Author Topic: Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall to Magpies  (Read 3494 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall to Magpies
« on: April 15, 2011, 11:57:27 PM »
Tigers fall to Magpies
richmondfc.com.au
By Mark Macgugan
10:24 PM Fri 15 Apr, 2011



Richmond       2.2      5.7    11.10    13.12 (90)
Collingwood    8.6    13.9    15.12    24.17 (161)

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Martin 2, White 2, Vickery, King, Miller, Deledio, Graham
Collingwood: Swan 4, Cloke 3, Sidebottom 3, Thomas 2, Dawes 2, Beams 2, Johnson, Pendlebury, Blair, Wood, Brown, Wellingham, Ball, Didak

BEST
Richmond: Deledio, Cotchin, Martin, Newman, Jackson
Collingwood: Swan, Thomas, Blair, Sidebottom, Cloke, Dawes

INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
Collingwood: Nil

SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Robin Nahas replaced by Brad Helbig in the third quarter
Collingwood: Ben Reid replaced by Alan Toovey in the fourth quarter

Reports: Leigh Brown (Coll) for striking Reece Conca (Rich) in the third quarter

Umpires: Rosebury, Chamberlain, Findlay

Official crowd: 58,050 at the MCG

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

A BRAVE third-quarter fightback from Richmond wasn't enough to get the Tigers over the line against Collingwood at the MCG on Friday night.

Richmond trailed by 50 points at half time, but cut that margin to 26 points by the end of the term after a six-goal quarter.

However the Magpies snuffed out any hope of a miraculous upset with a commanding nine-goal final term, running away to win 24.17 (161) to 13.12 (90).

The Magpies' forward pressure was telling early in the game as they dominated at stoppages and swarmed forward, forcing costly errors from Richmond's defence.

After the main break the Tigers, who had been unable to gain any penetration in the first half, started to get reward for their high-risk strategy of moving the ball through the corridor and playing on at all costs.

Brett Deledio, who had most of his disposals in Richmond's back half early in the match, was instrumental in the comeback, moving up the ground and using his slick foot skills to pick out forward targets.

Tigers youngsters Trent Cotchin and Dustin Martin were also impressive, with Cotchin outstanding in the clinches and Martin kicking two clever goals.

But any hope of an against-the-odds victory was snuffed out early in the final term as Collingwood banged home six goals in the first 16 minutes to put the game well beyond Richmond's reach.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/6301/newsid/111779/default.aspx

Offline one-eyed

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Stats: Tigers vs Magpies
« Reply #1 on: April 16, 2011, 05:01:27 AM »
Team Stats

Disposals       354 - 378
Efficiency%      78 - 74    
Kicks             201 - 255    
Handballs       153 - 123    
Con. Marks       11 - 15
Uncon. Marks    91 - 91    
Tackles             59 - 57    
Clearances        37 - 48    
Clangers           45 - 34    
Frees                17 - 23
Hitouts              47 - 22 ....... (Graham 36, Vickery 10 // Wood 16, Brown 6)
Con. Possies    111 - 153    
Uncon.Possies  242 - 208    
Inside 50s         45 - 63   
Assists              13 - 22

Individual Stats

             Disp.     Kicks Hballs G    B        SC    SCA  CM  UM   T     CL      C      FF   FA     CP     UP   In50   A      Eff

