the responses are in line with sexual content becoming more commonplace on television.[43]", "The popularity of Family Feud in the United States has led it to become a worldwide franchise, with over 50 adaptations outside the United States. Countries that have aired their own versions of the show include Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, Poland, Russia, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam, among others.", "Since the show's premiere in 1976, many home versions of Family Feud have been released in various formats. Milton Bradley, Pressman Games, and Endless Games have all released traditional board games based on the show,[44][45] while Imagination Entertainment released the program in a DVD game format.[46]", "The game has been released in other formats by multiple companies; Coleco Adam released the first computer version of the show in 1983, and Sharedata followed in 1987 with versions for MS-DOS, Commodore 64, and Apple II computers.[47] GameTek released versions for Nintendo Entertainment System, Super NES, Genesis, 3DO, and PC (on CD-ROM) between 1990 and 1995.[48] Hasbro Interactive released a version in 2000 for the PC and PlayStation.[49] In 2006, versions were released for PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, and PC.[50] Seattle-based Mobliss Inc. also released a mobile version of Family Feud that was available on Sprint, Verizon, and Cingular.[51][52][53] Glu Mobile later released a newer mobile version of Family Feud for other carriers.[54]", "Most recently, in conjunction with Ludia, Ubisoft has video games for multiple platforms. The first of these was entitled Family Feud: 2010 Edition and was released for the Wii, Nintendo DS, and PC in September 2009.[55] Ubisoft then released Family Feud Decades the next year, which featured sets and survey questions from television versions of all four decades the show has been on air.[56] A third game, entitled Family Feud: 2012 Edition was released for the Wii and Xbox 360 in 2011.[57]", "In addition to the home games, a DVD set titled All-Star Family Feud was released on January 8, 2008 and featured a total of 15 celebrity episodes from the original ABC/syndicated versions on its four discs.[58] It was re-issued as The Best of All-Star Family Feud on February 2, 2010.[59]" ]
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when did richmond last play in a preliminary final
Richmond Football Club
[ "Richmond Football Club\n\n\n\n\n\nNames\n\n\nFull name\nRichmond Football Club\n\n\nNickname(s)\nTigers, Tiges\n\n\n2017 season\n\n\nAfter finals\n1st\n\n\nHome-and-away season\n3rd\n\n\nLeading goalkicker\nJack Riewoldt (54)\n\n\nJack Dyer Medal\nDustin Martin\n\n\nClub details\n\n\nFounded\n1885\n\n\nColours\n     Yellow      black\n\n\nCompetition\nAustralian Football League\n\n\nPresident\nPeggy O'Neal\n\n\nCoach\nDamien Hardwick\n\n\nCaptain(s)\nTrent Cotchin\n\n\nPremierships\nVFL/AFL (11):\n1920, 1921, 1932, 1934, 1943, 1967, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1980, 2017\nVFA (2):\n1902, 1905\n\n\nGround(s)\nMelbourne Cricket Ground (capacity: 100,024)\n\n\nTraining ground(s)\nPunt Road Oval\n\n\nUniforms\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHome\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAway\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAlternate\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nOther information\n\n\nOfficial website\nrichmondfc.com.au", "Richmond Football Club", "Names", "Full name\nRichmond Football Club", "Nickname(s)\nTigers, Tiges", "2017 season", "After finals\n1st", "Home-and-away season\n3rd", "Leading goalkicker\nJack Riewoldt (54)", "Jack Dyer Medal\nDustin Martin", "Club details", "Founded\n1885", "Colours\n     Yellow      black", "Competition\nAustralian Football League", "President\nPeggy O'Neal", "Coach\nDamien Hardwick", "Captain(s)\nTrent Cotchin", "Premierships\nVFL/AFL (11):\n1920, 1921, 1932, 1934, 1943, 1967, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1980, 2017\nVFA (2):\n1902, 1905", "Ground(s)\nMelbourne Cricket Ground (capacity: 100,024)", "Training ground(s)\nPunt Road Oval", "Uniforms", "Home\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAway\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAlternate", "Home\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAway\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAlternate", "Home\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAway\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAlternate", "Other information", "Official website\nrichmondfc.com.au", "The Richmond Football Club, nicknamed the Tigers, is a professional Australian rules football club playing in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's premier competition. Between its inception in Richmond, Melbourne in 1885 and 1907, the club competed in the Victorian Football Association (VFA), winning two premierships. Richmond joined the Victorian Football League (now known as the AFL) in 1908 and has since won eleven premierships, most recently in 2017.", "Richmond's headquarters and training facilities are located at its original home ground, the Punt Road Oval, which sits adjacent to the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), the club's playing home since 1965. Richmond traditionally wears a black guernsey with a yellow sash. Richmond has a long-standing rivalry with cross-town Carlton, and the two teams compete each year in the opening match of the AFL season.", "The club is coached by Damien Hardwick and its current captain is Trent Cotchin. Four Richmond players have been inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame as \"Legends\" of the sport: Kevin Bartlett, Jack Dyer, Royce Hart and Ian Stewart.", "This article or section appears to be slanted towards recent events. Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non-recent events. (September 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)", "This article or section appears to be slanted towards recent events. Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non-recent events. (September 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)", "A short-lived football club named Richmond was established in 1860 with Tom Wills, one of the founders of Australian rules football, serving as its inaugural secretary and captain.[1][2] Wills' cousin H. C. A. Harrison captained Richmond briefly in the early 1860s before moving to Geelong.[3] This club has no continuity to the present club. A number of teams formed in Richmond during the game's rapid expansion in the 1870s and early 1880s.[4] However, all played at a junior level and it was considered an anomaly that Richmond, one of Melbourne's most prominent suburbs, did not boast a senior side. The wait ended when the Richmond Football Club was officially formed at the Royal Hotel in Richmond on 20 February 1885.[5] A successful application for immediate admission to the Victorian Football Association (VFA) followed. The club shared the Punt Road Oval with the Richmond Cricket Club, one of the strongest cricket clubs in Australia which had been playing on the ground since 1856.[6]", "At first the team wore blue guernseys and caps with yellow and black stripes in the style of the Richmond Cricket Club. The football club soon adopted yellow and black as its official colours. The team was variously called the \"Richmondites\", the \"Wasps\" or, most commonly, the \"Tigers\".", "During the late 1880s, Richmond struggled to make an impression in the VFA, and after a promising season in 1888 (when they finished fifth with eleven wins), the club slipped backwards, in the process losing players to more successful sides. As the local economy slipped into severe depression in the early 1890s and the crowds began to dwindle, some of the VFA's strongest clubs began to agitate for a reform of the competition, and Richmond was not considered part of this elite group, which usually voted as a block at VFA meetings.", "In 1896, Richmond walked off the field in a match against South Melbourne to protest the umpiring, and later in the season, the Tigers had their half-time score annulled against Essendon when it was discovered that they had too many men on the ground. In the closing three weeks of the season, Richmond's cut of the gate takings amounted to just five pounds, and the they finished the season with the wooden spoon.", "In October 1896, the cabal of six strong clubs broke with the association to form the Victorian Football League (VFL). As a struggling club with a poor following, Richmond was not invited to join the new league. Richmond's performances did not immediately improve in the emaciated VFA until the turn of the century.", "The Tigers were boosted by a significant country recruit in 1901. George \"Mallee\" Johnson was an instant sensation and the first true star player at the club. Richmond leapt to third place and then in 1902, with Johnson dominating the ruck, Richmond entered the closing weeks of the season neck and neck with Port Melbourne at the head of the ladder, but Port Melbourne faltered against Williamstown to hand Richmond its first flag.", "Having missed a potential bonanza from a premiership play-off, the VFA decided to emulate the VFL and introduce a finals series in 1903, a fateful decision for the Tigers. After recruiting the competition's leading goalkicker, Jack Hutchinson, and finishing the season as minor premier, Richmond lost both finals and were runner-up. The following season, the club became embroiled in a feud with umpire Allen, whom the Tigers accused of failing to curb field invasions or the dubious tactics of arch-rival North Melbourne. When the two clubs were scheduled to meet in the 1904 VFA Grand Final, Richmond announced that they wouldn't play with Allen as umpire. The VFA called Richmond's bluff, and appointed Allen as umpire for the match, meaning that the Grand Final was scratched and North Melbourne won the premiership on forfeit.", "Richmond were now openly at odds with the VFA, and matters failed to improve in the next few years. The club was campaigning against violence (both on-field and among the crowd), ungentlemanly conduct and poor sportsmanship, issues that plagued the VFA to a far greater extent than the rival VFL since the 1896 split. Richmond cultivated links with some VFL clubs by playing practice matches against them. Richmond knew that they were a major asset to the VFA, had built up a large following and played on one of the best grounds in the competition, where they remained unbeaten for five years. In 1905, Richmond confirmed their status with a second premiership, this time overcoming bitter rivals North Melbourne, \"Mallee\" Johnson had moved to Carlton, but youngster Charlie Ricketts dominated the season and won plaudits among the pressmen, who voted him the best player in the VFA.", "However, Ricketts was also lost to the VFL and injury hit the club hard. In 1906–07, the Tigers played finals without looking likely to win the flag. The club earned a rebuke from the VFA for scheduling a practice match against Geelong before the 1907 season, then went ahead with the commitment and earned further censure. Later in the year it became clear that the VFL wanted to expand its competition and Richmond won a place ahead of North Melbourne, which had been strengthened by an amalgamation with the bankrupt West Melbourne as part of their bid. Richmond were granted admission along with the now defunct University Football Club.", "The first few seasons in the VFL were less than spectacular. Although the club turned up some star players, it let a lot of talent leave and the administration was unstable after George Bennett's death at the end of the 1908 season. In 1916, the side played in the finals for the first time, however, with World War I having reduced the competition to just four clubs, finals qualification was automatic.", "Finally, in 1919, Richmond made their first Grand Final appearance, losing to Collingwood. Richmond stoked a rivalry with Collingwood by recruiting their former skipper Dan Minogue as playing coach and gained vengeance by beating Collingwood in the 1920 VFL Grand Final to secure a first flag in the big league. This was followed by an even better performance the next year. The only club that continued to beat Richmond on a regular basis was Carlton. Finishing minor premier with only one loss for the season in 1921, Carlton were the hottest premiership favourite, yet Richmond managed to beat them in two classic finals matches played over successive weeks to go back-to-back.", "The rest of the decade saw four more Grand Final appearances, all of which would end in frustration. From 1927 to 1929 Richmond became the first club in the VFL to lose three consecutive Grand Finals, all of which were to neighbouring archrivals, Collingwood.", "The next VFL flag came in 1932, with Richmond's triumph over Carlton in a tough encounter which saw Richmond wingman Alan Geddes play the second half with a broken jaw. Another premiership came in 1934, this time against South Melbourne's famed \"Foreign Legion\", avenging Richmond's loss in the 1933 VFL Grand Final.", "Prior to the commencement of the 1940 season, internal problems were brewing between the key personalities at the club. Some felt that the uneven performance of the team was due to Percy Bentley's coaching methods, and that he should be replaced. Jack Dyer walked out on the club and threatened to play in the VFA after his father, a committeeman who was involved with the anti-Bentley faction, lost his position at the board elections. Finally, the matter was resolved and Bentley kept his job, while Dyer returned to training on the eve of the season. The problems appeared to have been solved when Richmond won the semi-final against Melbourne to go straight into the 1940 VFL Grand Final. However, Melbourne reversed this result with a crushing win to pinch the premiership. Richmond had been out-thought by their old mentor Frank 'Checker' Hughes, who had assigned a tagger to negate Dyer. Dyer was furious that Bentley had done nothing to prevent his opponent taking him out of the game. The Richmond committee agreed with this assessment, so when Bentley (after retiring as a player) attempted to negotiate a higher fee to continue his coaching tenure, he was rebuffed. Incensed, Bentley quit Punt Road and moved to Carlton as coach, adding further spice to an already fierce rivalry between the two clubs.", "Despite the tribulations created by the Second World War, Richmond was able to maintain a commendable level of consistency on the field. The club had quite a lot of players in reserved occupations who remained at home, while the administration became adept at securing star players who were temporarily in Melbourne on war service.