Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers top Dons  (Read 488 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Tigers top Dons
« on: September 01, 2013, 06:44:38 AM »
Tigers top Dons
By Mark Macgugan
richmondfc.com.au
10:40pm AEST Saturday, August 31, 2013



ESSENDON     2.4   3.6      5.8      9.11  (65)
RICHMOND      4.1   5.6   11.9    15.14 (104)

GOALS
Essendon: Melksham 2, Jetta 2, Hurley 2, Lovett-Murray, Howlett, Dalgleish
Richmond: Vickery 4, A. Edwards 4, Jackson 2, King 2, Martin, Grigg, Tuck

BEST
Essendon: Melksham, Hurley, Stanton, Hibberd, Lovett-Murray
Richmond: Jackson, Ellis, A. Edwards, Vickery, Martin

INJURIES
Essendon: Carlisle (back spasms)
Richmond: White (hamstring), King (cut head)

SUBSTITUTES
Essendon: Leroy Jetta substituted on for Jake Carlisle (back spasms) in the third quarter
Richmond: Shane Tuck substituted on for Matt White (hamstring) at half time

Reports: Nil 

Umpires: Donlon, Farmer, Dalgleish 

Official crowd: 60,979 at the MCG

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

RICHMOND has taken a stranglehold on fifth place with a comfortable 39-point win over Essendon in a lacklustre contest at the MCG on Saturday night.

The 15.14 (104) to 9.11 (65) victory in front of 60,979 fans gives the Tigers a four-point buffer plus percentage over Collingwood, and sets up a likely blockbuster elimination final against Carlton next week.

But it was not all good news for Damien Hardwick's team, with speedster Matt White suffering a hamstring injury that appears certain to sideline him for the club's first final since 2001.

Essendon stayed in touch throughout an uninspiring and largely uncontested first half, before the Tigers started to dominate contested ball after half-time, breaking the game open with six goals to two in the third quarter.

They held a 37-point lead at three-quarter-time, and had no trouble maintaining that buffer throughout the final term.

Forward duo Tyrone Vickery and Aaron Edwards both booted four goals for the winners, forming a strong combination in the absence of injured spearhead Jack Riewoldt.

Young midfielder Brandon Ellis found it too easy to find space, racking up 35 disposals – 34 of them uncontested – as he worked tirelessly up and down the ground.

While Ellis and Dustin Martin ran amok on the outside, Daniel Jackson, Trent Cotchin and Reece Conca were outstanding in-and-under.

The Bombers had few standout players, and clearly struggled to find their best form in the wake of their disqualification from the finals earlier this week.

Jake Melksham gave his all, collecting 20 disposals and booting two goals.

However, the emerging midfielder may be at risk of missing the start of next season after elbowing Jackson to the head during the third quarter.

The Tiger left the ground with blood from both nostrils after the incident, although it appeared he ducked into Melksham's forearm.

Forwards Michael Hurley and Leroy Jetta also booted two goals for Essendon, while Brent Stanton found plenty of the ball through the midfield.

Retiring veterans Nathan Lovett-Murray and David Hille were useful contributors in their farewell AFL games.

Big man Jake Carlisle had to be subbed from the game during the third quarter after suffering severe back spasms.

The Tigers will hope to regain both Riewoldt (back/knee) and veteran Chris Newman (ankle) next week, while Shane Edwards is a certainty to be available after completing his suspension.

The Magpies will need to thrash North Melbourne on Sunday if they are to jump above Richmond into fifth.

If that happens, the Tigers' elimination final opponent will be Port Adelaide.

With their year from hell over, stand-in coach Simon Goodwin – leading the team in the absence of the now-suspended James Hird – gathered Bombers players in the middle of the ground after the final siren, before taking them for a lap of the boundary to thank the club's fans.

The red and black army responded with a rousing standing ovation.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2013-08-31/tigers-top-dons

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond dismantle Essendon to move into their first finals campaign in 12 years in style

    Glenn McFarlane
    From: Herald Sun
    August 31, 2013 10:59PM


RICHMOND is in; Essendon is out; and footy's first "dead rubber" has mercifully been consigned to history.

The Tigers did what they had to, with one eye fixed on the club's first final in 12 years. The Bombers held on for as long as they could before the residual damage of their season from hell wore them down.

There was blood spilled last night (Daniel Jackson and Jake King will attest to that), but in so many ways it might as well have been claret.

It wasn't quite bruise-free footy, but it is fair to say that it was not played with the intensity that the Tigers will face next week nor what the Bombers had managed for much of the year.

For both sides, given what lies ahead for the Tigers and what lies behind for the Bombers, that was understandable and almost accepted by the 60,979 fans at the game.

And in an emotional conclusion to the game the Essendon players showed a solidarity in the middle of the MCG last night before getting around to their supporters in a farewell to the most harrowing season in the club’s history.

