Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to Cats  (Read 720 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to Cats
« on: May 05, 2013, 12:21:59 AM »
Tigers fall to Cats
By Peter Ryan
richmondfc.com.au
11:17pm AEST Saturday, May 4, 2013



GEELONG          3.3    9.3  15.7   20.11 (131)
RICHMOND       4.1    8.4   11.7     13.9 (87)

GOALS
Geelong: Christensen 3, Bartel 2, Johnson 2 Smedts 2, Hawkins 2, Duncan 2, Stokes 2, Murdoch, West, Selwood, Enright, Blicavs.
Richmond: King 4, Riewoldt 3, Martin 2, Knights, McGuane, Ellis, Grigg.

BEST
Geelong: Christensen, Johnson, Duncan, Stokes, Selwood, Enright.
Richmond: Edwards, Jackson, Newman, Cotchin, Petterd.

INJURIES
Geelong: Nil.
Richmond: Vickery (concussion).

SUBSTITUTES
Geelong: George Horlin-Smith replaced Jordan Murdoch in the third quarter.
Richmond: Matt White replaced Tyrone Vickery in the third quarter.
 
Reports: Nil.
 
Umpires: Chris Donlon, Mathew Nicholls, Chris Kamolins.
 
Official crowd: 55,625 at the MCG.

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

GEELONG maintained its unbeaten run overcoming a persistent Richmond with a 44-point victory at the MCG on Saturday night.

The Cats kicked 20.11 (131) to Richmond's 13.9 (87). 

After slipping 19 points behind the Tigers midway through the second quarter, the Cats woke from their slumber.

They began to win the ball out of the centre (after being thrashed in that area early) and kicked four consecutive goals to regain the lead just before half-time.

From that point on, the Cats dominated.

A pulsating start to the third quarter was critical to the result.

In that time Geelong kicked three goals while Richmond lost its two big men, Ivan Maric and Tyrone Vickery, to injury.

Vickery was subbed off after a head clash with 200-gamer Steve Johnson, while a brave Maric returned but was running with a limp for the rest of the game.

The Cats' small forwards were the difference during that period.

Allen Christensen was brilliant in attack and through the midfield, Mathew Stokes' creativity shone and Mitch Duncan showed his class.

Up until that point Richmond had showed it could compete with the Cats.

It dominated the centre clearances, leading that statistic 12-4 at half-time, but couldn't control the game.

Too often the Tigers coughed up the ball with a skill error, Troy Chaplin's speculative handball into the middle of the forward 50 late in the second quarter that led to a Christensen goal the most blatant example of their occasionally errant disposal.

Even with the ball going inside Richmond's forward 50 the Cats were able to bring it to ground where champion Corey Enright (in his 250th game), Andrew Mackie and their heir apparent Cameron Guthrie just swept it away.

That was just part of what was upsetting Tiger fans however; not seeing Richmond receive a free kick in the second quarter did little for their mood.

At times it felt it would have been easier to win a grin from the Mona Lisa than a free kick if you were a Tiger fan. 

Geelong's band of ball thieves at ground level were too good and the Cats overpowered the opposition.

Riewoldt battled hard after suffering a corked thigh early in the game yet never threatened.

A couple of cameos from Jake King – one goal coming courtesy of a Jack Riewoldt tap – were the other highlights in another disappointing night for Richmond.

Ricky Petterd was reasonable for the Tigers and Shane Edwards and Daniel Jackson did their jobs.

However when Enright kicked a set shot from the boundary (the 10th goal he has kicked at the MCG in his career) and every teammate ran to congratulate him it capped off a brilliant night for the Cats.

Richmond now takes on Port Adelaide at AAMI Stadium while Geelong prepare for the match of the round against undefeated Essendon on Friday night.   

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2013-05-04/tigers-fall-to-cats

TigerTimeII

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to Cats
« Reply #1 on: May 05, 2013, 03:20:34 AM »
hackson newman and cotchin in our bests lol pigs arse

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to Cats
« Reply #2 on: May 05, 2013, 07:11:39 AM »
Geelong again celebrated two key milestones with an impressive victory

    Scott Gullan
    From: Sunday Herald Sun
    May 04, 2013 10:59PM


PART of Geelong's recent brilliant history includes a penchant for celebrating milestones.