[citation needed][examples needed] Dyer was a fearsome presence in his role as playing coach, but he was unable to improve Richmond's ability to win finals matches. A loss in the 1942 VFL Grand Final to Essendon (after starting as favourite) meant that over the previous 18 years, Richmond had won two flags but been runner-up eight times. Jack Titus set a still unbeaten record of playing in six losing Grand Final teams. In 1943, Richmond broke through to beat Essendon in a thrilling Grand Final by five points, a win that the club dedicated to ex-player Bill Cosgrove, an RAF pilot who had been killed in action a few weeks before the match. But another Grand Final loss followed in 1944, when Dyer's team failed against Fitzroy on a very hot day.", "In the immediate post-war era, despite an influx of excellent new players, Richmond struggled to make the four, appearing in the finals only once, in 1947. Dyer continued on as coach for three years after his playing retirement at the end of 1949, but was asked to retire by the committee who felt the club needed a shake up. Under a succession of coaches in the 1950s, With the demands of potential players increasing with each passing year, the club refused to allocate sufficient funds to recruit and they failed to replace star players as they retired. When stalwarts such as Des Rowe and dual-Brownlow Medallist Roy Wright left, the team slumped dramatically and finished with a wooden spoon in 1960.", "1966 heralded the start of the Tom Hafey era. Hafey, a former player of the club, was appointed coach and lead the club to winning four premierships under his leadership. They won the 1967 flag in a thrilling encounter with Geelong, ending a 24-year premiership drought. In 1969, it became two in three years as Richmond, who had finished fourth on the ladder, beat the much fancied Carlton in the 1969 VFL Grand Final by 25 points.", "Richmond were dominant in 1972 and were hot favourites in the 1972 VFL Grand Final against Carlton. However, Carlton stunned Richmond in a game of ridiculous high scoring. Even Richmond equalled the then record highest score in a Grand Final of 22.18 (150), but Carlton beat it with 28.9 (177). Richmond got their revenge in an intensely physical clash in the 1973 VFL Grand Final and went back-to-back in 1974 with a strong win against a resurgent North Melbourne.", "Richmond won its next premiership with a then record-breaking margin of 81 points over arch-rivals Collingwood in 1980. After reaching and losing the 1982 VFL Grand Final, it has been a rocky road for Richmond who have struggled to come to grips with the rules and regulations of a modernised VFL, including the draft and salary cap. The successes of the early 1980s were bought at high financial cost through expensive recruiting, and were followed by severe cut backs that saw several top players depart.", "Still smarting from the loss of star players to Collingwood, Richmond set themselves for war with Collingwood in 1984 by signing three of their players: John Annear, Craig Stewart and Phil Walsh. Not only were there big contracts and transfer fees to pay, but the costs of an expensive court action as well.", "Richmond also signed a number of mediocre players on big contracts, and the club's financial situation took a battering. With the team failing to improve, a challenge to the committee was brewing and Richmond's traditional political stability threatened. The rebel group, organised by long-time servant Bill Durham, convinced former player and coach Barry Richardson to be leader. An election in late 1984 failed to clarify the situation.", "Ian Wilson held on to the presidency into the new year. When the one hundredth birthday of the club arrived in February 1985, there was too much dissension to mark the moment fittingly. Eventually, Wilson handed over to Richardson, who had selected his former premiership teammate Paul Sproule to return from Tasmania and take over the coaching position on a guaranteed contract.", "As the season progressed with Richmond still struggling, Sproule came under pressure. Richardson guaranteed his position, but at the end of the year, the committee overruled Richardson and sacked Sproule. Incensed, Richardson walked out of Punt Road, which was in turmoil again. Desperately, Richmond turned back to Tony Jewell, who was appointed coach for a second time, the only man in the club's history to get a second go at the job. Jewell later commented on the destruction wrought on the club during his four-year absence: \"the supporters were gone, the members were gone, the money was gone, ... a real shame.\"", "With the competition set to expand, Richmond made a number of misguided moves in 1986. To fill the vacancy left by Richardson, Richmond wooed high-flying West Australian entrepreneur Alan Bond to become president. Bond came with an agenda to raise money for the club by listing on the stockmarket and relocating to Brisbane. When the latter plan was revealed in the media, a furious reaction from supporters and high-profile club personalities buried the proposal almost immediately. Early in 1987, Bond's tenure at the club ended in farce when he resigned without presiding over a single game. The off-field confusion was reflected in the players' performance as Richmond slumped to only its second wooden spoon in 70 years.", "Although the new president, ex-captain Neville Crowe, had stabilised the club and scored a coup by persuading club legend Kevin Bartlett to coach, The club managed to stay solvent by cutting expenses to the bone and paying only two-thirds of the allowable salary cap. But there was no money for recruiting to improve an impoverished playing list. The club struggled to come to terms with the draft after its inception in 1986, and made a number of poor choices—notably, the number one pick in 1987 was used on a player who had only two games with Richmond.", "Finally, with the economy in serious recession and interest rates touching seventeen per cent, Richmond's creditors came knocking. At one point, an attempt was made to seize the club's 1973 and 1974 premiership trophies as securities for unpaid debts, an embarrassing situation. For a number of years, the exact amount that the club owed was not publicly known. After Bartlett came Allan Jeans, who then passed the job to ex-Richmond premiership player John Northey for 1993. Northey returned the team to the simple long-kicking style of the halcyon days under the legendary Tom Hafey. Along with some draft concessions granted by the AFL, Northey's efforts gradually improved Richmond. The team fumbled an opportunity to make the 1994 finals, then opened 1995 with its best start to a season in 75 years and eventually made it to the preliminary final. With a talented playing list and a strong administration led by Leon Daphne (Richmond's first president from the corporate world, the Alan Bond farce aside), Richmond looked set to become regular finalists again.", "The anticipated success failed to materialise, partly because Richmond allowed the coaching position to again become unstable. With over a year still to run on his contract, John Northey demanded a contract extension that the club refused. This was because of a rumour that some people with an association with the club were pursuing Essendon coach and former Richmond premiership player Kevin Sheedy. So Northey walked out on Richmond and accepted a longer-term contract to coach the Brisbane Bears. Richmond, caught short, appointed the Bears' ex-coach Robert Walls for 1996. After several humiliating thrashings in 1997, Robert Walls became the first Richmond coach to be sacked mid-season. After two-and-a-half seasons under Jeff Gieschen, the club appointed ex-St Kilda captain Danny Frawley. After a Preliminary Final appearance in Frawley's second season, Richmond overestimated the strength of the list and settled for trading for established players rather than drafting youth. Over the next three seasons, the team managed just 18 wins. The administration continued to support Frawley and ensured that he would see out his contract, a far cry from the way many of his predecessors were treated. However, midway through the 2004 season (a season in which Richmond only managed 4 wins, and lost their last 14 H&A matches), Frawley announced he would be relinquishing his role as Richmond coach at seasons' end.", "The 2005 pre-season began with renewed optimism at the club, with No. 1 draft pick Brett Deledio being touted as a future star and leader. However, the Tigers' first match of the season (against Geelong), quickly dashed that hope, as they were thrashed by 62 points. However, this loss would spark a change in the Tigers, and in the next 8 weeks of the season, they would go on to win 7 matches (the one exception being a 68-point loss at the hands of St Kilda in Round 5). This included wins over the then-reigning premiers, Port Adelaide, and over then-runners up, the Brisbane Lions. Sitting pretty at 7 wins and 2 losses, and 3rd on the ladder, the impossible prospect of finals football loomed large. However, in the Round 10 match against Melbourne, star player Nathan Brown suffered a horrible leg injury, that would sideline him for the rest of the season. They went on to lose the match by 57 points, and would only register 3 more wins for the season (one of those was against eventual premiers the Sydney Swans by one point, who had a one-point win against Collingwood the round before), eventually finishing 12th.", "2006, a year which many experts predicted continued improvement for the Tigers, saw them lose their first H&A match by 115 points, against the Western Bulldogs, after which followed losses to St Kilda and West Coast. By the end of Round 3, things were looking grim for the Tigers once again. However, just as they did in 2005, the Tigers would respond to their poor start by winning 8 of their next 11 matches, and by the end of Round 14, the Tigers were in the Top 8 by a game and percentage. However, their spot in the Top 8 would be short lived, as 4 straight losses between Rounds 15 and 18 would effectively end their finals chances. They finished the 2006 season in 9th place, with 11 wins and 11 losses.", "After promising seasons in 2005 and 2006, it was expected that the Tigers would take the next step in 2007, and play finals football. After massive hype in the off-season, the Tigers had a terrible start to the 2007 season, losing their first 9 matches (this included suffering their biggest ever defeat, at the hands of eventual premiers Geelong, by a whopping 157 points). Their first premiership points came in a draw against the Brisbane Lions in Round 10, and their first win of the season didn't come until Round 12 against fellow straggler Melbourne. After Round 18 of the season, the Tigers had registered a mere 1 win, 1 draw, and 16 losses, and were looking like recording their worst ever recorded season. However, late-season victories over old rivals Collingwood in Round 19, and Essendon in Round 21, saved them from this fate. They would eventually finish the year as wooden-spooners, with 3 wins, 1 draw, and 18 losses.", "After the end of the 2007 season, Richmond elected to delist Patrick Bowden, Brent Hartigan, Andrew Krakouer and Carl Peterson. These four joined another four players in leaving Punt Road—veteran Darren Gaspar, Kent Kingsley, Trent Knobel and Ray Hall. While these players left the club Jake King and Angus Graham were elevated off the rookie list.", "Next up came the 2007 AFL Draft, in which the Tigers recruited highly rated midfielder Trent Cotchin with their first pick (No. 2 overall), backman Alex Rance (pick No. 18 overall) and ruckman Dean Putt (pick No. 51 overall). Then, in the pre-season draft, they elected to pick David Gourdis with the number one pick. The Tigers also picked Clayton Collard, Jarrod Silvester, Tristan Cartledge and Cameron Howat for the rookie list. Cam Howat had previously been on the rookie list but was delisted then picked up again.", "Richmond began the 2008 season with a surprise win over Carlton, but from Rounds 2 to 11, registered only two more wins (and a controversial draw against the Western Bulldogs). The club fought back in the latter half of the season, winning eight of its last 11 matches. However, this was not enough to reach the finals, as Richmond finished two premiership points short (and percentage) of 8th placed Collingwood.", "At the start of 2009, Richmond was said to be rising as a team, and they would be in the eight .[citation needed] They had recruited former Brownlow Medal winner Ben Cousins – who had previously been released by the West Coast Eagles due to drug trouble – and they had rising stars in Brett Deledio and Trent Cotchin. However, the club was beaten by 83 points in Round 1 by Carlton, and did not register a win until Round 5, against North Melbourne. With a record of 2–9 after eleven weeks, Terry Wallace stepped down as coach, having announced his intention during the previous week. Jade Rawlings was announced as caretaker senior coach; he adopted a youth policy for the remainder of the year, which saw experienced players Joel Bowden and Matthew Richardson retire by the end of the year. Rawlings led Richmond to three wins and a draw from eleven games. Richmond finished fifteenth with a record of 5–16–1. On 25 August, Damien Hardwick was appointed to be the senior coach from 2010.", "As Jade Rawlings and Craig McRae and Brian Royal left the Tigers assistant coaching panel, Brendon Lade and Justin Leppitsch were appointed as assistant coaches, leaving only Wayne Campbell as a previous Richmond assistant coach. Brendon Gale was also appointed CEO of the Tigers.", "Richmond was not expected to be competitive in 2010, with many commentators predicting the team would win no more than four games. From the 2009 AFL Draft, the Tigers drafted seven new players, which included midfielder Dustin Martin. At the 2010 Pre-season Draft, Richmond recruited young key defender Dylan Grimes, brother of Melbourne defender Jack Grimes.", "Damien Hardwick selected a young team at the start of the season, with four debutants, and only three players (Ben Cousins, Chris Newman and Troy Simmonds) over 25 in the Round 1 loss against Carlton. Richmond was winless after nine games, before a scrappy win over Port Adelaide in Round 10. This was the start of a turnaround in Richmond's form, with the team winning six out of eight games, to sit with a record of 6–12 after eighteen rounds. After losing the final four matches, Richmond finished fifteenth out of sixteen with a record of 6–16. Young key forward Jack Riewoldt finished the season with 78 goals, to win the Coleman Medal.", "Very early in the season, Richmond were criticised for \"partying too much\" in the wake of its winless start to the season; after the Round 3 loss to the Sydney Swans, Richmond players were reported to be at the bar drinking and acting in a disorderly manner.[7]", "Richmond continued to show improvement to finish 12th out of 17 teams in 2011 with eight wins and a draw.", "Jack Riewoldt again led the goalkicking with 62 majors, down on his previous year's tally of 78. Young midfielder Trent Cotchin won his first Jack Dyer Medal with 236 votes.[8] Cotchin also polled the most votes of any Richmond player in the 2011 Brownlow Medal count with 15 votes. Dustin Martin was next best, polling 12 votes.[9]", "Richmond's 2012 season did not see an improvement from the previous three years, as they lost 6 games by 12 points or less and finished 12th for the second year running. They were the first team to be beaten by the Gold Coast in the season, having led by ten points with less than a minute remaining, the Tigers produced what former Sydney Swans coach Paul Roos labelled \"the worst 47 seconds in footy\" to lose by two points.[10] They did, however, defeat both of the eventual grand finalists Hawthorn and Sydney during the season, the only team to do so the entire year. 2012 also saw Richmond have its first Brownlow Medallist in over 40 years when Trent Cotchin polled 26 votes to be the joint winner with Hawthorn's Sam Mitchell.", "2013 saw Richmond claim a victory over Hawthorn (making it one of only two clubs that season to defeat the eventual premiers) and go on to qualify for its first finals series in over a decade.[11][12] However, before 94,690 fans—the largest week-one crowd since the VFL/AFL adopted its current finals system—Richmond lost to Carlton in the first elimination final.[13] Also that year, Peggy O'Neal, an American-born lawyer, became the AFL's first female club president when she got the position at Richmond.[14]", "After its drought-breaking finals appearance the previous year, Richmond failed to live up to expectations in the first half of the 2014 season, losing 10 of its first 13 matches and dropping to 16th place on the ladder. Despite public sentiment that the season was lost, the club rallied behind a five-goal performance by Cotchin to win against St Kilda.[15] It catalysed a nine-match winning streak, with a Round 23 victory against eventual grand-finalists Sydney raising Richmond to 8th on the ladder and putting the club into its first back-to-back finals appearance since 1975. A 57-point loss to Port Adelaide in an elimination final knocked Richmond out in the first week of the finals.[16] Cotchin won the Jack Dyer Medal for the third time in four years, making him the youngest Richmond player to win three club best and fairest awards.[17]", "Richmond faced the prospect of another disappointing season in 2015, losing 4 of its first 6 games. In the following weeks, however, the club registered 4 straight wins, including an upset victory over the previously undefeated Fremantle in Perth,[18] and went on to defeat top-four teams Sydney and reigning premiers Hawthorn. Richmond would go on to win the final four games of the home and away season to finish fifth on the ladder. Facing North Melbourne in an elimination final, Richmond lost by 17 points in front of a crowd of 90,186, making it the club's third consecutive first weeks finals loss.[19]", "In 2016, Richmond failed to qualify for the finals for the first time in four years. Following a comprehensive Round 3 loss to Adelaide, coach Hardwick said the team would have to \"take a little half-step back to go two steps forward.\"[20] It would go on to be the story of the season with several major defeats including one against Greater Western Sydney in which Richmond registered its lowest score since 1961.