Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Patchy Tigers dispatch Port  (Read 1844 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Patchy Tigers dispatch Port
« on: May 06, 2012, 06:57:19 PM »
Patchy Tigers dispatch Port
By Mark Conway and AAP
5:47 PM Sun 06 May, 2012



PORT ADELAIDE      1.2     2.2    6.4      8.6    (54)                 
RICHMOND             3.2     8.7   9.10   13.13   (91)         
 
GOALS
Port Adelaide: Renouf, Broadbent 2, Stewart, Jacobs, Butcher, Young
Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Nahas 3, King 2, Miller, Newman, Deledio, Conca
 
BEST
Port Adelaide: Ebert, Hartlett, Jacobs, Cassisi, Renouf, Boak
Richmond: Maric, Deledio, Tuck, Rance, Nahas, Morris, King
 
INJURIES
Port Adelaide: Surjan (dislocated finger), Hitchcock (hamstring), Cornes (knee)
Richmond: Newman (shin)
 
SUBSTITUTES
Port Adelaide: Darren Pfeiffer replaced Cameron Hitchcock at quarter-time.
Richmond: Shane Edwards replaced Tyrone Vickery in the third quarter
 
Reports: Nil
 
Umpires: McBurney, Ritchie, Margetts
 
Official crowd: 18,552 at AAMI Stadium

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

RICHMOND has beaten Port Adelaide by 37 points in a patchy display at AAMI Stadium on Sunday.

Leading by 41 points early in the third term, Richmond failed to kick a goal for more than a quarter before registering a 13.13 (91) to 8.6 (54) win.

Ruckman and new cult hero Ivan Maric played arguably the best game of his career, collecting a career-high in both disposals (20) and hit-outs (46) to be his team's best.

Target 50,000 - Make the Tiger Army 50,000 strong, become a member today

Up forward, Robin Nahas booted three goals while spearhead Jack Riewoldt chipped in with four to lead the Tigers' goalkickers.

Despite the Tigers' lack of firepower in the third term, they were helped by a lacklustre Port, who belatedly rallied with four unanswered goals but crashed to its fifth loss in six rounds.

The Tigers set their winning tone early with the opening three goals of the game before Port scrapped to within six points early in the second term.

But Richmond then booted the next six goals to bust the game open.

Richmond's dominating second term set up victory, with the Tigers restricting Port to just two entries inside their attacking 50m arc.

In contrast, the Tigers, driven by the likes of Dustin Martin and captain Chris Newman, had 19 inside 50s for five goals.

Richmond led 8.7 to 2.2 at half-time but it could have been more as a sloppy Port revisited its dark days of last year when it won only three games.

Within a minute of the third quarter, Port was 41 points down but the Power belatedly kicked the next four goals to trail by 24 points at the last change.

But Riewoldt, who also missed two set shots and sprayed another out of bounds on the full, sealed Richmond's deserved triumph with the opening goal of the final term.

The Tiger forward ran into an open goal and speared a low trajectory kick which hit the goal umpire on the head.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/6301/newsid/135034/default.aspx

Offline Owl

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Re: Media articles and stats: Patchy Tigers dispatch Port
« Reply #1 on: May 06, 2012, 07:40:07 PM »
Port and the 3rd quarter umpire blitz intent on pulling them back into the game.  Turn it up.
Lots of people name their swords......

Offline one-eyed

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Stats: Tigers vs Port
« Reply #2 on: May 06, 2012, 07:52:20 PM »
Team Stats

Disposals           395 - 321
Efficiency%         72 - 69
Kicks                 209 - 177    
Handballs          186 - 144   
Con. Possies      135 - 137    
Uncon. Possies   260 - 184
Marks                 83 - 77     
Con. Marks           5 - 7
Uncon. Marks      78 - 70
Tackles               60 - 66    
Clearances          41 - 35
Clangers             55 - 44   
Frees                  21 - 25
Hitouts               57 - 27 ......... (I.Maric 46, Vickery 4, Grigg 4, Deledio 3 // Renouf 19, D.Stewart 3, J.Westoff 2)    
Inside 50s           55 - 38
Marks In50          13 - 6   
Rebound 50s       25 - 38   
Assists                  7 - 5   
1%ers                 37 - 45
Supercoach      1811 - 1488
Dreamteam      1580 - 1359

