Author Topic: Media Articles and Stats: Tigers fall by three to Saints in thriller  (Read 6159 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers fall by three in thriller
Matt Burgan
 10:00 PM Sat 03 May, 2008

ST KILDA  4.4  7.5  13.7  17.8  (110)
RICHMOND  4.1  9.4  13.8  16.11 (107)

Goals:
St Kilda: S Milne 7 C Gardiner 2 R Harvey 2 F Gehrig N Riewoldt A Schneider D Armitage S Birss N Dal Santo.
Richmond: M Richardson 5 T Simmonds 2 N Brown 2 S Edwards 2 M Morton 2 M White 2 J Riewoldt

Best:
St Kilda: S Milne R Harvey L Ball N Dal Santo A Schneider S Fisher.
Richmond: T Simmonds N Brown M Richardson B Deledio L McGuane K Johnson

Umpires: H Kennedy, S Wenn, T Keating

Official crowd: 40,585 at Telstra Dome

------------------------------
RICHMOND has lost a thrilling encounter to St Kilda in the most dramatic of circumstances after a Jack Riewoldt kick after the siren was unable to score the goal that would have given the Tigers victory at Telstra Dome on Saturday night.

Instead, the Tigers 16.11 (107) went down to the Saints 17.8 (110).

Riewoldt took a mark at centre half-forward with roughly 10 seconds remaining, but his kick from outside 50 didn't register a score, giving St Kilda its 10th consecutive victory over Richmond, meaning the Tigers have not beaten the Saints since round four, 2003.

Just moments before Riewoldt's kick, another young Tiger, Kelvin Moore, had the opportunity to nail victory from inside 50, but his kick slammed into the woodwork, just as Nathan Brown's effort under pressure from the pocket had.

It capped off a remarkable match that saw repeated lead changes throughout the night.

For the victors, livewire Stephen Milne played a blinder, booting seven goals, and for the Tigers Matthew Richardson and Brown also played beauties.

Richardson continued his All-Australian form with another excellent performance up forward and along the wing. He finished the match with five goals, 22 disposals and 13 marks.

Brown played statistically – and arguably – his best match since he sustained a shocking broken leg against Melbourne in round 10, 2005. He disposed of the ball 29 times and booted two goals.

Ruckman Troy Simmonds and vice-captain Chris Newman were also excellent for the Tigers, while Robert Harvey and Nick Dal Santo shone for the Saints.

Despite the win for the Saints, St Kilda captain Nick Riewoldt could be in doubt for next Saturday night's eagerly awaited Hall of Fame Tribute Match, after he injured his knee in the second half.

Riewoldt came from the field at the 11-minute mark of the third term and headed straight for the rooms. He took no further part in the match.

Tiger Brett Deledio got crunched front on by Saint Steven Baker late in the match and he left the field, with what appeared to be a corked thigh, but he came back to the field in the thrilling final minutes.

Another Dream Team squad member Justin Koschitzke had his number taken for striking Simmonds. Regardless of the outcome, Koschitzke will still be eligible to play in next week’s match.

Both teams made late changes. Tiger big man Graham Polak was replaced by midfielder Daniel Jackson and St Kilda brought in Raphael Clarke after it lost defender Max Hudghton with a hamstring injury.

The opening term was an evenly fought contest. Both teams scored four goals, but three more scoring shots from the Saints gave them a three-point advantage at the first break.

Troy Simmonds became the first multiple goal-scorer in the match when he put the Tigers in front with the first major of the second term. It was the start of a goal-for-goal run.

But when Matthew White took the game on and landed a beauty on the run and Brown somehow managed to weave through heavy traffic, the Tigers nailed consecutive goals deep in red-time for an 11-point point buffer.

Brown was Richmond's major ball-winner to the main break with 17 touches, with the Tigers dominating the hard ball gets 31 to 14.

The Saints started the second half in great style, slamming on five unanswered goals to jump out to an 18-point lead. It wasn't until Mitch Morton kicked truly at the 18-minute mark of the third term that Richmond registered its first for the second half.

Morton's second major kick-started a Tiger revival and by three-quarter time, Richmond was back in front by the narrowest of margins.

It set-up what proved to be a stunning arm-wrestle in the final term.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=59002

Offline one-eyed

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Milne lifts St Kilda to beat Richmond (The Age)
« Reply #1 on: May 04, 2008, 12:25:35 AM »
Milne lifts St Kilda to beat Richmond
The Age
May 3, 2008 - 10:10PM

A seven-goal haul from St Kilda goalsneak Stephen Milne lifted the Saints to a nail-biting 17.8 (110) to 16.11 (107) AFL victory over Richmond at Telstra Dome.

