Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Tigers outexecuted by Power  (Read 568 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles & stats: Tigers outexecuted by Power
« on: May 01, 2016, 04:36:56 AM »
Tigers outexecuted by Power

richmondfc.com.au
May 1, 2016


The return of Brett Deledio and a home game at the MCG was not enough to inspire Richmond as they dropped a fifth straight game, outworked by Port Adelaide to the tune of 35 points at the MCG on Saturday night.

Shaun Grigg and Jack Riewoldt got the Tigers off to a handy start, snapping home the first two goals of the game from open play and building a 14-point-to-nil lead inside the opening ten minutes.

Richmond were able to maintain that lead until the latter stages of the first quarter, but once they were headed, courtesy of Charlie Dixon’s first goal and a litany of Power points, they never regained control of the match or scoreboard.

Deledio’s booming snap for his first goal of the season in the third quarter was as close as Richmond got in the second half, reducing the margin to 14 points. As they were able to do for most of the night though, Port answered back in a play which was indicative of the night, as Nathan Krakouer was left in a paddock of space on the 50-metre arc to mark and goal from long range.

Jack Riewoldt then kicked his third goal of the contest as he continues to be a shining light up forward for the Tigers, however, Richmond could only add one point in the final quarter as Port Adelaide extended their victory margin to 35. 

Port’s use of the ball off their half-back line saw them launch the majority of their attacks from defence, particularly on the right-hand side going toward their goal, and outscored the Tigers by six goals from intercepts.

Matthew Broadbent and Jared Polec, as well as Jasper Pittard in the first half, led the way for the visitors in that regard, as they collected the most disposals for the Power at a high efficiency and did their damage from the defensive-side of the centre-square going forward.

While their use of the ball was better on the night, Port Adelaide also applied fierce pressure around the contest, winning the tackle count by 28 (99-71), including laying 15 more tackles in their forward half.

As well as the return of Deledio (22 disposals) and Riewoldt’s three goals, Dustin Martin returned to form for the Tigers with 31 disposals and a goal, while Grigg was able to pick up 32 touches, nine clearances and contribute two first-half goals.

Bachar Houli was the leading disposal winner for Richmond with 34, and Shane Edwards put together another solid game with 27 disposals, 17 contested possessions, 10 clearances and six inside 50s.

The Tigers' chances suffered a significant blow in the early stages of the match with Kane Lambert taken to hospital after receiving a knee to the back in a marking contest with the Power’s Brad Ebert.

Elevated rookie Jason Castagna made his senior league debut in front of a crowd of 27,077 after being a late call up to the final 22 in place of Kamdyn McIntosh. 19-year-old Castagna picked up 11 touches for the match.

After a six-day break, Richmond will host triple-reigning premier Hawthorn at the MCG on Friday night, with the Hawks coming off a 75-point loss to GWS on Saturday.

Richmond           2.2           5.4          8.10       8.11 59
Port Adelaide    2.7          7.10        11.13     13.16 94

Goals

Richmond – Riewoldt 3, Grigg 2, Vickery, Martin, Deledio
Port Adelaide – Impey 3, Young 2, Neade 2, Dixon 2, Westhoff, Broadbent, Boak, Krakouer

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2016-04-30/round-6-match-report

Offline one-eyed

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Power switches back on to fry Tigers' finals hopes (afl site)
« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2016, 04:37:50 AM »
Match report: Power switches back on to fry Tigers' finals hopes

AFL.com.au
May 1, 2016


PORT Adelaide has kept its flickering finals flame alight and plunged Richmond's season into free-fall with a hard-fought 35-point triumph at the MCG on Saturday night

In an error-riddled contest between two sides bereft of self-belief, it was the Power who gritted their teeth and ground out a critical 13.16 (94) to 8.11 (59) win.

The victory squared Port's win-loss ledger at 3-3 and keeps Ken Hinkley's men firmly in the frame for a top-eight spot, but the Tigers are lurching towards a 2016 disaster after suffering their fifth-straight loss.

Five talking points: Richmond v Port Adelaide

Even the long-awaited return of Brett Deledio from a quad injury couldn't inspire Richmond, and the Tigers' hopes of a fourth-consecutive finals appearance are now on the brink of being extinguished for good after a 1-5 start to the year.

It only gets tougher for the Tigers, who will once again be without suspended backman Alex Rance for a season-defining Friday night clash with Hawthorn, whose pride has been wounded by a thumping loss to Greater Western Sydney.

"I've been thinking every game's season-defining at the moment. We've just got to worry about getting the four points, we can't worry about games on the line," Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said.

