Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers have all the answers in win over the Swans  (Read 346 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Match report: Richmond v Sydney

Nick Bowen
afl.com.au
Jun 28, 2018 10:28PM


RICHMOND     6.1       7.2       11.5     14.9 (93)
SYDNEY           3.1       5.1       10.1     11.1 (67)

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Lambert 3, Short 2, Butler 2, Rioli, Vlastuin, Caddy, Edwards
Sydney: Franklin 4, Ronke 2, Florent 2, Parker 2, Hayward

BEST
Richmond: Riewoldt, Edwards, Lambert, Vlastuin, Cotchin, Nankervis, Astbury
Sydney: Kennedy, Franklin, Hewett, Parker, Lloyd

INJURIES
Richmond: Conca (ankle)
Sydney: Heeney (concussion)

Umpires: Stevic, Chamberlain, Findlay

Crowd: 43,519 at Etihad Stadium

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RICHMOND has consolidated top spot on the ladder, withstanding a fierce challenge from one of its most serious challengers, Sydney, to prevail by 26 points in a gripping contest at Etihad Stadium on Thursday night.

After taking the lead for the first time at the 26-minute mark of the opening quarter, the Tigers were never headed, but the Swans gave them an almighty scare when a Lance Franklin goal cut the margin to four points in the opening minute of the final term.

Richmond had led by 22 points late in the third term, but late goals to Will Hayward and Franklin cut the margin to 10 points at the final break, and then Buddy's last-quarter goal appeared to give Sydney all the momentum.

However, the reigning premiers then asserted their authority, holding the Swans scoreless for the rest of the game while they piled on the final three goals to seal a 14.9 (93) to 11.1 (67) victory and underline the fact they remain the team to beat in 2018.

Jack Riewoldt (three goals) was the hero for the Tigers, turning on a vintage display in attack. His total of 16 marks was six more than the next best player on the ground, while seven of those marks were contested.

The Tigers' win was soured with Reece Conca suffering a horrific injury early in his 100th game.

Conca's left ankle became trapped at an awkward angle underneath Lance Franklin midway through the first quarter, with the Tigers free agent stretched from the ground, his season almost certainly over.

The Tigers now have a game's break over the Swans, who entered the game second on the ladder, and West Coast, although the Eagles can close that gap if they defeat the Crows at Adelaide Oval on Saturday.

The Swans' loss could yet get worse with Franklin likely to face MRO scrutiny for an open-handed shove to the neck of Alex Rance early in the third term, which resulted in a free kick to the Tigers defender.

Richmond defender Nick Vlastuin appears to be in the same boat after he threw an elbow that caught Luke Parker high in the third quarter. Vlastuin was not looking at Parker, who was standing behind him, but the MRO takes a dim view of players that throw elbows.

The much-anticipated contest between Franklin and Rance did not quite live up to billing, although it had a couple of flash points.

After Franklin's shove to the throat, Rance appeared to get one back on the Swan later when he smothered a set shot from outside 50m. But the Tiger was pinged for overstepping the mark and Franklin took advantage of the resultant 50m penalty to goal from point-blank range after the three-quarter siren.

Franklin finished with four goals to claim the points over Rance, although he was not at his devastating best.

Toby Nankervis (18 possessions, 41 hit-outs and 10 tackles) decisively won his ruck contest against former teammate Callum Sinclair, while Kane Lambert (27 possessions and three goals), Shane Edwards (23 possessions and one goal) and Trent Cotchin (26 possessions and six clearances) powered the Tigers' midfield on a night when Dustin Martin was well held by Swans tagger George Hewett.

Vlastuin (22 possessions, 10 marks and nine one-percenters) continued his good form in defence, and Jayden Short (two goals and seven inside 50s) gave the Tigers plenty of drive from half-back.

The Swans loss ended a six-game winning streak, while they had won their previous two games against Richmond.

Josh Kennedy (a game-high 37 possessions, eight clearances and nine tackles) led his team from the front as Sydney won the clearance count 39-31.

In addition to keeping Martin on a short leash when the Tiger superstar was stationed in the midfield, Hewett had 20 possessions of his own and a game-high 10 clearances.

Jake Lloyd (33 possessions) and Luke Parker (23 possessions and two goals) were also solid performers through the midfield.

MEDICAL ROOM


Richmond:
Reece Conca was stretched from the ground in his 100th game after appearing to suffer a broken left ankle midway through the first quarter. Captain Trent Cotchin spent 15 minutes off the ground during the first term after suffering a knock to his knee, but returned soon after and played out the game.

