Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Tigers fall to Port in game of the season  (Read 869 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers fall to Port in game of the season

AFL media
8 August 2020


PORT ADELAIDE  4.4  8.6  10.11  13.15 (93)
RICHMOND         3.3  7.3  11.6    11.6 (72)

GOALS
Port Adelaide: Gray 3, Dixon 2, Ladhams 2, Amon, Butters, Houston, Rockliff, Wines, Woodcock
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Aarts 2, Chol 2, Lambert, Lynch, Martin, Stack

BEST
Port Adelaide: Gray, Boak, Wines, Butters, Rockliff, Amon
Richmond: Bolton, Short, Riewoldt, Vlastuin, Chol

INJURIES
Port Adelaide: Rozee (heel) replaced in selected side by Sutcliffe
Richmond: Nil

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

In the game of the season so far, Richmond fell to top-of-the-ladder Port Adelaide by 21 points at Adelaide Oval.

Richmond and Port Adelaide went toe-to-toe at Adelaide Oval on Saturday afternoon in the best game of the year thus far, with the reigning premier pitted against the ladder-leaders.

It was a game in which momentum swung like a pendulum, as the Power reinforced their claim as the best side this year, as it stormed to a 21-point win, the scoreboard reading, 13.15 (93) to 11.6 (72).

Port Adelaide played like a ladder-leader keen to confirm its credentials against the reigning premier.

The home side’s pressure was off the charts, as it trapped the Tigers in its front half and cashed in with the first four goals of the game.

The Tigers were rattled, but not rocked.

Richmond settled into the contest after Tom Lynch was gifted his first goal after two Power defenders spoiled each other and Lynch waltzed into the open goals.

Mabior Chol then ignited his side.

As Derek Eggmolesse-Smith streamed off the half-back line and looked up the field, he saw Chol tracking back towards Richmond’s goal on the far win, Eggmolesse-Smith drove the ball in his path.

Chol sets his eyes on the ball, spoiled it back with the flight then sprinted after it.

The athletic Tiger then tapped and scrapped the ball through half-forward, took the contact from a Port defender, tapped the ball inside 50, pick it up, took the brunt of a tackle then dished off the handball to Jack Riewoldt who snapped his first major.

It was one of the best passages of play for 2020 and showcased the traits and tricks that Chol has in his arsenal.

Riewoldt would kick another, and Richmond clawed its way back to be within seven points of Port by quarter-time.

The contest had a heavyweight feel to it and Ivan Soldo could attest to that after leaving the ground at quarter-time with a gash under his right eye after clashing heads with Robbie Gray.

The Tiger ruckman needed a “cut man” at the break to patch him up ready to resume the next round.

The pressure valve nearly blew off in the second term which was arguably the best quarter of footy for the season.

Both sides traded momentum, kicking four goals apiece, Riewoldt, Kane Lambert, Dustin Martin and Jake Aarts made the most of Richmond’s forward-50 entries and kept the Tigers within striking distance going into the second half.

Martin looked ever dangerous inside-50, having a direct hand in Lambert’s goal as he hulked his way through a forward-50 stoppage, firing off a handball to Lambert who snuck through a snapping goal.

The Tiger champ then snapped the go-ahead goal for his side after swooping on a 50/50 ball inside-50 and snapped truly across his left shoulder.

Liam Baker’s valorous effort to charge back with the flight of the ball in the path of a barnstorming Dixon will be etched in the memory of the Tiger Army from this contest.

Baker didn’t flinch or deviate and was poleaxed by Dixon but bounced to his feet like Rubber Man.

Port Adelaide, soothed and refreshed from the half-time break, burst away from the Tigers, and after Ollie Wines skated through a forward-50 stoppage unopposed and snapped a goal, the Power surged to a four-goal lead again.

Richmond needed a lifter - enter Aarts and Chol.

Aarts swooped and snapped like all good crumbing forwards do to give the Tigers the lift, Chol then dragged the margin back to within a straight kick with back-to-back goals.

Chol’s second goal was true forward craft, after shifting his opponent away from the drop of the ball and marking on his chest at the top of the square, he then eased through the goal.

Much to the delight of the scattering of Yellow and Black behind the goals.

