Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers win a thriller over Brisbane  (Read 2613 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers win a thriller
richmondfc.com.au
By Mic Cullen
10:10 PM Sat 26 July, 2008

Richmond                         2.2          8.4          10.7        18.9 (117)
Brisbane Lions                   3.6          7.6          13.14     16.18 (114)

GOALS
Richmond: Brown 4, Bowden 4, Richardson 3, Riewoldt 2, Morton, Simmonds, Deledio, Bowden, Schultz. Brisbane Lions: Brown 3, Bradshaw 3, Johnstone 2, Sherman 2, Drummond, Black, Brennan, Corrie, Copeland, Charman

BEST
Richmond: Deledio, Tambling, Richardson, Cotchin, Brown, Simmonds, Bowden. Brisbane Lions: Black, Charman, Brown, Power, Rischitelli, Dalziell


A CRACKING three-point Richmond win over the Brisbane Lions at Telstra Dome on Saturday night has the Tigers breathing down the neck of the eight with their second win by less than a goal in a week.

The Tigers again fell away in the third term, but a superb last quarter got them home, 18.9 (117) to 16.18 (114).

The Lions kicked six goals in the third quarter to lead by 31 points, but Richmond then kicked seven straight to hit the front. The Lions responded with three to take it back, but a late couple from Matthew Richardson and last week's hero Joel Bowden got them home.

The Tigers were superbly led, again, by Brett Deledio, while Richard Tambling played his best game for the club. Nathan Brown was smart forward, Bowden cool at the end, Trent Cotchin all class in the middle, and Troy Simmonds good in the ruck and around the ground.

The Lions were led from the middle by Jamie Charman and Simon Black, while Jonathan Brown, Luke Power, Michael Rischitelli and second gamer Bradd Dalziell were good.

It took a mere 35 seconds for Brisbane to dob the first major when Bradshaw snapped truly after gather the spillage, but nearly 12 minutes passed before the Tigers put together a good passage to score their own from the boot of Nathan Brown.

Deledio took the Tigers to the lead, but Travis Johnstone grabbed it back after Bowden gave away a free for an elbow to the throat, an event that will have Tigers fans watching the match review panel report with interest.

Jonathan Brown then made the most of a Shane Edwards turnover and the Lions led by 10 points at the first change.

A much better second term began with a couple of goals to Brisbane, both the results of some smart play, and the Lions were looking dangerous with a 22-point lead.

But three goals in five minutes had the Tigers back within a goal.

Jonathan Brown turned Kelvin Moore inside out and booted one from outside the arc, but then three quick majors from the Tigers, all from marks, got them out to an eight-point lead. Brennan then booted one for the visitors and the hosts led by just two points at the long break.

The Lions kicked three majors to start the third term, two from Richmond errors, before Schultz majored. But the Lions then kicked another three to lead by 31 points, although a late goal to Nathan Brown meant the Lions turned for home 25 points up.

But that goal clearly kept the Richmond fires burning, and the home side booted the first six of the last quarter by playing fast attacking football. But with five minutes left, and a four-point lead, they tried icing the clock and the Lions immediately scored to regain the lead.

But late goals sealed the deal.

Next week, the Tigers have Geelong at the Telstra Dome on Saturday evening, and the Lions are almost at home, taking on North Melbourne at the Gold Coast at the same time.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=64200

Offline one-eyed

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Stats: Tigers vs Lions
« Reply #1 on: July 27, 2008, 01:32:02 AM »
Team Stats

Disposals:       389 - 294
Efficiency%:      77 - 71
Kicks:             215 - 171
Handballs:      174 - 123
Con. Marks:      11 - 13
Uncon. Marks: 122 - 81
Tackles:            50 - 46
Clearances:       41 - 27
Clangers:          38 - 47
Frees:               19 - 13
Con. Possies:   105 - 97
Unco.Possies:   287 - 199
Inside 50s:        57 - 53
Assists:             19 - 22
Hitouts:             31 - 36  (Simmonds 23, Pattison 7, Tuck 1 / Charman 28, Clark 5, Brennan 3)