B.Deledio      33    14    19    1    0    138    106    1      6    2    1    0    3    0      9    24    4    1      94%
T.Cotchin      30    20    10    0    0    119      98    0      3    3    7    3    1    0    16    14    8    2      63%
S.Grigg         30    22      8    0    0    103      91    0    10    1    4    1    0    1      6    22    4    0      83%
D.Martin        28    17    11    2    0    109      93    2      5    2    6    4    1    1    10    19    2    0      82%
D.Jackson     26    14    12    0    1      78    108    0      5    7    5    6    1    4      7    18    4    0      77%
C.Newman    26    20      6    0    0    116    111    2      9    2    0    1    1    0      5    21    2    1      81%
R.Conca        23      7    16    0    1      75      56    0      7    4    2    2    2    2      4    19    4    0      91%
S.Edwards     22    11    11    0    2      54      51    1      8    2    3    5    1    1      6    16    4    0      64%
N.Foley         19      7    12    0    2      55      68    0      2    7    1    4    0    2      6    14    1    0      58%
B.Houli          17      8      9    0    0      73      60    1      7    3    0    0    0    0      3    14    1    0      88%
A.Graham     14      9      5    1    0      90      78    0      7    3    3    4    3    4      3    11    2    0      79%
M.White        13    12      1    2    0      52      52    0      4    2    1    4    1    0      5      8    3    1      38%
J.Batchelor    11      8      3    0    0      69      55    0      5    6    0    1    0    0      4      7    0    0    100%
B.Miller         11      6      5    1    3      51      51    0      3    2    0    1    1    1      4      7    1    1      55%
W.Thursfield  10      2      8    0    0      65      65    1      2    4    0    1    0    1      6      4    0    0      80%
D.Grimes        8      4      4    0    0      54      55    1      3    1    0    0    0    0      2      6    0    0      75%
R.Nahas          7      3      4    0    0      25      59    0      1    2    2    1    1    1      2      4    1    0    100%
D.Astbury       6      2      4    0    0      32      39    0      0    2    0    0    0    0      2      4    0    0      83%
J.King             6      5      1    1    0      23      51    0      3    1    0    5    1    3      3      4    2    0      67%
J.Riewoldt       6      5      1    4    0      77      63    2      1    2    0    1    0    1      6      1    0    0      83%
T.Vickery        5      2      3    1    0      27      57    0      0    1    1    1    0    1      1      3    0    0    100%
B.Helbig          3      3      0    0    0      10      28    0      0    0    1    0    0    0      1      2    2    0    100%

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/super-scoreboard?match_id=10310401
« Last Edit: April 16, 2011, 06:42:29 AM by one-eyed »

Offline one-eyed

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Magpies thump Tigers by 71 points (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: April 16, 2011, 05:06:54 AM »
Magpies thump Tigers by 71 points

    Sam Edmund
    From: Herald Sun
    April 15, 2011 9:08PM



COLLINGWOOD'S winning streak has continued, but the Magpies were made to work by a gallant Richmond at the MCG.

On paper the premier dished out another thumping - this time by 71 points - but they were asked some questions.

The Magpies started well and finished well. Sandwiched in between was a Richmond hot streak that, unfortunately for the Tigers, couldn't be sustained.

Collingwood led by 50 points at half-time. Indeed, such was the early spell of dominance that if this were a boxing match it would have been called off.

The Pies' pressure was immense. In a 30-minute barrage to open the game, they lead the disposal count 99-75, clearances 16-7 and inside 50s 17-7.

Four of its first six goals came from turnovers and with all its prime movers running riot a thrashing appeared a formality.

But from nowhere Richmond momentarily climbed off the canvas.

The Tigers kicked the first four goals of the third term. The pick of them came from Dustin Martin, who held off Harry O'Brien with one arm and trapped the ball with the other before finishing calmly.

It would be a six-goal-to-two third quarter to cut the margin to 26 at the last change and while Collingwood was never seriously threatened, Richmond's daring raids through the centre corridor proved there are chinks in the armour.

This will be a quarter of footy more than a few rival coaches will have a look at. But as quickly as the Tigers presented a challenge, just as swiftly were they brushed aside.

Dane Swan and Dale Thomas kicked the first two goals of the last quarter to emphatically shut the door on the contest.

Swan was stunning, Thomas sprinted far and wide all night and Steele Sidebottom was all class. All kicked multiple goals.

The Pies' key position power in the attacking half was just as telling. Chris Dawes, Travis Cloke and Leigh Brown all started inside 50m as Mick Malthouse sought to stretch an undermanned and inexperienced Richmond defence.

Tiger trio Dylan Grimes, David Astbury and Will Thursfield were brave, but they were always going to find the going tough.

There were positives however. Brett Deledio was terrific off half-back and the instigator in his side's third-quarter surge.

Trent Cotchin worked his backside off, Chris Newman's kicking was a highlight and Reece Conca is going to be a player.

Veteran forward Brad Miller was serviceable, if not a wasteful, in his Richmond debut, finishing with 1.3.

Brown was reported for a late high hit on Conca in the third quarter.

Scoreboard:

COLLINGWOOD 8.6 13.9 15.12 24.17 (161)
RICHMOND       2.2 5.7 11.10 13.12 (90)

Goals: Collingwood: D Swan 4 S Sidebottom 3 T Cloke 3 C Dawes 2 D Beams 2 D Thomas 2 A Didak B Johnson C Wood J Blair L Ball L Brown S Pendlebury S Wellingham. Richmond: J Riewoldt 4 D Martin 2 M White 2 A Graham B Deledio B Miller J King T Vickery.