Individual Stats

PLAYER             D    K    H    CP    DE%    M    CM    T    CL    FF    FA    I50    R50    G    B    GA    SC

S.Tuck              28    11    17    15      68%    5    1    5    8    1    1    3    2    0    2    0    109
S.Grigg             25    11    14      5      80%    4    0    3    2    1    1    6    3    0    0    0      92
A.Rance            24    14    10      9      67%    4    0    3    0    3    1    3    0    0    0    0      98
D.Martin           24    13    11      7      71%    7    0    1    4    1    0    6    0    0    2    1      92
B.Deledio          24    15      9    12      62%    3    0    6    4    1    0    6    2    1    1    1    143
B.Houli             23    10    13      6      87%    1    0    2    2    0    2    1    2    0    0    0      75
S.Morris            21    11    10      7      71%    5    0    1    0    0    3    1    2    0    0    0      63
I.Maric              20    13      7      6      70%    5    1    4    5    2    3    3    2    0    1    0    129
R.Conca            20    10    10      6      75%    5    0    2    3    1    2    2    1    1    0    0      82
J.Batchelor        20    10    10      8      55%    5    1    1    2    1    0    4    3    0    0    0      66
R.Nahas            19    12      7      8      68%    3    0    4    0    4    2    4    1    3    1    1    118
N.Foley             19      9    10      7      74%    1    0    7    5    1    0    4    2    0    0    1      99
B.Ellis               18      6    12      7      67%    3    0    1    1    0    2    2    1    0    1    0      72
M.Dea               18      6    12      6      94%    4    0    3    0    1    0    0    1    0    0    0      79
T.Cotchin           18      8    10      7      61%    2    0    4    3    0    1    1    0    0    0    0      73
D.Grimes           17    11      6      3      88%    5    0    1    0    1    2    1    3    0    0    1      89
J.Riewoldt          12    11      1      3      58%    6    1    3    0    0    3    1    0    4    2    1      65
J.King                12      6      6      5      75%    3    0    1    1    1    2    1    0    2    0    0      62
C.Newman         11      8      3      3    100%    6    1    2    1    1    0    0    0    1    0    0      91
B.Miller              10      6      4      3      80%    4    0    3    0    1    0    3    0    1    0    1      69
S.Edwards           8      6      2      2      50%    0    0    2    0    0    0    2    0    0    1    0      19
T.Vickery             4      2      2      0      75%    2    0    1    0    0    0    1    0    0    0    0      26

http://live-footy.heraldsun.com.au/StatsCentre/Index/20120620120140608
http://www.afl.com.au/tabid/16931/Default.aspx#fixtureid=7712&tab=Stats

Offline one-eyed

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Jumping Jack Riewoldt leads Richmond to victory over Port Adelaide

    Mark Stevens
    From: Herald Sun
    May 07, 2012


IF the Richmond re-generation is real, this will not go down as a defining moment.

After close calls against Geelong and West Coast, the Tigers were probably owed a win, but it wasn't pretty.

As much as coach Damien Hardwick will gleefully take it, a third-term fade-out made life more difficult than it needed to be.

Leading by 41 points at half-time, Richmond allowed the Power to surge to within 24 at the last change before steadying to win by 37.

Jack Riewoldt sealed it with two last term goals, the first a kick blasted at short range that almost took the goal umpire's head off.

Riewoldt celebrated the second knowing it was the sealer, but there was not too much to get excited about.

To put the victory into context, Port Adelaide was poor. Incredibly poor. Coach-killer poor.

It was an occasion a long way from the excitement of the Tigers' loss to West Coast at a rocking Etihad Stadium seven days earlier.

But it is worth looking at some positives for Richmond, which now has a manageable and deserved 2-4 record.

After an error-riddled start, the Tigers showed their edge in class with a dominant second term.

Power had only two inside 50 entries - the first two minutes in when Brent Renouf marked and goaled from 45m and the second in the final minute when the ball barely dribbled over the 50m line.

Richmond ran the ball at will, often ripping it down the corridor, and led 8.7 to 2.2 at the long change.

Such was the ease of the ball movement, the Tigers probably should have led by 60 points-plus rather than 41.

The difference in the disposal count at half time - an amazing 209 to 132 - summed it up.The Power has an option to move coach Matthew Primus on at the end of the year and they will have no choice if this keeps up.

And the handball receives tally  - 82 to 35 - showed only one side was playing with run, spread and a sense of daring.

