St Kilda coach Grant Thomas said this week that he wanted his team to make a "statement" - an open-ended statement about where his club and its personnel are perched within the AFL order.

The Saints, certainly made a statement, controlling, relinquishing and then fending off a gallant Richmond by 11 points in an entertaining game at Telstra Dome on Friday night.

St Kilda won the second-round match 13.10 (88) to Richmond's 11.11 (77).

Maybe, just maybe it was Terry Wallace and his Tigers troop who made the grander, more virtuous statement on Friday night.

After experiencing the most humiliating and embarrassing week of his 171-game coaching career, he managed to rally his young team to get within two kicks of the highly-fancied Saints.

Last week, Richmond was on the tail-end of a 115-point defeat - its greatest-ever loss in an opening round.

And records indicate a victory the following week after such a loss is well against the odds - a mere 48 per cent.

They stood up, and in the end the Tigers were shy on class and polish, and movement of the ball, particularly from defensive kick-outs and delivery into forward 50m.

Wallace unearthed a talent in defender Will Thursfield, who played a close-checking game on champion Nick Riewoldt.

However, it was his serious knee injury and departure from the ground midway through the final quarter which unshackled Riewoldt who put the game beyond the Tigers' grasp.

Riewoldt, maligned for his kicking and sometimes his temperament, dominated the match when it was up for grabs - and that he did, again, again and again.

He presented like a champion, took five marks and scored the first goal of the quarter - and the game breaker.

He finished with three goals, 13 kicks, four handballs and eight marks for the match.

For the sick and sorry Tigers, nursing injuries to Thursfield, Jay Schulz, Brent Hartigan and Chris Newman, they must soldier on for their tough interstate assignments against Brisbane and West Coast.

For the Saints, there is plenty to cheer and celebrate. Fraser Gehrig was his imposing self out of the goal square with three goals, and the return to form and fitness of Aaron Hamill.

While conceding his team still had plenty of improvements to make, St Kilda coach Grant Thomas was pleased to post his first win of the season.

"It wasn't a classic game of footy. But in the early part of the year that happens. We're not on top of our game yet and I don't think many sides are," Thomas said.

"So you've just got to hang tough and win the early ones and try and build momentum, try and build confidence and everything else and I think sides start to build more fitness after games three, four or five."

"You've just got to make sure you win those early ones when you're a bit vulnerable."

Terry Wallace said the Tigers had been determined to meet their expectations.

"We came into the game wanting to win, and I know everyone around the periphery and Richmond supporters were saying we really need to show that we were competitive," Wallace said.

"But, I think that's a given every week from our players, and every supporter from every team expects that every week."

"We certainly thought the game was there to be won at three-quarter time and it was just disappointing we couldn't get the job done."

The Tigers started in similar vein as last week, scoring the first goal of the match, this time through Greg Tivendale after 83 seconds.

Saints gained some early momentum through Gehrig, when the big bloke booted two goals within 90 seconds.

Playing in his 100th game for the Saints, Gehrig kicked his side's first when he was awarded a questionable free kick against opponent Darren Gaspar.

The second was on the end of a passage of play which involved four possessions and no Richmond player handling the ball.

Taking full advantage of the AFL's new rules, Max Hudghton quickly played-on from a kick-out, and delivered the ball to the outer wing where Aaron Fiora took three bounces and centred the ball.

Gehrig then used his big, bullocking frame to dribble through a goal.

Nick Dal Santo extended the lead to two goals when he booted truly from 50m out.

However, the Tigers hung in and went into the first break just five points down.

Their second goal came via a clever interchange switch midway through the quarter when Thursfield left the field and replaced by Daniel Jackson.

Jackson sprinted more than 60m to his team's forward line, marked the ball and kicked his first career goal.

His attack on the footy lifted his teammates, who at times looked a little laboured against the class of St Kilda.

Goals from Riewoldt and Matthew Richardson rounded out the quarter.

