Author Topic: Media Articles & Stats: Tigers Stay Alive!  (Read 407 times)

Offline WilliamPowell

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Media Articles & Stats: Tigers Stay Alive!
« on: August 09, 2014, 12:35:22 AM »
Tigers stay alive with nailbiting win over Dons
August 8, 2014
11:59 PM

RICHMOND'S faint finals pulse is a little stronger after a stirring 18-point victory over Essendon in a see-sawing contest at the MCG on Friday night.
 
The Tigers' 14.11 (95) to 11.11 (77) win is their sixth straight and has them sitting just a game outside the top eight.

Meanwhile, the Bombers, who are now just one game clear of the Tigers, could fall out of the eight by the end of round 20 depending on the results in North Melbourne, Collingwood, Gold Coast and Adelaide's games.

The Tigers started the game slowly, turning the ball over time and time again in the first term to enable the Bombers to go into quarter-time 12 points up.
 
But Richmond started to take advantage of their dominance at stoppages in the second term, lifting their pressure around the ground to deny Essendon the short options they had used so effectively in the first term.
 
The Tigers piled on six goals to Essendon's three in the second term to take a six-point lead into half-time, setting up a classic contest in the second half.
 
The momentum swung again at the start of the third term, when Essendon rediscovered its run to pile on the first three goals of the second half to grab an eight-point lead.
 
But the Tigers kicked the next four goals, taking a handy 18-point lead at the three-minute mark of the final term when Nathan Gordon converted with a kick that sliced through from 30m out.
 
The Bombers were far from done, kicking three of the next four goals and closing to within five points at the 20-minute mark when Dyson Heppell kicked a behind.
 
However when Shane Edwards kicked a goal three minutes later to put the Tigers 12 points up, Richmond was able to hold on despite some tense moments.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick said he was really proud of his team's effort.
 
"They were hard and tough and Essendon challenged us at the end there and we managed to bounce back, which was really impressive from our guys," Hardwick said.
 
"Defensively we were a lot better after quarter-time and we managed to keep the score down, but they control and move the ball so well and we probably defended a little bit much from the back half.
 
"I think we had nine forward-half turnovers, which is well below our season average, so we'll look at some things and see if we can do some things better moving forward."
 
A frustrated Essendon coach Mark Thompson said he didn't have any answers for his team's costly loss.
 
"It's a pretty disappointing night for the football club," Thompson said.
 
"It's hard to be positive when you lose a game to Richmond, who wanted to win more than us to play finals.
 
"In reality we played good football in bits and pieces. The first quarter was OK, towards the end of the first quarter we went away from how we want to play and then you could just see it coming.
 
"And we were too easy to play against, clearly."
 
Former Giant Anthony Miles continued his recent run of good form for the Tigers, finishing with 28 possessions and a game-high seven clearances.
 
Brandon Ellis (28 possessions) was a key playmaker for the Tigers all night, Edwards (19 possessions and two goals) was lively up forward and in the midfield, while Troy Chaplin did an outstanding job in defence on Joe Daniher.
 
Alex Rance had an entertaining duel with Bomber Jake Carlisle. Carlisle's height troubled the Tiger full-back at times but he battled hard to keep the Bomber to two goals.
 
Dyson Heppell and David Zaharakis (both 32 possessions) were outstanding for the Bombers around the ground, while full-back Cale Hooker continued his outstanding 2014 form keeping Jack Riewoldt to two goals.

RICHMOND     1.2       7.4       9.8       14.11 (95)
ESSENDON     3.2       6.4       8.7       11.11 (77)
 
GOALS
Richmond: Deledio 2, Gordon 2, Riewoldt 2, Edwards 2, Ellis, Griffiths, Houli, Cotchin, Martin, Maric
Essendon: Chapman 2, Carlisle 2, Melksham 2, Dell'olio, Goddard, Z.Merrett, Windlerlich, Heppell
 
BEST
Richmond: Miles, Ellis, Edwards, Rance, Chaplin, Maric, Cotchin, Martin
Essendon: Heppell, Zaharakis, Chapman, Hooker
 
INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
Essendon: Nil
 
SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Nick Vlastuin replaced Matt Thomas in the third term
Essendon: Elliott Kavanagh replaced Orazio Fantasia at three-quarter time.
 
Reports: Nil
 
Umpires: Nicholls, McInerney, Mitchell
 
Official crowd: 58,024 at the MCG

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2014-08-08/match-report-richmond-v-essendon
« Last Edit: August 09, 2014, 03:29:31 AM by one-eyed »
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Media Articles & Stars: Tigers Stay Alive!
« Reply #1 on: August 09, 2014, 12:41:38 AM »
Richmond’s finals hopes still alive with thrilling 18-point win over Essendon at MCG
SAM EDMUND
HERALD SUN
AUGUST 09, 2014 12:22AM

IT may be unlikely, it may even be fanciful.