[21] The club debuted six players and brought in two recruits for their first games in the yellow and black.", "During the preseason period for 2016/17, Richmond made a number of changes to its playing list and coaching staff. Among these changes was the departure of Brett Deledio to Greater Western Sydney, in a three-way deal involving Geelong that saw the Tigers receive a 2017 first-round draft selection from the Cats, as well as a 2017 third-round selection from the Giants. Richmond also attained the services of Gold Coast Suns midfielder Dion Prestia, Geelong player Josh Caddy, and young Sydney Swans ruckman Toby Nankervis in preparation for the 2017 season.", "Richmond began 2017 with 5 straight wins, a feat it had not achieved since 1995. A series of close losses hampered the Tigers throughout the middle of the season, including a 5-point loss to the Western Bulldogs, 2-point loss to Fremantle, and a 3-point loss to the Giants. Richmond ended the season strongly with convincing victories over Fremantle and St Kilda in the final two rounds, elevating the club to 3rd on the ladder. Richmond's first final of the season against the Cats at the MCG attracted a record qualifying final crowd of 95,028; the Tigers won by 51 points. Having advanced to the first preliminary finals for the first time since 2001, Richmond defeated Greater Western Sydney by 36 points in front of a crowd of 94,258 to progress to the Grand Final against Adelaide, their first Grand Final appearance since 1982. The attendance was 100,021, the largest crowd to a grand final since 1986. The Crows led at quarter time and led by as many as 13, but the Tigers took over the game as it progressed and scored seven straight goals at one point. They eventually would win by 48 points – 16.12 (108) to Adelaide's 8.12 (60) – to end their 37-year flag drought.[22] Dustin Martin also became the first player to win a Premiership medal, the Brownlow Medal and the Norm Smith Medal in the same season, while Damien Hardwick was named AFL Coaches Association Coach of the Year. Richmond's jump from 13th to premiers also marked the biggest jump from one AFL season to the next.", "Initially, Richmond saw itself as a gentlemanly and sportsman-like club; it even went to the extent of sacking a player who used poor language. During the early 1900s, the club used the press as a forum to publicise a campaign against violence in the game, which earned the derision of some rival clubs. This image followed the club into the VFL in 1908 and during the First World War the club emphasised the number of men associated with the club who had enlisted and served overseas. But the club's actions in 1916, when it voted with three other clubs seen as representative of the working class (Collingwood, Fitzroy and Carlton) to continue playing football, left no doubt as to which side of the class divide that the Tigers belonged. The club's self-consciously non-confrontational image can be partly attributed to two of long serving presidents—George Bennett (1887–1908) and Frank Tudor (1909–1918). Both were Richmond men and respected parliamentarians who took the view that how the game was played was more important than whether the game was won.", "After World War I, the club's attitude hardened as they attempted to match it with the then power clubs Collingwood and Carlton. Eventually, the Tigers became more prosaic in their approach to recruiting and training.", "The Hafey era transformed Richmond into one of the most feared combinations in the then VFL. The club's football administrator, Graham Richmond, drove the \"win at all costs\" mentality across the whole club, making Richmond a formidable force, winning five premierships from 1967 to 1980.", "Since the Tigers' grand final appearance in 1982, the club has appeared in six finals series (1995, 2001, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017). Board and coaching instability during the 1980s and 1990s distracted the club and forced its focus away from becoming an on-field force.", "The club's current home jumper design is black and features a yellow sash running from the top left of the jumper to the bottom right. For away games against teams with dark coloured jumpers, the club wears a clash strip with a reverse of this design, a black sash on a yellow base. In its first season, Richmond wore a blue jumper with a thin yellow-and-black sash running from right to left. Between 2011 and 2016, the club guernseys were manufactured by sportswear company BLK, who were known as KooGa Australia prior to 2014,[23] before it went into receivership in November 2016. Puma manufactures the club's on-and-off field apparel.[24]", "Initially, Richmond's club song was Onward the Tigers, set to the tune of Waltzing Matilda. In 1962, Jack Malcolmson, a cabaret singer who was performing regularly at the Richmond Football Club Social Club, was approached to write a new club song and adapted Row, Row, Row (Monaco/Jerome), a show tune from the Ziegfeld Follies of 1912. (America Football Club in Rio de Janeiro uses the same tune for its club song, the Hino do America.)", "The current version of the song used by the club is a 1972 recording performed by the Fable Singers.[25] In 2014, the Herald Sun named it the top club song of any AFL team.[26]", "Oh, we're from Tigerland\nA fighting fury, we're from Tigerland\nIn any weather, you will see us with a grin\nRisking head and shin\nIf we're behind, then never mind\nWe'll fight and fight and win", "Oh, we're from Tigerland", "A fighting fury, we're from Tigerland", "In any weather, you will see us with a grin", "Risking head and shin", "If we're behind, then never mind", "We'll fight and fight and win", "For we're from Tigerland\nWe never weaken 'till the final siren's gone\nLike the tiger of old\nWe're strong and we're bold\nFor we're from Tiger yellow and black\nWe're from Tigerland", "For we're from Tigerland", "We never weaken 'till the final siren's gone", "Like the tiger of old", "We're strong and we're bold", "For we're from Tiger yellow and black", "We're from Tigerland", "Richmond's club mascot is called Tiger \"Stripes\" Dyer, named after AFL legend Jack \"Captain Blood\" Dyer. After taking over from Tiggy (Richmond's earlier mascot), Stripes displays character and attributes synonymous to the club's \"never say die\" attitude. He remains as a solid foundation for fan engagement and is commonly seen as the team's playful and entertaining jokester, prowling the stands and getting among the fans, to be known as the league's most loved mascot.[27][neutrality is disputed]", "The club's home ground is the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) where the team plays most of their home matches in the regular season. The MCG has a capacity of 100,024 and the club usually draws large attendances against Victorian clubs, particularly rivals such as Essendon, Collingwood, Carlton and Hawthorn.", "The club also plays select home games against smaller local and interstate clubs at the smaller capacity Docklands Stadium.", "Richmond's training ground and base of operations is located at the Punt Road Oval, currently branded as the Swinburne Centre, located a few hundred metres from the MCG.", "Club administration since 1908[28]", "[show]Year\nPresident\nChief Executive Officer\nTreasurer\n\n\n2013–present\nPeggy O'Neal\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton\n\n\n2010–2012\nGary March\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton\n\n\nYear\nPresident\nGeneral Manager\nTreasurer\n\n\n2006–2009\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2005\nClinton Casey\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2004\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2003\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2001–2002\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2000\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nTerry Grigg\n\n\n1999\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nTerry Grigg\n\n\n1995–1998\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1994\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1993\nNeville Crowe\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1991–1992\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1989–1990\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1988\nNeville Cowe\nRichard Doggett\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1987\nAlan Bond\nNeville Crowe\nRichard Doggett\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1986\nBill Durham\nKevin Dixon\nRichard Doggett\nJohn McCormack\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1985\nIan Wilson\nBarry Richardson\nKevin Dixon\nJohn McCormack\n\n\n1981–1984\nIan Wilson\nKevin Dixon\nRon Carson\n\n\n1980\nIan Wilson\nRichard Doggett\nRichard Doggett\n\n\n1979\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\n\n\n1978\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nGareth Andrews\n\n\n\n\n\n\n[show]Year\nPresident\nSecretary\nTreasurer\n\n\n1977\nIan Wilson\nMax Scales\nMax Scales\n\n\n1974–1976\nIan Wilson\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1973\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1972\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1971\nRay Dunn\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\n\n\n1970\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\n\n\n1969\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1968\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1966–1967\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nRon Carson\n\n\n1965\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1964\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nI Cameron\n\n\n1963\nMaurie Fleming\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1962\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1960–1961\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1959\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1958\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1956–1957\nHarry Dyke\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1955\nHarry Dyke\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1953–1954\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1952\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1950–1951\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1949\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1947–1948\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\n\n\n1940–1946\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1939\nBarney Herbert\nMaurie Sheahan\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1938\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1937\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nGeorge Smith\n\n\n1936\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1932–1935\nBarney Herbert\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1925–1931\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1924\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nAbe Aarons\n\n\n1921–1923\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nAbe Aarons\n\n\n1919–1920\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer\n\n\n1917–1918\nFrank Tudor\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer\n\n\n1913–1916\nFrank Tudor\nBill Lohse\nJack Archer\n\n\n1912\nFrank Tudor\nGeorge Beachcroft\nJames MacDermott\n\n\n1909–1911\nFrank Tudor\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair\n\n\n1908\nGeorge Bennett\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair", "[show]Year\nPresident\nChief Executive Officer\nTreasurer\n\n\n2013–present\nPeggy O'Neal\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton\n\n\n2010–2012\nGary March\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton\n\n\nYear\nPresident\nGeneral Manager\nTreasurer\n\n\n2006–2009\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2005\nClinton Casey\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2004\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2003\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2001–2002\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2000\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nTerry Grigg\n\n\n1999\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nTerry Grigg\n\n\n1995–1998\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1994\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1993\nNeville Crowe\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1991–1992\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1989–1990\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1988\nNeville Cowe\nRichard Doggett\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1987\nAlan Bond\nNeville Crowe\nRichard Doggett\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1986\nBill Durham\nKevin Dixon\nRichard Doggett\nJohn McCormack\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1985\nIan Wilson\nBarry Richardson\nKevin Dixon\nJohn McCormack\n\n\n1981–1984\nIan Wilson\nKevin Dixon\nRon Carson\n\n\n1980\nIan Wilson\nRichard Doggett\nRichard Doggett\n\n\n1979\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\n\n\n1978\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nGareth Andrews\n\n\n\n\n\n\n[show]Year\nPresident\nSecretary\nTreasurer\n\n\n1977\nIan Wilson\nMax Scales\nMax Scales\n\n\n1974–1976\nIan Wilson\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1973\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1972\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1971\nRay Dunn\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\n\n\n1970\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\n\n\n1969\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1968\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1966–1967\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nRon Carson\n\n\n1965\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1964\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nI Cameron\n\n\n1963\nMaurie Fleming\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1962\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1960–1961\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1959\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1958\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1956–1957\nHarry Dyke\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1955\nHarry Dyke\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1953–1954\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1952\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1950–1951\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1949\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1947–1948\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\n\n\n1940–1946\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1939\nBarney Herbert\nMaurie Sheahan\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1938\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1937\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nGeorge Smith\n\n\n1936\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1932–1935\nBarney Herbert\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1925–1931\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1924\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nAbe Aarons\n\n\n1921–1923\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nAbe Aarons\n\n\n1919–1920\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer\n\n\n1917–1918\nFrank Tudor\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer\n\n\n1913–1916\nFrank Tudor\nBill Lohse\nJack Archer\n\n\n1912\nFrank Tudor\nGeorge Beachcroft\nJames MacDermott\n\n\n1909–1911\nFrank Tudor\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair\n\n\n1908\nGeorge Bennett\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair", "[show]Year\nPresident\nChief Executive Officer\nTreasurer\n\n\n2013–present\nPeggy O'Neal\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton\n\n\n2010–2012\nGary March\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton\n\n\nYear\nPresident\nGeneral Manager\nTreasurer\n\n\n2006–2009\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2005\nClinton Casey\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2004\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2003\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2001–2002\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nGarry Cameron\n\n\n2000\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nTerry Grigg\n\n\n1999\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nTerry Grigg\n\n\n1995–1998\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1994\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1993\nNeville Crowe\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1991–1992\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller\n\n\n1989–1990\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1988\nNeville Cowe\nRichard Doggett\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1987\nAlan Bond\nNeville Crowe\nRichard Doggett\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1986\nBill Durham\nKevin Dixon\nRichard Doggett\nJohn McCormack\nMichael Humphris\n\n\n1985\nIan Wilson\nBarry Richardson\nKevin Dixon\nJohn McCormack\n\n\n1981–1984\nIan Wilson\nKevin Dixon\nRon Carson\n\n\n1980\nIan Wilson\nRichard Doggett\nRichard Doggett\n\n\n1979\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\n\n\n1978\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nGareth Andrews", "[show]Year\nPresident\nChief Executive Officer\nTreasurer", "2013–present\nPeggy O'Neal\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton", "2010–2012\nGary March\nBrendon