Several missed set shots in the second term helped save Power from further embarrassment on a dreary day in front of only 18,522 fans.

The Tigers became insular and indecisive as Port finally found some pressure in the third quarter, but they wrested back control like a maturing outfit should.

Perhaps the biggest plus of all was the performance of the defence - the ever-emerging Dylan Grimes leading the way with a complete shutdown of John Butcher.

Grimes is eligible for the Rising Star and at this rate will be vying with Jeremy Cameron for the award.

It would be nice to see a defender win something, for this kid is not only a disciplined stopper, but a smooth user of the ball like his older brother Jack.

Alex Rance was again a key contributor and Steven Morris is gaining more confidence by the week.

Port never really looked threatening inside 50 and kicked goals in the third more through will-power than any form of system or class.

Ivan Maric, the great hope traded in during the off-season, was a revelation with 46 hitouts. He also constantly plugged holes in defence.

Maric was the one constant around the ball as most others on both teams drifted in and out of the contest.

Shane Tuck had 28 disposals, including 15 contested possessions, and Trent Cotchin's work rate and attack on the ball set the tone - even if he was restricted to 17 disposals.

Special mention, too, should go to Robin Nahas, who was devastating in the second term and finished with three goals.

Port had 73 less disposals and 18 less inside 50s. For long periods it looked no better than GWS. But all you can do is beat what is dished up.

Richmond will take the win and move on in a hurry.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/afl/jumping-jack-riewoldt-leads-richmond-to-victory-over-port-adelaide/story-e6frf9io-1226347964684

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Patchy Tigers dispatch Port
« Reply #4 on: May 06, 2012, 08:14:05 PM »
Five talking points: Port Adelaide v Richmond
By Harry Thring
afl.com.au
Sun 06 May, 2012



U.G.L.Y.
With both sides desperate for a win and in reasonable form despite consistent losses, Sunday's match between the Power and the Tigers was nicely positioned to be one of the games of the season. However, horrible skill errors ensured it will be remembered as one of the ugliest. Both sides found it hard to hit targets by foot or by hand and constant turnovers kept supporter frustration at boiling point. Never more so than when Port's Justin Westhoff played on with nobody standing the mark, only to kick it straight to Richmond's Shaun Grigg, who kicked long to a three-on-one contest in favour of the Power, before Brett Deledio goaled.

Man down
Richmond's Jack Riewoldt might like to offer an apology to the goal umpire in Sunday's clash, after the Tiger knocked him clean off his feet with a shot at goal. Riewoldt ran into the open goal and booted the ball straight into the goal umpire sending him sprawling. Like a true professional, the umpire stood back up and, with a smile, signaled the goal.

Mullet maketh the man
Ivan Maric may be 200cm tall, but the man with the mullet stood far taller than that on Sunday. Maric was excellent in slippery conditions that made even the smallest players look clumsy. He was everywhere, racking up 20 disposals and shining in the middle. He registered a career-best 46 hit-outs for the Tigers but also managed three inside-50s. Calls for him to shave, or at least trim, his mullet should be silenced if they're coming from Richmond supporters, because the longer it gets, the better Ivan becomes.

Prime target
Matthew Primus' future must now lie in serious doubt, with the Power in terrible shape after six rounds. At 1-5, any faint hope the Power had after their round-one win of a top eight finish is now over and with a tough draw, a bottom four finish is looming. The Power now play Fremantle, North Melbourne, Gold Coast, Carlton and Hawthorn before the bye, a run that could well leave them staring down the barrel for the second season in a row by the half-way mark.

A new dawn
Richmond coach Damien Hardwick said that after last week's loss to West Coast, his side's season "starts now". Sunday's 37-point win over the Power may not have been a skilful affair, but Hardwick said it was the type of game his team expected to win. After the match, Hardwick said he hoped the "honourable losses" the Tigers have suffered over the last month were over. Against the Swans next week, the Tigers will show whether they have indeed turned the page.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/135038/default.aspx

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers finally honourable victors (Australian)
« Reply #5 on: May 07, 2012, 03:27:52 AM »
Tigers finally honourable victors

    by: Andrew Faulkner
    From: The Australian
    May 07, 2012


AFTER all their brave but quixotic losses, Richmond and Port Adelaide had trod parallel paths going into yesterday's match.

Yes, they had both improved, but with one win apiece, they could only trade on goodwill for so long.