Individual Stats

player       D EFF% K H G B CM UM T CL C
   
Johnson      31   84 18  13 0 0 0 15 0 0 1
Tuck           29   86   9  20 0 0 1   5 3 8 2
Tambling    27   81 15  12 0 0 0   6 3 3 2
Deledio       26   88 10  16 1 0 1   5 5 5 0
Foley          26   62 16  10 0 2 0   4 7 6 3
Simmonds  25   60 15  10 1 0 2   8 1 5 5
Richardson  22   86 16   6 3 1 2 15 0 0 1
Brown         21   71 15   6 4 0 0   8 2 4 2
Bowden       19   84 12   7 4 0 0   7 7 0 1
Jackson       19   84   8 11 0 1 0   3 3 4 5
Schulz         18   72 13   5 1 1 0   8 1 1 1
McMahon     17   71 12   5 0 0 0   3 1 0 2
Newman      15   67  6    9 0 0 0   4 2 0 2
Pattison       13   85  3  10 0 0 0   5 2 2 0
White          13   85  9    4 1 0 1   5 2 0 0
Moore          12   58  7    5 0 0 2   6 2 0 3
Riewoldt      12   67  7    5 2 0 2   1 1 0 1
Thursfield    12 100  6    6 0 0 0   2 1 0 0
Cotchin       11   82  8    3 0 0 0   4 2 1 2
Edwards      10   70  2    8 0 0 0   3 2 2 4
McGuane       7   71  5    2 0 0 0   4 3 0 1
Morton          4   50  3    1 1 2 0   1 0 0 0

player FF FA CP UP I50 A       
   
Johnson      0 0   2 29 8 5       
Tuck           2 1 12 17 2 0       
Tambling    1 1   8 21 8 2       
Deledio       1 0   8 19 3 3       
Foley          0 2   6 20 6 0       
Simmonds  2 0   9 16 4 0       
Richardson  2 0  5 17 5 2       
Brown         0 0  5 16 4 1       
Bowden       3 1  5 14 2 0       
Jackson       1 3  5 15 2 0     
Schulz         1 1  4 13 0 1       
McMahon     0 0  3 14 3 1       
Newman      0 0  5   9 2 0       
Pattison       2 0  5   8 1 0     
White          1 0  5   9 2 0       
Moore          0 1  3   9 0 0       
Riewoldt      0 0  5   7 0 1       
Thursfield    0 0  1 11 0 0     
Cotchin       1 1  3   8 1 1       
Edwards      0 1  2   8 3 2     
McGuane     1 1  2   5 1 0     
Morton        1 0  2   2 0 0

http://superstats.heraldsun.com.au/gamestatslive/5015527.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers win a thriller over Brisbane
« Reply #2 on: July 27, 2008, 01:40:54 AM »
Tigers in thriller
AAP | July 26, 2008 10:31pm

RICHMOND's Joel Bowden again played the central role in a nail-biting finish, as the Tigers downed Brisbane by three points tonight.

The Tigers booted eight goals to three in the last quarter to storm back from 25 points down at the last change and win 18.9 (117) to 16.18 (114), keeping their finals hopes very much alive.

Bowden was one of the heroes of the win, kicking the winning goal with 22 seconds left on the clock, one of three he scored in the stunning final term.

It came after he last weekend earned a mixture of praise and criticism for twice rushing behinds to run down the clock in the final seconds of the Tigers' narrow win over Essendon.

The final goal came after key defender Kelvin Moore took a crucial pack mark in his defensive goalsquare, with the Tigers then racing the bal Related LinksRound 17 pic gallery l forward, for Richard Tambling to deliver to Bowden.

They had earlier kicked the last goal of the third quarter and the first six of the last to hit the front, before again falling behind by eight points and having to mount another late rally.

Richmond have now won five of their past six matches, moving them within two premiership points of the top eight.

Matthew Richardson was sensational for the Tigers, kicking three goals in the last term, as well as setting up another with a handball to Nathan Brown in the goalsquare.

It came after he had spent most of the previous three quarters roaming the ground, taking a heap of strong marks, before being stationed up forward for the last term.

He finished the night with 17 marks in a valiant performance.