"Our players and our club in general has got to bounce back and play some respectable football, which we are capable of playing but we haven't seen it."

While the Tigers are desperately searching for answers, the Power have a golden opportunity to keep their momentum rolling when they return home to take on the struggling Brisbane Lions.

Although Port wasn't at its explosive best against Richmond, there were fleeting glimpses of the run-and-gun football that endeared the Power to fans during their charge to the 2014 preliminary final.

Without stars Robbie Gray (hamstring) and Chad Wingard (concussion), the Power withstood an early Richmond onslaught and took a five-point lead into quarter-time.

They edged further ahead at every break and coach Ken Hinkley would've been pleased by the performances of his side's lesser lights.

Emerging forward Aaron Young booted two majors in a match-defining five-goal second term, while fourth-gamer Darcy Byrne-Jones (16 disposals), Jarman Impey (three goals), Jake Neade (two) and Cam O'Shea (20 disposals) made meaningful contributions.

After being recalled from the SANFL, speedster Jared Polec (23 disposals) responded with a fierce effort, Matthew Broadbent (25, one goal) was superb and skipper Travis Boak (22, one goal) found some form playing in attack.

Speaking post-match, coach Ken Hinkley praised his troops for a strong response after another week of intense scrutiny.

"It was a good, strong, four-quarter performance, which I was really proud of," Hinkley said.

"We understand why we've been under a lot of pressure, and we've soaked that pressure up a little bit, and the response of the group tonight I couldn't be more proud of them."

While the Power had contributors all over the ground, too much was left to too few for the Tigers, who lost Kamdyn McIntosh (corked leg) before the game and Kane Lambert to injury in the first term.

Lambert copped a knee to the back and was sent to hospital during the second quarter, reportedly struggling with breathing difficulties, although citing one fewer rotation as a reason for the loss would be giving the listless Tigers excuses.

One small positive for coach Damien Hardwick was Dustin Martin (31 disposals, one goal) bouncing back to his imposing best around the contest, but skipper Trent Cotchin (19 disposals) exerted minimal influence.

Shaun Grigg (32), Jack Riewoldt (three goals) and Bachar Houli (34) tried hard, but Richmond simply couldn't mount a serious challenge after Port opened up a three-goal half-time lead.

Deledio had 22 touches and booted an excellent snapped goal in his return match, but even the talismanic star – whose absence is often blamed for Richmond losses - couldn't stop the Tigers' season slipping towards the abyss.

MEDICAL ROOM

Richmond: Kane Lambert was sent to hospital after struggling to breathe following a first-quarter collision and has a suspected punctured lung, while late withdrawal Kamdyn McIntosh should be fit to face the Hawks after battling a corked leg in recent weeks.

Port Adelaide: Jasper Pittard needed attention for an eye socket problem and Jake Neade also came off with a cut to the mouth in the first quarter, but both returned to play out the match. Otherwise the Power escaped relatively unscathed.

NEXT UP

The Tigers will need to draw on every ounce of confidence they can muster from beating Hawthorn in three of their last four meetings when they take on the wounded Hawks on Friday night at the MCG. The Power have a must-win home clash with the Brisbane Lions if they're to be a genuine finals contender.


RICHMOND             2.2   5.4      8.10     8.11   (59)
PORT ADELAIDE     2.7   7.10   11.13   13.16   (94)           

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Grigg 2, Vickery, Martin, Deledio
Port Adelaide: Impey 3, Dixon 2, Young 2, Neade 2, Westoff, Broadbent, Boak, Krakouer

BEST
Richmond: Martin, Grigg, Houli, Edwards, B. Ellis, Riewoldt
Port Adelaide: Broadbent, Polec, Wines, Impey, Boak, Hartlett, O'Shea

INJURIES
Richmond: Lambert (ribs/lung/kidneys)
Port Adelaide: Nil

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Rosebury, Mollison, Roberts

Official crowd: 27,077 at the MCG

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2016-04-30/power-switches-back-on-to-fry-tigers-finals-hopes

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers on the brink as Port storms home (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2016, 04:41:13 AM »
Tigers on the brink as Port storms home

Herald-Sun
May 1, 2016


RICHMOND’S season is on life support.

As the final siren echoed around a deserted MCG on Saturday night, confirming the Tigers’ miserable 35-point loss to Port Adelaide, those that were left booed.

This isn’t as low as it gets for Richmond. No, that will come next against Hawthorn and the week after against Sydney. At 1-5, if their 2016 campaign isn’t caput, but it soon will be.