Milne put the Saints up by five points when he kicked his seventh almost 24 minutes into the final term, after outmarking Richmond defender Chris Newman one-handed 30m from goal.

It was his third goal of the final quarter and ensured he finished the game a hero.

Minutes earlier he had sent a set shot from the right pocket across the face of goal and out on the full, with the Saints at that stage trailing by a single point.

But, after Milne's goal, the Tigers went desperately close to pulling off a win with three shots in the dying minutes.

A snap from Richmond star forward Nathan Brown rolled into the left goal-post.

Then, with about a minute to play defender Kelvin Moore took a superb pack mark about 30m out, before hitting the same post with his set shot.

After winning the ball back, Richmond managed one more forward thrust, with youngster Jack Riewoldt failing to make the distance with a shot from outside 50m after the siren.

Milne's match-winning haul was vital for the Saints, given their tall forwards failed to have much of an impact on the game.

Nick Riewoldt left the ground with a left knee injury early in the third quarter, minutes after kicking his only goal for the night, and did not return.

And full-forward Fraser Gehrig also managed just one, well held by Luke McGuane in his return from two rounds out of the side.

At the other end of the ground, Matthew Richardson was superb with five goals, spending most of the match up forward in an entertaining battle with Sam Fisher, who gathered plenty of touches for his side.

Veteran midfielder Robert Harvey was a strong performer throughout the game for the Saints, running hard to gather plenty of touches, while Nick Dal Santo also found plenty of space throughout the night to rack up possessions.

Harvey kicked a vital goal late in the third quarter to give the Saints the lead, breaking a tackle and threading a shot through from the pocket in what was a highlight of a strong performance.

But Richardson goaled at the other end soon after to level the scores, setting the scene for the pulsating final term.

Richardson added another two goals in the final quarter and also set up Brown for a snap which put the Tigers up by five points about 18 minutes into the last term, before Milne's winning goal.

Ruckman Troy Simmonds was outstanding for Richmond, giving them some drive out of the centre with control of the hit-outs as well as running hard to gather a heap of touches around the ground.

Brown was also excellent for the Tigers, both with some creative work in the midfield and up forward, while Brett Deledio also showed plenty of class through the midfield.

http://news.theage.com.au/milne-lifts-st-kilda-to-beat-richmond/20080503-2anv.html

Offline one-eyed

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Stats: Tigers vs Saints
« Reply #2 on: May 04, 2008, 03:13:21 AM »
Teams Stats

Disposals:    372 - 295
Efficiency%:   74 - 80
Kicks:          206 - 190
Handballs:   166 - 105
Con. Marks:   11 - 6
Uncon.Marks: 85 - 111
Tackles:         42 - 57
Clearances:    42 - 26
Clangers:       43 - 49
Frees:            23 - 18
Con. Possies: 131 - 80
Uncon. Poss:  238 - 211
Inside 50s:     54 - 40
Assists:          14 - 16

Individual Stats

player        D EFF% K H G B CM UM T CL C

Brown        29 76 20  9 2 2 0 5 1 3 0
Newman     26 85 19  7 0 0 2 6 0 2 2   
Johnson      24 58 11 13 0 0 0 4 3 1 3   
Deledio       22 68  8 14 0 0 1 3 1 2 2   
Foley          22 68  6 16 0 0 0 1 7 9 3   
Richardson  22 64 15  7 5 1 3 10 1 0 2   
Tuck           21 76 12  9 0 0 0 3 1 5 1   
Simmonds  20 75 14  6 2 0 0 7 0 3 1   
Hyde          19 84  7 12 0 0 0 5 3 3 5   
King           19 63 10  9 0 0 0 3 2 1 5   
Tambling    18 72 11  7 0 1 0 4 4 5 0 
Moore         17 82  9  8 0 1 1 5 1 1 0   
McMahon    15 67 10  5 0 0 0 4 2 1 1   
White         14 71  8  6 2 0 0 3 2 0 1 
Jackson      13 69  7  6 0 0 0 4 4 0 2 
Morton       13 69  7  6 2 0 0 3 0 2 2   
McGuane    12 92  6  6 0 0 0 4 3 2 1   
Riewoldt    12  75  9  3 1 0 3 4 5 0 2
Edwards    10  90  6  4 2 0 1 1 0 1 1   
Pattison      9  78  2  7 0 0 0 1 1 1 4   
Schulz        8  63  4  4 0 0 0 2 0 0 4 
Thursfield   7 100  5  2 0 0 0 3 1 0 1 

