Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Tigers fall to Bombers in the final seconds  (Read 614 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers fall to Bombers in the final seconds

Sarah Black
AFL Media
20 May 2023


ESSENDON 4.1 5.7 6.10 10.11 (71)
RICHMOND 3.5 6.6 8.10 10.10 (70)

GOALS
Essendon: Weideman 2, Durham 2, A. Davey, Snelling, Menzie, Langford, Stringer, Menzie
Richmond: Bolton 2, Mansell 2, Martin 2, Ryan, Taranto, Graham, Clarke

BEST
Essendon: Merrett, Ridley, Redman, McGrath, Durham
Richmond: Taranto, Bolton, Martin, Ross, Rioli

INJURIES
Essendon: A.Davey (shoulder)
Richmond: Nil

LATE CHANGES:
Essendon: Dylan Shiel (injury), replaced in selected side by Will Snelling
Richmond: Nil

SUBSTITUTES
Essendon: Massimo D'Ambrosio (replaced Andrew Phillips at three-quarter time)
Richmond: Judson Clarke (replaced Thomson Dow in the third quarter)

Crowd: 78,300 at the MCG

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

Richmond has suffered a last-minute loss to Essendon at the MCG on Saturday night.

Sam Durham may have got his start with Richmond's VFL side, but the Essendon defender sunk his former team with a goal in the final seven seconds, snapping a 13-game losing streak for the Bombers with a one-point win.

A pitch invader held up the final bounce of the game, but the Bombers were home after a see-sawing affair, saluting 10.11 (71) to 10.10 (70).

Zach Merrett was superb with 39 disposals and five clearances, Essendon ending a four-match losing streak while the Tigers once again fell agonisingly short.

Durham kicked two final-quarter goals, Judson Clarke's lunging soccer looked to have got the Tigers' home and Rhyan Mansell was unable to kick his third, his set shot sailing out on the full in a frantic final five minutes.

The Indigenous Tiger Mansell had booted the first goal of the game after a free kick, and it took Essendon eight minutes to record a single inside 50, but the Tigers didn't capitalise on their early dominance.

Sam Weideman took full advantage of two free kicks to kick consecutive goals, and the Bombers ended up with a two-point advantage at the first break, despite being 12 down on the inside 50 count.

Richmond seemed a tall target short in the continued absence of Tom Lynch, not adapting to lower its entries into attack as it has done in the past, much to the delight of intercept defenders Jordan Ridley and Mason Redman.

After a frustrating series of misses from both sides, with six consecutive points kicked between them across the second term, Dustin Martin broke the game open temporarily with a trademark snap.

The Bombers were able to successfully execute a kick-mark game throughout, the Tigers letting them move the ball up the ground with relative ease.

Shai Bolton – who became the 100th Indigenous player to notch up 100 games on Saturday night – came to the fore with two consecutive goals in the third term, including a special soccer right on the boundary line amid a steady drizzle.

Nick Hind made a crucial, lunging spoil on the three-quarter time siren after a Dustin Martin snap, limiting the damage to 12 points at the final break after Bolton's brace.

It took the margin out to a game-high 12 points after a very gritty two-and-a-half quarters.

Merrett was immense throughout the game for Essendon, finding the ball at will and a key link piece throughout, while Ridley and Redman patrolled the air beautifully.

Tim Taranto's fine first Richmond season continued, Jack Ross had one of his best games for the year to date on the wing and Bolton and Martin did everything they could to drag the Tigers over the line.

Dylan Shiel was a late withdrawal after injuring his ankle last week, while Alwyn Davey jnr. received treatment on his shoulder in the second term, but played out the game.

The result puts the handbrake on what looked like a change of form for the Tigers after downing Geelong last round.

An entertaining and inspiring pre-game ceremony that featured players from both clubs performing together kicked off a high-pressure first half, with Richmond taking a five-point lead into the long break.

The Tigers extended the lead to two goals at three-quarter time but there was plenty of football to play.

The final term saw Richmond break out to a three-goal advantage yet Essendon kept coming, finally getting ahead with a goal from former Richmond VFL player Sam Durham with seven seconds on the clock.

https://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/1336015/tigers-fall-to-bombers-in-the-final-seconds
https://www.afl.com.au/news/928487/dreamtime-drought-breaker-dons-down-tigers-at-last

Offline one-eyed

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Durham leads Bombers to Dreamtime win against Richmond with late goal

Greg Baum
The Age
May 21, 2023


A goal square mark and goal in the last minute to Sam Durham delivered to Essendon their first win over Richmond in 14 games since 2014 in the Dreamtime match at the MCG on Saturday night. It also snapped a four-game losing streak.

