AN INSPIRING performance from Tom Hawkins has rescued Geelong's season from the brink of disaster with the Cats defeating Richmond by nine points at the MCG on Saturday afternoon.
The Tigers entered the match ninth on the ladder with two wins, with the Cats in the unfamiliar position of 15th with one, coming off a surprise loss to North Melbourne in Geelong.
Five talking points: Richmond v Geelong
But it was Cats, still undermanned without Andrew Mackie, Mathew Stokes and Jimmy Bartel, that made the more emphatic statement with the 12.13 (85) to 11.10 (76) win.
"I'm pretty relieved. It would have been really disappointing not to get the result because I thought we played pretty well in big parts of the game," Geelong coach Chris Scott said.
"But the game was, in a way, reflective of the last month of footy we've played. [Some] very good, and some lapses that Geelong supporters aren't used to seeing. But we're working really hard on that.
"There's no question young players take a bit of time to learn but we're expediting that as much as we possibly can. And if you get the win, it reinforces what you're trying to do."
It came at a cost. Veteran James Kelly was taken to hospital in the third quarter for scans on a suspected ruptured testicle..
Hawkins was terrific, and Joel Selwood the difference in a telling final term.
With Mitch Clark out with a foot injury, the full-forward marked strongly and made life hell for David Astbury in the first quarter with his contested marking.
While he finished with three goals and five marks, he was involved in a range of other scoring opportunities and often brought the ball to ground to allow his teammates to capitalise.
He wasn't on his own, with Josh Walker also playing a strong game to finish with two goals and nine marks.
Watch: Chris Scott post-match
In the end, it was the Cats' ability to make the most of their forward opportunities that was the difference, with the Tigers wasting their chances when they enjoyed purple patches in the midfield.
"Our scoreboard pressure in I think every game we've lost, we've had nearly more scoring shots in the first quarter," Richmond coach Damien Hardwick said.
"Zero [goals] five [behinds], unfortunately you kick that and you don't actually put the opposition on the back foot at any stage.
"It's something we've been working on but we've just got to make sure we continue to get better in that area because you never get your nose in front."
Trent Cotchin tried desperately to get his team over the line with 11 touches in the third quarter that kept them within 19 points at three-quarter time.
But Selwood's final quarter, where he had a big hand in three goals at the start of the quarter that came directly from centre clearances, proved more significant.
After the Cats led by as much as 28 points and were in a position to run away with it after half-time, it was a feat for the Tigers to still be in the contest.
Selwood finds a way to to hurt the Tigers
And to their credit, they hung in there. Four straight goals in the final term, the last of which came from Astbury following his shift into attack after half-time, cut a 31-point deficit to 10 points.
But with just over a minute remaining, everything had to go right for the Tigers to pinch the win.
Watch: Tom Hawkins terrorises the Tigers
They continued to press forward and Cotchin blasted the ball off the ground from a contest deep in attack with 22 seconds left, but it went right of the goals.
Mitch Duncan was the Cats' best with 29 disposals and two goals while Harry Taylor took 13 marks as he alternated with Corey Enright as the spare man in defence.
Duncan from downtown! #AFLTigersCats http://t.co/tJsE7WfzHG
— AFL (@AFL) May 2, 2015
Selwood was well held by Shaun Grigg in the first half but found more of the ball when Anthony Miles took over, with the Tigers abandoning the original tag to get the former Blue more into the game.
The Cats defenders were also influential. Taylor, Enright and Jared Rivers were important, even after Astbury's move made the former accountable and reduced his output.
A week after starting the game in the green vest, Steve Johnson made some strange decisions and was caught a few times with the ball.
He gave the Cats drive into attack, despite his unpredictable mood, and kicked a goal in the telling final term.
Ty Vickery tried in his first game for the season but was also inaccurate in attack, which was a trend that hurt the Tigers when they peppered five behinds and failed to kick a goal in the first term.
Watch: Damien Hardwick post-match
In the second, it was all Richmond early. Vickery took a couple of marks but managed just one goal, but as a team they tackled hard and dominated at the centre clearances.
Selwood was pinned by Grigg and Dawson Simpson struggled around the ground against the more-mobile Ivan Maric.
Alex Rance moved to Hawkins, and the Tigers double-teamed him when the Cats went inside 50, and Astbury took on Josh Walker.
But all the Tigers' hard work resulted in just two goals in 14 minutes, and the Cats were able to absorb the flurry of forward entries and hold a lead of two points.
Suddenly, the switch flicked. A goal to Mitch Duncan after he danced around Nick Vlastuin kicked off a run of four, and the Cats took the handy 28-point lead into half-time that wasn't headed.
Dustin Martin tries to escape the clutches of Geelong forward Tom Hawkins. Picture: AFL Media.
RICHMOND 0.5 2.6 6.8 11.10 (76)
GEELONG 2.2 7.4 9.9 12.13 (85)
GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Astbury, Cotchin, Edwards, C.Ellis, Grigg, Houli, Miles, Vickery
Geelong: Hawkins 3, Duncan 2, Walker 2, Blicavs, Johnson, Kersten, Lang, Motlop
BEST
Richmond: Cotchin, Houli, Grigg, Rance, Riewoldt, Maric
Geelong: Duncan, Rivers, Hawkins, Taylor, Walker, Motlop
INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
Geelong: James Kelly (suspected ruptured testicle)
SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Sam Lloyd replaced Ben Lennon in the third quarter
Geelong: George Horlin-Smith replaced James Kelly in the third quarter
Reports: Nil
Umpires: Foot, Meredith, Mollison
Official crowd: 45,228 at the MCG