Gale\nRobert Dalton", "Year\nPresident\nGeneral Manager\nTreasurer", "2006–2009\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron", "2005\nClinton Casey\nGary March\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron", "2004\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nSteve Wright\nGarry Cameron", "2003\nClinton Casey\nIan Campbell\nGarry Cameron", "2001–2002\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nGarry Cameron", "2000\nClinton Casey\nMark Brayshaw\nTerry Grigg", "1999\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nTerry Grigg", "1995–1998\nLeon Daphne\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller", "1994\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nJim Malone\nKeith Miller", "1993\nNeville Crowe\nLeon Daphne\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller", "1991–1992\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nKeith Miller", "1989–1990\nNeville Crowe\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris", "1988\nNeville Cowe\nRichard Doggett\nCameron Schwab\nMichael Humphris", "1987\nAlan Bond\nNeville Crowe\nRichard Doggett\nMichael Humphris", "1986\nBill Durham\nKevin Dixon\nRichard Doggett\nJohn McCormack\nMichael Humphris", "1985\nIan Wilson\nBarry Richardson\nKevin Dixon\nJohn McCormack", "1981–1984\nIan Wilson\nKevin Dixon\nRon Carson", "1980\nIan Wilson\nRichard Doggett\nRichard Doggett", "1979\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett\nGareth Andrews\nRichard Doggett", "1978\nIan Wilson\nGareth Andrews\nGareth Andrews", "[show]Year\nPresident\nSecretary\nTreasurer\n\n\n1977\nIan Wilson\nMax Scales\nMax Scales\n\n\n1974–1976\nIan Wilson\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1973\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1972\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\nAlan Schwab\n\n\n1971\nRay Dunn\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\n\n\n1970\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\n\n\n1969\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1968\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1966–1967\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nRon Carson\n\n\n1965\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nGraeme Richmond\n\n\n1964\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nI Cameron\n\n\n1963\nMaurie Fleming\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1962\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1960–1961\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Tymms\n\n\n1959\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1958\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1956–1957\nHarry Dyke\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1955\nHarry Dyke\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1953–1954\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1952\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1950–1951\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1949\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\nBill Quinn\n\n\n1947–1948\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\n\n\n1940–1946\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1939\nBarney Herbert\nMaurie Sheahan\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1938\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nCharlie Turner\n\n\n1937\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nGeorge Smith\n\n\n1936\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1932–1935\nBarney Herbert\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1925–1931\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nJos Langdon\n\n\n1924\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nAbe Aarons\n\n\n1921–1923\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nAbe Aarons\n\n\n1919–1920\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer\n\n\n1917–1918\nFrank Tudor\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer\n\n\n1913–1916\nFrank Tudor\nBill Lohse\nJack Archer\n\n\n1912\nFrank Tudor\nGeorge Beachcroft\nJames MacDermott\n\n\n1909–1911\nFrank Tudor\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair\n\n\n1908\nGeorge Bennett\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair", "[show]Year\nPresident\nSecretary\nTreasurer", "1977\nIan Wilson\nMax Scales\nMax Scales", "1974–1976\nIan Wilson\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab", "1973\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nAlan Schwab", "1972\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly\nAlan Schwab", "1971\nRay Dunn\nAl Board\nAlan Schwab\nPat Kennelly", "1970\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson", "1969\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nGraeme Richmond", "1968\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nAlan Schwab\nRon Carson\nGraeme Richmond", "1966–1967\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nRon Carson", "1965\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nGraeme Richmond", "1964\nRay Dunn\nGraeme Richmond\nI Cameron", "1963\nMaurie Fleming\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms", "1962\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nGraeme Richmond\nBill Tymms", "1960–1961\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Tymms", "1959\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn", "1958\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn", "1956–1957\nHarry Dyke\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn", "1955\nHarry Dyke\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Tymms\nBill Quinn", "1953–1954\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn", "1952\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nHector Lingwood-Smith\nBill Quinn", "1950–1951\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nBill Quinn", "1949\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith\nBill Quinn", "1947–1948\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nJack Smith", "1940–1946\nHarry Dyke\nMaurie Fleming\nCharlie Turner", "1939\nBarney Herbert\nMaurie Sheahan\nCharlie Turner", "1938\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nCharlie Turner", "1937\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nGeorge Smith", "1936\nLou Roberts\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon", "1932–1935\nBarney Herbert\nJohn Smith\nJos Langdon", "1925–1931\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nJos Langdon", "1924\nJack Archer\nPercy Page\nAbe Aarons", "1921–1923\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nAbe Aarons", "1919–1920\nAlf Wood\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer", "1917–1918\nFrank Tudor\nBill Maybury\nJack Archer", "1913–1916\nFrank Tudor\nBill Lohse\nJack Archer", "1912\nFrank Tudor\nGeorge Beachcroft\nJames MacDermott", "1909–1911\nFrank Tudor\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair", "1908\nGeorge Bennett\nAndrew Manzie\nArchie McNair", "Richmond has a large supporter base and which is known for its dedication, including its personal cheer squad who attend both home and away matches for the club. Membership record for the club hit 74,000 in 2017 making it one of the most supported clubs in the Australian Football League.", "The building of the fan base was a slow process for Richmond. In the 1890s, the club never sold more than 300 season tickets, but the following was built up with success in the VFA and membership numbered about 2,000 at the time of admission to the VFL in 1908. Between the wars, the club captured the imagination of the residents of Richmond. The successful Tigers were a positive motif for the oppressed working class community which suffered deprivation during the Great Depression. At this time, the Richmond community was almost half Catholic, and this demographic was reflected in the club among the players and officials.", "As Melbourne dramatically spread out in the post-war years, so too did the Richmond supporters. Many were now concentrated in the eastern suburbs, which eventually formed the club's metropolitan recruiting zone. Indeed, at one point during the early development of the Waverley Park ground, the Tigers considered making the stadium its home for this reason. Following the barren period of the 1950s, Richmond was able to tap into the large number of fans by moving home matches to the MCG and almost doubled attendance figures. The Tigers maintained this advantage over the other clubs until the mid-1980s, when poor administration led to a downturn in every area of the club. As the club struggled for funds, the membership plummeted from over 10,000 to under 3,000.", "The greatest display of loyalty from the fans occurred during 1990. Threatened by liquidation, the supporters rallied to pay off the multimillion-dollar debt via the \"Save Our Skins\" campaign.[29] In 2011, the club launched the Fighting Tiger Fund to reduce the club's debt and to allow it to increase spending on the football department in order to be more competitive on field.[30]", "In 2013, the club launched The Roar is Back membership promotion aiming at signing up 60,000 members in a season for the first time ever. Following a successful campaign, on 24 June 2013, Richmond chief executive Brendon Gale confirmed that membership had passed 60,000.[31][32] The club created a limited edition commemorative Sherrin football to celebrate the achievement and it was distributed free to families at the 'Thank you for 60,000 members BBQ/Training Morning' at Punt Road Oval on 29 June 2013. The official membership total for 2013 was 60,321.[33]", "For statistical purposes 30 June is the cut-off date for membership numbers although it does continue to sell memberships. In 2013, after 30 June the club commenced bundling 2013 and 2014 membership years into a special \"Sign up as a member for 2014 and get the rest of 2013 free!\" offer.[34] The 2014 membership total of 66,122[35] gave Richmond the 3rd biggest membership base in the AFL behind Collingwood and Hawthorn (80,793 and 68,650 respectively). This record was again broken in 2015 with the club signing up 70,809 members, still ranking 3rd in total membership numbers. The club averaged the highest crowds in the AFL of 49,841 in 2015, home crowd averaged 53,236 the highest in the 2015 AFL season", "Season\nTicketed\nMembers\nFinishing\nPosition\nTotal\nAttendance\nAverage Home\nAttendance\n\n\n2017\n75,777\n3rd\n1,314,058\n55,958\n\n\n2016\n72,206\n13th\n900,237\n40,921\n\n\n2015\n70,809\n5th\n1,146,335*\n49,841 *\n\n\n2014\n66,122\n8th\n889,658*\n38,681*\n\n\n2013\n60,321\n5th\n1,134,980*\n49,347*\n\n\n2012\n53,027\n12th\n871,504\n39,614\n\n\n2011\n40,184\n12th\n895,290\n40,695\n\n\n2010\n35,960\n15th\n834,590\n37,936\n\n\n2009\n36,985\n15th\n868,855\n39,493\n\n\n2008\n30,820\n9th\n935,002\n42,500\n\n\n2007\n30,044\n16th\n909,203\n41,327\n\n\n2006\n29,406\n9th\n855,556\n38,888\n\n\n2005\n28,029\n12th\n802,885\n36,494\n\n\n2004\n27,133\n16th\n751,982\n34,181\n\n\n2003\n25,101\n13th\n830,841\n37,765\n\n\n2002\n27,251\n14th\n776,113\n35,277\n\n\n2001\n26,501\n3rd\n1,173,875*\n46,955*\n\n\n2000\n26,869\n9th\n853,916\n38,814\n\n\n1999\n29,047\n12th\n885,159\n40,234\n\n\n1998\n27,092\n9th\n1,023,821\n46,537\n\n\n1997\n24,975\n13th\n783,517\n35,614\n\n\n1996\n20,308\n9th\n850,966\n38,680\n\n\n1995\n14,647\n3rd\n1,104,607*\n44,184*\n\n\n1994\n8,229\n9th\n646,301\n29,377\n\n\n1993\n9,918\n14th\n484,041\n24,202\n\n\n1992\n8,158\n13th\n474,575\n21,571", "Season\nTicketed\nMembers\nFinishing\nPosition\nTotal\nAttendance\nAverage Home\nAttendance", "2017\n75,777\n3rd\n1,314,058\n55,958", "2016\n72,206\n13th\n900,237\n40,921", "2015\n70,809\n5th\n1,146,335*\n49,841 *", "2014\n66,122\n8th\n889,658*\n38,681*", "2013\n60,321\n5th\n1,134,980*\n49,347*", "2012\n53,027\n12th\n871,504\n39,614", "2011\n40,184\n12th\n895,290\n40,695", "2010\n35,960\n15th\n834,590\n37,936", "2009\n36,985\n15th\n868,855\n39,493", "2008\n30,820\n9th\n935,002\n42,500", "2007\n30,044\n16th\n909,203\n41,327", "2006\n29,406\n9th\n855,556\n38,888", "2005\n28,029\n12th\n802,885\n36,494", "2004\n27,133\n16th\n751,982\n34,181", "2003\n25,101\n13th\n830,841\n37,765", "2002\n27,251\n14th\n776,113\n35,277", "2001\n26,501\n3rd\n1,173,875*\n46,955*", "2000\n26,869\n9th\n853,916\n38,814", "1999\n29,047\n12th\n885,159\n40,234", "1998\n27,092\n9th\n1,023,821\n46,537", "1997\n24,975\n13th\n783,517\n35,614", "1996\n20,308\n9th\n850,966\n38,680", "1995\n14,647\n3rd\n1,104,607*\n44,184*", "1994\n8,229\n9th\n646,301\n29,377", "1993\n9,918\n14th\n484,041\n24,202", "1992\n8,158\n13th\n474,575\n21,571", "Club records in bold text.\n* Includes three finals in 1995, 2001, 2017 and one final in 2013, 2014, 2015.", "The Official Richmond Cheer Squad is an organised group of passionate supporters who attend every Richmond game whether in Melbourne or interstate. There are also supporter groups located in each state of Australia.[36]", "See Richmond premiership teams", "See Richmond premiership teams", "In 1998, Richmond announced its Team of the 20th Century. The selection of the 22 players shows an even spread of champions from all the eras of the club: Thorp from the club's first premiership wins of 1920–21; McCormack, Strang, Titus and Dyer from the inter-war years; Rowe, Morris and Wright from the battling era after the war; Richardson and Knights from recent times. But the great days from the late 1960s to the early 1980s provide the bulk of the side: Sheedy, Green, Keane, Bourke, Barrot, Clay, Hart, Dean and Bartlett who made up the core of Tom Hafey's teams, and later success stories Weightman and Raines. Ian Stewart, named on the bench, managed selection in a team of the century at two clubs—he was named in the centre of St Kilda's team as well. Richmond has four players denoted below with an asterisk who are also members of AFL Team of the Century. This is the second-most of any club.", "Richmond Team of the Century\n\n\nB:\nKevin Sheedy\n1967–79, 180cm 81k,\n251 games 91 goals\n\nVic Thorp\n1910–25, 178cm 83k,\n263 games 7 goals\n\nMichael Green\n1966–75, 193cm 94k,\n146 games 83 goals\n\n\n\nHB:\nBasil McCormack\n1925–36, 180cm 80k,\n199 games 1 goal\n\nGordon Strang\n1931–38, 185cm 83k,\n116 games 108 goals\n\nMervyn Keane\n1972–84, 185cm 82k,\n238 games 36 goals\n\n\n\nC:\nFrancis Bourke *\n1967–81, 185cm 83k,\n300 games 71 goals\n\nBill Barrot\n1961–70, 180 cm 76k,\n120 games 91 goals\n\nDick Clay\n1966–76, 185cm 85k,\n213 games 80 goals\n\n\n\nHF:\nMatthew Richardson\n1993–2009 , 197cm 103k,\n282 games 800 goals\n\nRoyce Hart *\n1967–77, 187cm 86k,\n187 games 369 goals\n\nRoger Dean\n1957–73, 175cm 73k,\n245 games 204 goals\n\n\n\nF:\nDale Weightman\n1978–93, 170cm 69k,\n274 games 344 goals\n\nJack Titus\n1926–43, 175cm 66k,\n294 games 970 goals\n\nBill Morris\n1942–51, 188cm 86k,\n140 games 98 goals\n\n\n\nFoll:\nRoy Wright\n1946–59, 188cm, 102k,\n195 games 127 goals\n\nJack Dyer * (capt)\n1931–49, 185cm 89k,\n312 games 443 goals\n\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–83, 175cm 71k,\n403 games 778 goals\n\n\n\nInt:\nDes Rowe\n1946–57, 182cm 83k,\n175 games 24 goals\n\nGeoff Raines\n1976–82, 180cm 78k,\n134 games 53 goals\n\nIan Stewart *\n1971–75, 180cm 78k,\n78 games 55 goals\n\n\n\n\nMatthew Knights\n1988–2002, 179cm 74k,\n279 games 141 goals\n\n\n\n\n\nCoach:\nTom Hafey\nPlayed 248 Won 173 Lost 73 Drawn 2", "Richmond Team of the Century", "B:\nKevin Sheedy\n1967–79, 180cm 81k,\n251 games 91 goals\n\nVic Thorp\n1910–25, 178cm 83k,\n263 games 7 goals\n\nMichael Green\n1966–75, 193cm 94k,\n146 games 83 goals", "1967–79, 180cm 81k,\n251 games 91 goals", "1910–25, 178cm 83k,\n263 games 7 goals", "1966–75, 193cm 94k,\n146 games 83 goals", "HB:\nBasil McCormack\n1925–36, 180cm 80k,\n199 games 1 goal\n\nGordon Strang\n1931–38, 185cm 83k,\n116 games 108 goals\n\nMervyn Keane\n1972–84, 185cm 82k,\n238 games 36 goals", "1925–36, 180cm 80k,\n199 games 1 goal", "1931–38, 185cm 83k,\n116 games 108 goals", "1972–84, 185cm 82k,\n238 games 36 goals", "C:\nFrancis Bourke *\n1967–81, 185cm 83k,\n300 games 71 goals\n\nBill Barrot\n1961–70, 180 cm 76k,\n120 games 91 goals\n\nDick Clay\n1966–76, 185cm 85k,\n213 games 80 goals", "1967–81, 185cm 83k,\n300 games 71 goals", "1961–70, 180 cm 76k,\n120 games 91 goals", "1966–76, 185cm 85k,\n213 games 80 goals", "HF:\nMatthew Richardson\n1993–2009 , 197cm 103k,\n282 games 800 goals\n\nRoyce Hart *\n1967–77, 187cm 86k,\n187 games 369 goals\n\nRoger Dean\n1957–73, 175cm 73k,\n245 games 204 goals", "1993–2009 , 197cm 103k,\n282 games 800 goals", "1967–77, 187cm 86k,\n187 games 369 goals", "1957–73, 175cm 73k,\n245 games 204 goals", "F:\nDale Weightman\n1978–93, 170cm 69k,\n274 games 344 goals\n\nJack Titus\n1926–43, 175cm 66k,\n294 games 970 goals\n\nBill Morris\n1942–51, 188cm 86k,\n140 games 98 goals", "1978–93, 170cm 69k,\n274 games 344 goals", "1926–43, 175cm 66k,\n294 games 970 goals", "1942–51, 188cm 86k,\n140 games 98 goals", "Foll:\nRoy Wright\n1946–59, 188cm, 102k,\n195 games 127 goals\n\nJack Dyer * (capt)\n1931–49, 