Author Topic: Media articles & stats / Tigers turn it around, set up repeat clash against Norf  (Read 1228 times)

Offline one-eyed

  • Administrator
  • RFC Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 98042
    • One-Eyed Richmond
Tigers turn it around, set up repeat Roos clash

Nathan Schmook
AFL.com.au
September 4, 2015


RICHMOND                  1.4   2.7   7.11  16.12 (108)
NORTH MELBOURNE      2.3   4.5   6.6   10.7 (67)

GOALS
Richmond: Vickery 3, Martin 3, Lambert 2, Riewoldt 2, Ellis, Maric, Newman, Houli, Edwards, Deledio
North Melbourne: Turner 3, Daw 2, Brown 2, Bastinac, McKenzie, Petrie

BEST
Richmond: Deledio, Rance, Edwards, Lambert, Martin, Cotchin, Grigg
North Melbourne: Macmillan, Hansen, Tarrant, Turner, Atley

INJURIES
Richmond: TBC
North Melbourne: Turner (head knock)

SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Sam Lloyd replaced Ben Lennon in the final quarter
North Melbourne: Brent Harvey replaced Mason Wood in the third quarter

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Margetts, Stevic, Meredith

Official crowd: 40,461 at Etihad Stadium

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

RICHMOND and North Melbourne are set to meet in an elimination final next weekend after the Tigers won a cagey final-round dress rehearsal by 41 points at Etihad Stadium on Friday night.

The Kangaroos will be sweating on a late head knock to vice-captain Jack Ziebell, however, with the key midfielder leaving the ground late in the fourth quarter after a clash with Anthony Miles.

Ziebell was able to walk off the ground, but teammate Kayne Turner had to be taken from the Etihad Stadium turf on a stretcher minutes later after being knocked out in a marking contest with four minutes remaining.

The late setbacks came with Richmond six goals clear and the sting clearly out of the match, which ended 16.12 (108) to 10.7 (67) after the Tigers booted nine goals to four in the final quarter.

That last term – the Tigers' best against North Melbourne since 1995 and their best for the season – provided some momentum for Damien Hardwick's team going into the finals after three stuttering quarters that would have had the Richmond faithful worried.

Trailing by four points early in the third quarter against a severely understrength North Melbourne, the Tigers needed a spark, and Brett Deledio came to the rescue.

The dashing Tiger was best-on-ground with 26 possessions, nine inside 50s and a game-high four score involvements, with captain Trent Cotchin (30 possessions and six inside 50s) also strong.

Defender Alex Rance was superb on North Melbourne forward Drew Petrie, while midfielder Shane Edwards continued to build form before finals after suffering a fractured leg.

The Tigers didn't win by a big enough margin to overtake the Sydney Swans in fourth spot, and they can only slide down to sixth if the Western Bulldogs beat the Brisbane Lions by a three-figure margin.

They finish the home and away season with a 15-7 record, equalling their 2013 tally, but now face a September acid test after two straight finals losses in 2013 and 2014.

There will also be pressure on Brad Scott and the Kangaroos to capitalise on the decision to rest nine stars and turn around Friday night's result next weekend.

The Kangaroos tore up the script in the first quarter, with ruckman Majak Daw stamping himself on the contest early, alongside fellow 'ring-ins' Trent Dumont, Brad McKenzie and Turner.

Daw, who has played one games this season, enlivened a dull start when he won possession backwards of centre and took off, taking one bounce and then guiding the ball through from inside the centre square.

The 24-year-old was at the forefront of the Kangaroos' physical approach, laying four tackles in the first quarter as his team went on a tackling rampage (28-11).

By half time the Kangaroos led the tackle count 42-23 as the Tigers struggled to generate any run, playing a conservative style and kicking just one goal for the quarter as a result.

Trailing by 10 points at the main break and with a score of just 2.7, Richmond needed a shot of life, or it risked going into its third straight finals series in a funk.

The response came from Deledio and Edwards, who injected pace into the Tigers' game and sparked a five-goal unanswered run that gave them control of the match.