Sydney Stack then handed Richmond back the lead after converting his set-shot and, after looking gone for the second time in the game, the Tigers showed why they’re the yard stick.

Richmond led by a solitary point at the final change.

The final term however was owned by the ladder leaders, with the ball parked in the Power’s half for pretty much the entire quarter.

The Tigers couldn’t clear the ball with purpose or composure, every possession was pressured and thus, most kicks or handballs hacked or rushed.

Port Adelaide won the midfield battle, especially clearing the centre square which allowed it to own the territory and then set-up behind it to thwart any Tiger attempt to extricate from the back-half.

The eventual margin was 21 points, as the Power confirmed their status as the pacesetters in 2020 and gave the reigning premier plenty of lessons to grow from.

https://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/791505/tigers-fall-to-port-in-game-of-the-season

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles & stats: Tigers fall to Port in game of the season
« Reply #1 on: August 08, 2020, 10:04:57 PM »
Port Adelaide overpower Tigers in finals teaser

By Steve Barrett
The Age
August 8, 2020 — 7.52pm


It was billed as a heavyweight stoush between the rising challenger and the defending champion - and it didn't disappoint.

Incumbent champion Richmond, on the back of a turbulent 24 hours , were leaning on the ropes early after absorbing plenty of early blows from rising challenger Port Adelaide.

The defending premiers refused to wave the white flag and continued to land plenty of counter-punches of their own, clawing, scrapping and chipping away at the Power.

But the ladder-leaders had enough, holding the Tigers off in one of the games of the season.

It is too early to say if a changing of the guard has taken place but it isn't too early to brand the Power the genuine article.

Former captains Travis Boak and Ollie Wines - playing his 150th game - provided supreme strength at the contest, Robbie Gray and Zac Butters the finishing sizzle and big Pete Ladhams with the X-factor in attack to keep Richmond at bay.

Port's powerhouse Charlie Dixon could have virtually killed the contest early but when he missed two set-shot sitters - which could have opened up a 31-point buffer - Richmond were able to wriggle their way back.

Tom Lynch slotted Richmond's first after Power defenders Dan Houston and Trent McKenzie fell over each other. Jack Riewoldt goaled following a similar fluff-up between Hamish Hartlett and Tom Clurey to reduce Port's lead to seven points at quarter-time.

The Tigers were again the recipients of a bit of luck in the second stanza, when Riewoldt converted a contentious free kick when it appeared Dustin Martin shoved Clurey, before Martin snapped truly after a poor Hartlett turnover.

Richmond closed to within nine points when Robbie Gray, strolling into the goal-square, was beaten by the half-time siren by a matter of seconds.

Port's advantage swelled to 22 points before the Tigers responded and stole a one-point, three-quarter-time lead thanks largely to Mabior Chol's back-to-back majors.

Gray goaled inside the first 16 seconds of the fourth to kickstart a run of three Port goals in five minutes to terminate Richmond's brave challenge.

Pete's pocket

Saturday's clash was a minute old when 202-centimetre Port big man Pete Ladhams got the ball rolling and set the tone for the high-quality, gripping contest that was to follow with a sensational opening goal.

On the opposite side of the ground to the scoreboard pocket, nicknamed "Eddie's Pocket" after Carlton's ex-Crows magician Eddie Betts, Ladhams received a sharp handball from Cam Sutcliffe and bent through a magnificent left-foot banana from the left-hand pocket of the River End.

Unable to comprehend what he had just done, Ladhams shared a laugh with direct opponent Dylan Grimes moments later.

Brain fade sabotages late bid

Josh Caddy's fourth-quarter brain fade hurt the Tigers' prospects of a last-ditch comeback.

After conceding a free kick in the middle, in the fifth minute of the final term, a frustrated Martin shoved Tom Rockliff and copped a 50m penalty for his troubles.

Then, Jayden Short inexplicably made it a 100m penalty when he ran in front of Rockliff while running back to goal. Rockliff converted from point-blank range and Richmond's challenge was done.

BEST

Port Adelaide: Boak, Gray, Wines, Rockliff, Ladhams, Dixon.
Richmond: Bolton, Martin, McIntosh, Rioli, Aarts, Soldo.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sport/afl/port-adelaide-overpower-tigers-in-finals-teaser-20200808-p55jwj.html