185cm 89k,\n312 games 443 goals\n\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–83, 175cm 71k,\n403 games 778 goals", "1946–59, 188cm, 102k,\n195 games 127 goals", "1931–49, 185cm 89k,\n312 games 443 goals", "1965–83, 175cm 71k,\n403 games 778 goals", "Int:\nDes Rowe\n1946–57, 182cm 83k,\n175 games 24 goals\n\nGeoff Raines\n1976–82, 180cm 78k,\n134 games 53 goals\n\nIan Stewart *\n1971–75, 180cm 78k,\n78 games 55 goals", "1946–57, 182cm 83k,\n175 games 24 goals", "1976–82, 180cm 78k,\n134 games 53 goals", "1971–75, 180cm 78k,\n78 games 55 goals", "Matthew Knights\n1988–2002, 179cm 74k,\n279 games 141 goals", "1988–2002, 179cm 74k,\n279 games 141 goals", "Coach:\nTom Hafey\nPlayed 248 Won 173 Lost 73 Drawn 2", "Played 248 Won 173 Lost 73 Drawn 2", "[2]", "As legends of the game:", "Jack Dyer\nKevin Bartlett\nIan Stewart\nRoyce Hart", "As players of the game:", "Percy Bentley\nFrancis Bourke\nDan Minogue\nBill Morris\nCharlie Pannam\nVic Thorp\nJack Titus\nDale Weightman\nRoy Wright\nMatthew Richardson\nMaurice Rioli", "As coaches of the game:", "Tom Hafey\nFrank 'Checker' Hughes", "Frank 'Checker' Hughes", "The club's hall of fame was created in 2002 with 23 inductees. Below is a list, separated into categories, of members and the year they were inducted. To date, six Richmond \"Immortals\" have been named, the first of whom was Jack Dyer, the year before his death in 2003. Dyer was followed by Kevin Bartlett, Tom Hafey, Francis Bourke, Royce Hart and Vic Thorp.", "Players\nPlayers\nPlayers\nPlayers\nCoaches\nServants\n\n\n\n\nNeil Balme 2010\nBill Barrot 2007\nKevin Bartlett 2002\nPercy Bentley 2002\nMartin Bolger 2005\nFrancis Bourke 2002\nRon Branton 2006\nWayne Campbell 2013\nDick Clay 2002\nDavid Cloke 2007\nRoger Dean 2002\n\n\n\n\nDonald Don 2015\nJack Dyer 2002\nAlec Edmond 2007\nAlan Geddes 2007\nMichael Green 2004\nClarrie Hall 2006\nDick Harris 2004\nRoyce Hart 2002\nFrank Hughes 2004\nHugh James 2005\nJim Jess 2008\n\n\n\n\nMervyn Keane 2005\nMark Lee 2010\nRay Martin 2010\nBasil McCormack 2004\nBill Morris 2002\nTom O'Halloran 2013\nKevin O'Neill 2008\nMax Oppy 2004\nGeoff Raines 2008\nMatthew Richardson 2015\nMichael Roach 2002\n\n\n\n\nDes Rowe 2004\nHavel Rowe 2015\nBarry Rowlings 2015\nKevin Sheedy 2002\nIan Stewart 2013\nVic Thorp 2002\nJack Titus 2002\nWayne Walsh 2013\nDale Weightman 2002\nBryan Wood 2006\nRoy Wright 2002\n\n\n\n\nTom Hafey 2002\nDan Minogue 2002\n\n\n\n\nCharlie Backhouse 2002\nCharlie Callander 2002\nJames Charles 2002\nAllan Cooke 2006\nNeville Crowe 2002\nRay Dunn 2002\nBarney Herbert 2004\nTony Jewell 2002\nBarry Richardson 2004\nGraeme Richmond 2002\nAlice Wills 2002\nIan Wilson 2010", "Players\nPlayers\nPlayers\nPlayers\nCoaches\nServants", "Neil Balme 2010\nBill Barrot 2007\nKevin Bartlett 2002\nPercy Bentley 2002\nMartin Bolger 2005\nFrancis Bourke 2002\nRon Branton 2006\nWayne Campbell 2013\nDick Clay 2002\nDavid Cloke 2007\nRoger Dean 2002\n\n\n\n\nDonald Don 2015\nJack Dyer 2002\nAlec Edmond 2007\nAlan Geddes 2007\nMichael Green 2004\nClarrie Hall 2006\nDick Harris 2004\nRoyce Hart 2002\nFrank Hughes 2004\nHugh James 2005\nJim Jess 2008\n\n\n\n\nMervyn Keane 2005\nMark Lee 2010\nRay Martin 2010\nBasil McCormack 2004\nBill Morris 2002\nTom O'Halloran 2013\nKevin O'Neill 2008\nMax Oppy 2004\nGeoff Raines 2008\nMatthew Richardson 2015\nMichael Roach 2002\n\n\n\n\nDes Rowe 2004\nHavel Rowe 2015\nBarry Rowlings 2015\nKevin Sheedy 2002\nIan Stewart 2013\nVic Thorp 2002\nJack Titus 2002\nWayne Walsh 2013\nDale Weightman 2002\nBryan Wood 2006\nRoy Wright 2002\n\n\n\n\nTom Hafey 2002\nDan Minogue 2002\n\n\n\n\nCharlie Backhouse 2002\nCharlie Callander 2002\nJames Charles 2002\nAllan Cooke 2006\nNeville Crowe 2002\nRay Dunn 2002\nBarney Herbert 2004\nTony Jewell 2002\nBarry Richardson 2004\nGraeme Richmond 2002\nAlice Wills 2002\nIan Wilson 2010", "Neil Balme 2010\nBill Barrot 2007\nKevin Bartlett 2002\nPercy Bentley 2002\nMartin Bolger 2005\nFrancis Bourke 2002\nRon Branton 2006\nWayne Campbell 2013\nDick Clay 2002\nDavid Cloke 2007\nRoger Dean 2002", "Neil Balme 2010", "Bill Barrot 2007", "Kevin Bartlett 2002", "Percy Bentley 2002", "Martin Bolger 2005", "Francis Bourke 2002", "Ron Branton 2006", "Wayne Campbell 2013", "Dick Clay 2002", "David Cloke 2007", "Roger Dean 2002", "Donald Don 2015\nJack Dyer 2002\nAlec Edmond 2007\nAlan Geddes 2007\nMichael Green 2004\nClarrie Hall 2006\nDick Harris 2004\nRoyce Hart 2002\nFrank Hughes 2004\nHugh James 2005\nJim Jess 2008", "Donald Don 2015", "Jack Dyer 2002", "Alec Edmond 2007", "Alan Geddes 2007", "Michael Green 2004", "Clarrie Hall 2006", "Dick Harris 2004", "Royce Hart 2002", "Frank Hughes 2004", "Hugh James 2005", "Jim Jess 2008", "Mervyn Keane 2005\nMark Lee 2010\nRay Martin 2010\nBasil McCormack 2004\nBill Morris 2002\nTom O'Halloran 2013\nKevin O'Neill 2008\nMax Oppy 2004\nGeoff Raines 2008\nMatthew Richardson 2015\nMichael Roach 2002", "Mervyn Keane 2005", "Mark Lee 2010", "Ray Martin 2010", "Basil McCormack 2004", "Bill Morris 2002", "Tom O'Halloran 2013", "Kevin O'Neill 2008", "Max Oppy 2004", "Geoff Raines 2008", "Matthew Richardson 2015", "Michael Roach 2002", "Des Rowe 2004\nHavel Rowe 2015\nBarry Rowlings 2015\nKevin Sheedy 2002\nIan Stewart 2013\nVic Thorp 2002\nJack Titus 2002\nWayne Walsh 2013\nDale Weightman 2002\nBryan Wood 2006\nRoy Wright 2002", "Des Rowe 2004", "Havel Rowe 2015", "Barry Rowlings 2015", "Kevin Sheedy 2002", "Ian Stewart 2013", "Vic Thorp 2002", "Jack Titus 2002", "Wayne Walsh 2013", "Dale Weightman 2002", "Bryan Wood 2006", "Roy Wright 2002", "Tom Hafey 2002\nDan Minogue 2002", "Tom Hafey 2002", "Dan Minogue 2002", "Charlie Backhouse 2002\nCharlie Callander 2002\nJames Charles 2002\nAllan Cooke 2006\nNeville Crowe 2002\nRay Dunn 2002\nBarney Herbert 2004\nTony Jewell 2002\nBarry Richardson 2004\nGraeme Richmond 2002\nAlice Wills 2002\nIan Wilson 2010", "Charlie Backhouse 2002", "Charlie Callander 2002", "James Charles 2002", "Allan Cooke 2006", "Neville Crowe 2002", "Ray Dunn 2002", "Barney Herbert 2004", "Tony Jewell 2002", "Barry Richardson 2004", "Graeme Richmond 2002", "Alice Wills 2002", "Ian Wilson 2010", "[3]", "During the centenary season the tigers announced their 100 Tiger Treasures consisting of 10 awards, each with 10 nominees given by the Richmond Football Club in 2008 to celebrate their centenary year of competition in the VFL/AFL.[37] The awards were mostly given to players but also club moments and campaigns. On Saturday, 28 June Richmond held a centenary celebration at Punt Road Oval before the centenary game at the MCG against arch rivials Carlton later that day.", "Award\nWinner\nNominees\n\n\nBest Individual Performance of the Century\nKevin Bartlett\n\"Put his unique stamp on the 1980 finals series, kicking 21 goals as a half-forward in Richmond's three appearances, including seven in the Grand Final massacre of the Magpies, which earned him the Norm Smith Medal for being best afield.\"\n\n\n\n\nJack Titus\nDoug Strang\nJack Dyer\nRoy Wright\nTommy Hafey\nBill Barrot\nMichael Green\nDavid Cloke\nMatthew Knights\n\n\n\n\n\nClass of the Century\nRoyce Hart\n\"Thrilled Tiger fans for a decade with his match-winning exploits at centre half-forward. His dominance up forward was a major factor in the Club's run of four premierships from 1967–74. He was an extraordinary mark, a deadeye shot for goal, very courageous and, when the ball hit the ground, he swooped on it like a rover.\"\n\n\n\n\nVic Thorp\nBill Morris\nIan Stewart\nKevin Bartlett\nDick Clay\nPaul Sproule\nGeoff Raines\nDale Weightman\nMaurice Rioli\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Strong & the Bold\nJack Dyer\n\"No player in the history of the game epitomises his club more than the man known as 'Captain Blood'. He struck fear into the hearts and minds of all opposition players during the 1930s and 40s. Was renowned for his bone-jarring shirtfronts, which left many an opponent bloodied, battered and bruised. He bled for the Tigers and expected his teammates to do likewise.\"\n\n\n\n\nBasil McCormack\nPercy Bentley\nMax Oppy\nRoger Dean\nMartin Bolger\nDes Rowe\nMatthew Richardson\nKevin Sheedy\nFrancis Bourke\n\n\n\n\n\nDefining Moment\nSave Our Skins\n\"On 15 August 1990, Richmond announced that it needed to raise $1 million by 31 October that year, or it would cease to exist. The Save Our Skins campaign was immediately established to keep the Tigers alive. With Club president Neville Crowe as the figurehead, the SOS campaign did exactly what it set out to achieve, raising the necessary funds to stave off the threat of extinction.\"\n\n\n\n\nJoining The VFL\nThe Sash\nFirst Premiership\nEat 'Em Alive\nJack Dyer's Debut\nThe Theme Song\nMove To The MCG\nTommy Hafey's Appointment As Coach\nBreaking The Drought In '67\nBreaking the 37 Year Drought\n\n\n\n\n\nServant of the Century\nGraeme Richmond\n\"Graeme Richmond filled a variety of important roles at Tigerland over more than 30 years of devoted service. He was a shrewd, ruthless administrator, who never wasted an opportunity that could benefit his beloved Tigers. His strength lay in his relentless persuasiveness—he was a masterly recruiter and negotiator. And, as a speaker, arguably there have been none finer in league football history.\"\n\n\n\n\nCharlie Callander\nCharlie Priestley\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nAllan Cooke\nMaurie Fleming\nNeville Crowe\nAlice Wills\nIan Wilson\n\n\n\n\n\nBrave Act of the Century\nFrancis Bourke\n\"Bourke collided with teammate Stephen Mount in a tense Round 21, 1980 clash with North Melbourne at Arden Street and had trouble seeing because of the blood streaming down his face. He was subsequently moved from full-back to the opposite end of the ground, where he immediately made his presence felt, taking a diving chest mark and slotting through a crucial goal.\"\n\n\n\n\nBill Burns\nGeorge Smeaton\nEric Moore\nFrancis Bourke\nRoyce Hart\nLaurie Fowler\nRobert Lamb\nTony Free\nMatthew Richardson\n\n\n\n\n\nPremiership of the Century\n1967\n\"Richmond, under coach Tommy Hafey, finished the 1967 home-and-away season on top. The Tigers disposed of Carlton by 40 points in the second-semi, then faced up to a star-studded Geelong combination in the Grand Final. At the end of a spectacular contest, Richmond had broken a 24-year premiership drought. Barrot, Brown, Hart, Dean and Bartlett starred, while unsung hero Ronaldson kicked three vital goals.\"\n\n\n\n\n1920\n1921\n1932\n1934\n1943\n1969\n1973\n1974\n1980\n2017\n\n\n\n\n\nMark of the Century\nMichael Roach\n\"The superstar full-forward was a noted high-flyer during his 200-game career at Tigerland, but the mark he took against Hawthorn at the MCG in 1979 was, almost literally, out of this world. 'Roachy' actually rose so high over a huge nest of Hawk players, he ended up making it a chest mark!\"\n\n\n\n\nThomas O'Halloran\nRoyce Hart\nMalcolm Greenslade\nKevin Sheedy\nBryan Wood\nGeoff Raines\nMichael Mitchell\nDavid Bourke\nMatthew Richardson\n\n\n\n\n\nGoal of the Century\nMichael Mitchell\n\"The little Tiger excitement machine decided to take off on a bit of a trot during the team's final home-and-away match of the 1990 season, against Sydney at the SCG. After gathering the ball deep in defence, 'Mitch' took one bounce, then another, and then five more (seven in total), before calmly drilling home an incredibly inspirational goal.\"\n\n\n\n\nJohn Ronaldson\nBill Barrot\nMichael Roach\nKevin Bartlett\nJimmy Jess\nMatthew Knights\nJoel Bowden\nNathan Brown\nChris Newman\n\n\n\n\n\nControversy of the Century\nWindy Hill Brawl\n\"On 18 May 1974, all hell broke loose at half-time of Richmond's clash with Essendon at Windy Hill as the players were leaving the field . . . A massive brawl erupted, involving players and officials of both clubs. Following a league investigation, several players and officials received suspensions, the heaviest being for Graeme Richmond, who was rubbed out until 31 December and also fined $2000.\"\n\n\n\n\nDean/Barassi Incident In 1963\nCrowe/Nicholls Incident In 1967 Second-Semi\nBarrot/Stewart Swap\nNeil Balme's Rampage, 1973 Grand Final\nJohn Pitura Trade\nJewell/Jones Quarter-Time Brawl\n1980's Trade Wars With Collingwood\nAlan Bond's Brisbane Plan\nJeff Hogg Trade", "Award\nWinner\nNominees", "Best Individual Performance of the Century\nKevin Bartlett\n\"Put his unique stamp on the 1980 finals series, kicking 21 goals as a half-forward in Richmond's three appearances, including seven in the Grand Final massacre of the Magpies, which earned him the Norm Smith Medal for being best afield.\"\n\n\n\n\nJack Titus\nDoug Strang\nJack Dyer\nRoy Wright\nTommy Hafey\nBill Barrot\nMichael Green\nDavid Cloke\nMatthew Knights", "\"Put his unique stamp on the 1980 finals series, kicking 21 goals as a half-forward in Richmond's three appearances, including seven in the Grand Final massacre of the Magpies, which earned him the Norm Smith Medal for being best afield.\"", "Jack Titus\nDoug Strang\nJack Dyer\nRoy Wright\nTommy Hafey\nBill Barrot\nMichael Green\nDavid Cloke\nMatthew Knights", "Class of the Century\nRoyce Hart\n\"Thrilled Tiger fans for a decade with his match-winning exploits at centre half-forward. His dominance up forward was a major factor in the Club's run of four premierships from 1967–74. He was an extraordinary mark, a deadeye shot for goal, very courageous and, when the ball hit the ground, he swooped on it like a rover.\"\n\n\n\n\nVic Thorp\nBill Morris\nIan Stewart\nKevin Bartlett\nDick Clay\nPaul Sproule\nGeoff Raines\nDale Weightman\nMaurice Rioli", "\"Thrilled Tiger fans for a decade with his match-winning exploits at centre half-forward. His dominance up forward was a major factor in the Club's run of four premierships from 1967–74. He was an extraordinary mark, a deadeye shot for goal, very courageous and, when the ball hit the ground, he swooped on it like a rover.\"", "Vic Thorp\nBill Morris\nIan Stewart\nKevin Bartlett\nDick Clay\nPaul Sproule\nGeoff Raines\nDale Weightman\nMaurice Rioli", "The Strong & the Bold\nJack Dyer\n\"No player in the history of the game epitomises his club more than the man known as 'Captain Blood'. He struck fear into the hearts and minds of all opposition players during the 1930s and 40s. Was renowned for his bone-jarring shirtfronts, which left many an opponent bloodied, battered and bruised. He bled for the Tigers and expected his teammates to do likewise.\"\n\n\n\n\nBasil McCormack\nPercy Bentley\nMax Oppy\nRoger Dean\nMartin Bolger\nDes Rowe\nMatthew Richardson\nKevin Sheedy\nFrancis Bourke", "\"No player in the history of the game epitomises his club more than the man known as 'Captain Blood'. He struck fear into the hearts and minds of all opposition players during the 1930s and 40s. Was renowned for his bone-jarring shirtfronts, which left many an opponent bloodied, battered and bruised. He bled for the Tigers and expected his teammates to do likewise.\"", "Basil McCormack\nPercy Bentley\nMax Oppy\nRoger Dean\nMartin Bolger\nDes Rowe\nMatthew Richardson\nKevin Sheedy\nFrancis Bourke", "Defining Moment\nSave Our Skins\n\"On 15 August 1990, Richmond announced that it needed to raise $1 million by 31 October that year, or it would cease to exist. The Save Our Skins campaign was immediately established to keep the Tigers alive. With Club president Neville Crowe as the figurehead, the SOS campaign did exactly what it set out to achieve, raising the necessary funds to stave off the threat of extinction.\"\n\n\n\n\nJoining The VFL\nThe Sash\nFirst Premiership\nEat 'Em Alive\nJack Dyer's Debut\nThe Theme Song\nMove To The MCG\nTommy Hafey's Appointment As Coach\nBreaking The Drought In '67\nBreaking the 37 Year Drought", "\"On 15 August 1990, Richmond announced that it needed to raise $1 million by 31 October that year, or it would cease to exist. The Save Our Skins campaign was immediately established to keep the Tigers alive. With Club president Neville Crowe as the figurehead, the SOS campaign did exactly what it set out to achieve, raising the necessary funds to stave off the threat of extinction.\"", "Joining The VFL\nThe Sash\nFirst Premiership\nEat 'Em Alive\nJack Dyer's Debut\nThe Theme Song\nMove To The MCG\nTommy Hafey's Appointment As Coach\nBreaking The Drought In '67\nBreaking the 37 Year Drought", "Joining The VFL", "Eat 'Em Alive", "Jack Dyer's Debut", "The Theme Song", "Move To The MCG", "Tommy Hafey's Appointment As Coach", "Breaking The Drought In '67", "Breaking the 37 Year Drought", "Servant of the Century\nGraeme Richmond\n\"Graeme Richmond filled a variety of important roles at Tigerland over more than 30 years of devoted service. He was a shrewd, ruthless administrator, who never wasted an opportunity that could benefit his beloved Tigers. His strength lay in his relentless persuasiveness—he was a masterly recruiter and negotiator. And, as a speaker, arguably there have been none finer in league football history.