A message on the Tigers' bench read 'keep the ball going forward', and that is what they did for the bulk of the second half, without giving away everything against next week's opponent.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2015-09-04/tigers-turn-it-around-set-up-repeat-roos-clash

Offline one-eyed

  • Administrator
  • RFC Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 98042
    • One-Eyed Richmond
Five talking points: Richmond v North Melbourne (afl site)
« Reply #1 on: September 04, 2015, 11:17:49 PM »
Five talking points: Richmond v North Melbourne

Nick Bowen
AFL.com.au
September 4, 2015


1. Replacement Roos take fight to Tigers
North's nine inclusions for Friday night's game had played just 43 senior games between them previously in 2015, with Aaron Mullett, Aaron Black, Joel Tippett, Majak Daw and Brad McKenzie each having managed three games or less. It was understandable then that Richmond – whose only change was to recall skipper Trent Cotchin from injury for rookie Matt Thomas – started the game a $1.07 favourite with CrownBet, with North a rank $9.00 outsider. But what the Roos lacked in experience, they made up for in endeavour. With Daw leading the way in the ruck in Todd Goldstein's absence, North lead for all bar a few minutes in the first half, taking a thoroughly deserved 10-point lead into half-time. When Kayne Turner kicked the first goal of the second half, the Roos lead by 16 points and a David-and-Goliath-scale upset – and a Richmond trip to Adelaide in the first week of the finals – suddenly seemed a possibility. But Richmond quickly got the game back on its expected course, kicking the next five goals and 14 of the last 19 to eventually cruise to a 41-point win.


2. Riewoldt works his way into form

This loomed as the perfect chance for Jack Riewoldt to hit his stride on the eve of the finals. Although the spearhead plays further up the ground now and is happy to play selfless team roles, he has not been hitting the scoreboard with his usual frequency in recent weeks. Goalless last round against Essendon, he entered the North clash having not kicked more than two goals since slotting three in round 15 against Carlton. Things did not get any better for the two-time Coleman medallist in the first half as the Roos made a mockery of their underdog status. Manned by Robbie Tarrant, Riewoldt went goalless and copped an accidental head knock and sore left foot for his troubles. The Tiger spearhead was far more lively in the third term, kicking two behinds, taking a strong contested mark and setting up a Brett Deledio goal. He continued in that vein in the final term, finally adding two majors, and will be hopeful he can build on his second-half form in the finals.


3. Roos cop two late casualties
North had done everything it could to have its players cherry ripe for week one of the finals, but coach Brad Scott had a few nervous moments late in the game. First, he saw vice-captain Jack Ziebell lying face down in the middle of the ground after the midfielder copped a heavy head knock when Shane Edwards accidentally knocked Anthony Miles into him. Ziebell recovered to jog from the field but had blood streaming down his face and went straight into the rooms for treatment. Minutes later, small forward Kayne Turner was knocked out when Kamdyn McIntosh hit him high in a spoiling attempt gone wrong. Turner, who had put his name up for selection in the finals with a team-high three goals, was taken from the ground on a motorised stretcher and must now be in severe doubt for next week, although the Roos tweeted some better news on the youngster soon after the game.


4. Daw at home in ruck

Majak Daw had played 15 games for North Melbourne since debuting in 2013, but before Friday night he had never started as the Roos' No.1 ruckman. But with Todd Goldstein one of North's nine rested players, Daw took on Tigers ruckman Ivan Maric with occasional help from Ben Brown. And the athletic tall looked far more at home than he has in recent outings in North's forward line. Midway through the first quarter, he burst out of the centre, took one bounce and bombed a goal from outside 50. Then in the second quarter he showcased his aerial strength, outmarking Maric at the top of the goal square to set up his second goal. The 24-year-old ultimately lowered his colours to the big Tiger, but his 25-hit-out, eight-tackle performance won't hurt his hopes of earning a new contract with North at the end of the year.


5. See you (at least, some of you) next week

Barring a Western Bulldogs' massacre of the Brisbane Lions on Saturday, the fifth-placed Tigers and eighth-placed Roos will do it all again next week in an elimination final. North will obviously have a completely different look, with all nine of its rested players – Shaun Higgins, Nick Dal Santo, Todd Goldstein, Jarrad Waite, Andrew Swallow, Scott Thompson, Michael Firrito, Ben Cunnington and Sam Wright – likely to play. Will the Roos' fresh legs help them rebound from Friday night's loss and knock the Tigers out of the finals in week one for the third straight year? Or will Richmond take a psychological advantage out of its 41-point win and make North rue the fact it flirted with its form a week before the finals? We'll find out next weekend.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2015-09-04/five-talking-points-richmond-v-north-melbourne

Offline one-eyed

  • Administrator
  • RFC Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 98042
    • One-Eyed Richmond
Tigers tame plucky Roos in finals preview (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: September 05, 2015, 03:41:13 AM »
Tigers tame plucky Roos in finals preview

Herald-Sun
September 5, 2015


TWIN talls Jack Riewoldt and Ty Vickery reflected Richmond’s starkly contrasting workrates.