Also good for the Tigers were skipper Kane Johnson, along with fellow midfielders Shane Tuck, Brett Deledio and Tambling, while Luke McGuane did a strong stopping job on dangerous Lions forward Daniel Bradshaw.

Brisbane were made to pay dearly for some wasteful kicking earlier in the match.

They controlled the first term, but kicked 3.6, with Bradshaw kicking 1.3 for the quarter.

After trailing by two points at the long break, they completely dominated the third term, but could not capitalise fully, outscoring Richmond 6.6 to 2.3, with their missed shots keeping the Tigers in the hunt.

Running defender Josh Drummond put in a strong performance for the Lions, while Jonathan Brown was a constant threat up forward with eight marks and three goals.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,24083720-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Never-say-die Tigers pip Lions (The Age)
« Reply #3 on: July 27, 2008, 01:53:01 AM »
Never-say-die Tigers pip Lions
Lyall Johnson | The Age| July 27, 2008

RICHMOND last night staged a never-say-die last quarter to post a thrilling victory over the Brisbane Lions and keep its finals hopes alive.

The Tigers came from 25 points down at three-quarter-time — after doing their best to throw away the match in a turnover-riddled third term — to pull off a spectacular three-point win at Telstra Dome.

The much-maligned Joel Bowden, who had been consigned to the reserves earlier in the season, was the hero in the end with three final-quarter goals.

The last, his fourth for the match, was a set shot from 40 metres on a tricky angle that was the matchwinner, putting the Tigers ahead by four points with 22 seconds to play.

Valuable seconds were run off the clock at the resultant centre bounce, but a mark to Brett Deledio at centre half-back as the Lions made one more desperate thrust saved the day. It capped yet another fine game for the youngster.

A win for the Lions would have cemented their place in the eight, but the loss, made only slightly more palatable by losses to St Kilda and Collingwood, means they still have a fight on their hands.

The Lions should have won the night, their consistency and better use of the ball throughout the match by far the better of the two teams.

Indeed, with the amount of turnovers and elementary errors by Richmond, which threatened to drag the game down to a forgettable level, the Lions can only blame themselves for not capitalising with a higher score. Their seven extra scoring shots was possibly the most damning statistic of the night.

But when it counted at the business end, Richmond, through the agency its midfield, particularly Shane Tuck, Nathan Foley and Troy Simmonds, found the urgency and skill level that had been lacking.

Surging out of the middle, the Tigers kicked six unanswered goals in the first 15 minutes of the last term to stage a 38-point turnaround, Nathan Brown and Matthew Richardson kicking crucial majors, before goals to Jamie Charman, Daniel Bradshaw and Justin Sherman put the Lions eight points in front at the 27-minute mark.

That should have been enough, but the Tigers surged again, the ball finishing in the hands of Richardson. He hadn't had the greatest night but stood up when it counted.

And as much as the game was eventually won in attack, it was also saved in defence. The Tigers can thank a match-saving mark on the last line by Kelvin Moore with only a minute to play for not only stopping a goal, but setting the passage of play in motion that eventually enabled Richard Tambling to hit Bowden lace out with a lovely pass.

Tambling, notwithstanding his fair share of clangers, played possibly the best game of his career, collecting 27 touches and providing drive off half-back.

The Lions started the match well and should have been in greater control at quarter-time, at least three gettable shots going astray.

With the midfield drive of Simon Black and Luke Power thrusting the Lions forward, Bradshaw ran Will Thursfield a merry dance until Luke McGuane was moved onto him.

The Tigers' skill levels have improved markedly this season, but the ability of a select few in their line-up to turn the ball over on a weekly basis meant the Lions had ample opportunity to capitalise.

Yet they didn't and went to the first change only 10 points clear. But they burst clear by 22 points in the second with goals to Sherman and a brilliant running effort from Josh Drummond.

But as they were to do in the last quarter, the Tigers were jolted to life and started winning the centre breaks. Foley, after being well beaten by Sherman in the first, started to find the ball.

After a Bradshaw miss, the Tigers flew forward. Trent Cotchin, brilliantly elusive, found Deledio with a great kick, Bowden eventually sealing the passage with a set shot.