They were still on the field when the Tigers were about to start their theme song.

For Richmond, there were some real positives for Damien Hardwick to consider out of last night's 39-point victory, particularly in attack.

With Jack Riewoldt out injured, but likely to return next week, one of only four Tiger players last night to have actually played in final - Aaron Edwards - has hit form at the right time.

Edwards kicked four goals, had a hand in a few others, took a career-high 12 marks and booked a certain spot to play his fifth final next weekend.

He was one of the Tigers' best players on a night, combining well with Ty Vickery, who nailed four second half-goals.

Brandon Ellis was best afield with 35 disposals, while Trent Cotchin, Daniel Jackson and Dustin Martin were strong contributors.

Michael Hibberd and Jake Melksham worked hard, Jobe Watson never stopped trying, and Nathan Lovett-Murray - who like David Hille was playing his final game - threw everything into the contest.

Edwards kicked two opening term goals as the Tigers surged to an early 22.

It took Essendon 19 minutes to score a goal - youngster Jackson Merrett missed one of the worst sitters of the season – with Lovett-Murray nailing a much-needed goal.

Then some ingenuity from Watson brought about a second goal with only seconds left in the first term. With the ball in dispute at half-forward, the skipper tapped it onto Ben Howlett, and his long snap from 40m bent back and made the difference only nine points at the first change.

Only two goals came in second quarter.

Daniel Jackson's goal from the boundary line was courtesy of two important team acts. Matthew White's lightning speed set up Jackson's goal with his two bounces as did Dylan Grimes’ bump on Melksham.

It was Melksham who scored the Bombers' sole goal for the term as he slotted through a fine goal from 45m out to make the difference less than two goals.

Richmond's introduction of the sub at half time had a mixed response.

It brought Shane Tuck into the game in what is his final season. But for every fairytale, there's a potential nightmare and that came in the hamstring injury suffered by White that threatens to end his season.

Two goals to Vickery in the first six minutes of the second half and another late in the term took much of the sting out of the contest. When Edwards kicked his third goal, the difference had pushed out to 38 points.

Then came one of the few moments of aggro in a match largely devoid of it. Melksham took a strong mark in attack that proved uncomfortable for Jackson who was coming in to try and spoil. When the Bomber goaled, he then had a clash with the Tiger midfielder, which drew some blood.

When Tuck kicked the last of six goals in the third term, it brought about a massive roar. That was surpassed in the final term when King nailed the last of the game and raised his arms in triumph that personified Richmond’s delight at making the finals again.

http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/richmond-dismantle-essendon-to-move-into-their-first-finals-campaign-in-12-years-in-style/story-fnelctok-1226708323186

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers cruise into September (Age)
« Reply #2 on: September 01, 2013, 06:49:19 AM »
Tigers cruise into September

  Rohan Connolly
     The Age
    September 1, 2013


RICHMOND 4.1 5.7 11.9 15.14 (104)
ESSENDON 2.4 3.6 5.8 9.11 (65)

GOALS
Richmond: Edwards 4, Vickery 4, Jackson 2, King 2, Martin, Grigg, Tuck.
Essendon: Melksham 2, Jetta 2, Hurley 2, Howlett, Dalgleish, Lovett-Murray.

BEST
Richmond: Ellis, Jackson, Edwards, Cotchin, Martin, Vickery.
Essendon: Hibberd, Melksham, Watson, Goddard, Stanton, Lovett-Murray.

UMPIRES Donlon, Dalgleish, Farmer.
CROWD 60,979 at MCG.

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

No one was quite sure pre-game how Saturday night's MCG clash between Essendon and Richmond was going to pan out, one side already with its finals prospects ended by the AFL Commission without having fired a shot, the other, safely ensconced in the eight, trying as best it could to keep its powder dry in preparation for next week.

So what happened? Shocks, surprises, controversy? No. Really, this contest played out pretty much how logic dictated it should. Not very physically. With little incident, save for Richmond runner Matt White's untimely hamstring injury. And with the side whose raison d'etre had been stripped away ultimately run all over by the opponent with at least something still to play for.

To say that this game ended with a whimper might be to imply that it had started with a bang, which would be totally incorrect. Perhaps a car's manual transmission would be a better analogy. As in started in first gear, and barely got beyond second, save for a brief little flurry in third in the corresponding quarter, when Richmond slammed on four goals in five minutes to turn a narrow lead into essentially a match-winning one.
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Three of that quartet came from key forwards Ty Vickery and Aaron Edwards, who ended up with eight goals between them and made the potentially conspicuous absence of spearhead Jack Riewoldt not matter much at all in the end.

They were fed constantly, a steady diet of chances created by the likes of Brandon Ellis, who was everywhere, Daniel Jackson, who racked up 30 touches and a couple of goals besides, and the usual suspects, skipper Trent Cotchin, Dustin Martin and Brett Deledio. And once the gap had grown to 38 points, there was a certain inevitability about the result. Last week, the Bombers had found something against the odds. This time, given the events of the past week, finding something similar was simply implausible.