But after a night of incredible drama at the MCG, it’s also incredibly difficult not to get caught up in Richmond’s charge to September.

You only had to see Damien Hardwick in those electric minutes after the final siren to know this is a side who believes.

The coach, who has been close to tears in the darkest times this season, ran across the MCG pumping his fist. When he got to his players he embraced all within reach.

The Tigers celebrated like they’d won a final, but if this sort of stuff continues maybe that’s not just wishful thinking.

Richmond held off Essendon, 14.11 (95) to 11.11 (77), on Friday night to win its sixth game in a row for the first time in 20 years.

It was a win that blew the race for the finals wide open, thrusting the Bombers into the hot seat and giving the likes of Adelaide, Collingwood and Gold Coast cause for real optimism.

And for the Tigers, it remains a tantalising possibility.

“It’s in our hands, which is a positive for us and we’re playing good footy. We’ve just got to keep winning,” Hardwick said afterwards.

Captain Trent Cotchin said: “It’s a big win, not only for the playing group, but for the supporters as well.

“When you put your best foot forward each week you give yourself an opportunity.”

In an absorbing, seesawing contest for massive stakes, Essendon owned the first quarter, Richmond controlled the second and the Bombers dominated the third without reward.

In the last quarter the Tigers held firm as Essendon surged, kicking the first two and the last two goals of the term.

Essendon had 38 more possessions, won contested ball and had a stunning 12 more inside 50s. But the Bombers’ own wastefulness and the Tigers’ clearance dominance were game deciding factors.

Richmond won the clearances 35-23. At half-time it was 21-9. The in-close dominance was Richmond’s saving grace when the Dons were dominating and it was deal-breaker when they got on top.

Anthony Miles had 28 possessions and a game-high seven clearances in a superb performance. He had six clearances at half-time and when he wasn’t ripping the ball from stoppages he was tackling and smothering.

Dustin Martin, Brett Deledio and Trent Cotchin had two kicks between them after the opening 15 minutes but grew into the game. Deledio, playing almost exclusively as a forward, took the honours over Heath Hocking, while Martin, although wasteful, got better as the game wore on.

Essendon did enough to win, but will rue a forward line that simply didn’t fire.

Jake Carlisle was dangerous, but Joe Daniher couldn’t get involved, which encouraged the likes of Alex Rance and troy Chaplin to peel off and double-team Carlisle.

Desperate, the Bombers swung Michael Hurley, and then Patrick Ryder, forward in the last quarter, but to no avail.

Dyson Heppell’s scintillating season continued. He got to an extraordinary amount of contests and with the excellent David Zaharakis, finished with 32 possessions.

There were cameos from Jake Melksham and Brent Stanton, but they just couldn’t score.

Incredibly, Richmond is an outside chance to play finals.

Essendon’s problem now is that it’s a real chance to minis them

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/richmonds-finals-hopes-still-alive-with-thrilling-18point-win-over-essendon-at-mcg/story-fni5f22o-1227018285793
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond keeps finals dream alive with win over Essendon (Age)
« Reply #2 on: August 09, 2014, 03:54:55 AM »
Richmond keeps finals dream alive with win over Essendon

   Jake Niall
     The Age
    August 9, 2014



RICHMOND 1.2 7.4 9.8 14.11 (95)
ESSENDON 3.2 6.4 8.7 11.11 (77)

Goals:
Richmond: B Deledio 2 J Riewoldt 2 N Gordon 2 S Edwards 2 B Ellis B Griffiths B Houli D Martin I Maric T Cotchin.
Essendon: J Carlisle 2 J Melksham 2 P Chapman 2 B Goddard C Dell'Olio D Heppell J Winderlich Z Merrett.

BEST
Richmond: Miles, Ellis, Cotchin, Edwards, Maric, Martin, Houli.
Essendon: Heppell, Zaharakis, Goddard, Chapman, Myers, Colyer.

Umpires: Mathew Nicholls, Shane McInerney, Andrew Mitchell.
Official Crowd: 58,024 at MCG.

----------------------------------------------------------

Richmond’s improbable dream of playing finals remains possible, if still unlikely, while Essendon’s top eight place has become more precarious. In besting the Bombers by 18 points, the Tigers won their sixth straight game and kept their quixotic run alive.