Forget the mid-season resurrections of the past two seasons, it will take a miracle to dig this one out.

The side Brett Deledio said was good enough to win a premiership couldn’t beat a second string Power outfit bereft of confidence on its own deck.

No Robbie Gray, no Chad Wingard and no Jackson Trengove, this was more Port Magpies than Port Power. Yet Ken Hinkley’s men outran, outworked and outhunted the Tigers.

Richmond won contested ball by 16 and clearances by six, but were annihilated on the outside. The Tigers went inside 50m nine fewer times and had 10 fewer scoring shots.

When they had the ball, they were besieged by a Port unit who rediscovered the hunger to lay 99 tackles — 28 more than Richmond. Tackles are a basic stat, but they speak of work ethic and desire.

When Richmond didn’t have the ball, Port went coast to coast like it was 2014 all over again. Jasper Pittard, Matthew Broadbent and Jared Polec were the springboards off half-back who cut through the Tigers like a hot knife through butter.

A Richmond backline missing the suspended Alex Rance was powerless to stop Charlie Dixon and Justin Westhoff, who combined for nine contested marks. Penny for your thoughts, Alex?

Kane Lambert was the hero in the last-gasp Round 1 win over Carlton, but he couldn’t repeat the trick after being taken to hospital in the first quarter with suspected rib damage.

But his absence can be no excuse, for the Tigers again had too many passengers and not even Dustin Martin’s best game of the season could save them. With Shaun Grigg, Martin was magnificent and the pair battled against the tide for much of the night.

This was a game going to script for Richmond after 10 minutes. The Tigers had kicked the first two goals of the game, had five of the first six inside 50s and looked “on”.

Meanwhile, Port Adelaide looked every bit the fumbly, hesitant and indecisive mess that had been humiliated in the last fortnight.

But where the Power started with fire and brimstone and then went missing against Geelong last week, this time they grew into the game with more substance.

While Kane Lambert was waiting for an ambulance with suspected rib damage half way through the first quarter, Hamish Hartlett and Travis Boak were coming to life in the middle and it would soon prove contagious.

Polec, Pittard and Broadbent were running the Tigers off their legs and when they delivery went forward Westhoff, Young and Dixon were causing all sorts of aerial problems.

The Power went into this game averaging eight marks inside 50m — an AFL low — but had taken nine by half way through the second quarter.

Port kicked five of the next six goals and when surprise packet Young bobbed up again with a mark and snap the Power led by 16 points 10 minutes out from halftime.

Broadbent followed up with a monster 65m running goal and when Darcy Byrne-Jones had time to fumble and regather in the middle of the MCG, alarm bells were ringing for the Tigers.

For while the Power were strolling off half-back, Richmond was under enormous pressure with each and every possession.

Martin and Grigg’s refusal to roll over set up a desperate third quarter tug of war. Deledio missed a set shot from 40m, but delivered 30 seconds later with a brilliant arcing snap from the same distance on a tougher angle.

It wasn’t the spark Richmond would have hoped for, however, with goals from Nathan Krakouer and Jarman Impey — the latter setup by a 20m handball from Brendon Ah Chee — restoring Port’s 21-point buffer at the last change.

PORT ADELAIDE 13.16 (94)

RICHMOND 8.11 (59)

GOALS

Port Adelaide: J Impey 3 A Young 2 C Dixon 2 J Neade 2 J Westhoff M Broadbent N Krakouer T Boak.

Richmond: J Riewoldt 3 S Grigg 2 B Deledio D Martin T Vickery.

Umpires: Jacob Mollison, Brett Rosebury, Brent Wallace.

Official Crowd: 27,077 at MCG.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/port-adelaide-defeats-richmond-by-35-points-at-the-mcg-in-round-6/news-story/4a0e79f1759d4bd02a22c44103de697e

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Slumping Tigers suffer from a Power surge (Age)
« Reply #3 on: May 01, 2016, 04:41:58 AM »
Slumping Tigers suffer from a Power surge

Jon Pierik
Herald-Sun
May 1, 2016



PORT ADELAIDE 2.7 7.10 11.13 13.16 (94)
RICHMOND      2.2 5.4   8.10  8.11 (59)

Goals:
Port Adelaide: J Impey 3, A Young 2, C Dixon 2, J Neade 2, J Westhoff, M Broadbent, N Krakouer, T Boak.
Richmond: J Riewoldt 3, S Grigg 2, B Deledio, D Martin, T Vickery.

BEST:
Richmond: Martin, Houli, Grigg, Riewoldt.
Port Adelaide: Polec, Pittard, Broadbent, Wines, Dixon.