player    FF FA CP UP I50 A    
   
Brown        1 0  8 21 2 2     
Newman    1 0  7  18 0 0       
Johnson     0 1  5  19 4 0       
Deledio      0 0 10 13 4 1       
Foley         2 2 11 10 2 0       
Richardson 0 0  7 15 3 1       
Tuck          2 1  7 13 3 0       
Simmonds 1 0  6 14 1 0     
Hyde         0 3  7 12 3 2       
King          5 2 13  8 4 1       
Tambling   3 0  8 10 1 0       
Moore        0 0  7 10 0 0       
McMahon   2 0  3 14 3 1       
White        1 1  3 12 7 1       
Jackson     1 1  3 11 4 0   
Morton      1 1  4  7 4 0       
McGuane   1 1  5  7 0 0       
Riewoldt    0 0  6  4 1 2   
Edwards    0 1  5  4 3 2       
Pattison     2 2  3  6 2 1       
Schulz       0 1  3  5 2 0     
Thursfield  0 1  0  5 1 0

http://superstats.heraldsun.com.au/gamestatslive/5015517.html

Offline one-eyed

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Gritty Saints hold off Tiges (The Age)
« Reply #3 on: May 04, 2008, 03:30:49 AM »
Gritty Saints hold off Tiges
Lyall Johnson | May 4, 2008 | The Age

IT CAME down to the last kick. Fittingly, after an incredible match, after the siren. And the ball was in the hands of a Riewoldt.

Unfortunately for St Kilda, the christian name was Jack, not Nick, even if the mark that led to the final act was a trademark of his cousin, who was sitting on the bench with a damaged knee.

After showing again that he is a genuine player of the future, the younger Riewoldt loaded up from 53 metres. But with his legs spent, the connection of boot on ball was not great and the shot fell short.

The Saints — with only two fit men on the interchange bench for much of a furious last quarter — thrust their arms in the air. They'd snuck home by three points.

In some respects, the Tigers deserved to pinch it, if only because it was a shame to see another close match slip through their grasp. Not to mention they had pretty much dominated the Saints for much of the night, but let themselves down with poor disposal.

Equally, of course, the Saints deserved their win. After a less than inspiring start to their season they finally showed the sort of grit their fans want to see.

While the tall timber in Fraser Gehrig, Riewoldt, Michael Gardiner and Justin Koschitzke had less impact than Ross Lyon would have hoped, Stephen Milne was back to his brilliant best, bagging seven goals in a match-winning performance. Three of those goals came in the final term as the Tigers charged.

At the other end however, Matthew Richardson — after playing the majority of the game roving all over Telstra Dome — almost did enough to get his side over the line singlehandedly.

The big fellow added to this with one of the marks of the season. In the last term, running full tilt, he took a genuine "specky" through and over a big pack of players.

Within the first few minutes of the final term, St Kilda looked to have sealed the match when Milne booted two goals. But the Tigers fought back and Nathan Brown's brilliant snap 17 minutes in somehow put them ahead by a point.

Milne then grabbed his third, fending off Chris Newman to give the Saints a five-point buffer and from there it was thrilling end-to-end football as both sides tried in vain to conjure a lethal attack.

Tiger Kelvin Moore had the chance to steal the match with one minute left on the clock, shooting from 45-metres out. St Kilda fans breathed again when his shot crashed into the left-hand goal post.

From the kick out, St Kilda cleared the ball on the wing and it appeared as if that was the end for the Tigers. Yet with only 15 seconds left there was one last tilt — Nathan Foley breaking the lines and firing the ball to Riewoldt.

The Tigers will be kicking themselves for poor use of the football in the first half that kept St Kilda in the match. They were often superior in the endeavour department, were working harder and were slaughtering St Kilda in hard-ball-gets (66-28 for the match), but undid their good work with wasteful use of the ball.

The Saints, despite having less of the ball — 77 less disposals for the match — were better in finding targets most times they went inside 50.

Trailing by 11 points at half-time, the St Kilda players gathered in a tight huddle at half-back before the start of the third term. There was a fair chance they were just taking a quick second to clear their heads after the roasting they would have received in the change room from the coach.