Best:
Collingwood: D Swan S Sidebottom D Thomas S Pendlebury T Cloke L Ball.
Richmond: B Deledio D Jackson T Cotchin D Martin R Conca C Newman.

Umpires: Robert Findlay, Ray Chamberlain, Brett Rosebury.

Official Crowd: 58,050 at Melbourne Cricket Ground.

Reports:
Collingwood: L Brown (Collingwood) reported for striking R Conca (Richmond) in the third quarter.
Richmond: Nil.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/magpies-crushing-hapless-tigers/story-e6frf9jf-1226039924279

Offline one-eyed

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Pies give Tigers a lesson - for a quarter (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #3 on: April 16, 2011, 05:08:42 AM »
Pies give Tigers a lesson - for a quarter

    Sam Edmund
    From: Herald Sun
    April 16, 2011


COLLINGWOOD coach Mick Malthouse has described last night's belting of Richmond as a "good education" for his players.

The Magpies led by 50 points at halftime, but were blindsided by a 6.3 to 2.3 Tiger charge in the third quarter.

Collingwood answered emphatically with a nine-goal last term, but the third term marred an otherwise impressive 71-point win.

"I was disappointed in many respects, but I suppose this is the test for us," Malthouse said.

"I thought one-on-one in that third quarter, both aerially and on the ground, we were beaten by a side that deserved to kick six goals.

"I wasn't angry (at three-quarter time). I was disappointed in a lot of set-ups and disappointed we were beaten one-on-one in too many instances.

"That's not a sin, it simply means you regather yourself.

"Our tackle count lifted, our clearance rate lifted and our pressure lifted and they're the things you need to do as a good side."

But Malthouse was at pains to give credit to Richmond, whose hot streak last night came after similar dominant spells against Carlton (Round 1) and St Kilda (Round 2).

"I think what we do is we take to much credit away from our opponents," Malthouse said.

"I've watched Richmond live three times now. Their maturity is progressing at a rate I'm sure Richmond would be very happy with.

"They've got a very young side that will get better and when they get momentum, or it shifts (their way), they can be a very damaging side.

"It was a good education for a lot of our blokes, who at halftime being 50 points up expect it to go to 75.

"Clearly, in the AFL, when you have a side that's got (Trent) Cotchin, (Brett) Deledio, (Nathan) Foley, (Shaun) Grigg, (Daniel) Jackson, (Dustin) Martin, who all win their own football, they will score."

Collingwood, missing premiership ruckman Darren Jolly, was monstered in the hitouts 47-22, which Malthouse said was had a profound effect on the contest.

"Take nothing away from either end, but it starts and finishes where the ball is, and that's a stoppage, centre bounce or whatever," Malthouse said.

"They slaughtered us as far as hitouts go for most of the night. We had to play a different role at the stoppages, but when they controlled it they scored.

"They were highly efficient and we weren't."

MAGPIE Leigh Brown was reported for striking Reece Conca in the third quarter.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/pies-give-tigers-a-lesson-for-a-quarter/story-e6frf9jf-1226040006520

Offline one-eyed

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Bored Magpies flick the switch (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #4 on: April 16, 2011, 05:10:26 AM »
Bored Magpies flick the switch

    Mark Robinson
    From: Herald Sun
    April 16, 2011


MOSTLY everyone tuned out half-way through the second quarter last night, with Collingwood leading by eight goals and Dane Swan destined for another three Brownlow Medal votes.

The Tigers certainly had. At halftime they trailed 87-37. And their second quarter was pretty good, which indicates just how pathetic their first quarter was.

Still, funny game football.

If coach Mick Malthouse says the Magpies are playing "April footy", Collingwood's third quarter was "January footy", or "Lair footy" or "I am bored footy".

The Tigers, in an amazing transformation, kicked 6.3 to 2.3 - including five unanswered goals - and opened up the Magpies in a way football hadn't seen this year.

The fact is Richmond annihilated Collingwood in contested possessions - 47-23.

It was the first time in this year, in 15 quarters, Collingwood had lost perhaps the most critical of statistical categories.

It helped the Tigers get within 26 points and for a brief time we had ourselves a ball game.

Normal transmission resumed, however, in the last quarter.