\"\n\n\n\n\nCharlie Callander\nCharlie Priestley\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nAllan Cooke\nMaurie Fleming\nNeville Crowe\nAlice Wills\nIan Wilson", "\"Graeme Richmond filled a variety of important roles at Tigerland over more than 30 years of devoted service. He was a shrewd, ruthless administrator, who never wasted an opportunity that could benefit his beloved Tigers. His strength lay in his relentless persuasiveness—he was a masterly recruiter and negotiator. And, as a speaker, arguably there have been none finer in league football history.\"", "Charlie Callander\nCharlie Priestley\nRay Dunn\nAlan Schwab\nAllan Cooke\nMaurie Fleming\nNeville Crowe\nAlice Wills\nIan Wilson", "Brave Act of the Century\nFrancis Bourke\n\"Bourke collided with teammate Stephen Mount in a tense Round 21, 1980 clash with North Melbourne at Arden Street and had trouble seeing because of the blood streaming down his face. He was subsequently moved from full-back to the opposite end of the ground, where he immediately made his presence felt, taking a diving chest mark and slotting through a crucial goal.\"\n\n\n\n\nBill Burns\nGeorge Smeaton\nEric Moore\nFrancis Bourke\nRoyce Hart\nLaurie Fowler\nRobert Lamb\nTony Free\nMatthew Richardson", "\"Bourke collided with teammate Stephen Mount in a tense Round 21, 1980 clash with North Melbourne at Arden Street and had trouble seeing because of the blood streaming down his face. He was subsequently moved from full-back to the opposite end of the ground, where he immediately made his presence felt, taking a diving chest mark and slotting through a crucial goal.\"", "Bill Burns\nGeorge Smeaton\nEric Moore\nFrancis Bourke\nRoyce Hart\nLaurie Fowler\nRobert Lamb\nTony Free\nMatthew Richardson", "Premiership of the Century\n1967\n\"Richmond, under coach Tommy Hafey, finished the 1967 home-and-away season on top. The Tigers disposed of Carlton by 40 points in the second-semi, then faced up to a star-studded Geelong combination in the Grand Final. At the end of a spectacular contest, Richmond had broken a 24-year premiership drought. Barrot, Brown, Hart, Dean and Bartlett starred, while unsung hero Ronaldson kicked three vital goals.\"\n\n\n\n\n1920\n1921\n1932\n1934\n1943\n1969\n1973\n1974\n1980\n2017", "\"Richmond, under coach Tommy Hafey, finished the 1967 home-and-away season on top. The Tigers disposed of Carlton by 40 points in the second-semi, then faced up to a star-studded Geelong combination in the Grand Final. At the end of a spectacular contest, Richmond had broken a 24-year premiership drought. Barrot, Brown, Hart, Dean and Bartlett starred, while unsung hero Ronaldson kicked three vital goals.\"", "1920\n1921\n1932\n1934\n1943\n1969\n1973\n1974\n1980\n2017", "Mark of the Century\nMichael Roach\n\"The superstar full-forward was a noted high-flyer during his 200-game career at Tigerland, but the mark he took against Hawthorn at the MCG in 1979 was, almost literally, out of this world. 'Roachy' actually rose so high over a huge nest of Hawk players, he ended up making it a chest mark!\"\n\n\n\n\nThomas O'Halloran\nRoyce Hart\nMalcolm Greenslade\nKevin Sheedy\nBryan Wood\nGeoff Raines\nMichael Mitchell\nDavid Bourke\nMatthew Richardson", "\"The superstar full-forward was a noted high-flyer during his 200-game career at Tigerland, but the mark he took against Hawthorn at the MCG in 1979 was, almost literally, out of this world. 'Roachy' actually rose so high over a huge nest of Hawk players, he ended up making it a chest mark!\"", "Thomas O'Halloran\nRoyce Hart\nMalcolm Greenslade\nKevin Sheedy\nBryan Wood\nGeoff Raines\nMichael Mitchell\nDavid Bourke\nMatthew Richardson", "Goal of the Century\nMichael Mitchell\n\"The little Tiger excitement machine decided to take off on a bit of a trot during the team's final home-and-away match of the 1990 season, against Sydney at the SCG. After gathering the ball deep in defence, 'Mitch' took one bounce, then another, and then five more (seven in total), before calmly drilling home an incredibly inspirational goal.\"\n\n\n\n\nJohn Ronaldson\nBill Barrot\nMichael Roach\nKevin Bartlett\nJimmy Jess\nMatthew Knights\nJoel Bowden\nNathan Brown\nChris Newman", "\"The little Tiger excitement machine decided to take off on a bit of a trot during the team's final home-and-away match of the 1990 season, against Sydney at the SCG. After gathering the ball deep in defence, 'Mitch' took one bounce, then another, and then five more (seven in total), before calmly drilling home an incredibly inspirational goal.\"", "John Ronaldson\nBill Barrot\nMichael Roach\nKevin Bartlett\nJimmy Jess\nMatthew Knights\nJoel Bowden\nNathan Brown\nChris Newman", "Controversy of the Century\nWindy Hill Brawl\n\"On 18 May 1974, all hell broke loose at half-time of Richmond's clash with Essendon at Windy Hill as the players were leaving the field . . . A massive brawl erupted, involving players and officials of both clubs. Following a league investigation, several players and officials received suspensions, the heaviest being for Graeme Richmond, who was rubbed out until 31 December and also fined $2000.\"\n\n\n\n\nDean/Barassi Incident In 1963\nCrowe/Nicholls Incident In 1967 Second-Semi\nBarrot/Stewart Swap\nNeil Balme's Rampage, 1973 Grand Final\nJohn Pitura Trade\nJewell/Jones Quarter-Time Brawl\n1980's Trade Wars With Collingwood\nAlan Bond's Brisbane Plan\nJeff Hogg Trade", "\"On 18 May 1974, all hell broke loose at half-time of Richmond's clash with Essendon at Windy Hill as the players were leaving the field . . . A massive brawl erupted, involving players and officials of both clubs. Following a league investigation, several players and officials received suspensions, the heaviest being for Graeme Richmond, who was rubbed out until 31 December and also fined $2000.\"", "Dean/Barassi Incident In 1963\nCrowe/Nicholls Incident In 1967 Second-Semi\nBarrot/Stewart Swap\nNeil Balme's Rampage, 1973 Grand Final\nJohn Pitura Trade\nJewell/Jones Quarter-Time Brawl\n1980's Trade Wars With Collingwood\nAlan Bond's Brisbane Plan\nJeff Hogg Trade", "Dean/Barassi Incident In 1963", "Crowe/Nicholls Incident In 1967 Second-Semi", "Barrot/Stewart Swap", "Neil Balme's Rampage, 1973 Grand Final", "John Pitura Trade", "Jewell/Jones Quarter-Time Brawl", "1980's Trade Wars With Collingwood", "Alan Bond's Brisbane Plan", "Jeff Hogg Trade", "Trent Cotchin 2013–\nChris Newman 2009–12\nKane Johnson 2005–08\nWayne Campbell 2001–04\nMatthew Knights 1997–00\nTony Free 1994–96\nJeff Hogg 1993\nDale Weightman 1988–92\nMark Lee 1985–87\nBarry Rowlings 1983–84\nDavid Cloke 1982\nBryan Wood 1981\nBruce Monteath 1980\nKevin Bartlett 1979\nKevin Sheedy 1978\nFrancis Bourke 1976–77\nRoyce Hart 1972–75\nRoger Dean 1968–71\nFred Swift 1967\nNeville Crowe 1963–66\nRon Branton 1960–62\nRoy Wright 1958–59\nDes Rowe 1952–57\nBill Morris 1950–51\nJack Dyer 1941–49\nPercy Bentley 1932–40\nMaurie Hunter 1931\nAlan Geddes 1930\nCyril Lilburne 1929\nAlan Geddes 1927–28\nMel Morris 1926\nDan Minogue 1920–25\nBill Thomas 1919\nClarrie Hall 1918\nPercy Maybury 1917\nBill Thomas 1914–16\nHugh James 1913\nTed Ohlsen 1912\nLen Incigneri 1911\nBilly Schmidt 1910\nDick Condon/John Lawson 1909\nCharlie Pannam Snr 1908", "Trent Cotchin 2013–", "Chris Newman 2009–12", "Kane Johnson 2005–08", "Wayne Campbell 2001–04", "Matthew Knights 1997–00", "Tony Free 1994–96", "Jeff Hogg 1993", "Dale Weightman 1988–92", "Mark Lee 1985–87", "Barry Rowlings 1983–84", "David Cloke 1982", "Bryan Wood 1981", "Bruce Monteath 1980", "Kevin Bartlett 1979", "Kevin Sheedy 1978", "Francis Bourke 1976–77", "Royce Hart 1972–75", "Roger Dean 1968–71", "Fred Swift 1967", "Neville Crowe 1963–66", "Ron Branton 1960–62", "Roy Wright 1958–59", "Des Rowe 1952–57", "Bill Morris 1950–51", "Jack Dyer 1941–49", "Percy Bentley 1932–40", "Maurie Hunter 1931", "Alan Geddes 1930", "Cyril Lilburne 1929", "Alan Geddes 1927–28", "Mel Morris 1926", "Dan Minogue 1920–25", "Bill Thomas 1919", "Clarrie Hall 1918", "Percy Maybury 1917", "Bill Thomas 1914–16", "Hugh James 1913", "Ted Ohlsen 1912", "Len Incigneri 1911", "Billy Schmidt 1910", "Dick Condon/John Lawson 1909", "Charlie Pannam Snr 1908", "Damien Hardwick 2010–\nJade Rawlings 2009 (Rounds 12–22)\nTerry Wallace 2005–09 (Rounds 1–11)\nDanny Frawley 2000–04\nJeff Gieschen 1997–99\nRobert Walls 1996–97\nJohn Northey 1993–95\nAllan Jeans 1992\nKevin Bartlett 1988–91\nTony Jewell 1986–87\nPaul Sproule 1985\nMike Patterson 1984\nFrancis Bourke 1982–83\nTony Jewell 1979–81\nBarry Richardson 1977–78\nVerdun Howell 1971\nTom Hafey 1966–76\nJack Titus 1965\nLen Smith 1964–65\nDick Harris 1964\nDes Rowe 1961–63\nAlan McDonald 1957–60\nMax Oppy 1956\nAlby Pannam 1953–55\nJack Dyer 1941–52\nPercy Bentley 1934–40\nBilly Schmidt 1933\nFrank 'Checker' Hughes 1927–32\nMel Morris 1926\nDan Minogue 1920–25\nNorm Clark 1919\nBernie Nolan 1918\nPercy Maybury 1917\nCharlie Ricketts 1914–16\nErn Jenkins 1913\nCharlie Pannam Sr 1912\nLen Incigneri 1911\nAlex 'Joker' Hall 1910\nDick Condon 1908–09", "Damien Hardwick 2010–", "Jade Rawlings 2009 (Rounds 12–22)", "Terry Wallace 2005–09 (Rounds 1–11)", "Danny Frawley 2000–04", "Jeff Gieschen 1997–99", "Robert Walls 1996–97", "John Northey 1993–95", "Allan Jeans 1992", "Kevin Bartlett 1988–91", "Tony Jewell 1986–87", "Paul Sproule 1985", "Mike Patterson 1984", "Francis Bourke 1982–83", "Tony Jewell 1979–81", "Barry Richardson 1977–78", "Verdun Howell 1971", "Tom Hafey 1966–76", "Jack Titus 1965", "Len Smith 1964–65", "Dick Harris 1964", "Des Rowe 1961–63", "Alan McDonald 1957–60", "Max Oppy 1956", "Alby Pannam 1953–55", "Jack Dyer 1941–52", "Percy Bentley 1934–40", "Billy Schmidt 1933", "Frank 'Checker' Hughes 1927–32", "Mel Morris 1926", "Dan Minogue 1920–25", "Norm Clark 1919", "Bernie Nolan 1918", "Percy Maybury 1917", "Charlie Ricketts 1914–16", "Ern Jenkins 1913", "Charlie Pannam Sr 1912", "Len Incigneri 1911", "Alex 'Joker' Hall 1910", "Dick Condon 1908–09", "Richmond Football Club\n\n\nview\ntalk\nedit\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSenior list\nRookie list\nCoaching staff\n\n\n\n\n 1 Nick Vlastuin \n 2 Dylan Grimes \n 3 Dion Prestia \n 4 Dustin Martin \n 5 Brandon Ellis \n 6 Shaun Grigg \n 8 Jack Riewoldt (vc) \n 9 Trent Cotchin (c) \n10 Shane Edwards \n12 David Astbury \n14 Bachar Houli \n15 Jayden Short \n16 Shaun Hampson \n17 Daniel Rioli \n18 Alex Rance (vc) \n21 Jacob Townsend \n22 Josh Caddy \n23 Kane Lambert \n\n\n\n\n\n24 Ben Griffiths \n25 Toby Nankervis \n26 Anthony Miles \n27 Sam Lloyd \n29 Shai Bolton \n30 Reece Conca \n31 Oleg Markov \n32 Corey Ellis \n33 Kamdyn McIntosh \n34 Jack Graham \n35 Nathan Broad \n37 Connor Menadue \n39 Nathan Drummond \n40 Dan Butler \n42 Ryan Garthwaite \n46 Jason Castagna \n47 Ivan Soldo \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n36 Callum Moore \n41 Mabior Chol \n44 Tyson Stengle \n\n\n\n\nHead coach\n\nDamien Hardwick\n\nAssistant coaches\n\nBlake Caracella (midfield spread)\nAndrew McQualter (midfield stoppage)\nJustin Leppitsch (forwards)\nBen Rutten (defence)\nIvan Maric (ruck)\nXavier Clarke (development)\nRyan Ferguson (development)\nCraig McRae (VFL coach / development)\n\n\n\nLegend:\n\n\n(c) Captain\n(vc) Vice captain\n(B) Category B rookie\n\n\nUpdated: 26 October 2017\nSource(s): Senior list, Rookie list, Coaching staff", "Richmond Football Club\n\n\nview\ntalk\nedit", "view\ntalk\nedit", "Senior list\nRookie list\nCoaching staff", "1 Nick Vlastuin \n 2 Dylan Grimes \n 3 Dion Prestia \n 4 Dustin Martin \n 5 Brandon Ellis \n 6 Shaun Grigg \n 8 Jack Riewoldt (vc) \n 9 Trent Cotchin (c) \n10 Shane Edwards \n12 David Astbury \n14 Bachar Houli \n15 Jayden Short \n16 Shaun Hampson \n17 Daniel Rioli \n18 Alex Rance (vc) \n21 Jacob Townsend \n22 Josh Caddy \n23 Kane Lambert \n\n\n\n\n\n24 Ben Griffiths \n25 Toby Nankervis \n26 Anthony Miles \n27 Sam Lloyd \n29 Shai Bolton \n30 Reece Conca \n31 Oleg Markov \n32 Corey Ellis \n33 Kamdyn McIntosh \n34 Jack Graham \n35 Nathan Broad \n37 Connor Menadue \n39 Nathan Drummond \n40 Dan Butler \n42 Ryan Garthwaite \n46 Jason Castagna \n47 Ivan Soldo \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n36 Callum Moore \n41 Mabior Chol \n44 Tyson Stengle \n\n\n\n\nHead coach\n\nDamien Hardwick\n\nAssistant coaches\n\nBlake Caracella (midfield spread)\nAndrew McQualter (midfield stoppage)\nJustin Leppitsch (forwards)\nBen Rutten (defence)\nIvan Maric (ruck)\nXavier Clarke (development)\nRyan Ferguson (development)\nCraig McRae (VFL coach / development)\n\n\n\nLegend:\n\n\n(c) Captain\n(vc) Vice captain\n(B) Category B rookie\n\n\nUpdated: 26 October 2017\nSource(s): Senior list, Rookie list, Coaching staff", "1 Nick Vlastuin \n 2 Dylan Grimes \n 3 Dion Prestia \n 4 Dustin Martin \n 5 Brandon Ellis \n 6 Shaun Grigg \n 8 Jack Riewoldt (vc) \n 9 Trent Cotchin (c) \n10 Shane Edwards \n12 David Astbury \n14 Bachar Houli \n15 Jayden Short \n16 Shaun Hampson \n17 Daniel Rioli \n18 Alex Rance (vc) \n21 Jacob Townsend \n22 Josh Caddy \n23 Kane Lambert", " 1 Nick Vlastuin", " 2 Dylan Grimes", " 3 Dion Prestia", " 4 Dustin Martin", " 5 Brandon Ellis", " 6 Shaun Grigg", " 8 Jack Riewoldt (vc)", " 9 Trent Cotchin (c)", "10 Shane Edwards", "12 David Astbury", "14 Bachar Houli", "15 Jayden Short", "16 Shaun Hampson", "17 Daniel Rioli", "18 Alex Rance (vc)", "21 Jacob Townsend", "22 Josh Caddy", "23 Kane Lambert", "24 Ben Griffiths \n25 Toby Nankervis \n26 Anthony Miles \n27 Sam Lloyd \n29 Shai Bolton \n30 Reece Conca \n31 Oleg Markov \n32 Corey Ellis \n33 Kamdyn McIntosh \n34 Jack Graham \n35 Nathan Broad \n37 Connor Menadue \n39 Nathan Drummond \n40 Dan Butler \n42 Ryan Garthwaite \n46 Jason Castagna \n47 Ivan Soldo", "24 Ben Griffiths", "25 Toby Nankervis", "26 Anthony Miles", "27 Sam Lloyd", "29 Shai Bolton", "30 Reece Conca", "31 Oleg Markov", "32 Corey Ellis", "33 Kamdyn McIntosh", "34 Jack Graham", "35 Nathan Broad", "37 Connor Menadue", "39 Nathan Drummond", "40 Dan Butler", "42 Ryan Garthwaite", "46 Jason Castagna", "47 Ivan Soldo", "36 Callum Moore \n41 Mabior Chol \n44 Tyson Stengle", "36 Callum Moore", "41 Mabior Chol", "44 Tyson Stengle", "Damien Hardwick", "Blake Caracella (midfield spread)\nAndrew McQualter (midfield stoppage)\nJustin Leppitsch (forwards)\nBen Rutten (defence)\nIvan Maric (ruck)\nXavier Clarke (development)\nRyan Ferguson (development)\nCraig McRae (VFL coach / development)", "Blake Caracella (midfield spread)", "Andrew McQualter (midfield stoppage)", "Justin Leppitsch (forwards)", "Ben Rutten (defence)", "Ivan Maric (ruck)", "Xavier Clarke (development)", "Ryan Ferguson (development)", "Craig McRae (VFL coach / development)", "Legend:", "(c) Captain\n(vc) Vice captain\n(B) Category B rookie", "(c) Captain", "(vc) Vice captain", "(B) Category B rookie", "Updated: 26 October 2017\nSource(s): Senior list, Rookie list, Coaching staff", "VFL/AFL Premierships\n11 - 1920, 1921, 1932, 1934, 1943, 1967, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1980, 2017\n\n\nVFL/AFL Runner-up\n12 - 1919, 1924, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1931, 1933, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1972, 1982\n\n\nVFL/AFL Reserve Premierships\n9 - 1929, 1946, 1954, 1955, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1977, 1997\n\n\nVFL/AFL Under 19 Premierships\n11 - 1958, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1980, 1985, 1989\n\n\nMcClelland Trophies\n7 - 1967, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1982\n\n\nChampions of Australia\n3 - 1969, 1973, 1974\n\n\nVFL Night Series Premierships\n1 - 1962\n\n\nVFL/AFL Lightning Premierships\n1 - 1953\n\n\nVFL/AFL \"Wooden Spoons\"\n6 - 1917, 1960, 1987, 1989, 2004, 2007\n\n\nLast updated: 4 October 2017", "VFL/AFL Premierships\n11 - 1920, 1921, 1932, 1934, 1943, 1967, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1980, 2017", "VFL/AFL Runner-up\n12 - 1919, 1924, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1931, 1933, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1972, 1982", "VFL/AFL Reserve Premierships\n9 - 1929, 1946, 1954, 1955, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1977, 1997", "VFL/AFL Under 19 Premierships\n11 - 1958, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1980, 1985, 1989", "McClelland Trophies\n7 - 1967, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1982", "Champions of Australia\n3 - 1969, 1973, 1974", "VFL Night Series Premierships\n1 - 1962", "VFL/AFL Lightning Premierships\n1 - 1953", "VFL/AFL \"Wooden Spoons\"\n6 - 1917, 1960, 1987, 1989, 2004, 2007", "Last updated: 4 October 2017", "Win-Loss record\nPlayed: 2,2317\nWon: 1,126    Lost: 1,083    Drawn: 22   \n\n\nHighest score\n222 (34.18)\nvs. St Kilda, Round 16, 1980 at SCG\n\n\nLowest score\n8 (0.8)\nvs. St Kilda, Round 16, 1961 at Junction Oval\n\n\nGreatest winning margin\n168 points\nvs. North Melbourne, Round 2, 1931 at Punt Road Oval\n\n\nGreatest losing margin\n157 points\nvs. Geelong, Round 6, 2007 at Telstra Dome\n\n\nBiggest match attendance\n119,165\nvs. Carlton, Grand Final, 1969 at MCG\n\n\nBiggest home & away match attendance\n92,436\nvs. Collingwood, Round 4, 1977 at MCG\n\n\nSource:AFL