In an entertaining match between teams of similar capacity, the Tigers withstood a spirited Essendon challenge – the Tigers had led by 18 points mid-term and seemed assured of victory before an Essendon counter-offensive – and then finished stronger with the last two goals to claim their ninth win.

Unusually, the difference was Richmond’s slightly superior composure with the ball and forward potency. The Tigers botched fewer opportunities than the Dons.

The Bombers were heavily dependent upon their emerging superstar, Dyson Heppell, who was probably best afield and an omnipresent threat throughout.

Statistically, the Tigers can play finals, if various moons align and rivals lose – an extraordinary notion given that they were 3-10 six weeks ago. Regardless of what happens from here, they have given their vociferous fans hope, and a water cooler conversation for everyone else.

The Tigers had come from behind early in the match, owning the second quarter, and then the most important moments of the second half. Essendon’s inefficiency in attack – its weakness all season – was the story of its failure. It was this problem that prompted the shifting of Michael Hurley into the forward half late in the game.

This was a game of alternating surges. First Essendon, then Richmond – this was the yo-yo pattern that repeated throughout the match. The decisive surge was the first few minutes of the final quarter, when the Tigers slotted a pair of goals to forge a lead of beyond three goals.

Essendon’s concern,  and ultimate undoing,  was that it did not score as heavily from its periods of ascendancy. This was most evident during the third quarter, when the Bombers had far more ball and forward entries, yet were outscored by a point.

The Dons were most dangerous on the counter-attack, with a high wire act of overlapping handball. But many a thrust foundered in their forward 50-metre arc, where Joe Daniher was ineffectual and was unable to provide the necessary scoring alternative to Jake Carlisle. Paul Chapman was dangerous with the ball in hand.

The Tigers had been on the back foot in the third quarter, yet by containing damage during the Essendon surge, were able to restore their half-time lead. A brilliant curling snap from Dustin Martin, against the run of general play, enabled Richmond to hold a slightly improbable seven-point advantage at three-quarter-time.

Richmond had gained the momentum and lead in the second term, scoring six goals to three, reversing the pattern that Essendon had established. The Tigers’ surge was built upon the game’s most fundamental skill: winning the ball.

They had a decisive edge in the stoppages, where the club’s find of 2014, Anthony Miles, accumulated six clearances, among his 19 touches.

 Brett Deledio sprinted into an open paddock  for his second goal, while Shane Edward’s clever roving and evasion had enabled an easy Brandon Ellis conversion. Aside from a wonderful angle shot from just inside 50metres, Jack Riewoldt was quelled in the opening half by rangy Cale Hooker, but, in a most encouraging development for Damien Hardwick, Ben Griffiths – deputising for Tyrone Vickery – had a genuine impact as Richmond’s much needed  and perennially absent second fiddle to Riewoldt, and by doing so, contained Essendon’s defensive trump, Hurley.

The Tigers had snatched the lead by mid second quarter, then lost it, before a holding free was paid to Trent Cotchin as the siren was set to sound for half-time to regain a one kick advantage. Carlisle - the sole forward threat in red and black - had mixed his aerial excellence with an astonishing act of stupidity, when he fingered Chris Newman in the throat for a second 50-metre penalty that gave Bachar Houli a gimme.

The Bombers had been much sharper, fiercer and cleaner with the ball – better really in most facets – during the opening quarter. Richmond was blessed to be within two goals at quarter time (3.2 to 1.2), given that the margin of superiority seemed greater than 12points.

Essendon had – in defiance of conventional wisdom – allowed Trent Cotchin to run largely unchecked, while placing a harder tag, in the person of Heath Hocking, on Deledio.

In the absence of Jobe Watson, Heppell has emerged as Essendon’s premier player over the course of this season. He and David Zaharakis were influential around the ball in this early period.

The Tigers were getting wiped in the contest, in the spread and had minimal impact from Cotchin, Martin and Riewoldt. Their only source of hope, at this stage, was the stoppages, where their mids held sway – statistically at least - in clearances, where Miles, contributed three among his largely invisible 14 first quarter touches.

The Tigers, though, had the upside. In what was the story of their season writ small, they regained their mojo and prevailed. It just remains to be seen whether this resurgence will be worthwhile.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/richmond-keeps-finals-dream-alive-with-win-over-essendon-20140808-1026q9.html#ixzz39pAPXCqw

Offline one-eyed

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After defeating Essendon, time for Tigers to dream (Age)
« Reply #3 on: August 09, 2014, 03:56:18 AM »
After defeating Essendon, time for Tigers to dream

  Greg Baum
    The Age
    August 9, 2014


This was not the Dreamtime. It was more important than that; it was the time to dream.