Almost irrelevant in the first half and then key components of the inevitable comeback against a ridiculously understrength opposition.

The pair shared a meagre five touches when the Tigers were stunned by North Melbourne’s bruising intent for the first two quarters that threatened a monumental upset at Etihad Stadium.

But Riewoldt and Vickery stood up when urgently required, sharing four goals and setting up a couple more amid the last quarter scoring splurge of the 41-point win that really glossed over far more urgent Richmond concerns heading into a finals campaign.

Yes, the Tigers found a way back from a tardy start as a top eight team should at this stage of the season. The nine goal last quarter was their best against the Roos since 1995. But the inability to find and feed Riewoldt and Vickery for nearly three quarters will be closely scrutinised by fellow finalists.
Richmond celebrate one of their 14 second half goals.

It was no surprise Richmond’s response after the dismal first half would start with ever reliable and clean ballhandlers Brett Deledio and Trent Cotchin at the centre bounces for the start of the third quarter.

Even when North Melbourne skipped to a 16 point lead after an early goal from Kayne Turner, the Tigers were showing renewed endeavour and hunger for the contest.

Bachar Houli was prominent across the midfield and up forward to help fuel the fightback and his long goal on the run was the first time the Tigers army had found their roar.

It sparked a run of Tiger goals with Shane Edwards adding grunt and run with his crumbing work on the inevitable spillage from the traditional Richmond high balls inside 50.

Richmond’s five goals in a row shot it to a 16 point lead, on the back of six marks inside the forward 50 compared to just one in the entire first half.

But the Roos weren’t done yet as the opportunist Taylor slotted his third goal late in the third term to leave the contest right in the balance again. But they were overwhelmed in the lopsided last term.

Richmond’s abysmal two goals in the first half was a combination of a misfiring forward setup as much as the Roos pressure. Riewoldt and Vickery struggled to get their hands on the ball with the poor delivery from the under-the-pump midfielders.

North Melbourne, in contrast, always looked dangerous surging forward and the ease of several marks inside 50 will be noted if these teams meet again in a final.

Like Ryan Bastinac slipped away unchecked to accept a centred pass from Jamie MacMillan for a rare goal midway through the second quarter of the defence-dominated first half.

The Tigers were sluggish and tentative in the face of the Roos’ intensity to deny them the trademark run and rebound. It was as if they had lost their dare to attack and own the centre corridor, such was the struggle to win an uncontested ball.
North Melbourne’s pressure was terrific in the first half.

It was time-on in the opening quarter when a Brandon Ellis hurried snapshot found the target for Richmond’s first goal. And a quick kick by Maric from a pack of players on the edge of the goalsquare early in the second term brought the only other scoreboard joy in a surprisingly barren first half.

North Melbourne had simply unnerved Richmond players with the attack on the ball and the ball-carrier, as evidenced by the lopsided 42-23 tackle count at halftime.

It was admirable pressure that couldn’t be maintained and Richmond’s sheer weight of skill and strength ensured a top four hopes are still alive.

RICHMOND 16.12 (108)

def

NORTH MELBOURNE 10.7 (67)

GOALS


RICHMOND: Martin Vickery 3, Lambert Riewoldt 2, Deledio Ellis Houli Edwards Maric Newman 1

NORTH MELBOURNE: Turner 3, Brown Daw 2, Bastinac McKenzie Petrie 1

BEST


Richmond: Deledio, Cotchin, Houli, Ellis, Martin, Grigg, Vlastuin

North Melbourne: Macmillan, Hansen, Tarrant, Ziebell, Atley, Gibson

VOTES

3. Brett Deledio (Richmond)

2. Trent Cotchin (Richmond)

1. Bachar Houli (Richmond)

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/afl-2015-richmond-defeat-north-melbourne-by-41-points-at-etihad-stadium-in-round-23/story-fni5f22o-1227513311509

Offline one-eyed

  • Administrator
  • RFC Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 98042
    • One-Eyed Richmond
After a rest, Richmond overcome North Melbourne Lite (Age)
« Reply #3 on: September 05, 2015, 03:43:35 AM »
After a rest, Richmond overcome North Melbourne Lite

Jake Niall
The Age
September 5, 2015



RICHMOND               1.4    2.7   7.11   16.12 (108)
NORTH MELBOURNE  2.3    4.5    6.6      10.7 (67)

Goals:
Richmond: D Martin 3, T Vickery 3, J Riewoldt 2, K Lambert 2, B Deledio, B Ellis, B Houli, C Newman, I Maric, S Edwards.
North Melbourne: K Turner 3, B Brown 2, M Daw 2, B McKenzie, D Petrie, R Bastinac.

