Author Topic: Media Articles and Stats: Hawks beat Tigers despite poor kicking  (Read 6173 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Hawks beat Tigers despite poor kicking
richmondfc.com.au
7:15 PM Sun 27 April, 2008

Hawthorn         4.7       6.12    10.18   14.22 (106)
Richmond         4.1       6.1     11.4     15.4 (94)

GOALS:

Hawthorn: Roughead 5, Williams 2, Osborne 2, Rioli 2, Young, Franklin, McGlynn

Richmond: Richardson 4, Brown 3, Morton 2, Deledio, Riewoldt, Johnson, Tuck, Tambling, Schulz



HAWTHORN made tough going of its match against Richmond at the MCG scraping home by 12 points after being wasteful in front of goal.

Hawthorn scored 14.22.106 to Richmond's 15.4.94 to win by 12 points in front of 46,076 fans at the MCG.

Lance Franklin was the worst offender in front of goal kicking 1.7. Jarryd Roughead started the match missing goals but finished with 5.3.

Richmond's Matthew Richardson and Nathan Brown were extremely accurate in contrast to the Hawthorn forwards. Richardson kicked 4.1 while Brown kicked three straight goals.

Cyril Rioli had a fantastic game for the Hawks, kicking a vital goal in the final quarter and a Goal of the Year contender in the third quarter.

Hawthorn dominated the first half but could not put it on the scoreboard.

At half time the Hawks led 6.12 (48) to 6.1 (37), with their 11-point lead comprised entirely of behinds.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=58609

Offline one-eyed

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Stats Tigers vs Hawks
« Reply #1 on: April 27, 2008, 07:54:58 PM »
Team Stats

Disposals:     396 - 370
Effective%:     80 - 79
Kicks:           170 - 186
Handballs:    226 - 184
Con. Marks:    13 - 11
Uncon.Marks:  87 - 88
Tackles:          45 - 65
Clearances:     25 - 31
Clangers:        51 - 46
Frees:             26 - 21
Con. possies: 116 - 101
Uncon. poss:  283 - 270
Inside 50s:     33 - 57  :o
Assists:          12 - 21

Individual Stats

player          D EFF% K H G B CM UM T CL C
   
Tuck            33  67   8 25 1 0 0 4 2 5 4
Johnson       31  90   8 23 1 0 0 4 5 1 5
Deledio        30  80 13 17 1 1 1 5 5 1 0
King            29  86 13 16 0 0 0 11 2 1 4
McMahon     29  79   9 20 0 0 0 4 1 0 4
Richardson  27  81 15 12 4 1 2 11 0 0 5
Foley          26  58 10 16 0 0 0 0 0 5 2
Brown         21  81 11 10 3 0 0 4 1 1 3
Simmonds   19  74  9 10 0 0 0 4 1 3 4
Tambling     18  83  6 12 1 0 1 1 2 1 2
McGuane     17  94 11  6 0 0 2 6 5 1 1
Morton        15  93 10  5 2 0 0 7 4 1 3
Schulz        14  79   3 11 1 0 1 2 3 0 3
Hyde          13  77   4  9 0 0 0 2 0 0 1
Moore         12  92   7  5 0 0 0 7 2 0 0
Thursfield   12 100  5  7 0 0 1 1 2 0 1
Newman     11  91  6  5 0 0 0 5 1 0 3
White         11  73  5  6 0 0 0 5 2 1 3
Riewoldt       8  63  7  1 1 1 1 1 2 0 0
Pattison        7  86  4  3 0 0 0 2 3 2 1
Polak            7  86  4  3 0 0 2 0 0 1 1
Edwards       6  50  2  4 0 0 0 1 2 1 1

player     FF FA CP UP I50 A   
   
Tuck            1 3 10 23 2 0   
Johnson       1 3  6 24 1 0   
Deledio        1 0  7 23 1 0   
King            3 2  9 22 2 0   
McMahon     1 0  4 25 1 1   
Richardson  3 2  7 18 2 0   
Foley          3 2 11 18 1 1   
Brown        0 1   7 13 4 1   
Simmonds  2 1   4 15 2 0   
Tambling    1 0   7 11 0 0   
McGuane    1 1   6 11 2 0   
Morton       6 0   8  8  4 4   
Schulz       0 2   5  9  0 0   
Hyde         0 0   3 11 0 0   
Moore        1 0   2 10 0 0   
Thursfield  1 1   3  9  0 0   
Newman    0 2  1 11  3 1   
White        0 0  4  9   0 0   
Riewoldt    0 0  4  3   5 3   
Pattison     1 0  2  5   1 0   
Polak         0 0  5  1   1 1   
Edwards    0 1  1  4   1 0