The premier booted nine goals to run all over the Tigers. It meant Collingwood started with eight in the first quarter, finished with nine, and was poleaxed in the third.

In two quarters the Pies kicked 17.11 to 4.4. How's that? Challenged in the third quarter and still winners by 71 points.

For those believing Collingwood has the capacity to turn it on and turn it off at will, this game was Exhibit A.

The Tigers were magnificent for one quarter, solid in another, shot in two others. Was their good quarter, the third, of their doing? Or was it because Collingwood became disinterested?

Coach Damien Hardwick would be frustrated. Consistency of effort would be his mantra in the lead-up to North Melbourne next weekend.

As for Collingwood, Malthouse may question the mental strength of his players. Only "may", because when you win by that margin the positives outweigh the negatives.

Swan was best afield, Dale Thomas wasn't too far behind and the rest of the usual suspects lit up the stats sheet. Swan continues to astound with his brilliance.

The subs rule enables him to be more of a midfield-forward. He is an even more damaging player this season than last.

He kicked goals in the first, second and fourth quarters, and finished with four.

Combine that with 27 kicks, six handballs, eight clearances and nine inside-50s, and Swan's heat graph would sizzle.

Indeed, he is an inside mid, outside mid and goalkicking forward, with an enormous tank, powerful legs and footy smarts.

That's some resume, and not bad for a bloke who almost has as many photographs in the social pages as the sports pages.

Collingwood bolted from the blocks, while the Tigers had blocks as legs.

It was as if, when the starter's gun started a foot race, the Magpies were in a 100m dash and the Tigers a 800m grind.

The Pies' energy was absolute and the game was all over at quarter-time.

In the end, they won contested possession 153-111 - a spanking - and inside-50s clocked over for another 60-plus.

The line for last-quarter goals started at Flinders St.

The Tigers shone when Brett Deledio had the ball, especially in the third quarter when he opted to kick instead of handball.

He kicked a magical goal from 55m and looked every part the elite footballer.

Dustin Martin is fast becoming a mid-forward himself.

He kicked two goals, the second a stunning stop and gather of a bouncing ball.

Hardwick would be pleased with Reece Conca, Trent Cotchin continued to be a winner in the packs and Matty White turned from stopper to goalkicker with two goals.

Shane Edwards could have done the same, but he just could not execute when the Tigers were on the attack.

Pluses, too, to ruckman Angus Graham, while Nathan Foley is still improving from a long layoff.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/bored-magpies-flick-switch/story-e6frf9jf-1226040003267

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers fail to catch rampant Magpies (Age)
« Reply #5 on: April 16, 2011, 05:13:50 AM »
Tigers fail to catch rampant Magpies
Rohan Connolly
April 16, 2011


COLLINGWOOD 8.6 13.9 15.12 24.17 (161)
RICHMOND       2.2 5.7 11.10 13.12 (90)

GOALS Collingwood: Swan 4, Sidebottom 3, Cloke 3, Dawes 2, Beams 2, Thomas 2, Didak, Johnson, Wood, Blair, Ball, L Brown, Pendlebury, Wellingham. Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Martin 2, White 2, Graham, Deledio, Miller, King, Vickery.

BEST
Collingwood: Swan, Thomas, Sidebottom, Pendlebury, Cloke, Didak.
Richmond: Deledio, Martin, Cotchin, Conca, Jackson, Riewoldt.

REPORTS Collingwood: Leigh Brown (for allegedly striking Reece Conca)
UMPIRES Findlay, Chamberlain, Rosebury. CROWD 58,050 at MCG.

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

THE Tiger hordes were roaring in the third quarter last night at the MCG, and with good reason. Their young side was on a roll, dominating possession and kicking the first four goals of the term, the likes of Brett Deledio, Dustin Martin and the even younger Reece Conca on fire.

It was heady stuff. Unfortunately for Richmond, in terms of the result, it was also largely irrelevant. This match had been as good as done and dusted since about 12 minutes after the start, by which time Collingwood had slammed on four goals to nothing, and helpfully reminded the Tigers of just how big the gap is between themselves and the very best.

Richmond's third-quarter 6.3 was as much as anyone had scored against Collingwood in a quarter since the Bulldogs booted 6.4 in a term in round one of last year.

But the bottom line remained that the Tigers were already 50 points in arrears when they finally stirred, and for all their third-quarter effort, still ended up losing by 71 after Collingwood restored the equilibrium with a thumping nine goals to two in the final term.