BEST:
Richmond: Deledio, Martin, Cotchin, Miles, Rance, Ellis.
North Melbourne: Hansen, Macmillan, Bastinac, Atley, Turner.

Injuries: North Melbourne: J Ziebell (head knock), K Turner (head knock).
Umpires: Matt Stevic, Simon Meredith, Dean Margetts.
Official Crowd: 40,461 at Etihad Stadium.

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

For a time, it appeared that the scandalous part of this game wouldn't be North's selections, but Richmond's inability to take advantage of the mass withdrawals.
Brad McKenzie of the Kangaroos handballs as he is tackled by Jack Riewoldt of the Tigers.

Brad McKenzie of the Kangaroos handballs as he is tackled by Jack Riewoldt of the Tigers. Photo: Getty Images

For a time, it seemed possible that the North team that was happy to lose might confound its own selection policy and win, while the Tigers team that had every reason to win couldn't summon the energy or confidence to make it happen.

For more than a hour, North Lite was out-playing Full-strength Richmond, and the team that didn't care about winning was beating the team that had plenty riding on the result.

"Rest-gate" had created a storm in the 48 hours before a match that had, by dint of North's extreme resting of senior players, been transformed into a supposedly dead rubber – a fifth Ashes Test.

North Lite wasn't supposed to be competitive against Premium Richmond, who were playing for a potential home final, against a team that could only lose, fixturing-wise, by winning and certainly wouldn't gain. If the Tigers lost, they faced the possibility of playing a sudden – and probable – death final in Adelaide, assuming the Crows beat Geelong.

But the no-names and fringe dwellers whom Brad Scott had introduced to this side – names such as McKenzie, Wood, Dumont, Daw, Black, Mullet and Tippett – weren't willing to give the Tigers four easy points; If North had little to play for, this did not apply to a number of  players, whose desire to impress was apparent.

North had not only withdrawn nine players and seemed prepared to lay down for the Tigers, but they'd made Brent Harvey their sub – another selection, we can safely predict, that will not be repeated next weekend.

Shortly after half-time, this composite North-Ballarat-Werribee-North Melbourne team led the lethargic Tigers by 16 points, following a goal to Kayne Turner. Surely it couldn't happen, could it? Well, no, it couldn't.

To this point, the Tigers had fallen into the apparent trap of believing what everyone had said – that North was simply handing them the points.

 Richmond, who had managed a pathetic two goals in a half, promptly rattled on three goals in five minutes to take the lead and by the 17-minute mark had seven on the board (7.10) to North's 5.6. While they led only by 11 at the last change, it was evident that the Tigers would go on and win – which they did in eventual comfort, as Tyrone Vickery, hitherto silent, booted a couple of goals and North's resistance collapsed in the final quarter, the Tigers booting 9.1.

Brett Deledio and Shane Edwards were instrumental in turning the match in the third term – Edwards twice swooping on loose balls, including a lovely goal-square piece of crumbing, to either kick or create goals. Deledio, a clear best-afield, simply found space and used the ball, while defender Alex Rance, Bachar Houli and Kane Lambert also lifted in this decisive period. In the last term, Dusty Martin became prominent, Anthony Miles and Brandon Ellis were steady influences in the midfield.

The opening half did not follow the anticipated script. One can only guess that the Tigers were too cognisant that the opposition had picked a weaker team and lowered their intensity accordingly.

The players North put out there – including those less-familiar names – were more purposeful and cohesive, while the Tigers foundered in attack. North's defence excelled in the first half, with Luke McDonald and Lachie Hansen taking advantage of Richmond's shoddy delivery.

Speedy Shaun Atley was lively around the ball, Ryan Bastinac, Sam Gibson, Jamie Macmillan and Trent Dumont found their share of ball and the promoted Majak Daw seemed to relish the opportunity to play in the ruck, booting a wonderful long running goal and plucking a pack mark to regain a lead that the Roos had briefly given up (second term). Majak, who has never had great football smarts, might be better suited to the freedom of rucking than the confines of the forward line.

Many of North's senior players – Todd Goldstein, Nick Dal Santo, Andrew Swallow, Jarrad Waite et al – weren't on the park. You could say that quite a few of Richmond's waited until half-time before appearing. Once Martin and co arrived, the match was over.

If, as seems most likely, these teams meet again at the MCG next weekend, we'll see a completely different North, and, presumably, a Richmond that is revved from the outset.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/after-a-rest-richmond-overcome-north-melbourne-lite-20150904-gjfp3s.html