The Tigers took the lead briefly in the opening minute of the second term when Patrick Bowden delicately threaded a goal on the snuggest of angles.

Caught on the boundary line, Brown slipped him a handball, and pushed/shepherded his opponent to allow Bowden enough space and time to attempt a curling banana kick for goal.

The lead was short-lived, with the Saints pushing numbers around the ball and scoring two goals in quick succession through the busy Fiora and Clarke.

Riewoldt and youngster Thursfield were locked in a lively battle out of the goal square.

Lining up in his seventh game, the lean defender stuck closely to the flamboyant Saint, forcing him to lead out of the 50m arc and spoiling him in marking contests.

Riewoldt, however, showed his class, allowing space for his forwards and hurting Richmond's defence when it mattered.

His goal just seconds before the half-time siren, drove a stake through the heart of the Tigers. It attracted boos and jeers from the supportive and forgiving Tigers supporters.

Bouyant, but not brilliant, Richmond had battled hard to stay in the match against the smoother-skilled and polished Saints.

An illegal spoil from Thursfield allowed Riewoldt to line up from 40m out and score his second, and his team's ninth for the match.

Hamill exerted some of the intimidating presence we are accustomed when his body is fit and injury-free.

He gave his opponent Andrew Kellaway the slip on occasions and was brutal on any loose ball.

His tackle on Andrew Raines on the offensive side of the goal square was uncompromising and brutal. The subsequent free kick allowed him to set up Xavier Clarke's first goal from 35m.

Desperately needing to score the first goal of the second half, Robert Harvey, who had been limited to eight possessions by Kane Johnson, extended the lead to 24 points.

Harvey was able to position himself in a scoring position when Brett Deledio's wayward handball bobbled into his space.

The nature of the game shifted shortly after when acting captain Matt Maguire surrendered a silly 50m penalty when he got too cute with Kane Pettifer in the centre of the ground.

Maguire was dragged while Pettifer scored from close range.

The Tigers booted three of the next four goals, with Pettifer, playing at half forward, causing problems for Clarke.

He played a hand in the next goal two minutes later when his slippery short pass found the diving Patrick Bowden.

He booted his third moments later, reducing the lead to just five points.
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Gehrig, who always looked dangerous, broke the momentum, when he roved his own dropped chest mark and scrambled a goal in the goal square.

But Bowden bobbed up again and had the opportunity to give the Tigers the lead at the beginning of time-on.

The shot from the Tigers' leading possession gatherer - he had 18 kicks and seven handballs until three-quarter time - hit the post, and less than a kick separated the two teams at the final change.

It was a heart-stopper with the first goal of the quarter not scored until after 12 minutes through Riewoldt and the sealer via Lenny Hayes at the 18-minute mark.

Skipper Luke Ball was a late withdrawal, struggling with a strained stomach muscles and was replaced in the Saints' team by Justin Peckett, playing his 237th match.

For Richmond, Greg Stafford was replaced for the second week in a row, this week by Daniel Jackson.

RICHMOND: 3.2, 6.4, 10.7, 11.11 (77)
ST KILDA: 4.1, 9.4, 11.6, 13.10 (88)

GOALS – Richmond: P.Bowden 3, Pettifer 3, Jackson 2, Tivendale, Richardson, Simmonds St Kilda: Gehrig 3, Riewoldt 3, Dal Santo, Goddard, X.Clarke, Fiora, Montagna, Harvey, Hayes
BEST – Richmond: J.Bowden, Simmonds, P.Bowden, Hyde, Raines, Coughlan St Kilda: Riewoldt, Hayes, Hamill, Hudghton, Montagna, Harvey
INJURIES – Richmond: Thursfield (knee), Schulz (AC joint)
St Kilda: Nil
CHANGES – Richmond: Stafford in selected side by Jackson
St Kilda: Ball (abdominal strain) in selected side by Peckett
REPORTS - Nil
UMPIRES - Margetts, McLaren, McInerney
CROWD - 40,740 at Telstra Dome