Umpires: Jacob Mollison, Brett Rosebury, Brent Wallace.
Official Crowd: 27,077 at MCG.

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

Richmond's finals hopes appear all but over — and internal change is on the cards — after the Tigers crashed to a six-goal loss to an undermanned Port Adelaide on Saturday night.

The Tigers dropped their fifth match of the season and now brace for another week under a fierce spotlight where club brass will also more than likely have to face searching questions.

Since 1994, 35 teams have started 1-5, and only one has gone on to make the finals. This would suggest the Tigers' September dreams are over, and an internal review will focus on recruiting, development and assistant coaches. The decision to extend coach Damien Hardwick's contract on the eve of the season will be a source of debate – at least for supporters.

Trailing by three goals at half-time, Hardwick opted to coach from the bench for the first half of the third term but, despite his side showing fight, the Power were able to extend their advantage and post their third win of an inconsistent campaign.

The Tigers played most of the night with only three on the bench after Kane Lambert was taken to hospital with suspected rib or lung damage after a heavy hit in the first term.

Dustin Martin did his best to drag the Tigers over the line with a complete performance but, once again, they were exposed by a lack of quality. Trent Cotchin had a night he would rather forget, and played as if he had the weight of the world on his shoulders.

In what at times was an arm-wrestle, the Tigers were out-tackled and the absence of the suspended Alex Rance was felt in defence with the Tigers missing his composure when Power forwards Charlie Dixon and Justin Westhoff threatened.

The Tigers held the advantage in clearances and contested possession but too many disposals, particularly when heading inside 50, or when inside 50, lacked penetration or direction, a regular criticism.

Jack Riewoldt did his best to continually present but Ty Vickery, off contract this year, was unable to have the required impact. Finding a suitable sidekick for Riewoldt may be one of the Tigers' most pressing debates.

Brett Deledio, in his first match of the season after a quad injury, provided drive from half-forward and half-back and reinforced why he had been so badly missed.

Conversely, the Power, missing stars Chad Wingard and Robbie Gray, muscled the ball forward and were brilliantly led by the midfield dash of Jared Polec and Jasper Pittard across half-back. After a slow start, skipper Travis Boak was also influential.

In his first match back from a five-match suspension, Nathan Krakouer delivered a crucial goal off one step from 50 metres midway through the third term, just as the Tigers were pressing.

The Tigers have turned to youth more this season, and debutant Jason Castagna, a former Northern Knight, showed encouraging glimpses on a pressure-filled night. The time to blood more youth has arrived.

Pre-match Port Adelaide chief executive Keith Thomas summed up the expectations of each side after they had endured a rugged week.

"You have to perform, you can't hide from the media glare. You have to perform. Tonight will tell us a lot about each of the clubs," he said.

For the opening 10 minutes, the Tigers did show up for business. They began impressively, and dominated the contested ball and inside 50s.

They had the first two goals on the board thanks to snaps by Shaun Grigg and Riewoldt, with the Power looking as if they were not up for the fight.

While Boak did not have his first touch until midway through the term, the Power slowly began to lift, and that began in the contest through Polec from half-back and Hamish Hartlett. They began to win the clearances, and Dixon and Westhoff took marks deep inside 50 – previously a problem area for the Power.

Westhoff, though, had his typical moments of frustration, this time when, having completed a strong mark 15 metres out from goal, he attempted to handball to an unmarked teammate, only for the ball to be smothered. But when Dixon converted minutes later, the Power had the lead at the first change.

Vickery regained that advantage inside the opening 12 seconds of the second term but it would be the Power, with their confidence rising, who would seize control.

The Tigers needed their leaders to lift but Cotchin would have only the one disposal. The heavy lifting was left to Martin, who had 18 disposals to half-time, Grigg and Houli.

The Tigers would have a slight advantage in clearances and contested possession which was at odds with how play unfolded. Polec continued to find the ball, Pittard provided dash from half-back and Broadbent's damaging run hurt. So, too, did his stunning goal from 65m after the Tigers had failed to "kill" the contest on the wing, allowing the Power to overlap and Broadbent to convert his bomb without a teammate inside 50 to pass to.

With the Tigers trailing by three goals at the main break, former Hawthorn premiership defender-turned-commentator Campbell Brown suggested "careers are on the line in the second half". The Tigers now have some major decisions to make heading into a Friday-night rumble against a stung Hawthorn.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/port-adelaide-v-richmond-slumping-tigers-suffer-from-a-power-surge-20160430-goiuxl.html