Bulldogs take bite out of Richmond
Jesse Hogan | April 14, 2009
ABOUT 20 minutes after their match against Richmond, all of the Western Bulldogs players casually strode out onto an open-roofed Etihad Stadium with towels over their shoulders, most in shorts and thongs. In that attire and with seagulls already squawking overhead all that was missing was sand and waves, as if their 47-point thumping of the Tigers had been barely more strenuous than a day at the beach.
The record books will show Richmond became the first team since 2003 to hold the Bulldogs to a goalless opening quarter. What they cannot show is how the optimism that characterised the Tigers' pre-season is rapidly evaporating — if not already evaporated — after the club slumped to its third defeat of the season.
The Bulldogs' failure to kick a goal in a scrappy opening term — fought almost entirely between the teams' 50-metre arcs — was inconsequential as they kicked 16 of the next 21 goals.
Even highly rated Bulldogs players such as Lindsay Gilbee and Ryan Griffen sprayed passes early, but never to the extent that their Tiger rivals wasted kicks and fumbled marks as the match progressed. Bulldogs youngster Josh Hill displayed the gulf of talent between the teams when, approaching time-on in the last quarter, he scooped a bouncing ball off the turf with one hand and within the same action slid the ball onto his boot and through for a goal.
Veteran Tiger forwards Nathan Brown and Matthew Richardson had 50 possessions between them but, crucially, only two goals as they spent most of the opening half in defence. By contrast, emerging Bulldog half-forward Shaun Higgins' 24 possessions included two goals and a team-high three scoring assists.
Bulldogs full-back Brian Lake declared during the week he wanted to play on Richardson, but if Tigers coach Terry Wallace saw that as an opportunity to nullify Lake's creativity he was outsmarted by Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade.
Any time in the first half that Richardson ventured to the wing or beyond, Bulldogs spearhead Brad Johnson would take over.
The tactic worked, with Lake notching seven possessions and four marks in the opening term, compared to Richardson's three ineffectual touches.
Jake King is among the most maligned players in the league when it comes to disposal, yet in the first term the Tigers claimed two of their goals — from Jack Riewoldt and Matt White — after pinpoint passes from the diminutive defender. That accuracy eventually waned.
Both sides seemed intent on crowding their opponent's forward line, which created significant opportunities after interceptions because the other end of the ground was vacant.
Brownlow medallist Adam Cooney, having started on the bench, would have attracted the ire of Eade after benefiting from a turnover and having teammate Griffen alone inside the 50-metre arc but ignoring him and shooting, unsuccessfully, for goal.
There were few similarly selfish acts from the Bulldogs after that. By the half-way mark of the second quarter they had overhauled the Tigers' 16-point first-quarter lead, inspired by Gilbee's 11 possessions for the quarter and Griffen's ferocious tackling, which earned him two holding-the-ball free kicks.
Conditions were ideal, but it was not until the 26-minute mark of the second quarter that Richmond's White became the first player to kick a goal at the Coventry End, ending a run of 10 behinds.
Richmond captain Chris Newman was arguably the most dominant midfielder on the ground in the first half — Bulldog Daniel Cross was his main rival — yet was largely anonymous in the second half, when his team needed more of the same.
There was little improvement from the Tigers in the third quarter, although goals from Shane Tuck and Mitch Morton during time-on somehow dragged the margin back to 21 points at the last break.
Within six minutes of the restart the margin was out to a more realistic 38 points. Jason Akermanis marked three times on the lead, all close to goal, and slotted each one.
Instead of celebrating his third goal, Akermanis dashed straight to young teammate Dylan Addison, whose run down the wing and precise pass had created the goal.
At the other end, Richardson took a strong outstretched mark over three Bulldogs defenders.
Even though a goal would have offered no more than consolation, the Tigers did not even get that as their tireless spearhead booted it out on the full from 40 metres.
Cooney was one of the few Bulldogs not to have made a meaningful contribution, but in the final minutes of the match he gave Eade — and the club's fans — a hint that the effects of his interrupted pre-season may finally be past him with another dashing kick on the run from 50 metres.
That one, unlike his wayward kick in the first term, sailed through for a goal.
W BULLDOGS 0.6 6.11 10.13 16.14 (110)
RICHMOND 3.4 4.8 7.10 8.15 (63)
GOALS
Western Bulldogs: Akermanis 4, Johnson 2, Giansiracusa 2, Higgins 2, Cooney, Morris, Hill, Gilbee, Hahn, Minson.
Richmond: White 2, Riewoldt, Morton, Richardson, Brown, Foley, Tuck.
BEST
Western Bulldogs: Cross, Higgins, Lake, Akermanis, Gilbee, Addison.
Richmond: Foley, Tuck, White, Newman.
INJURIES Harbrow (hip) replaced in selected side by Tiller, Lake (corked thigh).
Western Bulldogs:
REPORTS: Picken (WB) reported for striking B Deledio (Rich) by field umpire R Chamberlain in second quarter.
UMPIRES: Schmitt, Chamberlain, Nicholls.
CROWD: 46,261 at Etihad Stadium.
VOTES (Jesse Hogan)
8 Daniel Cross (WB)
8 Shaun Higgins (WB)
7 Nathan Foley (Rich)
6 Brian Lake (WB)
6 Jason Akermanis (WB)
MAIN MEN
Lindsay Gilbee was in his usual impressive form of late for the Bulldogs netting 28 possessions followed by Daniel Cross who had 27 disposals and Shaun Higgins with 24. For Richmond, Shane Tuck was persistent across the ground with 33 disposals while Nathan Foley had 29 and Nathan Brown 28 against his old side.
TURNING POINT
After remaining goalless in the first quarter to Richmond's three, the Bulldogs kicked the next six straight goals in the second term to the Tigers' one which came in the 26-minute mark. Richmond, having dominated in the first term, was nowhere to be seen which enabled the Dogs to run way with a lead that Richmond was unable to catch.
THE UPSHOT
The undefeated Bulldogs should coast home for another win against West Coast at Subiaco next week while winless Richmond is expected to make multiple changes to give it more hope against Melbourne at the MCG.
http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/rfmatchreport/dogs-take-bite-out-of-tigers/2009/04/13/1239474815595.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1