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media Articles and Stats: Hawks beat Tigers despite poor kicking
« Reply #2 on: April 27, 2008, 08:05:34 PM »
Hawks defeat Tigers despite poor finishing
The Australian
April 27, 2008

HAWTHORN extended their perfect start to the AFL season, but were nearly punished for bad finishing before beating Richmond by 12 points at the MCG tonight.

The Hawks were badly off their best form, highlighted by wastefulness in front of goal, yet won their sixth game on the trot, 14.22 (106) to 15.4 (94) before a crowd of 46,076.

The Hawks were out-played by a Matthew Richardson-inspired Richmond for much of the second half, and lost the lead late in the third quarter, but finished the stronger to win, despite booting one less goal than the Tigers.

Jarryd Roughead booted five goals (three behinds) and set up a crucial goal in the third quarter to cover for the misfiring Lance Franklin, who finished with 1.7 after five great games to start the season.

Hawthorn's kicking for goal was askew from the moment Roughead missed from 15 metres out on the run early in the game, but Richmond's tactic of clogging up the Hawks' forward line in the second quarter forced them into taking shots from the pockets.

Their bad finishing meant the game was still alive well into the final quarter, until Roughead goaled at the 25-minute mark.

Luke Hodge starred in the midfield for the Hawks, and Michael Osborne, Rick Ladson, Sam Mitchell and Shane Crawford were busy throughout, while Cyril Rioli provided a constant spark in the forward line and booted two goals.

Ironically in a performance notorious for its bad finishing, Rioli kicked what could be the goal of the year, when he burst past three Tigers in the third quarter and rolled through a dribbler from the boundary line.

Richardson booted four goals for the Tigers in a superb performance notable for his hard work across the ground.

The veteran Tiger began on a wing, spent much of the first half in defence filling the space Franklin would normally lead into, and then went forward in the second half.

He brought the Tigers to within two points in the opening seconds of the final quarter when he kicked off the ground, and then closed the gap to five points 11 minutes later when he converted a free kick.

But the Hawks booted four goals in the last quarter, and Roughead found his range to boot two from strong marks, to seal the win.

Jay Schulz gave Richmond the lead during the third-quarter comeback, but the Hawks booted the last two goals before three-quarter time, one of them to Ben McGlynn from a clever Roughead tap, which gave Hawthorn some breathing space.

Richardson (27 disposals, 12 marks) was the Tigers' best, while Nathan Brown (three goals) was lively, and Kane Johnson, Nathan Foley, Shane Tuck, Jordan McMahon, Jake King and Brett Deledio found plenty of the ball.

But the Tigers often over-did it when in possession, and were punished several times through bad skill errors or turnovers caused by one too many handballs.

Franklin booted the Hawks' opening goal to take the lead on the league goal kicking, but missed seven shots from then on in a performance similar to his effort late last year, when he booted 2.11 against the Western Bulldogs.

He came off the ground late in the last quarter with a sore shoulder, although the injury did not look serious.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23606662-2722,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers pipped in top-quality tussle (RFC)
« Reply #3 on: April 27, 2008, 08:32:40 PM »
Tigers pipped in top-quality tussle
richmondfc.com.au
Russell Holmesby
 8:24 PM Sun 27 April, 2008

RICHMOND fell to Hawthorn by just 12 points on Sunday after pushing the unbeaten Hawks all day in a high-quality contest at the MCG.

Hawthorn held on to win 14.22 (106) to Richmond's 15.4 (94) in front of 46,076 fans at the MCG.

After a first half of negating, ineffectual football Richmond pushed a wayward Hawthorn side all the way.