The victory for the undermanned Bombers will fortify their sense that under new coach Brad Scott, they are at last on a path to a sustainable future. They stuck to their possession game plan and kept their shape when the game appeared to have slipped out of their reach, and were rewarded.

Richmond, on the other hand, have again been knocked off the stride of what was a faltering recovery from a fruitless start to the season. They should have won this and will know it. They desperately missed the injured forward Tom Lynch.

Essendon coach Brad Scott said that after four losses, the most important thing about the win was the fact of it. “There’s only so long you can keep talking about effort, and playing well,” he said “Coaches don’t like to talk about the result because it’s the process and system you put in place to get the result.

“But it becomes hard to keep pushing a message when you’re not getting that result. So for the players, that was really important.

“But I would never underestimate what Essendon fans have gone through over the last decade. It’s been hard for them. When I spoke to the players on the ground at the post-game presentation, you looked around and the Essendon fans were all still there.”

In truth, the quality of football on the night did not match the grandeur of the staging. Long passages of scrappy play pock-marked by turnover goals were the night’s motif. This was not one they will be talking about around the campfires for years to come. Until the second half, the most notable performers were Michael Long, Dean Rioli and - of all people - Kevin Sheedy singing Archie Roach numbers at the long break.

But sometimes a game becomes memorable not for how it is played but how it finished. This was one.

None of that is to downplay the performance of Essendon captain Zach Merrett, Without Darcy Parish, and following the late withdrawal of Dylan Shiel, he was tasked to play as three men, and did. His vision made goals for Durham and Jake Stringer early in the last quarter as Richmond threatened to steal away with the game. His 39 touches made him a worthy and unanimous winner of the best-on-ground medal.

Scott said Merrett brought to mind former teammate and Brisbane great Michael Voss in that he was even better close-up than he had imagined from afar.

“As a kid growing up watching Voss play, I thought, gee, this guy’s a generational player,” he said. “But usually you get disappointed when you see them up close. When I (played with him), I thought, he’s even better than I thought he was.

“Merrett fits in that category. I knew he was a good player. But he’s a better player than I thought he was. And that’s unusual.”

Richmond coach Damian Hardwick could not conceal his frustration.

“It was a horrible game by us to be perfectly honest,” he said. “We couldn’t defend. To give up 140 uncontested marks was just diabolical. It was an obvious strategy coming in. We saw it in their VFL guys, but we just couldn’t stop it.

“We just couldn’t get the ball back, which was incredibly frustrating. It wasn’t helped by the fact offensively, we just gave the ball back.

“Thirty-six turnovers in the front half is just horrendous. We didn’t give ourselves an opportunity. We had 60-odd inside 50s But we just kept giving the ball back.”

Because of their midfield manpower crisis, initially the Bombers simply could not get their hands on the ball at stoppages, and in the first 12 minutes of the match advanced the ball into their forward 50 only once, briefly. The least they had to be was precise with the ball when they had it and efficient in the forward arc, and they were. Four minutes later, they were in front, courtesy of two Sam Weidman free kick goals, and maintained that lead to quarter time.

Richmond’s Shai Bolton began as if he had been given his own football for his 100th match. But for all the Tigers’ ascendancy, they could not find a marking forward target. Jack Riewoldt was unsighted, and Lynch wasn’t there at all, and the only mark they were paid, to Samson Ryan, was an umpiring howler.

The Bombers had the better of a scrappy second quarter, but kicked 1.6. Weideman was the only forward on the ground winning his position, but was profligate, kicking three behinds from gettable shots. Dustin Martin’s curling goal from, long range was a rare highlight.

Two Bolton goals defined the third quarter. The first came from a badly errant handball from the generally excellent Andy McGrath, allowing Bolton to waltz to the goal-line. The other was an artful dribble from what two weeks ago was the Bobby Hill pocket. Lots of dross; flashes of brilliance; so this game played out. The crowd of nearly 80,000 groaned as much as they cheered, but at least Essendon contingent would go home happy.

Bolton’s stroke of inspiration was matched at the start of the last quarter by Martin’s driving goal from outside 50. That should have settled the issue, but this was a night on which nothing and no-one was settled. The magnificent Merrett set up goals in quick succession for Durham and Stringer.