But whatever was said there or by Lyon spurred them into the type of action they had threatened, but failed to deliver, in the first half.

They won possession at will and with five unanswered goals erased the deficit and set up a three goal lead that the Tigers did not look capable of recovering from.

Nick Dal Santo, as he was all night, was a driving force, Robert Harvey also was good, while Raphael Clarke, who in the final term injured his hamstring, was proving plenty of run. But as they have done all season the Tigers refused to lay down and came back with three goals to Richardson and Morton to somehow go into the last break a point ahead.

As it turned out, it needed to be four points.

The Saints will be buoyed by their gutsy effort, the win entrenching them in the eight with Collingwood their opponent next week.


BEST
Richmond: Richardson, Brown, Simmonds, Deledio, Hyde.

THE UPSHOT
THE Saints may have prevailed in a gritty effort, but the unheralded Tigers showed last night that they were vastly underestimated coming into this season, taking the game right to the wire.

TALKING POINT
THE wounded Saints. Nick Riewoldt was taken down in a late tackle by Luke McGuane 11 minutes into the third quarter and left the ground soon after with a knee injury, taking no further part in the game. Xavier Clarke was also forced out of the game with a hamstring injury in the final term.

HOT AND COLD
STEPHEN Milne was the man with the answers in the Saints' forward line last night, kicking seven goals, three of those in the final term when the game was on the line. Fraser Gehrig may be re-thinking his decision to return to football after another lacklustre performance, getting only five possessions and kicking one goal.


Offline one-eyed

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Sainters blessed by lucky escape (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #4 on: May 04, 2008, 03:39:56 AM »
Sainters blessed by lucky escape
Mark Harding | May 04, 2008

IS it possible for a winning team to leave the field in worse shape than the loser? If so, St Kilda did at Telstra Dome last night.

The Tigers were winners everywhere but the scoreboard and, based on pre-season expectation, the Saints are in trouble.

Sure, they won an incredible match by three points after the Tigers had twice missed winning opportunities in the final minute, but they have Nick Riewoldt with a knee injury, Xavier Clarke with a leg injury and some of their stars down on form and confidence.

Not even a seven-goal performance from Stephen Milne could hide the fact the Saints were beaten in the midfield and were lucky to escape.

Their premiership clock is many hours closer to midnight than their opposition and while they started the season with high hopes, the Tigers were freely tipped for the wooden spoon.

Richmond fans might well get sick of valiant losses, but their team played exciting footy last night, fired by the Peter Pan exuberance of Matthew Richardson, who kicked five goals and grabbed 13 marks all over the ground.

Although Fraser Gehrig was back in the line-up, coach Ross Lyon signalled that he was still not in favour of the "big three" forward line by starting Justin Koschitzke on the bench as the relieving ruckman for Michael Gardiner.

Gehrig kicked only one goal and even when Riewoldt was off the field late in the game, he spent lots of time on the bench.

Maybe his decision to retire against the Tigers last year was the right one.

The game opened with Richardson on the wing without an opponent while Sam Fisher was loose in defence for the Saints.

The Saints were less keen to let the likes of Nathan Foley and Nathan Brown run free - Shane Birss was a heavy tag on Foley, while the noted niggler Steven Baker was minding Brown up forward.

Neither match-up worked with Foley busy at the stoppages with nine clearances and Brown having a great night - a game-high 29 possessions compared to Baker's six.

Other midfield match-ups included Shane Tuck on Lenny Hayes, Chris Hyde on Leigh Montagna with Nick Dal Santo and Kane Johnson matching possessions from afar.

The Saints were first away with three of the first four goals and Milne busy up forward, snapping the first after his opponent Jake King spilled a mark.

But the Tigers fought back late in the first term with Hyde not only keeping the normally prolific Montagna to only one touch, but assisting in two goals.

He feigned and ran around the mark finding Troy Simmonds on the lead and then showed quick hands in a pack to get the ball to Shane Edwards to put the Tigers only three points down at the first change.

The Tigers dominated the second term, but five goals to three was a poor reflection of their command in general play.

It seemed - and not for the first time over the past decade - that they needed two Richos.

One to float across half back and the wing and the other up forward providing a target.

Jack Riewoldt was providing a lively option, but the Tiger forward line had more purpose when Richo was "resting" in the square.

An example came late in the term when he provided an aerial contest against two Saint defenders and bought the ball to ground for Brown to snap the goal that gave them an 11-point lead at half-time.