Sydney:
Gary Rohan came to the bench after a collision with Toby Nankervis in the opening minute of the game, but returned to the ground soon after. Isaac Heeney copped a knock to the head in the second quarter. He returned to the ground but was taken out of the game midway through the third term with suspected concussion. Luke Parker suffered a knock to his right elbow when Richmond defender Dylan Grimes collided with him early in the third term, but played the game out after having the joint strapped.

NEXT UP

The Tigers host Adelaide at the MCG next Friday night, when they will hope to avenge their 36-point loss in the Grand Final rematch at Adelaide Oval in round two. The Swans host Geelong at the SCG next Thursday night, having won four of their past five clashes against the Cats.           

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-06-28/match-report-richmond-v-sydney

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers still top in game of attrition (Age)
« Reply #1 on: June 28, 2018, 11:21:03 PM »
Tigers still top in game of attrition

By Michael Gleeson
The Age
28 June 2018 — 10:29pm


Not even a fog settling under a roof could disguise a simple truth: in the battle of first and second, the reigning premier remains better than the rest.

Richmond Sydney was constructed to be a contest presenting the best forward against the best defender. It turned out the best forward was on the same team as the best defender.

Jack Riewoldt was the best forward on the ground. He was significantly the best player on the ground. It was not a Rance-Lance dance, it was a what? A Jack jig?

Riewoldt took more marks inside 50 than the entire Sydney team. He was the primary difference but the other critical difference was Richmond’s ability to scrounge goals. Butler kicked a couple, Kane Lambert three, including two to end Sydney’s last hope. Jayden Short kicked goals short and long.

Richmond won the small margin moments forward. Like in the first term when Olly Florent should have taken the mark and didn’t. And Daniel Rioli shouldn’t have taken the mark and did.

Florent should have stopped the goal. Rioli should never have got the ball to kick the goal. But he did.

This is mentioned not to single out Florent for error for he was good on the night (especially when he picked a ball from his toes looked at Shaun Grigg realised he had him covered and kicked a goal) but to illustrate the margins by which the game turned.

They were margins Richmond found.

The Florent-Rioli moment came in the first term after Sydney had begun frenetically. Ben Ronke had kicked two sharp clever goals in thirty seconds and Sydney was flying. Richmond hung in. Reece Conca was twisted in a tackle and hurt his ankle badly – it looked like it might be a break – and the game was held up at length.

Richmond knew they’d be a man down and Trent Cotchin was managing a grumbly knee. The Tigers were down on the scoreboard at the time and the game of attrition was assumed to be telling. It was, but it was a game of attrition Richmond won.

The Tigers absorbed Sydney’s thrusts and counter-attacked with more daring, precision and art. Sydney attacked in contrast with muddled thought and poor execution. Besides, the fewer rotations after Conca’s injury was evened up in the third term when Isaac Heeney was concussed out of the game.

After Conca went off Richmond kicked four unanswered goals for the remainder of the long first term. The second of them was the Florent-Rioli goal when the ball whistled through Florent’s hands to Rioli behind him who scooped it in almost on the half volley one-handed, he bounced to his feet, stepped inside a player and banana’d a goal. In a breath it went from moment saved to moment lost.
It was that kind of game at that stage.

Both sides began the centre bounces with an extra behind the ball but Sydney tended to push theirs up the contest. It kept them in the play around the ball and gave them an extra outlet but it also meant their forward entries had to be smart and clean and they weren’t. For example, to half-time Richmond had kicked five goals from within 30 metres and Sydney none.

Nick Vlastuin was again class because that is what he is – the best player outside the big four. He is calm and smart. He thrilled climbing on Franklin’s shoulders to mark a ball that sat up for him like a training drill.

Though he will likely be in trouble for an elbow to the face of Luke Parker which drew a 50-metre penalty after he gave away a free kick.

The Tigers had been pressed but outside of the first minutes of the game Richmond was decisively the better team and the result reflected it.


RICHMOND 6.1 7.2 11.5 14.9 (93)
SYDNEY 3.1 5.1 10.1 11.1 (67)

GOALS: Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Lambert 3, Butler 2, Short 2, Rioli, Caddy, Vlastuin, Edwards..
Sydney: Franklin 4, Ronke 2, Parker 2, Florent 2, Hayward.

BEST: Richmond: Riewoldt, Lambert, Vlastuin, Edwards, Prestia, Short.
Sydney: Lloyd, Ronke, Parker, Hayward, Kenedy, Rampe, Franklin.

INJURIES: Richmond: Conca (leg).
Sydney: Heeney (concussion).

CROWD: 43,159 at Etihad Stadium.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/tigers-still-top-in-game-of-attrition-20180628-p4zof5.html