Two of the club's greats were being honoured at the MCG and that was always going to spell trouble for Richmond.

What was even more spectacular was the fact the two men being celebrated - Corey Enright (250 games) and Steve Johnson (200) - combined for an incredible 58 possessions in the Cats stunning 44-point victory.

Fittingly Enright, who wears No.44, kicked his team's last goal of the night - a brilliant set shot from 45m out on the boundary _ which saw every Geelong player on the ground ran to mob him.

When Geelong are in the mood to celebrate they are a very hard beast to stop and they overwhelmed the Tigers with a 11 goal to five second half.

Johnson finished with 30 possessions and two goals while Allen Christensen kicked three from 28 touches.

Mitch Duncan and Mathew Stokes both kicked two and were influential at crucial times.

Unfortunately for the Tigers an impressive first-half was washed away quickly and they again failed to stand up against one of the big boys of the competition.

Jake King (four goals) and Jack Riewoldt (three goals) were serviceable but the lack of output from senior players including captain Trent Cotchin and Brett Deledio was a concern.

The game changed complexion in the third quarter as Geelong went up a gear.

It was started by skipper Joel Selwood who'd been uncharacteristically quiet but his 50m goal on the run at the two-minute mark kick-started the Geelong machine.

The game ignited shortly after when Richmond had an opportunity for an easy goal taken off them when Chris Newman was called for a behind-the-play free against Taylor Hunt.

He then got involved in a heated wrestle with Selwood while the ball was transferred to the other end where Christensen kicked an easy goal after the Tigers gave away another 50m penalty.

The Tigers were rattled with their cause not helped by injuries to both of their ruckmen in the space of a couple of minutes.

Ivan Maric was forced off the ground with an ankle injury but his replacement Tyrone Vickery didn't last long after a nasty head clash with Johnson at the centre bounce.

He was carried off in the arms of trainers with blood streaming from his head and was quickly subbed out of the game.

Maric reappeared but he was hobbling and to rub salt into the wound, his opponent Mark Blicavs goaled at the 10-minute mark to push the margin out to 16 points.

It was out to 24 at three-quarter time with Johnson and Christensen kicking impressive goals late to break the Tigers spirit.

Any chance of a fightback was snuffed out when Tom Hawkins, who'd been unsighted all night, kicked two in as many minutes.

The first came courtesy of an error by Cotchin whose short pass out of the back pocket was easily intercepted by the Cats full-forward.

He got the next thanks to a pass from Selwood with his set shot from 50m sailing through to officially ice the contest.

The post-mortem will again focus on the Tigers inability to match it for four quarters against a powerhouse team.

Cotchin had many credits in the bank so his quiet night can be excused but for the second week in a row Deledio struggled to break the tag with Hunt having his number.

What will make this loss even harder to digest is the fact Richmond had owned all the key stats in the first half but had weren't able to capitalise and actually found themselves five points down at half-time.

At one stage early in the second quarter they led centre clearances 9-1 (it was 12-4 at half-time) while the tackle count - which was an area the Tigers had been criticised about - was 31-23 their way.

They'd had more of the ball, 197 to 179 possessions, more inside 50s and led the clearances by five overall yet they didn't have the reward on the scoreboard.

Geelong can thank an inspired couple of minutes from Mathew Stokes for that.

When Dustin Martin kicked two goals in three minutes the Tigers were 19 points up at the 19-minute mark and the Tiger faithful were understandably getting excited.

A long bomb from Johnson from a rare centre clearance for the Cats sent the ball to the top of the goalsquare where Stokes hit the pack at full pace to snare a classic rover's goal.

Two minutes later he produced a special individual effort that can only be described as team lifting.

Matched against three Richmond players who were hoping the ball was going to go over the boundary line, Stokes kept it alive and then somehow got a handball out to ruckman Trent West who snapped the goal.