Tables. Last updated: 4 October 2017", "Win-Loss record\nPlayed: 2,2317\nWon: 1,126    Lost: 1,083    Drawn: 22", "Highest score\n222 (34.18)\nvs. St Kilda, Round 16, 1980 at SCG", "Lowest score\n8 (0.8)\nvs. St Kilda, Round 16, 1961 at Junction Oval", "Greatest winning margin\n168 points\nvs. North Melbourne, Round 2, 1931 at Punt Road Oval", "Greatest losing margin\n157 points\nvs. Geelong, Round 6, 2007 at Telstra Dome", "Biggest match attendance\n119,165\nvs. Carlton, Grand Final, 1969 at MCG", "Biggest home & away match attendance\n92,436\nvs. Collingwood, Round 4, 1977 at MCG", "Source:AFL Tables. Last updated: 4 October 2017", "Statistic\nRecord\nPlayer\nSeasons inclusive\n\n\nMost league Best and Fairest awards\n2\nRoy Wright\n1952, 1954\n\n\nMost seasons as league leading goal kicker\n2\nMichael Roach\n1980-81\n\n\nJack Riewoldt\n2010, 2012\n\n\nMost All-Australian selections\n4\nAlex Rance\n2014–2017\n\n\nMost Brownlow Medal votes\n160\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983\n\n\nMost club Best & Fairest awards\n6\nJack Dyer\n1932, 1937–1940, 1946\n\n\nMost seasons as club leading goal-kicker\n13\nMatthew Richardson\n1994, 1996–1999, 2001–2008\n\n\nGames played\n403\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983\n\n\nGames played as captain\n168\nPercy Bentley\n1932–1940\n\n\nGames as coach\n248\nTom Hafey\n1966–1976\n\n\nGoals\n970\nJack Titus\n1926–1943\n\n\nDisposals\n9151\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983\n\n\nKicks\n8293\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983\n\n\nHandballs\n2736\nDale Weightman\n1978–1993\n\n\nMarks\n2270\nMatthew Richardson\n1993–2009\n\n\nTackles\n774\nTrent Cotchin\n2008-current\n\n\nHit Outs\n4304\nMark Lee\n1977–1991\n\n\nClearances\n983\nTrent Cotchin\n2008-current\n\n\nInside 50s\n980\nBrett Deledio\n2005-2016\n\n\nRebound 50s\n1006\nJoel Bowden\n1996-2009\n\n\nOne percenters\n1333\nAlex Rance\n2009-current\n\n\nSource:AFL Tables. Last updated 4 October 2017", "Statistic\nRecord\nPlayer\nSeasons inclusive", "Most league Best and Fairest awards\n2\nRoy Wright\n1952, 1954", "Most seasons as league leading goal kicker\n2\nMichael Roach\n1980-81", "Jack Riewoldt\n2010, 2012", "Most All-Australian selections\n4\nAlex Rance\n2014–2017", "Most Brownlow Medal votes\n160\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983", "Most club Best & Fairest awards\n6\nJack Dyer\n1932, 1937–1940, 1946", "Most seasons as club leading goal-kicker\n13\nMatthew Richardson\n1994, 1996–1999, 2001–2008", "Games played\n403\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983", "Games played as captain\n168\nPercy Bentley\n1932–1940", "Games as coach\n248\nTom Hafey\n1966–1976", "Goals\n970\nJack Titus\n1926–1943", "Disposals\n9151\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983", "Kicks\n8293\nKevin Bartlett\n1965–1983", "Handballs\n2736\nDale Weightman\n1978–1993", "Marks\n2270\nMatthew Richardson\n1993–2009", "Tackles\n774\nTrent Cotchin\n2008-current", "Hit Outs\n4304\nMark Lee\n1977–1991", "Clearances\n983\nTrent Cotchin\n2008-current", "Inside 50s\n980\nBrett Deledio\n2005-2016", "Rebound 50s\n1006\nJoel Bowden\n1996-2009", "One percenters\n1333\nAlex Rance\n2009-current", "Source:AFL Tables. Last updated 4 October 2017", "Statistic\nRecord\nPlayer\nOpponent\nMatch\n\n\nGoals\n14\nDoug Strang\nNorth Melbourne\nRound 2, 1931 at Punt Road Oval\n\n\nDisposals\n46\nRobert Wiley\nCarlton\nRound 8, 1980 at MCG\n\n\nKicks\n38\nKevin Bartlett\nGeelong\nRound 17, 1974 at Waverley Park\n\n\nHandballs\n28\nNathan Foley\nBrisbane\nRound 6, 2011 at MCG\n\n\nMarks\n23\nJoel Bowden\nPort Adelaide\nRound 13, 2008 at Football Park\n\n\nTackles\n14\nShane Tuck\nPort Adelaide\nRound 10, 2010 at Football Park\n\n\n14\nAngus Graham\nPort Adelaide\nRound 10, 2010 at Football Park\n\n\nHit Outs\n56\nToby Nankervis\nMelbourne\nRound 5, 2017 at MCG\n\n\nClearances\n15\nWayne Campbell\nFremantle\nRound 19, 2000 at WACA Ground\n\n\nInside 50s\n14\nKane Johnson\nWestern Bulldogs\nRound 17, 2003 at Docklands Stadium\n\n\nRebound 50s\n16\nJoel Bowden\nAdelaide\nRound 8, 2006 at Docklands Stadium\n\n\nOne percenters\n19\nAlex Rance\nGeelong\nRound 21, 2016 at MCG\n\n\nSource:AFL Tables. Last updated 4 October 2017", "Statistic\nRecord\nPlayer\nOpponent\nMatch", "Goals\n14\nDoug Strang\nNorth Melbourne\nRound 2, 1931 at Punt Road Oval", "Disposals\n46\nRobert Wiley\nCarlton\nRound 8, 1980 at MCG", "Kicks\n38\nKevin Bartlett\nGeelong\nRound 17, 1974 at Waverley Park", "Handballs\n28\nNathan Foley\nBrisbane\nRound 6, 2011 at MCG", "Marks\n23\nJoel Bowden\nPort Adelaide\nRound 13, 2008 at Football Park", "Tackles\n14\nShane Tuck\nPort Adelaide\nRound 10, 2010 at Football Park", "14\nAngus Graham\nPort Adelaide\nRound 10, 2010 at Football Park", "Hit Outs\n56\nToby Nankervis\nMelbourne\nRound 5, 2017 at MCG", "Clearances\n15\nWayne Campbell\nFremantle\nRound 19, 2000 at WACA Ground", "Inside 50s\n14\nKane Johnson\nWestern Bulldogs\nRound 17, 2003 at Docklands Stadium", "Rebound 50s\n16\nJoel Bowden\nAdelaide\nRound 8, 2006 at Docklands Stadium", "One percenters\n19\nAlex Rance\nGeelong\nRound 21, 2016 at MCG", "Source:AFL Tables. Last updated 4 October 2017", "Statistic\nRecord\nPlayer\nSeason\n\n\nGoals\n112\nMichael Roach\n1980\n\n\nDisposals\n744\nDustin Martin\n2017\n\n\nKicks\n634\nKevin Bartlett\n1973\n\n\nHandballs\n320\nCraig Lambert\n1991\n\n\nMarks\n224\nMike Green\n1969\n\n\nTackles\n139\nTrent Cotchin\n2017\n\n\nHit Outs\n711\nMark Lee\n1984\n\n\nClearances\n160\nDustin Martin\n2017\n\n\nInside 50s\n159\nNick Daffy\n1998\n\n\nRebound 50s\n190\nJoel Bowden\n2006\n\n\nOne percenters\n242\nAlex Rance\n2017\n\n\nSource:AFL Tables. Last updated 4 October 2017", "Statistic\nRecord\nPlayer\nSeason", "Goals\n112\nMichael Roach\n1980", "Disposals\n744\nDustin Martin\n2017", "Kicks\n634\nKevin Bartlett\n1973", "Handballs\n320\nCraig Lambert\n1991", "Marks\n224\nMike Green\n1969", "Tackles\n139\nTrent Cotchin\n2017", "Hit Outs\n711\nMark Lee\n1984", "Clearances\n160\nDustin Martin\n2017", "Inside 50s\n159\nNick Daffy\n1998", "Rebound 50s\n190\nJoel Bowden\n2006", "One percenters\n242\nAlex Rance\n2017", "Source:AFL Tables. Last updated 4 October 2017", "VFL/AFL Best & Fairest", "Stan Judkins – 1930\nBill Morris – 1948\nRoy Wright – 1952, 1954\nIan Stewart – 1971\nTrent Cotchin – 2012\nDustin Martin – 2017", "Stan Judkins – 1930", "Bill Morris – 1948", "Roy Wright – 1952, 1954", "Ian Stewart – 1971", "Trent Cotchin – 2012", "Dustin Martin – 2017", "VFL/AFL leading goalkicker", "George Bayliss – 1920\nJack Titus – 1940\nDick Harris – 1943\nMichael Roach – 1980, 1981\nJack Riewoldt – 2010, 2012", "George Bayliss – 1920", "Jack Titus – 1940", "Dick Harris – 1943", "Michael Roach – 1980, 1981", "Jack Riewoldt – 2010, 2012", "Grand Final Best & Fairest\nFirst Awarded 1979", "Kevin Bartlett – 1980\nMaurice Rioli – 1982\nDustin Martin – 2017", "Kevin Bartlett – 1980", "Maurice Rioli – 1982", "Dustin Martin – 2017", "AFL Rising Star\nFirst Awarded 1993", "Brett Deledio – 2005", "Brett Deledio – 2005", "Mark of the Year", "Michael Roach – 1979\nGeoff Raines – 1982\nMichael Mitchell – 1990", "Michael Roach – 1979", "Geoff Raines – 1982", "Michael Mitchell – 1990", "Goal of the Year", "Geoff Raines – 1984\nMichael Mitchell – 1990\nDaniel Rioli – 2017", "Geoff Raines – 1984", "Michael Mitchell – 1990", "Daniel Rioli – 2017", "All-Australian selection\nFirst Awarded 1953", "Des Rowe – 1956\nRoy Wright – 1956\nNeville Crowe – 1966\nRoyce Hart – 1969\nDavid Cloke – 1979\nBruce Monteath – 1979\nMichael Roach – 1979\nJim Jess – 1980\nGeoff Raines – 1980\nMark Lee – 1980, 1983, 1985\nMaurice Rioli – 1983, 1986\nDale Weightman – 1985, 1986, 1988\nTerry Wallace – 1988\nWayne Campbell – 1995, 1999\nMatthew Richardson – 1996, 1999, 2008\nMatthew Knights – 1998\nAndrew Kellaway – 2000\nDarren Gaspar – 2000, 2001\nBrad Ottens – 2001\nJoel Bowden – 2005, 2006\nJack Riewoldt – 2010, 2015\nTrent Cotchin – 2012\nBrett Deledio – 2012, 2015\nAlex Rance – 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 (captain)\nDustin Martin – 2016, 2017", "Des Rowe – 1956", "Roy Wright – 1956", "Neville Crowe – 1966", "Royce Hart – 1969", "David Cloke – 1979", "Bruce Monteath – 1979", "Michael Roach – 1979", "Jim Jess – 1980", "Geoff Raines – 1980", "Mark Lee – 1980, 1983, 1985", "Maurice Rioli – 1983, 1986", "Dale Weightman – 1985, 1986, 1988", "Terry Wallace – 1988", "Wayne Campbell – 1995, 1999", "Matthew Richardson – 1996, 1999, 2008", "Matthew Knights – 1998", "Andrew Kellaway – 2000", "Darren Gaspar – 2000, 2001", "Brad Ottens – 2001", "Joel Bowden – 2005, 2006", "Jack Riewoldt – 2010, 2015", "Trent Cotchin – 2012", "Brett Deledio – 2012, 2015", "Alex Rance – 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 (captain)", "Dustin Martin – 2016, 2017", "AFL Coaches Association Champion Player of the Year", "Trent Cotchin – 2012\nDustin Martin – 2017", "Trent Cotchin – 2012", "Dustin Martin – 2017", "AFL Coaches Association Coach of the Year", "Damien Hardwick – 2017", "Damien Hardwick – 2017", "AFL Players Association Most Valuable Player", "Dustin Martin – 2017", "Dustin Martin – 2017", "International Rules Series representatives\nCommenced 1998", "Matthew Richardson – 1996, 1999, 2008\nWayne Campbell – 1998, 1999, 2000\nAndrew Kellaway – 2000, 2002\nDarren Gaspar – 2001\nBrad Ottens – 2001\nJoel Bowden – 2001, 2004\nNathan Brown – 2003, 2004\nBrett Deledio – 2005\nChris Newman – 2005\nAndrew Raines – 2006\nJack Riewoldt – 2010\nJake King – 2011\nRobin Nahas – 2011", "Matthew Richardson – 1996, 1999, 2008", "Wayne Campbell – 1998, 1999, 2000", "Andrew Kellaway – 2000, 2002", "Darren Gaspar – 2001", "Brad Ottens – 2001", "Joel Bowden – 2001, 2004", "Nathan Brown – 2003, 2004", "Brett Deledio – 2005", "Chris Newman – 2005", "Andrew Raines – 2006", "Jack Riewoldt – 2010", "Jake King – 2011", "Robin Nahas – 2011", "Club Best & Fairest", "See Jack Dyer Medal", "See Jack Dyer Medal", "Club leading goalkicker", "See Michael Roach Medal", "See Michael Roach Medal", "Richmond has had a reserves team participate in various competitions since the early 20th century. The reserves competition for the then-Victorian Football League (now trading as the Australian Football League) began in 1919 and the Richmond reserves recorded its first premiership in 1929. In the following 68 years, Richmond went on to win a further eight premierships in reserve-grade football.[38] The Richmond reserves participated in the VFL/AFL reserves, then the Victorian State Football League up to the 1999 season, then in the new Victorian Football League competition in 2000.", "In 2001, the Richmond reserves team was dissolved and the club entered a reserves affiliation with the Coburg Football Club in the VFL, using the latter as a feeder team. This arrangement lasted from 2001 until 2013.[39]", "Richmond ended the affiliation at the end of 2013, seeking to re-establish a more direct developmental structure by operating a stand-alone reserves team.[40] The reformed Richmond (VFL) reserves team has played in the VFL since 2014, playing its home games at the Punt Road Oval, with many staged as curtain raisers to the club's senior home and away games at the nearby Melbourne Cricket Ground.[41] The team is made up of a combination of senior listed AFL players, rookie listed players and VFL exclusive contracted players. The VFL exclusive player list is below.", "Richmond Football Club (reserves)\n\n\nview\ntalk\nedit\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPlaying list\n\nCoaching staff\n\n\n\n\n51 Sam Darley (c) \n52 Anthony Scott \n53 Hugh Beasley \n54 Jacob Ballard \n55 Ryan Bathie \n57 Brandon Wood \n58 Jake Aarts \n59 Ash Morris \n60 Tom Langford \n61 James Fletcher \n62 Jayden Cass \n63 Jack Holden \n\n\n\n\n\n64 Thomas Silvestro \n67 Brenton Credlin \n69 Shaun Mannagh \n74 Tyson Kruse \n75 Lachlan McKenzie \n76 Alex Harnett \n78 Daniel Coffield \n79 Billy Coates \n80 Antony Forato \n81 Danko Bzenic \n86 Zak McCubbin \n88 Max O'Sullivan \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHead coach\n\nCraig McRae\n\nAssistant coaches\n\nTom Hunter (forwards)\nXavier Clarke (midfield)\nRyan Ferguson (backline)\nBen Waite (midfield stoppage)\nMarc Sophoulis (development)\n\n\n\nLegend:\n\n\n(c) Captain\n(vc) Vice captain\n\n\nUpdated: 15 March 2017\nSource(s): Playing list, Coaching staff", "Richmond Football Club (reserves)\n\n\nview\ntalk\nedit", "view\ntalk\nedit", "Playing list\n\nCoaching staff", "51 Sam Darley (c) \n52 Anthony Scott \n53 Hugh Beasley \n54 Jacob Ballard \n55 Ryan Bathie \n57 Brandon Wood \n58 Jake Aarts \n59 Ash Morris \n60 Tom Langford \n61 James Fletcher \n62 Jayden Cass \n63 Jack Holden \n\n\n\n\n\n64 Thomas Silvestro \n67 Brenton Credlin \n69 Shaun Mannagh \n74 Tyson Kruse \n75 Lachlan McKenzie \n76 Alex Harnett \n78 Daniel Coffield \n79 Billy Coates \n80 Antony Forato \n81 Danko Bzenic \n86 Zak McCubbin \n88 Max O'Sullivan \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHead coach\n\nCraig McRae\n\nAssistant coaches\n\nTom Hunter (forwards)\nXavier Clarke (midfield)\nRyan Ferguson (backline)\nBen Waite (midfield stoppage)\nMarc Sophoulis (development)\n\n\n\nLegend:\n\n\n(c) Captain\n(vc) Vice captain\n\n\nUpdated: 15 March 2017\nSource(s): Playing list, Coaching staff", "51 Sam Darley (c) \n52 Anthony Scott \n53 Hugh Beasley \n54 Jacob Ballard \n55 Ryan Bathie \n57 Brandon Wood \n58 Jake Aarts \n59 Ash Morris \n60 Tom Langford \n61 James Fletcher \n62 Jayden Cass \n63 Jack Holden", "51 Sam Darley (c)", "52 Anthony Scott", "53 Hugh Beasley", "54 Jacob Ballard", "55 Ryan Bathie", "57 Brandon Wood", "58 Jake Aarts", "59 Ash Morris", "60 Tom Langford", "61 James Fletcher", "62 Jayden Cass", "63 Jack Holden", "64 Thomas Silvestro \n67 Brenton Credlin \n69 Shaun Mannagh \n74 Tyson Kruse \n75 Lachlan McKenzie \n76 Alex Harnett \n78 Daniel Coffield \n79 Billy Coates \n80 Antony Forato \n81 Danko Bzenic \n86 Zak McCubbin \n88 Max O'Sullivan", "64 Thomas Silvestro", "67 Brenton Credlin", "69 Shaun Mannagh", "74 Tyson Kruse", "75 Lachlan McKenzie", "76 Alex Harnett", "78 Daniel Coffield", "79 Billy Coates", "80 Antony Forato", "81 Danko Bzenic", "86 Zak McCubbin", "88 Max O'Sullivan", "Craig McRae", "Tom Hunter (forwards)\nXavier Clarke (midfield)\nRyan Ferguson (backline)\nBen Waite (midfield stoppage)\nMarc Sophoulis (development)", "Tom Hunter (forwards)", "Xavier Clarke (midfield)", "Ryan Ferguson (backline)", "Ben Waite (midfield stoppage)", "Marc Sophoulis (development)", "Legend:", "(c) Captain\n(vc) Vice captain", "(c) Captain", "(vc) Vice captain", "Updated: 15 March 2017\nSource(s): Playing list, Coaching staff", "Reserves Premierships (9)[42]\n\n\nYear\nCompetition\nOpponent\nScore\nVenue\n\n\n1929\nVFL Reserves\nGeelong\n12.8 (80) - 7.15 (57)\nMCG\n\n\n1946\nVFL Reserves\nFitzroy\n7.15 (57) - 7.14 (56)\nMCG\n\n\n1954\nVFL Reserves\nMelbourne\n10.20 (80) - 4.9 (33)\nMCG\n\n\n1955\nVFL Reserves\nFootscray\n13.18 (96) - 9.12 (66)\nMCG\n\n\n1966\nVFL Reserves\nCollingwood\n14.11 (95) - 13.12 (90)\nMCG\n\n\n1971\nVFL Reserves\nEssendon\n14.14 (98) - 8.18 (66)\nMCG\n\n\n1973\nVFL Reserves\nGeelong\n17.18 (120) - 8.12 (60)\nMCG\n\n\n1977\nVFL Reserves\nFootscray\n19.18 (132) - 10.15 (75)\nMCG\n\n\n1997\nAFL Reserves (VSFL)\nHawthorn\n17.12 (114) - 10.10 (70)\nMCG", "Reserves Premierships (9)[42]", "Year\nCompetition\nOpponent\nScore\nVenue", "1929\nVFL Reserves\nGeelong\n12.8 (80) - 7.15 (57)\nMCG", "1946\nVFL Reserves\nFitzroy\n7.15 (57) - 7.14 (56)\nMCG", "1954\nVFL Reserves\nMelbourne\n10.20 (80) - 4.9 (33)\nMCG", "1955\nVFL Reserves\nFootscray\n13.18 (96) - 9.12 (66)\nMCG", "1966\nVFL Reserves\nCollingwood\n14.11 (95) - 13.12 (90)\nMCG", "1971\nVFL Reserves\nEssendon\n14.14 (98) - 8.18 (66)\nMCG", "1973\nVFL Reserves\nGeelong\n17.18 (120) - 8.12 (60)\nMCG", "1977\nVFL Reserves\nFootscray\n19.18 (132) - 10.15 (75)\nMCG", "1997\nAFL Reserves (VSFL)\nHawthorn\n17.12 (114) - 10.10 (70)\nMCG", "The Richmond Football Club has licenses for two women's teams: one team in the AFL Women's competition, which will enter the league in 2020; and one team in the VFL Women's competition, which will be fielded for the first time in the 2018 VFLW season. The program, including development pathways, is presently overseen by female football operations manager, Kate Sheahan.[43]", "Richmond has a thin history with women's football, with the club connected to just two women's matches in the 20th century. The first occurred in 1923, with a team dubbed the \"Tigresses\" playing off against the club's junior men's team (Cubs) as a fundraiser for a VFL team's interstate trip. As was the case with women versus men charity matches in that era, the men's team competed in the match in full fancy dress attire. In what was a non-serious affair the women's side (9.14 (68)) defeated the scoreless cubs side.[44] In August 1933 however, an all women's match was held between teams representing the suburbs of Richmond and Carlton in a charity match. While the Carlton team was associated with the club itself, Richmond did not pair with the side that played under its moniker. The match, played at Carlton's home Princes Park drew an estimated crowd of 10,000 and raised funds as part of a VFL bye-week carnival for the Royal Melbourne Hospital.[45]", "In 2016, Richmond was among 13 AFL clubs to bid for licenses to compete in the soon to be formed AFL Women's competition. The club was one of five to miss out, instead being awarded provisional licenses guaranteeing access in later expansions.[46] The following year they would again bid, this time winning the right to entry into the competition's fourth season, to be held in 2020.[47]", "In October 2017, Richmond was granted a license to field a team in the 2018 VFL Women's season.[48] They are to be one of 13 clubs in the competition, including all 10 Victorian-based AFL clubs. The league operates in the winter season (separately to the AFLW compeition), with players not contractually bound to play for the same clubs in both leagues.", "Former men's VFL assistant coach Tom Hunter was named the team's head coach in November 2017. He is additionally responsible for overseeing the womens arm of the club's Next Generation Academy.[49]", "Golfer Greg Norman and cricketers Dennis Lillee and Rod Marsh are famous Richmond supporters, as is actor Russell Crowe. The club also won a famous American supporter in Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton after Newton traveled to Melbourne to visit the team as part of a Gatorade commercial.[50] Comedian Mick Molloy, who also co-hosts The Front Bar, is another famous Richmond supporter." ]