Here was a turning point. A reward for all the hard work. An opportunity to beat a fellow honourable loser.

In triumphing by 37 points at AAMI Stadium, Richmond is at last an honourable winner and the Power is mired in yet more misery.

Fed by a dominant Ivan Maric in the ruck, Richmond's runners made fewer errors than their counterparts.

Both sides persisted with cute, dry-weather football in the drizzle even as the clangers and critical errors piled up.

Richmond was not only cleaner, it dominated possession through Shane Tuck (28 disposals, 15 contested possessions), Dustin Martin (24 disposals), Shaun Grigg (25) and Brett Deledio (24).

Defenders Steven Morris and Dylan Grimes were resolute and Jack Riewoldt kicked four majors from seven shots on goal.

But Maric was a clear best on ground, winning 46 taps, making five clearances and working hard in the backplay to gather 20 possessions for the game.

The lumbering Maric showed how to play wet-weather football by quickly getting boot to ball rather than handballing, and soccering rather than trying to pick up the slippery ball.

There was nothing pretty about it, but the win at last gives the Tigers some reward for effort and they now sit level with the Bulldogs and Lions on two wins.

Tigers coach Damien Hardwick agreed the match had little to recommend it aesthetically.

"It was a pretty tough day at the office," he said. "The conditions got pretty ordinary. The amount of numbers around the ball made it difficult to move it with much fluency.

"Our performances up to this stage have been OK without getting the four points. To come over to Port Adelaide's home ground and win by 37 points, it's certainly a good feeling."

Hardwick singled out Maric for high praise, rounded off with a quip about the ruckman's mullet.

"He's been a star. He's a high-calibre person. What he's delivering on the field is high quality also.

"He still has some areas to work on, starting with his hair."

Until yesterday, Port had lost by no more than 25 points but things were ugly from the time Dom Cassisi won the toss and chose to kick into the breeze.

A horrible turnover gave the Tigers their first goal and had the Port crowd calling for the return of the ban on kicking across the goal.

Next, Jacob Surjan was penalised for a dive on the ball that left him nursing a dislocated finger.

Bad news comes in threes, and the set was complete when Cameron Hitchcock pulled a hamstring inside the first 15 minutes and was substituted.

Port trailed by just two goals at quarter-time but it should have been more, before the team imploded as a curtain of drizzle came down on the ground and the Power's season in the second term.

The Tigers pounced on a succession of turnovers to pile on five goals to one and stretch the lead to a match-winning 41 points at the main break.

The mismatch was illustrated in a statistics sheet that showed the visitors had 77 more disposals than the hosts by half-time.

Port salvaged scant pride by outscoring Richmond in the third, although that was largely down to Richmond's indiscipline in defence, its wastefulness in attack and its habit of kicking straight to Port's loose man posted across half-back.

Port coach Matthew Primus could not name one winner.

His team was perhaps best served by Brad Ebert, who had 29 possessions, with 15 of them contested, Travis Boak (25 disposals) and Ben Jacobs (24 possessions).

"We were OK in the first quarter . . . but then in the second quarter, we weren't able to get at them at any stage," Primus said. "We just couldn't put any pressure on them to stop the uncontested stuff. It just went through the roof.

"For the last five weeks, I was proud of the way the guys have gone about their footy, but today was a step backwards."

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/tigers-finally-honourable-victors/story-e6frg7mf-1226348168930

Offline one-eyed

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Not pretty, but Tigers on the move (Age)
« Reply #6 on: May 07, 2012, 03:30:04 AM »
Not pretty, but Tigers on the move
Ashley Porter, Adelaide
The Age
May 7, 2012


RICHMOND 3.2 8.7 9.10 13.13 (91)
PORT ADELAIDE 1.2 2.2 6.4 8.6 (54)

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Nahas 3, King 2, Deledio, Miller, Newman, Conca.
Port Adelaide: Renouf 2, Broadbent 2, Young, Jacobs, Stewart, Butcher.

BEST
Richmond: Maric, Tuck, Deledio, Martin, Grimes, Rance.
Port Adelaide: Brad Ebert, Jacobs, Broadbent, Cassisi, Boak, Hartlett.

INJURIES
Richmond: Newman (shin), Vickery (corked buttock).
Port Adelaide: Hitchcock (hamstring), Cornes (knee).

UMPIRES McBurney, Margetts, Ritchie.
CROWD 18,522, at AAMI Stadium.