It was a momentum changing moment.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/afl/teams/geelong-again-celebrated-two-key-milestones-with-an-impressive-victory/story-e6frf9lo-1226635295314

Offline one-eyed

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Cats find winning gear (Age)
« Reply #3 on: May 05, 2013, 07:14:30 AM »
Cats find winning gear

   Michael Gleeson
    The Age
    May 5, 2013


GEELONG 3.3 9.3 15.7 20.11 (131)
RICHMOND 4.1 8.4 11.7 13.9 (87)

GOALS
Geelong: Christensen 3, Smedts 2, Bartel 2, Duncan 2, Stokes 2, Johnson 2, Hawkins 2, Enright, Murdoch, Selwood, Blicavs, West.
Richmond: King 4, Riewoldt 3, Martin 2, Ellis, Knights, McGuane, Grigg.

BEST
Geelong: Christensen, Johnson, Stokes, Enright, Duncan, Bartel, Hunt, Guthrie
Richmond: Edwards, Grigg, Martin, Grimes, Knights, Jackson, Rance

UMPIRES Donlon, Kamolins, Nicholls.
CROWD 55,625, at the MCG

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

Momentum, like confidence, can turn on a kick. Or it can turn on the tap, touch, handball and boot of Mathew Stokes. Or it can swing on the bloody-minded and frustrated tossing of opportunities in a tantrum.

In a two-minute period Stokes halted then redirected the course of a game that Richmond had worked so determinedly to manufacture in its favour. He intercepted a Trent Cotchin handball, stepped inside a player and goaled, which as a description of the artistry of his effort is as brief as it is inadequate.

A minute later he fell to his bottom as a ball looped towards him one-out in a marking duel. He bounced back to his feet in time enough to spoil the mark then scurry after the ball and keep it alive when three Richmond players willed it out of bounds. Stokes ran along the boundary and handballed to Trent West in the goal square for a major.
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When Stokes first goaled after pressing forward from starting the game in the midfield, his side trailed Richmond by 19 points but his two quick interventions halted that run and when Billie Smedts and Mitch Duncan converted soon after Geelong had overwhelmed Richmond to lead at the main break by five points.

Richmond had played itself into a winning position in the first half by being physical in a way it had not been all year.

Ranked 18th for tackling this year it could ill-afford to allow a side such as the high-possession helter-skelter Geelong to play unimpeded.

A side that had averaged fewer than 50 tackles a game in the first rounds of the season had 18 tackles to Geelong's six in the first quarter and 31 to 23 to the main break. Which was why Richmond was able to claw back into the game.

First Jake King goaled when Jack Riewoldt smartly opted against trying to mark a high ball and palmed it instead to King beneath him, who converted the chance. A centre clearance, a long ball in and this time Riewoldt did mark. Moments later, King eased a tackle up off his shoulder to his neck for a free and a goal. Richmond having been out-played for much of the first term had worked its way to a lead.

Shane Edwards and Shaun Grigg, unlikely types to be governing the midfield, kept Richmond's spirited assault alive in the second term and Dustin Martin imposed to convert, stretching the lead to 19 points. Joel Selwood and Cotchin were heavily tagged, which is not unusual. But both largely had little impact, which was unusual.

Typifying Richmond's determination to be physical Selwood interestingly was the subject of team-wide physical attention - or as Terry Wallace coined it he was ''in the gun'' for each Tiger to buffet when he had the opportunity.

After the main break Richmond returned to the ground and in two minutes lost both ruckmen - Ivan Maric to a rolled ankle and Ty Vickery to an accidental head collision and the Cats quickly goaled. Momentum swings on strange things. This time Richmond stopped and returned it to Geelong.

In a renewing of the physical commitment Chris Newman and Taylor Hunt wrestled. A moment later Newman ran down a flank and kicked long to the goal square as he was heavily tackled. Newman didn't like it and pounded Hunt.

The ball that had been marked in the goal square was denied - a free paid to Hunt, then a 50-metre penalty. Selwood salted Newman's wound and was put on his back, only to then lift Newman up in the air WWF style in a suplex. A further 50-metre penalty against Ricky Petterd and the Cats had another.