Hawthorn left the door ajar by its wasteful kicking for goal. Richmond’s tenacity deserved credit even though they had just over half the scoring shots of the opposition.

From the outset Richmond was under siege with Hawthorn doing all the attacking.

At all times the Tigers were trying to push numbers back to block the path to the big Hawk forwards Lance Franklin and Jarryd Roughead, and Richmond looked at times to be overly conscious of the in-form Franklin.

Matthew Richardson started well up the ground at each centre bounce, stationing himself on the wing and attempting to drop into Franklin’s leading space to assist the big Hawk’s direct opponent Kelvin Moore. Hawthorn had control of the ball in the first 15 minutes with Franklin, Mark Williams and Roughead finding the target.

Mitch Morton opened Richmond’s goal account and it sparked a yellow and black surge as Nathan Foley and co began to win a share of the ball out of the middle. A minute later Nathan Brown fashioned something out of nothing to goal from a  confined space 40 metres out from goal.

When Kane Johnson and Shane Tuck kicked truly the Tigers had rattled on four goals in eight minutes and had cut the gap to five points.

Richmond was racking up plenty of touches but were falling into the trap of being corralled by Hawthorn. The Tiger defence was under plenty of pressure. Moore was sticking with Franklin, and while Richardson was totting up plenty of possessions he was not an attacking force.

Hawthorn was keeping Richmond in the contest with poor kicking for goal and had 4.9 on the board to 4.1. Franklin’s third behind barely scraped in as all but three Tigers were inside the defensive 50 metre arc. The Tigers were hanging in but didn’t look like creating their own attacking moves and the Hawks were dominating possession.

For much of the second quarter it was a scrambly dogfight in Hawthorn’s forward half with Richmond over-possessing with handballs to get itself out of trouble rather than generate attacks.

Roughead was given a free kick in the goalsquare and converted but he had been a  prime offender with 1.3. He scored a second goal late in the term, but Richmond kept afloat with late goals to Richard Tambling and Nathan Brown. At half time Hawthorn led by 11 points despite having 11 more scoring shots. The most damning statistic was Richmond’s unbalanced ratio of 82 kicks and 126 handballs.

At the start of the third term Hawthorn coach Alistair Clarkson had pushed Franklin up the field and opened up the Hawk attack and it paid quick dividends with Roughead goaling three minutes into the quarter. Meanwhile Richardson had been shifted back to his customary place in attack and he outmarked his opponent Stephen Gilham to score a lovely goal from 50 metres.

Richmond was barely recognisable from the stodgy unit that had been on display in the first half and  after goals to Jack Riewoldt, Brown and Jay Schulz the Tigers grabbed the lead for the first time all day.

Richmond went into the final term trailing by eight points and promptly made inroads as Richardson soccered a goal from the square after just 20 seconds. Hawthorn’s wayward shooting continued as Franklin’s scoreline moved to 1.7 after another miss.

Richmond kept working and Richardson made no mistake to goal from a free 20 metres out. With 12 minutes gone Hawthorn clung to a five point lead, but then Cyril Rioli crumbed perfectly after Kelvin Moore had done everything right in spoiling Franklin.

Again Richmond refused to knuckle under as Morton marked and kicked a running goal. Richmond’s valiant effort was ended by Hawthorn’s most successful forward for the night, Roughead, who kicked two goals in the space of two minutes.

 
BEST
Hawthorn: Hodge, Roughead, Osborne, Crawford, Mitchell, Rioli
Richmond: Richardson, Deledio, Foley, King, Tuck, Morton

INJURIES
Hawthorn: Nil
Richmond: White (knee)

Reports: Nil

Umpires: McBurney, Stewart, Jeffery

Official crowd: 46,076 at the MCG

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=58609


Offline one-eyed

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Hunters keep the prey at bay (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #5 on: April 28, 2008, 02:43:41 AM »
Hunters keep the prey at bay
Herald-Sun | Mark Stevens |April 28, 2008

HUNDREDS of seagulls celebrated the arrival of another twilight game, doing circle work at the altitude of a Malcolm Blight torpedo as the sun went down.