But in a match characterised by surges, the Lions launched themselves into the third term and should have raced away with the match then. Instead, within the first two minutes, they squandered three shots at goal.

Richmond's clanger count continued to rise, Bradshaw made no mistake courtesy of a Chris Newman blunder to put the Lions eight points ahead. Black followed to extend the lead to 14. By three-quarter-time, the Lions had extended that to 25 points, but in the end, that simply wasn't enough.


BEST
Richmond: Bowden, Richardson, Deledio, Tuck, Simmonds, N. Brown.

THE UPSHOT They may have dozed all the way through the third quarter, but the Tigers turned it on in the fourth to take the points in an absolute thriller, giving the faithful something to smile about on a rocky weekend and putting them within striking distance of the top eight.

TALKING POINT
If imitation is the greatest form of flattery, then Terry Wallace appeared to be very visibly tipping his hat to Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson last night. It was not used often, but there were stages when the Tigers were using the Hawks' trademark rolling defensive zone formation — the question now is will both teams use the cluster when they meet in round 20?

HOT AND COLD
It's got to be big Matthew Richardson. The Tigers roared back to life with eight goals in the final term and "Richo" had a role in five of them. Add to that his 22 disposals and game-high 17 marks, and it's easy to see why they love him at Tigerland. Cheynee Stiller. Cheynee who? With just nine possessions and one point for the match, Stiller was barely sighted at all last night.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/rfmatchreport/neversaydie-tigers-pip-lions/2008/07/27/1216492823352.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Bowden sustains finals dream (The Age)
« Reply #4 on: July 27, 2008, 01:57:54 AM »
Bowden sustains finals dream
Chloe Saltau | July 27, 2008

IF THERE is such a thing as death by talkback radio, Joel Bowden very nearly became its first victim in the week that followed his dastardly crime in the closing seconds of Richmond's slender victory over Essendon.

And if there is such a thing as defeat by a thousand mistakes, Richmond appeared set for a ritual thrashing at the hands of the Brisbane Lions at Telstra Dome last night.

So it was fortunate that Bowden — a man whose extensive football experience and cool head under pressure taught him to rush behinds to shore up the win against the Bombers and whose rich life experience would have reinforced how out of proportion was the outcry that followed — had the ball with 22 seconds to go against the Lions.

Plainly, the veteran of 12 seasons was unperturbed by the reaction to "Rush-gate" because with his team four points ahead and a full six minutes remaining, he held the ball in the air to signal he was in clock-icing mode, and kicked backwards.

It was enough to invoke outrage in the Brisbane supporters in the stands and nervousness in the Richmond ones, and with good reason, since there were more lead-changes, and more drama, to come.

In the end, the football gods exonerated both Bowden and Richmond, for the veteran was again the protagonist of a match decided in the final moments, though this time in far less controversial circumstances and at the opposite end of the ground.

It has been a strange year for the Tiger, who is a couple of weeks away from his 250th game, for he has been dropped to the VFL and spent time up forward and in his more familiar, free-wheeling role in defence. On the evidence presented in the past three weeks, he remains one of the Tigers' most valuable players.

At the same time, the Tigers were forgiven for the errors of skill and execution, a bugbear of Richmond fans for years, that made tortured viewing for much of the game.

In the absorbing final term, Jordan McMahon found redemption for his earlier clangers by getting the ball seven times, and using it constructively. On one such occasion, he planted it on the chest of Nathan Brown, who converted his third goal.

Kane Johnson, with 31 touches the leading ball-winner on the ground, got away with his moment of madness a few minutes later, when he inexplicably handballed to Matt White in front of goal just as he was about to be swamped by a Lions defender.

Fortunately for the Tigers, Bowden came to the rescue with a fierce tackle that earned a free kick and goal to drag Richmond closer to an improbable win.

The skipper wasn't the only Tiger who could breathe a sigh of relief. Chris Newman and Shane Edwards were guilty of turnovers that led directly to Brisbane goals, but doubtless slept more peacefully last night in the knowledge they had not cost their side the game.