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[ 77 ]
who sang what in the world's come over you
Jack Scott (singer)
[ "Jack Scott\n\n\nBirth name\nGiovanni Domenico Scafone, Jr.\n\n\nBorn\n(1936-01-24) January 24, 1936 (age 82)\nWindsor, Ontario, Canada\n\n\nGenres\nRock and roll\nRockabilly\n\n\nOccupation(s)\nSinger\n\n\nInstruments\nVocals\n\n\nYears active\n1957–present\n\n\nLabels\nABC-Paramount, Carlton, London, Top Rank, Capitol, RCA, Jubilee, Groove, Harvest\n\n\nWebsite\njackscottmusic.com", "Jack Scott", "Birth name\nGiovanni Domenico Scafone, Jr.", "Born\n(1936-01-24) January 24, 1936 (age 82)\nWindsor, Ontario, Canada", "Genres\nRock and roll\nRockabilly", "Occupation(s)\nSinger", "Instruments\nVocals", "Years active\n1957–present", "Labels\nABC-Paramount, Carlton, London, Top Rank, Capitol, RCA, Jubilee, Groove, Harvest", "Website\njackscottmusic.com", "Jack Scott (born Giovanni Domenico Scafone, Jr., January 24, 1936, Windsor, Ontario, Canada[1]) is a Canadian American singer and songwriter. He was the first white rock and roll star to come out of Detroit, Michigan. He was inducted into Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2011 and has been called \"undeniably the greatest Canadian rock and roll singer of all time.\"[2]", "Scott spent his early childhood in Windsor, Ontario (Canada), across the river from Detroit, Michigan (United States).[1] When he was 10, Scott's family moved to Hazel Park, a Detroit suburb. He grew up listening to hillbilly music and was taught to play the guitar by his Mother Laura. [1] As a teenager, he pursued a singing career and recorded as 'Jack Scott.' At the age of 18, he formed the Southern Drifters.[1] After leading the band for three years, he signed to ABC-Paramount Records as a solo artist in 1957.[1]", "After recording two good-selling local hits for ABC-Paramount in 1957, he switched to the Carlton record label and had a double-sided national hit in 1958 with \"Leroy\" (#11) / \"My True Love\" (#3).[1] The record sold over one million copies, earning Scott his first gold disc.[3] Later in 1958, \"With Your Love\" (#28) reached the Top 40. In all, six of 12 songs on his first album became hit singles. On most of these tracks, he was backed up by the vocal group, the Chantones.[4]", "He served in the United States Army during most of 1959, just after \"Goodbye Baby\" (#8) made the Top Ten. 1959 also saw him chart with \"The Way I Walk\" (#35). Most of his Carlton master tapes were believed lost or destroyed until Rollercoaster Records in England released a vinyl EP, \"Jack Scott Rocks\", and CD, \"The Way I Walk\", which were for the most part mastered from original tapes rather than the disc dubs used for previous reissues.[5]", "At the beginning of 1960, Scott again changed record labels, this time to Top Rank Records.[1] He then recorded four Billboard Hot 100 hits – \"What in the World's Come Over You\" (#5), \"Burning Bridges\" (#3) b/w \"Oh Little One\" (#34), and \"It Only Happened Yesterday\" (#38).[1] \"What in the World's Come Over You\" was Scott's second gold disc winner.[6] Scott continued to record and perform during the 1960s and 1970s.[1] His song \"You're Just Gettin' Better\" reached the country charts in 1974.[1] In May 1977, Scott recorded a Peel session for BBC Radio 1 disc jockey, John Peel.", "Scott had more US singles (19), in a shorter period of time (41 months), than any other recording artist – with the exception of The Beatles, Elvis Presley, Fats Domino and Connie Francis.[7] Scott wrote all of his own hits, except one: \"Burning Bridges.\"[4]", "His legacy ranks him with the top legends of rock and roll. It has been said that \"with the exception of Roy Orbison and Elvis Presley, no white rock and roller of the time ever developed a finer voice with a better range than Jack Scott, or cut a more convincing body of work in Rockabilly, Rock and Roll, Country-Soul, Gospel or Blues\".[4][8]", "In 2011 he was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame. More recently Scott was nominated for the Hit Parade Hall of Fame. He is still actively singing and touring today and resides in a suburb of Detroit.", "Year\nAlbum\n\n\n1959\nJack Scott (Carlton 12–107)\n\n\n1960\nI Remember Hank Williams (Top Rank RM319)\n\n\n1960\nWhat in the World's Come Over You (Top Rank RM326)\n\n\n1960\nWhat Am I Living For (Carlton 12–122)\n\n\n1960\nThe Spirit Moves Me (Top Rank RM348)\n\n\n1964\nBurning Bridges (Capitol T2035)\n\n\n2015\nWay To Survive (Bluelight BLR 33176)", "Year\nAlbum", "1959\nJack Scott (Carlton 12–107)", "1960\nI Remember Hank Williams (Top Rank RM319)", "1960\nWhat in the World's Come Over You (Top Rank RM326)", "1960\nWhat Am I Living For (Carlton 12–122)", "1960\nThe Spirit Moves Me (Top Rank RM348)", "1964\nBurning Bridges (Capitol T2035)", "2015\nWay To Survive (Bluelight BLR 33176)", "Year\nSingle (A-side, B-side)\nBoth sides from same album except where indicated\nChart Positions\nAlbum\n\n\nUS\nUS R&B\nUS Country\nCAN Country\nUK\n\n\n1957\n\"Baby, She's Gone\"\nb/w \"You Can Bet Your Bottom Dollar\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For\n\n\n\"Two Timin' Woman\"\nb/w \"I Need Your Love\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1958\n\"My True Love\" /\n3\n5\n—\n—\n9\nJack Scott\n\n\n\"Leroy\"\n11\n5\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"With Your Love\" /\n28\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Geraldine\"\n96\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Goodbye Baby\" /\n8\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Save My Soul\"\n73\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1959\n\"I Never Felt Like This\"\nb/w \"Bella\"\n78\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For\n\n\n\"The Way I Walk\"\nb/w \"Midgie\"\n35\n—\n—\n—\n30\nJack Scott\n\n\n\"There Comes A Time\"\nb/w \"Baby Marie\"\n71\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For\n\n\n1960\n\"What In The World's Come Over You\"\nb/w \"Baby, Baby\"\n5\n7\n—\n—\n11\nWhat In The World's Come Over You\n\n\n\"Burning Bridges\" /\n3\n5\n—\n—\n32\n\n\n\"Oh, Little One\"\n34\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"What Am I Living For\"\nb/w \"Indiana Waltz\" (from Jack Scott)\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For\n\n\n\"It Only Happened Yesterday\" /\n38\n—\n—\n—\n—\nBurning Bridges\n\n\n\"Cool Water\"\n85\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"No One Will Ever Know\"\nb/w \"Go Wild Little Sadie\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nNon-album tracks\n\n\n\"Patsy\"\nb/w \"Old Time Religion\" (from The Spirit Moves Me)\n65\n—\n—\n—\n—\nBurning Bridges\n\n\n1961\n\"Is There Something On Your Mind\"\nb/w \"I Found A Woman\" (Non-album track)\n89\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"A Little Feeling (Called Love)\"\nb/w \"Now That I\" (Non-album track)\n91\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"My Dream Come True\"\nb/w \"Strange Desire\" (Non-album track)\n83\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Steps One And Two\"\nb/w \"One Of These Days\" (Non-album track)\n86\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"If Only\"\nb/w \"Green Green Valley\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nNon-album tracks\n\n\n1962\n\"Cry Cry Cry\"\nb/w \"Grizzily Bear\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"The Part Where I Cry\"\nb/w \"You Only See What You Wanna See\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Sad Story\"\nb/w \"I Can't Hold Your Letters (In My Arms)\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1963\n\"Laugh and The World Laughs With You\"\nb/w \"Strangers\" (Non-album track)\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nBurning Bridges\n\n\n\"All I See Is Blue\"\nb/w \"Meo Myo\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"There's Trouble Brewin'\"\nb/w \"Jingle Bells Slide\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nNon-album tracks\n\n\n1964\n\"I Knew You First\"\nb/w \"Blue Skies (Moving In On Me)\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"What A Wonderful Night Out\"\nb/w \"Wiggle On Out\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Thou Shalt Not Steal\"\nb/w \"I Prayed For An Angel\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Tall Tales\"\nb/w \"Flakey John\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1965\n\"I Don't Believe In Tea Leaves\"\nb/w \"Separation's Now Granted\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"Don't Hush The Laughter\"\nb/w \"Let's Learn To Live and Love Again\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n\"I Hope I Think I Wish\"\nb/w \"Looking For Linda\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1966\n\"Before The Bird Flies\"\nb/w \"Insane\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1967\n\"My Special Angel\"\nb/w \"I Keep Changing My Mind\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1970\n\"Billy Jack\"\nb/w \"Mary Marry Me\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1973\n\"May You Never Be Alone\"\nb/w \"Face To The Wall\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\n\n\n1974\n\"You're Just Gettin' Better\"\nb/w \"As You Take A Walk Through My Mind\"\n—\n—\n92\n—\n—\n\n\n1992\n\"Burning Bridges\" (with Carroll Baker)\n—\n—\n—\n55\n—", "Year\nSingle (A-side, B-side)\nBoth sides from same album except where indicated\nChart Positions\nAlbum", "US\nUS R&B\nUS Country\nCAN Country\nUK", "1957\n\"Baby, She's Gone\"\nb/w \"You Can Bet Your Bottom Dollar\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For", "\"Two Timin' Woman\"\nb/w \"I Need Your Love\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1958\n\"My True Love\" /\n3\n5\n—\n—\n9\nJack Scott", "\"Leroy\"\n11\n5\n—\n—\n—", "\"With Your Love\" /\n28\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Geraldine\"\n96\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Goodbye Baby\" /\n8\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Save My Soul\"\n73\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1959\n\"I Never Felt Like This\"\nb/w \"Bella\"\n78\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For", "\"The Way I Walk\"\nb/w \"Midgie\"\n35\n—\n—\n—\n30\nJack Scott", "\"There Comes A Time\"\nb/w \"Baby Marie\"\n71\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For", "1960\n\"What In The World's Come Over You\"\nb/w \"Baby, Baby\"\n5\n7\n—\n—\n11\nWhat In The World's Come Over You", "\"Burning Bridges\" /\n3\n5\n—\n—\n32", "\"Oh, Little One\"\n34\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"What Am I Living For\"\nb/w \"Indiana Waltz\" (from Jack Scott)\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nWhat Am I Living For", "\"It Only Happened Yesterday\" /\n38\n—\n—\n—\n—\nBurning Bridges", "\"Cool Water\"\n85\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"No One Will Ever Know\"\nb/w \"Go Wild Little Sadie\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nNon-album tracks", "\"Patsy\"\nb/w \"Old Time Religion\" (from The Spirit Moves Me)\n65\n—\n—\n—\n—\nBurning Bridges", "1961\n\"Is There Something On Your Mind\"\nb/w \"I Found A Woman\" (Non-album track)\n89\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"A Little Feeling (Called Love)\"\nb/w \"Now That I\" (Non-album track)\n91\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"My Dream Come True\"\nb/w \"Strange Desire\" (Non-album track)\n83\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Steps One And Two\"\nb/w \"One Of These Days\" (Non-album track)\n86\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"If Only\"\nb/w \"Green Green Valley\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nNon-album tracks", "1962\n\"Cry Cry Cry\"\nb/w \"Grizzily Bear\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"The Part Where I Cry\"\nb/w \"You Only See What You Wanna See\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Sad Story\"\nb/w \"I Can't Hold Your Letters (In My Arms)\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1963\n\"Laugh and The World Laughs With You\"\nb/w \"Strangers\" (Non-album track)\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nBurning Bridges", "\"All I See Is Blue\"\nb/w \"Meo Myo\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"There's Trouble Brewin'\"\nb/w \"Jingle Bells Slide\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—\nNon-album tracks", "1964\n\"I Knew You First\"\nb/w \"Blue Skies (Moving In On Me)\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"What A Wonderful Night Out\"\nb/w \"Wiggle On Out\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Thou Shalt Not Steal\"\nb/w \"I Prayed For An Angel\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Tall Tales\"\nb/w \"Flakey John\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1965\n\"I Don't Believe In Tea Leaves\"\nb/w \"Separation's Now Granted\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"Don't Hush The Laughter\"\nb/w \"Let's Learn To Live and Love Again\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "\"I Hope I Think I Wish\"\nb/w \"Looking For Linda\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1966\n\"Before The Bird Flies\"\nb/w \"Insane\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1967\n\"My Special Angel\"\nb/w \"I Keep Changing My Mind\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1970\n\"Billy Jack\"\nb/w \"Mary Marry Me\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1973\n\"May You Never Be Alone\"\nb/w \"Face To The Wall\"\n—\n—\n—\n—\n—", "1974\n\"You're Just Gettin' Better\"\nb/w \"As You Take A Walk Through My Mind\"\n—\n—\n92\n—\n—", "1992\n\"Burning Bridges\" (with Carroll Baker)\n—\n—\n—\n55\n—" ]
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[ 14 ]
who produces the most wool in the world
Wool
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[ 58 ]
where does alaska the last frontier take place
Alaska: The Last Frontier
["Alaska: The Last Frontier\nTitle card (Season 2 onwards)Genre\nReality showSurvival skillsStarring(...TRUNCATED)
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[ 23 ]
what was a result of the muslim conquests
Early Muslim conquests
["Early Muslim conquests\n\n\n\nExpansion from 622–750, with modern borders overlaid\n\n\n\n\n\nDa(...TRUNCATED)
["table","table","table","table","table","table","table","table","text","table","table","list","list(...TRUNCATED)
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a day to remember all i want cameos
All I Want (A Day to Remember song)
["\"All I Want\"\n\n\n\nIllustration by Mike C. Hardcore\n\n\n\nSingle by A Day to Remember\n\n\nfro(...TRUNCATED)
["table","table","table","table","table","table","table","table","table","table","table","table","ta(...TRUNCATED)
[ 35 ]
what type of food do they eat in finland
Finnish cuisine
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how to be a right back in soccer
Defender (association football)
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["text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","text","(...TRUNCATED)
[ 27 ]
who has represented india in most number of t20 internationals
List of India Twenty20 International cricketers
["A Twenty20 International (T20I) is a form of cricket match between two representative teams, each (...TRUNCATED)
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