As if inspired, birds of another kind scavenged at ground level as if a lone, greasy chip was up for grabs.

It wasn't pretty, but the Hawks again highlighted their status as the best hunters in the competition. The pressure and intensity of the attack on whoever in black and yellow had the footy was enormous.

And the Tigers, like they did against Collingwood three weeks earlier, were forced to revert to hurried handballs in a bid to beat the constant harassment.

Richmond fired off 227 handballs and managed only 170 kicks in arguably the most bizarre match of the season.

The Tigers' kick-to-handball total of -57 was an all-time record, smashing West Coast's previous benchmark of -37 set in Round 9 against the Hawks last year.

The total of 227 handballs was Richmond's most ever and the equal fourth most by any side.

Richmond coach Terry Wallace has been talking up the virtues of pressure in recent times, sending anyone who won't lay a tackle to Coburg.

Against Hawthorn, his young side was given an up-close lesson in what Wallace is preaching.

The Hawks won the tackles 66-45. At three-quarter time, it was a spanking 51-28.

Luke Hodge laid eight and Brad Sewell seven. Brent Guerra, Shane Crawford and Sam Mitchell had five each.

Midway through the second term ruckman Simon Taylor was desperate enough to meet a charging Richard Tambling head on and wrap him up.

As the Tigers refused to wilt in the final term, Taylor's ruck buddy Robbie Campbell managed to stop the just-as-dangerous Nathan Foley.

It seemed every time a Tiger won the ball, he was cornered by two or three Hawks.

When you're under the pump, the quickest route to safety is to get rid of it by hand.

Jay Schulz had three kicks and 11 handballs. Shane Tuck went 8-25. Kane Johnson 8-23. Jordan McMahon 9-20.

Against Collingwood, going handball hilarious was a death sentence.

Yet yesterday, through sheer will and persistence and some laughable goalkicking from Hawthorn, Richmond managed to stay in touch.

Hawthorn had 24 more inside 50 entries and 17 more shots on goal, but could only win by 12 points.

The Hawks pretty much did everything right except the most important art of all, actually putting the ball through the big sticks.

Lance Franklin had one of those crazy goalkicking blowouts he has become renowned for, spraying 1.7 and slipping over just 10m out in the first term when a certain goal beckoned.

Not all the shots were gimmes, but he should have kicked at least four.

Mark Williams, the most reliable set shot in the team, kicked 2.3.

Jarryd Roughead contributed 5.3, but was a wasteful 3.3 before icing the game with two straight set shots late in the last.

At the other end, it seemed everything Richmond touched turned to gold.

They only had 33 forward entries, yet scored 19 times.

No other team has scored more from 35 or less entries since the advent of inside 50 stats.

It was the type of game to do any Hawk supporter's head in.

And the Tigers deserve credit for hanging tough and adding to the feeling of anxiety amongst a Hawthorn fan base becoming increasingly arrogant about its chances.

Past versions of the Tigers outfit might have crumbled.

At least they persisted and showed enough grunt to suggest they have moved on from bottom-four status.

But anybody who witnessed the strange events at the MCG would find it difficult to argue the Hawks aren't a class above.

Organised, relentless and even across the park, it is going to take something special to roll Alastair Clarkson's team.

All the ingredients are the there.

Fixing the goalkicking is the easy part.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23607678-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Numbers game to favour Hawks (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #6 on: April 28, 2008, 02:48:11 AM »
Numbers game to favour Hawks
Herald-Sun | Mark Hayes | April 28, 2008

For much of the match the Tigers had either Graham Polak or Matthew Richardson in the hole in front of full-forward, forcing the Hawks to play wide in attack and contributing to their inaccuracy (14.22) in front of goal.

The move slowed Lance Franklin's goalkicking spree - "Buddy" booting just one goal from his eight shots - but Clarkson said it also cost Richmond the game.

"There's no doubt in my mind that them dropping a number behind the ball is the reason we won the game," Clarkson said.

"It freed up players further afield for us and it meant that the game was played in our half of the ground . . . it was 57 inside 50s to 33 (and) when the game's played like that you usually end up on top and that's what happened."