The passions that rose in the game opened up the contest and allowed Geelong to move in. The Cats' goals flowed, booting 11 to Richmond's five after half-time.

TALL ORDER

First Ivan Maric went down, with a rolled ankle two minutes into the third quarter. Then just a minute later Tyrone Vickery went up in the ruck in the middle and came down cracking his forehead into the head of Steve Johnson. Vickery was helped from the ground on wobbly legs, bleeding from the head and was immediately subbed out. Suddenly Luke McGuane was called on to handle the ruck work in the middle. Maric returned to the ground later.

NEW HURDLE

Mark Blicavs, the most famous steeplechaser in Australia not to go to the Olympics, is nominally a ruckman, but as athletic as he is, he is also tremendously versatile, which explained why he started the game on the wing. He has played wing occasionally in games, but as a starting position it was interesting and indicated the position the Cats believe he could yet occupy.

DOUGHNUT

The first half was a free-flowing affair with a lot let go by the umpires but it was still remarkable that Richmond earned not a single free kick in the second quarter. The umpires certainly became a lot more involved in the third term in a frenzied five-minute period when fights erupted, free kicks were reversed and 50-metre penalties doled out. The Tigers over the night had the lesser of the umpiring.

BORIS BEWDY

Corey Enright, in his 250th game, crept forward in the last quarter to goal and every single Cats player ran to him to enjoy the moment. It might have been Johnson's 200th also but the Cats loved Boris' goal as much as some Johnson magic.

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/cats-find-winning-gear-20130504-2j0na.html#ixzz2SMQFJnl3

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers stand up but Cats scoot clear (Age)
« Reply #4 on: May 05, 2013, 07:16:21 AM »
Tigers stand up but Cats scoot clear

    Rohan Connolly
    The Age
    May 5, 2013


Richmond has been on the wrong end of some humiliations against a number of clubs over these past few largely unsuccessful decades, but few opponents strike fear into the hearts of the Tiger army quite like Geelong, and for good reason.

The Cats were using Richmond as a plaything as far back as the late 1980s, when the first version of Gary Ablett used to torment them on an almost annual basis, in a nightmarish five-year period, Ablett senior booting 10 or more goals against Richmond no fewer than four times.

And in the past 18 years, little has changed. Indeed, it had been a mauling of the Tigers, by a mammoth 157 points back in round six of 2007, which essentially kick-started one of the greatest eras league football has seen, Geelong having won 123 of 148 games since, and having beaten Richmond in 15 of their last 16 meetings.

This version of Richmond, though, is determined not to cower before anyone. So this time, the Tigers attacked their task head-on. In the first half, their pressure was fierce, even Geelong skipper Joel Selwood held in relative check. Richmond was dominating the centre clearances and midfield battle, and up forward Jack Riewoldt threatened, and Jake King bristled. Shortly before half-time, they led by 19 points. And the final result? Geelong running away to win by 44 points.

Richmond wasn't humiliated this time, but the result was emphatic nonetheless, the Tigers shown tellingly enough that the very best teams can soak up a bit of pressure and hit back twice as hard, that effort will take you so far but can still be trumped by an extra dollop of class. And that Geelong, yet again, is one seriously good football team.

The last four goals of the second term had the Cats in front by the break, and from then came a sense of inevitability.

The brilliance of forward/midfield pair Mathew Stokes and Allen Christensen was at times breathtaking. Youngsters like Cameron Guthrie and Mark Blicavs continue to emerge, but an enduring Geelong era was summed up by the elation shared among seemingly the entire Geelong line-up when much-loved Corey Enright, in his 250th game, rammed through the final goal of the game.

The Tigers will continue to develop but they've got some distance to go yet before they get anywhere near Geelong's sort of heights.

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/tigers-stand-up-but-cats-scoot-clear-20130504-2j0n0.html#ixzz2SMQuki6T

Offline Owl

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to Cats
« Reply #5 on: May 05, 2013, 08:40:10 AM »
Michael Gleeson called it under the doughnut section
Lots of people name their swords......