That game, too, was error-riddled, but full of steely commitment. It's fair to say this one was less than physical. And it became obvious pretty early in the piece that defensive resolve was not going to loom large in this contest. And that either side was going to take risks. Big ones, in the case of Essendon youngster Lauchlan Dalgeish, who marked well then preceded to chip inboard inside his defensive 50 and promptly turn the ball over to Cotchin, in turn finding Aaron Edwards, who had the first goal on the board.

Essendon squandered its chances in reply, first Stewart Crameri spraying one out on-the-full, then Jackson Merrett jaw droppingly managing to miss from 12 metres out on his own under absolutely no pressure. Somewhere, the likes of Malcolm Blight were smiling ruefully and thinking: "Welcome to the club". That's how bad it was.

And Richmond made the Bombers pay. Jake King brought down Bomber Cale Hooker in a nice tackle and dobbed the resultant free kick. Edwards, lively up forward, had his second when he kept the ball alive on the boundary line near goal and ran it in for the point blank finish. The Dustin Martin launched one from just on 50 metres, the scoreboard now reading four goals to zip and things looking ominous for Essendon.

Not that the Bombers were being smashed in general play. And soon their conversion improved, too, both of the Dons' retirees David Hille and Nathan Lovett-Murray combining in a passage which produced Essendon's first goal. The second came after a lovely tap from Jobe Watson, the Bomber skipper off-loading before he was inevitably tackled, and Ben Howlett's snap sailing through.

But in the second term it was Richmond failing to make the most of its opportunities. Ricky Petterd sprayed a couple. So did Martin. So did Reece Conca. In fact, to be brutally honest, the entire quarter had little to recommend it, defensive pressure again sorely absent, but seemingly no one able to convert the relatively simple chances which came their way, save for the Tigers' Jackson, and Essendon's Jake Melksham.

And so, once the Tigers briefly put their foot to the floor, did this game revert to a benefit of sorts. Some nice enough football, but with little riding on it, nothing to bring the Richmond faithful to full voice as much as the Tigerland theme song come the final siren. They've at least got bigger fish to fry next week, and it was song belted out with the gusto of 12 years of pent-up frustration at not having that opportunity.

SPLIT THE DIFFERENCE

Saturday night's win by Richmond left its scoreline against Essendon for the year at 1-1, no great surprise seeing the teams had split their previous 12 contests since 2007, neither side having won two games against the other in a single season since the Tigers beat the Bombers twice in 2008. The score was also 1-1 in 2009, 2011 and last year, with just the one clash in 2010. Overall, Essendon has 103 wins, the Tigers 86, with four draws since 1908, the year Richmond came into the competition.

TOUGH CALL ON TUCK?

Shane Tuck's retirement call during the week wasn't entirely unexpected, the 31-year-old struggling for games towards the end of this season after a mid-season shoulder injury. It's been a laudable effort for the son of former Hawthorn great Michael Tuck to rack up 172 games over 10 seasons, seven times finishing in the best and fairest top 10 after having been initially rejected by the Hawks. Restored to the line-up against Essendon and starting as sub, Tuck came on for the second half after Matt White was injured. The Tigers now have to decide whether he keeps his spot for his first AFL final, with fellow old-timer Chris Newman and suspended Shane Edwards expected back.

HOW DID HE MISS?

Jackson Merrett is a promising small man for Essendon who has shown some good signs in 13 games this season after one game last year. But he might have some bad dreams about his miss from point blank range in the opening minutes. Merrett was in space near goal and after accepting a pass from Brendon Goddard, ran in with no pressure. But only 12 metres out, and still with space to have run right to the goal line, he steered the ball on to his boot, only to inexplicably miss. It was right up there as one of the game's great goalkicking howlers.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/tigers-cruise-into-september-20130831-2sy3a.html

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers top Dons
« Reply #3 on: September 01, 2013, 06:52:09 AM »
Sorry, pointless end for the Bombers

  Greg Baum
     The Age
    September 1, 2013


Essendon was playing for no points and Richmond for academic points, and the mood and manner of their match reflected it.

It was best summed up by the tackle count, 43 apiece. Next week, the Tigers might have to lay that many in a half. There were bloody noses, but they were a legacy of clumsiness, not running through brick walls. Richmond kept going and Essendon stopped because that is the status of their respective seasons, and so the margin grew to 39 points. But the background noise throughout was a hum rather than a roar.

It is a moot point whether this sort of match suited the Tigers, who would have been glad to escape a bruising, but will wonder how two low intensity matches in a row will soften them for next week's long-awaited return to the finals.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/sorry-pointless-end-for-the-bombers-20130831-2sy39.html