Clarkson praised Richmond's tactics, but said his team had to learn to adapt to what opponents throw at them.

"I thought earlier in the game if we could have capitalised on some opportunities we had and placed some scoreboard pressure on Richmond, the game might have opened up a little earlier," he said.

"(But when) they actually got their nose in front in the third quarter, it was good for us to rebound and take control of the game again.

"Richmond placed a number behind the ball . . . for a great period of the game and we need to cope with those type of strategies from time to time.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23607686-19742,00.html

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These Tigers love a scrap (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #7 on: April 28, 2008, 02:50:11 AM »
These Tigers love a scrap
Herald-Sun | Michael Horan | April 28, 2008

UGLY as it was at times, Richmond just wouldn't go away.

For the second week in a row, last year's wooden spooners took on an unbeaten team and went within a lucky break here or there of stealing the show.

That Hawthorn won this match was appropriate given the 14.22 to 15.4 scoreline, but despite having almost almost double the Tigers' scoring shots, the Hawks certainly flirted with disaster.

"It wasn't a very entertaining game of footy, I suppose our poor kicking marred the game," was Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson's understated assessment.

The Hawks got over the line because they had a tall forward who could kick a goal when all around him missed.

But this time it wasn't Buddy Franklin, who finished the night with a shockingly wasteful 1.7, it was Jarryd Roughead, whose five-goal haul proved the difference.

Richmond was manic with its handball - it had 226 of an extraordinary game total of 410 - but despite often crazily overusing the ball, their frenetic possession game forced the Hawks to work just as hard and in the end only their edge in class enabled them to get crucial goals when they were needed most.

Early, the Tigers seemed headed for an old-fashioned towelling as Hawthorn set out after a sixth straight win.

Eleven minutes into the match Hawthorn had toted up eight scoring shots to one.

Yet by the first change there was only a kick in it as the Tigers, as was their style all night, found ways to kick goals after Hawthorn repeatedly squandered opportunities.

By halftime it was 6.12 to 6.1, the Hawks' dreadful inaccuracy highlighted by two late Richmond goals that again balanced up the contest.

And every time the Hawks threatened to pull away, the plucky Tigers found inspiration and precious goals on the back of their opponents' misses.

When Cyril Rioli almost mocked so many missed easy shots by his teammates by kicked a nigh-on impossible left-foot snap from the boundary 15 minutes into the third quarter, the Hawks slipped out to a 13-point lead and again seemed primed to take control of proceedings.

Instead, Richmond produced its most fluent period of the game to kick three goals in five minutes to grab the lead in time-on for the first and, as it turned out, only time.

The Tigers never really looked likely winners, but never stopped trying to steal the game.

Twice in the final term the difference was whittled back to less than a goal, but the amount of drive generated by Luke Hodge, Sam Mitchell, Michael Osborne and Shane Crawford allowed the the polished finishing of Roughead (twice) and Rioli to get a three-goal buffer into time-on, the biggest margin of the match.

By and large it was a scrappy, untidy contest born of an emphasis on possession and onball pressure.

Tigers including skipper Kane Johnson, Shane Tuck, the irrepressible Richardson at both ends of the ground in his go-anywhere-do-as-you-like role, Jake King and Brett Deledio built hefty numbers akin to their Hawk counterparts.

Behind the close scoreline were the hard facts of what could and probably should have been.

Hawthorn dominated the inside 50s 57-33 and had 17 more scoring shots.

For all that, the Hawks remain unbeaten at the top of the tree with Geelong while the Tigers, for all their pluck and fight over the past three weeks, slip out of the top eight.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/1,9191,23607644-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media Articles and Stats: Hawks beat Tigers despite poor kicking
« Reply #8 on: April 28, 2008, 03:21:26 AM »
Errant Hawks happy Roughead aim is true
Michael Gleeson | April 28, 2008

CONFRONTING the conundrum of where best to use its best player, Richmond's answer yesterday was "everywhere".

Matthew Richardson, the Tigers' most important player, played on a wing, drifted to defence to put the finger in the dyke of Lance "Buddy" Franklin and Jarryd Roughead and still went forward to kick four goals.