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

JUST 12 minutes into the game, Port's Cameron Hitchcock, in his first game this year from shoulder surgery, sat on the bench at AAMI Stadium with his head bowed and his hands covering his eyes.

Many believed it was because of a hamstring strain, but more likely he was no different to anyone else at this Port Adelaide and Richmond game - no one could bear to watch.

Richmond won by 37 points - a deserving change based on its recent admirable losses - but it, too, produced patches of its worst football this season, particularly in the first half when it led 8.7 to 2.2.

It would nice to raise the hopes of the faithful by suggesting this may be the turnaround in fortunes the Tigers were hunting, but the performance was far from convincing on this cold, drizzly and overall miserable Sunday afternoon.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick conceded it wasn't pretty. ''It was a tough day in the office,'' he lamented.

''That rain just before the half made it very slippery … the numbers around the ball certainly made it difficult to move the ball with any fluency.

''It wasn't a great game to probably watch, but they are the games we expect to win.

''I have said our performances up to this stage have been OK without quite getting the four points, and to come over here and beat Port on their home deck by 37 points is not easy when you're travelling. It is certainly a win that we will take stock of and move on.''

Richmond's effort was first class, but there were also times when it reverted to its dreadful short kicking, go backwards, sideways and negative style. Taking six or seven disposals moving backwards when it wasn't necessary and losing possession in the spot where the movement started looked awful.

But there were obviously many quality moments, and clearly leading the way was ruckman Ivan Maric with 46 hit-outs and 20 disposals, earning high praise - and a friendly sledge - by Hardwick.

''Ivan has been a real star,'' Hardwick said. ''He's a high-calibre person, and what he is delivering on the field is also high calibre. We have been really pleased.

''He still has some areas he can work on, mainly his hair, but other than that we move on. He seems to be getting better the longer the mullet. He's a guy who is starting to understand our system, what is required of him. He gets the ball and moves it from A-to-B. he's been a real plus.''

Jack Riewoldt missed three set shots, but he certainly made up for it with four goals. His workrate was outstanding in difficult conditions. Also pleasing was the performance by Dylan Grimes, who after struggling last year with a hamstring injury has continued to be a quality performer in the backline.

Richmond had many other valuable contributors in this slog-fest, but ultimately it was that will-to-win that gave it a 47-point lead just after half-time and resistance to Port's expected third-term comeback.

Brad Ebert was again best for Port, but too often his hard-earned possessions were wasted by teammates. Dom Cassisi led Port's third-term revival with his typical in-and-under approach, while Travis Boak and Matthew Broadbent had their share of good moments.

But unlike Richmond's list of contributors, Port had few players who had a big impact on this game. Like the Tigers, the effort has been there of recent weeks, but Port just doesn't seem to have the depth of genuine AFL players. The fans will now be on the back of coach Matthew Primus, but that lack of depth goes back to the recruiting staff.

The Power has too many players who fall over, pass to players under pressure, or simply don't have the confidence to take a deep breath and effectively work the ball inside-50. Too much of the old kick-and-hope-it-reaches-a-target routine.

Danyle Pearce, who was dropped to the SANFL to find form, was injured playing for Sturt on Saturday and will be out for some weeks.

It just gets worse for Port Adelaide, but at Richmond they're singing ''we're from Tigerland'' with a lot more gusto.

A lot of improvement is still needed, but at least the lads are moving forward.

WELCOME HOME

Ivan Maric made a welcome return to AAMI Stadium after six seasons at Adelaide and was clearly best on ground with 46 hit-outs and 20 disposals. Among the first to congratulate him - and catch up on old times - was former Crows teammate Tyson Edwards, who is now an assistant coach at Port.

FIGURES

Richmond's dominance was reflected by 73 more disposals, but 60 of them were uncontested. The Tigers were also way ahead with inside-50s, leading 55-37. The key here was the second term when Richmond went inside 19 times to Port's two, and kicked 5.5 to 1.0 - a match-winning term.

AGAINST THE WIND

Surprisingly, Port captain Dom Cassisi won the toss and kicked against the wind. Port had won only one of its five last quarters, and perhaps the expectation was of the wind becoming stronger and Port having a last hurrah. Of course, it didn't come, with Richmond out-scoring Port 4.3 to 2.2 in the last term against a fading breeze.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/not-pretty-but-tigers-on-the-move-20120506-1y72q.html#ixzz1u6z4UgJM