They're scary good, these Pies, carving out winning margins this season of 75 points, 87 points, five goals and now 12 goals without having played a full four quarters of their best.

Last night the damage started within 90 seconds when Dale Thomas was inexplicably left free running inside 50 and slamming home the first goal. Only 90 seconds after that, it was two, after Travis Cloke converted a strong mark straight out of a centre bounce clearance.

Five minutes further on and Thomas struck again, dishing off a handball to Heath Shaw, his kick locked in Chris Dawes's vice-like grip, maximum reward quickly realised. Then Richmond young gun Martin chipped a ball in the middle of the ground in Jack Riewoldt's direction. Bouncing in front of the Tiger forward, it was pounced upon by the Pies, Ben Johnson coolly slotting the fourth goal.

Four goals to nil, and by now it wasn't just the scoreboard looking ugly. Collingwood had 34 possessions in the first nine minutes to the Tigers' paltry 14. The clearances were 7-1 the Magpies' way, the contested ball 15-4. This already was shellacking territory.

Not for the first time, it was the perennially eye-catching Riewoldt who jolted his team into life taking a great grab in which he hipped out Chris Tarrant in mid-air whilst positioning himself to take the mark. He had a second in equally unorthodox fashion, trapping the ball with one hand and dribbling it just inside the goalpost.

But all that meant was that Richmond was keeping pace on the scoreboard instead of getting further behind.

Swan swooped on some goalsquare crumbs. Scott Pendlebury said thanks near goal after Tiger Shane Edwards played on and was caught. Steele Sidebottom threaded one from a tight angle. Then, with three seconds left on the clock, Jarryd Blair ran on to an advantage free kick conceded by an ominously clunky Tiger ruck Angus Graham.

Eight goals to two by the first break, and just to make sure their opponent wasn't going to creep back into this contest, Collingwood slammed on three of the first four scored in the second term for good measure, two of them to Swan, and the gap blew out to 50 points.

Perhaps even more depressingly for Richmond, the Tigers started to hold their own better in the contests, now let down by their own errors more than opposition pressure. In a few minutes, Martin turned the ball over to Harry O'Brien, Brad Miller missed from 30 metres, Jake King got ahead of himself and sprayed a shot out on-the-full, then, tellingly, Bachar Houli fumbled under some midfield heat, Blair mopping up, chipping to Cameron Wood, and another Collingwood goal the result.

That's the frustration for Richmond now. It has talent coming at a rapid rate of knots, it generally has the requisite effort. What it still lacks most obviously is sufficient skill under pressure, and the capacity to consistently make the right decisions. You can at least say now with more confidence that the Tigers will get there at some stage.That's a place Collingwood itself has been in. But, boy, does that seem like a long time ago now. And the way the Magpies can these days seemingly clock off for 30 minutes or so and still come out winning by close enough to 100 points, makes you realise just how long it's going to be before they're in that position again. And how much ground not only the Tigers, but the rest of the AFL, are going to have to make up on the reigning premier.

KEY STATS

■ In the first quarter, Collingwood generated 14 scoring shots (8.6) from its 17 inside-50s. It had 24 disposals and grabbed nine marks inside 50 for the quarter.

■In the first quarter, Collingwood generated 14 scoring shots (8.6) from its 17 inside-50s. It had 24 disposals and grabbed nine marks inside 50 for the quarter.

■The Magpies won the contested possession count 153 to 111 across the night. It was too good right from the start, leading the count 17-4 after the first 10 minutes of the match.

■It was an even second quarter. Both teams had eight scoring shots for the term, with Richmond recording one more disposal, Collingwood recording two more inside-50s, and both teams winning 11 clearances apiece.

■Richmond kicked three goals to zip in the opening 10 minutes of the third quarter, recording 22 more disposals and 21 more uncontested possessions than Collingwood.

SWANNING AROUND

Football's highest individual honour has eluded Collingwood ball magnet Dane Swan so far, but his 19 touches by half-time last night and 33 for the game stood out in a team bristling with talent. Coming into the match he led the club in long kicks, general kicks, was second in handballs, third in short kicks, fifth in handballs and third in handballs received. At least a couple of Brownlow votes might have been added to those numbers by the final siren.