Former Richmond coach Danny Frawley had mused last week that after Richardson's successful migration to a wing, the experiment should be expanded to make him stand the AFL's most irresistible force in Franklin.

Playing one-out on Franklin was a bridge too far, but not the ploy of using Richardson in defence.

It symbolised an approach by Richmond throughout the match: ceding the potency of Hawthorn's forward set-up and the singular deficiencies of Richmond's defence if allowed to remain man-to-man, the Tigers pressed extra numbers to defence.

Ostensibly, this was Richardson, but in his stead, it was always a tall player. Variously, Graham Polak and Adam Pattison were also used and smaller running players also clustered back.

This left a largely barren forward structure for Richmond but also a congested Hawthorn one.

It contributed significantly to Hawthorn's wasteful scoreline, which on pure shots at goal, would suggest the final margin should have been in the 10-goal realm. But many a shot was taken from wide afield.

The other consequence of the numbers in defence, along with the team's usual marking target, was that fast ball movement was denied the Hawks. This appeared to create the belief in the Richmond players that shuffling the ball forward by hand — which often also entailed handing it back and in circles — was preferable to kicking it.

After the Collingwood loss, when Richmond descended into a basketball-like handball frenzy, coach Terry Wallace worried that teams couldn't win with numbers like that.

Yesterday was further proof to the argument, for even with a better structure and intensity, he was right.

Again yesterday, the Tigers had vastly more handballs than kicks (226 to 170), with 13 players enjoying a stats sheet weighted to handballs. As it was against Collingwood, several of these were midfielders and the disparity was enormous (read Tuck and Johnson).

This approach also worked partly into Hawthorn's pattern of play, for the Hawks are among the most intense sides at pressuring the ball coming out of their forward line. And that does not mean their forward 50 alone, but right through the ground.

It is like fighting through set after set of waves, trying to breach the break. There is no clear break and errors inevitably follow.

Moments before half-time, the Tigers took a kick-in and carried the ball to the wing by handball after handball before finally taking a kick from the boot of Adam Pattison. Pattison is a ruckman. Kicking is not his strength.

After the half-time break, Richmond returned to a slightly more familiar structure and approach. While players continued to press harder to defence, they ran the ball with more familiarity and style of movement.

Hawthorn had kicked twice as many behinds as goals to the main break and Richmond was left with a sniff that it should not have had. When the Hawks continued to miss early in the third term, Richmond was encouraged when was able to find avenues to goal. Early it seemed the only way the Tigers would score would be through the fantastic — a one-handed Richard Tambling mark, a snap on the wrong foot from 50 metres by Nathan Brown. Now they were coming via more customary routes.

Cyril Rioli matched Richmond's heroics with his own, kicking a goal-of-the-year contender when he crumbed the pack, broke two tackles without actually touching the ball at any stage with his right hand, held off another tackle and laid the ball on his left foot and curled in a goal. Buddy will not be the only concern in Hawthorn's forward line over the next decade.

And neither will Cyril. The match-winner, on the day, was not the man Richmond had troubled with but his foil, Roughead. The Tigers remained in contention in the final term — just five points down at the midway point — and it was Roughead who found space and clean hands in front and twice goaled.


BEST
 Hawthorn: Roughead, Hodge, Mitchell, Osborne, Bateman, Ladson. Richmond: Richardson, Deledio, Foley, Tuck, Thursfield, King.


THE UPSHOT
Despite the win, the Hawks would be less than happy with the way they went about things, especially their goalkicking. They should have won by a street. Richmond would at least be pleased with the way it fought hard to stay in touch.

TALKING POINT
Handballs. By half-time, Richmond was on target for a 250-handball game. Only five Tigers had more kicks than handballs. Things were only marginally better in the second half. The reason? Hawthorn's relentless pressure.

HOT AND COLD
With all the recent hype surrounding Lance Franklin, his return of 1.7 was terrible. On the flip side, he had enough of the ball to perhaps have nailed half a dozen. Matthew Richardson, however, even at the ripe old age of 33, continues to astound with his incredible work rate.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/rfmatchreport/hawks-happy-roughead-is-true/2008/04/27/1209234659334.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1