Another McGrath miscalculation when trying to switch led to a toe-poke on the goal-line for Tigers substitute Judson Clarke. As if the players were not authors enough of their own ill-fate, a cruel bounce then eluded Dylan Grimes, allowing Jye Menzie in to bring the Bombers back within range.

The Richmond of old would have killed the match then. Instead, it was seized by the renewed Bombers.

With three-and-a-half wins from 10 games, the Tigers’ season is teetering.

“The fact that matter is we should be better than where we’re positioned on the ladder,” Hardwick said. “I’ve got to take some responsibility for that. We’ve got to get to work. The season’s still alive.”

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/durham-leads-bombers-to-dreamtime-win-against-richmond-with-late-goal-20230520-p5d9xq.html

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Bombers pinch win in dying stages as Tigers fluff their lines

Essendon have stolen the win in Dreamtime at the ‘G after a last-gasp goal in the final 10 seconds. Richmond failed to convert a chance to put the game to bed and now their season hangs by a thread.

Ed Bourke
HeraldSun
May 20, 2023 - 10:14PM


Essendon has pulled off an extraordinary Dreamtime comeback as Sam Durham sank the Tigers with a final minute goal to snatch a one-point victory.

With 45 seconds left on the clock, Jake Stringer pounced on a ground ball deep in the Bombers’ forward line and found Durham with a centering kick off his left boot, with the 21-year-old holding firm in a one-on-one contest against Daniel Rioli.

The goal was Durham’s second for the quarter as the Bombers overcame an 18-point deficit early in the final term, with Jake Stringer heavily influential in the fightback after a torrid first three quarters.

Stringer was used mostly at centre bounces to shore up a Bombers midfield missing three of its first choice players, but Tim Taranto and Shai Bolton were the key figures around the stoppages as Richmond dominated the contested ball but failed to capitalise in a frustrating first term.

Captain Zach Merrett was phenomenal with 39 disposals, seven tackles and three goal assists as he clamed the Yiooken Trophy for best on ground, beaten in the clinches by Richmond’s inside midfielders but running hard both ways to have a huge impact on the match.

The Bombers broke Richmond’s run of 13 consecutive wins over them, ending what was the equal longest active streak in the AFL.

SCHRODINGER’S STRINGER

With the Bombers missing three key midfielders in Darcy Parish, Will Setterfield and late withdrawal Dylan Shiel, Jake Stringer was used extensively at centre bounces.

But despite the dynamic Bomber’s near constant presence around the ball, he simply could not get his hands on it.

Stringer had just six touches to three quarter time, and while he they were all impactful (he had four score involvements), the Bombers badly needed him to find more of the footy as Tiger pair Tim Taranto and Shai Bolton dominated at the coalface.

It was a sign of his continuing immense quality that he roared to life in the final quarter with five disposals and a goal.

TIGERS NEEDED A BEAR

The first quarter was likely the most acutely Richmond has felt star forward Tom Lynch’s absence so far this season.

The Tigers were rampant in the first quarter, dominating contested possessions and racking up an eye-watering 23 forward entries, but for all the work of their midfielders they could not find a commanding forward presence in the air and trailed at the first break.

Essendon had been torn apart in recent weeks by Joe Daniher, Charlie Dixon and Tom Hawkins, but with Jack Riewoldt contained by Brandon Zerk-Thatcher, the Tigers had no such threat.

Marlion Pickett was deployed forward as a pseudo key forward but found it hard to stop Essendon’s interceptors.

SCOREBOARD

BOMBERS 4.1, 5.7, 6.10, 10.11 (71)

TIGERS 3.5, 6.6, 8.10, 10.10 (70)

BOURKE’S BEST

Bombers: Merrett, Durham, Weideman, Caldwell, Ridley, Redman.

Tigers: Bolton, Taranto, Martin, Nankervis, Mansell, Ross.

GOALS

Bombers: Weideman 2, Menzie 2, Durham 2, Davey, Snelling, Langford, Stringer.

Tigers: Mansell 2, Bolton 2, Martin 2, Ryan, Taranto, Graham, Clarke.

UMPIRES Foot, Heffernan, O’Gorman, Stevic.

INJURIES Bombers: Davey (shoulder). Tigers: none.

CROWD 78,300 at the MCG

BOURKE’S VOTES

3. Z. Merrett (Ess)

2. S. Bolton (Rich)

1. T. Taranto (Rich)

https://www.codesports.com.au/afl/afl-essendon-v-richmond-bombers-pinch-win-in-dying-stages-as-tigers-fluff-their-lines/news-story/f3df8ba6f4f7416581f0ee05df8bc8ea