BROWN IN DOUBT

He should only have to deal with a couple of nervous nights, but Leigh Brown went into the umpire's book in the third term after making contact with Reece Conca. Brown will probably beat the charge, but if he doesn't and Darren Jolly (knee) misses another week, second-string ruckman Cameron Wood will have a huge task against the Bombers on Anzac Day.

JACK'S BACK

Jack Riewoldt had a night to forget against the Hawks last week. In footy, fortunately, there's always next week and when it arrived Riewoldt set himself for a big night on a big stage against the Pies. He finished with four goals, a terrific contested mark against re-born Magpie Chris Tarrant and no reason for apologies.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/tigers-fail-to-catch-rampant-magpies-20110415-1di62.html

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers roar for a bit, then go quietly (Age)
« Reply #6 on: April 16, 2011, 05:15:22 AM »
Tigers roar for a bit, then go quietly
Martin Boulton
April 16, 2011


AFTER last week's 63-point loss, Richmond coach Damien Hardwick refused to hit the panic button, but he was emphatic when he said the Tigers had to be better against the reigning premier Collingwood.

By half-time at the MCG last night, the margin had blown out to 50 points, the Tigers had just five goals on the board and by the end of the night the losing margin was 71 points.

Collingwood had eight individual goal-scorers in the first term, while Richmond forward Jack Riewoldt was his side's only goal scorer with two in a disastrous opening for the Tigers.

For Hardwick and Tiger fans, the fight shown in the third term would have been enormously encouraging, but the fade-out that followed proved the Magpies are far and away the side to beat and Richmond has a long road ahead.

After four rounds, the Tigers have just one draw, against St Kilda, and three losses, and face North Melbourne next Sunday.

The only downside for Collingwood was a report against Leigh Brown, who appeared to lightly slap Reece Conca in the head during a marking contest. The versatile Brown would be unlucky to be rubbed out ahead of the Anzac Day match against Essendon.

Richmond's third term was equal to the best it showed against St Kilda and slashed the margin to 26 points at the final break, with Brett Deledio, Trent Cotchin, Daniel Jackson, Matt White and Dustin Martin all having an enormous influence.

Deledio finished with 33 disposals, including nine contested possessions, and Cotchin had 16 contested possessions in his 30 touches. But still there will be little to smile about at Punt Road this morning.

It was another heavy, confidence-sapping loss for a side that desperately needs to show improvement through wins.

Meanwhile, Collingwood finished off the Tigers with 41 scoring shots and a nine-goal final term.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/tigers-roar-for-a-bit-then-go-quietly-20110415-1di5z.html

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Quarter by quarter (Age)
« Reply #7 on: April 16, 2011, 05:17:11 AM »
Quarter by quarter
April 16, 2011

First quarter

How would Jack Riewoldt respond for the Tigers after a poor game last week, and some bad publicity? Strongly, but it took until midway through the term for his superb contested mark and goal, which cut the lead to 20 points. Collingwood had dominated the contest until that stage with the first four goals. Riewoldt's goal, and another, briefly stemmed the flow, but it was the Magpies who finished far stronger, with four more majors to see out the quarter. Collingwood by 40

Second quarter

Swan threaded his third - and second for the quarter - in the 14th minute with his 16th touch. Vickery responded and the scoring briefly dried up. Cotchin lifted and the Tigers looked good moving the ball quickly through the middle. Wood goaled to stretch the lead to 50 points. The Tigers refused to yield and goaled through Martin and White, but again the reigning premier stepped up a gear and closed the half with two more goals. Collingwood by 50

Third quarter

Few would have expected such a staggering turnaround - and it was built largely on the Tigers' self-belief. Six goals to two was the most telling statistic and slashed the margin to 26 points, but it was the output of Deledio, Martin, King and White (who each kicked a goal) and the influence of Cotchin and Riewoldt that swung the contest. The Magpies still held a handy scoreboard advantage at the last break, but the momentum had switched in a quarter when Collingwood's Leigh Brown was reported. Collingwood by 26

Fourth quarter

Collingwood responded the way most expected, kicking the opening three goals. The Tigers again struggled to get their hands on the ball. Thomas starred in the third term with a huge, five-bounce run and kept the pedal down in the final stages as Collingwood pulled away to win comfortably. There were goalscorers everywhere for the top-of-the-ladder Pies, and more promising signs for their fans with key forwards Cloke and Dawes continuing to show good form. Collingwood by 71 points

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/quarter-by-quarter-20110416-1di7b.html