For Richmond, after so many barren years, a glimpse of successive finals series is as good as a premiership. Six wins in a row have given the Tigers that glimpse. They are a game outside the top eight now, and by a certain fall of results will still be there at the end of the weekend. Coach Damian Hardwick thinks they are playing better footy than last year, too. "We're probably more consistent," he said.

Richmond needed this. So did Essendon. After 10 years of underachievement of their own, and two of a living hell of their own making, victory this night would nearly have cemented a finals place for the second year in a row, too. This one, it could even play in. The Bombers took six weeks of pretty solid form of their own into the game. This would always be about who wanted it more.

So it proved. Essendon was slicker, but Richmond was more desperate. Essendon kept threatening to make off with the game, but Richmond kept reining it in, until at last it was itself a length in front. Then when the Bombers threatened to finish over the top, the Tigers staved them off. That was how it went. "They wanted to win more than us, to play finals," admitted coach Mark Thompson. "It was all about attitude. Yep. Yep. Youl could see it coming. We were too easy to play against."

Essendon had more of the ball, more often in its forward 50 arc. It had silk. Dyson Heppell is the sort of player for whom one second lasts two, who has more than 360 degrees on his compass. Brendan Goddard plays football as knowingly as if he invented the game. But the Bombers were scandalously wasteful, dropping marks, conceding frivolous free kicks, missing easy shots, sometimes failing even to kick them far enough to count as shots. "We didn't finish our work," said Thompson. "We kept messing up sodas." It had been the same at training.

Richmond's fanaticism was a measurable force in the game, in clearances around the ground, in the tackle count, in the free-kick count. Anthony Miles, one of the season's revelations, was not only at the coalface all night, but had a shovel in one hand and a pick in the other. "Outstanding," said Hardwick. Little acts told big stories. Ben Griffiths protected Ivan Maric in a marking duel on the wing, then hared off into the forward line, doubled back and marked Maric's kick. Two-hundred-centimetre footballers generally don't do that. But the Tigers have the sniff again.

Three bone-crunching Richmond tackles announced the last quarter. Essendon was caught in possession, of the ball, of the lead it had held until late in the third quarter, of an opportunity. The match slipped through its fingers. Richmond gathered up the crumbs. The standard play this night was a miskick, a faltering, a turnover at one end and a score at the other. It is the way of modern footy; the merest hesitation or misjudgment catches every player on the ground out of position, the team with the ball suddenly has all the advantages, and no-one has yet worked out how to counter it.

At least twice, they were 12-point plays as Essendon failed to score at one end and Richmond promptly did at the other. Then there was the moment Jake Carlisle took leave of his senses, turned a 50-metre penalty into 100 and gifted Bachar Houli a goal. Thompson was not in a forgiving frame of mind. For all anyone knows, he said, it was the goal that cost Essendon the match. Thompson kept the Bombers in for three-quarters of an hour after the final siren. "It was a little bit of angry Bomber," he admitted. In contrast, his press conference was a lot of quirky Bomber.

But this was the Tigers' night. This might be the Tigers' time. What was best about the win, said Hardwick, was that it was achieved despite the fact that Tigers failed to meet their own standards in several respects. "We can get a lot better," Hardwick said. But he was chirpy as only winners can be. Asked about AFL chief executive Gillon McLachan's unvarnished criticism of Reece Conca for his strike of GWS's Devon Smith last week, Hardwick said that Conca already was acutely aware of his mistake, and did not need McLachlan to rub it in. He had exceeded his brief. "I'll be sending him a 'please explain'," Hardwick said.

Mostly, Hardwick was po-faced, because coaches are, all except Thompson. But make no mistake about what sort of landmark this was for Richmond. At the final siren, the players held their formation while Maric took his finalising shot at goal. But in the middle of the ground, a trainer was spraying a drink bottle as joyously as if it was full of champagne and this was a grand prix.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/after-defeating-essendon-time-for-tigers-to-dream-20140809-1026vu.html#ixzz39pAyuKaL

Offline Stripes

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Re: Media Articles & Stats: Tigers Stay Alive!
« Reply #4 on: August 09, 2014, 10:46:40 AM »
Its great to see Miles and Griffiths getting some accolades from the media  :thumbsup

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media Articles & Stats: Tigers Stay Alive!
« Reply #5 on: August 10, 2014, 02:46:07 AM »
Team Stats



Individual Stats




Offline Yeahright

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Re: Media Articles & Stats: Tigers Stay Alive!
« Reply #6 on: August 10, 2014, 12:24:20 PM »
Matt Thomas, 2 tackles and 3 Free's against  ::)