There was a fair amount of daring and dash on the Tigers' side, and some some wonderful moments from high draft picks Brett Deledio and Trent Cotchin. But there also were times when their skills were made to look all the more ragged by the polish of a Lions side that had Josh Drummond laying the ball on his exquisite left foot, and the silky midfield duo of Simon Black and Travis Johnstone putting it perfectly out in front of Jonathan Brown and Daniel Bradshaw.

Ironically, the most obviously costly mistake of the final term came from a Lion, and a three-time premiership Lion at that, when Luke Power's kick-in was intercepted by Bowden, who kicked his third straight goal.

The 30-year-old's heroics were completed when Richard Tambling danced down the wing and found him on the lead in the 32nd minute and the Tigers trailing by three points.

Bowden went back and slotted the goal with calm and purpose, two qualities that had been largely missing from the Tigers' game. For the second time in a fortnight, Bowden's experience and coolness under pressure won Richmond the game and brought an improbable finals dream closer. And with 22 seconds remaining when the ball went back to the middle, there was no need to ice the clock.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/bowden-sustains-finals-dream/2008/07/27/1216492823355.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Ox

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers win a thriller over Brisbane
« Reply #5 on: July 27, 2008, 02:32:38 AM »
give me a fu cken break :'(

Joels heroics ?

He almost lost the fu kcen game ffs.

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers again turn to their cool man in a crisis (The Age)
« Reply #6 on: July 28, 2008, 03:43:12 AM »
Tigers again turn to their cool man in a crisis
AAP | July 28, 2008

JOEL Bowden might not be the fastest, the strongest, or the fittest player on Richmond's list, but he is the calmest in a crisis, and for that quality, the Tigers can be very thankful.

For the third time in the past five rounds, Bowden's poise in the final seconds of a nail-biting finish got the Tigers home on Saturday night.

The 30-year-old, in his 13th season, kicked three goals in the final term, as Richmond roared back from 25 points down at the last change to win 18.9 (117) to 16.18 (114) over the Brisbane Lions at Telstra Dome.

Having spent much of the game in defence, Tigers coach Terry Wallace punted on Bowden's poise in attack helping his side prevail.

"I just thought his smarts in a pretty tough cooker environment, that it was going to be in that quarter, might just have been handy," Wallace said.

"With Matthew (Richardson) and Browny (Nathan Brown) down forward, I just thought that he might be the third foil, that so much emphasis would go on to those players. To have a smart player down there, rather than necessarily a young player might just have been the way to go and it panned out really well."

All three of Bowden's goals for the term highlighted his ability to focus in the pressure of a tense situation that was adversely affecting many around him. The first came when he won a free kick for a desperate lunge and tackle on Brisbane youngster Tom Collier.

Seconds earlier, Richmond captain Kane Johnson had given away a golden chance for a goal himself when, instead of taking an open shot from 25 metres, he inexplicably handballed into a crowded goalsquare.

Bowden's second goal of the term again showed his poise under pressure in comparison to another veteran, when he intercepted a poorly placed short pass from Lions star Luke Power, who was kicking out from full-back.

His third was the clincher, after he marked on the lead about 30 metres from goal with 22 seconds left on the clock and the Tigers trailing by three points. With the result of the match, and possibly Richmond's finals hopes, riding on the kick, the ball could hardly have been in better hands and Bowden duly sent it through the middle.

"The one thing with Joel, you know he's a cool, wise head," Wallace said. "The goals that he kicked, he never looked like missing and there was certainly one very big goal there as well."

Saturday night's heroics came after Bowden showed similar poise, albeit to mixed reactions, in helping the Tigers home in round 16's thriller over Essendon, twice rushing behinds to milk the clock in the final seconds.

He played an equally pivotal role in the dying seconds of the round 13 win over Port Adelaide at AAMI Stadium, marking deep in defence as the Power came desperately close to over-running the Tigers.

All that after the two-time club best and fairest was dropped from rounds four to seven, as the club pondered whether he still had the goods to contribute at the top level.

Had he not earned his way back, the Tigers' season could be looking a lot more bleak right now.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/tigers-again-turn-to-cool-man-in-crisis/2008/07/27/1217097059830.html