Earlier Edwards and Jack Riewoldt had given Tiger fans a heartening glimpse of the future by helping each other to goals and King had bounced back from a rocky start against Milne to make a valuable contribution running into the forward line.

King soon had more bouncing back to do, although with the second half starting the way of the first with Milne goaling, this time from a free.

The Saints were suddenly playing with the urgency of a team whose coach had delivered some half-time ultimatums, with Gehrig getting into the action with a goal and Nick Riewoldt snapping another shortly before injuring his left knee in a slinging tackle from Luke McGuane.

The momentum had swung and a crucial decision when Matt White sent a 20m pass to Jay Schulz in front of goal, only for the umpire to rule play on, which led to a rebound for the fifth consecutive goal and a 16-point lead to the Saints.

But just as they had done in the first two quarters, the Tigers fought back with late quarter goals, including two to Richo.

Up the other end, another veteran Robert Harvey shrugged a tackle to calmly slot a reply and after a rushed behind to the Tigers it was one point the difference at the final change.

The Tigers had dominated the centre clearances late in the third term, but the Saints began to win their share - and after Richo kicked the first goal they answered with three on the trot including two to Milne, now on Chris Newman.

Xavier Clarke limped off to join Nick Riewoldt on the bench and when Richo took a screamer from a Brown pass and kicked his fifth the difference was back to four points.

Soon after Richo returned the favour to Brown who snapped a goal to put the Tigers back in front, but only until Milne took a one hander for his seventh goal.

The crowd was at fever pitch with the Tigers again doing all the attacking late in the quarter.

Brett Deledio, who earlier had run with the flight in a display of rare courage, took a grand mark and sent it forward for Kelvin Moore to take a screamer with less than a minute to play. His kick had the fans behind the goals cheering, but it swerved late and hit the post.

Then Jack Riewoldt took a mark on the 50m and had a kick for victory after the siren from outside the arc.

He hung his head low when the kick fell short, but all his mates ran to him to commiserate.

The Tigers could leave with heads held high.

The Saints left with four points - proof positive that sport doesn't have to be fair.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,23642307-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers annihilated St Kilda's midfield - Lyon (The Age)
« Reply #5 on: May 05, 2008, 04:07:24 AM »
St Kilda's midfield too soft, Lyon says
Lyall Johnson | May 5, 2008

IT'S one of the oldest cliches in football, but games of football are almost always won, or lost, in the midfield.

And St Kilda coach Ross Lyon was honest enough after Saturday night's thrilling three-point win over Richmond to admit his side got totally smashed through the midfield and, as a result, possibly didn't deserve to win.

The Tigers, in Lyon's words, "annihilated" St Kilda in the middle of the ground (the statistics for hard-ball-gets alone were 66-28 Richmond's way). And if not for Richmond turning the ball back over to the Saints with monotonous regularity, it would have come out on top, which would have made irrelevant the 11 seconds "lost" by the timekeepers that muddied the result.

Lyon said yesterday the main worry he had with his side was that while the midfielders were performing well individually, they were yet to play well together on the same day.

"The biggest concern is our midfield," Lyons said on radio 3AW yesterday. "Games are won and lost there. Your ability to put scoreboard pressure on and help your defence is from there.

"In a real sense, bar (Nick) Dal Santo and (Robert) Harvey last night, up to half-time, we were annihilated in there. Their ruckmen spread on us and got a lot of ball and Lenny (Hayes), who's been outstanding all year, was tagged heavily and (Leigh) Montagna was tagged heavily and struggled.

"It wasn't until we put (Adam) Schneider and Xavier Clarke on the wings in the second half that we got some pace and some more ball-winning ability. And as soon as that happened, we scored five goals really quickly …

"So, to me, our biggest issue — and the numbers tell you that and the contested ball (stats) tell you that — at the minute, it's the midfield not supplying enough opportunity. They've all had good games but not collectively. Clearly, we'd like more goals from them."

It is fair to say Richmond was the better side on the night in all but two areas. For a start, the scoreboard shows it lost, Jack Riewoldt's after-the-siren kick falling short by a couple of metres.

Second, despite 70-odd more possessions than St Kilda and being ahead in nearly every statistical department, the Tigers' use of the football was so average, it cost them the game.

Stephen Milne was a star for the Saints, kicking 7.3, while Matthew Richardson was superb for the Tigers, booting five as he roved the ground for most of the night.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/st-kildas-midfield-too-soft-lyon-says/2008/05/04/1209839459922.html