Author Topic: Media articles and Stats: Tigers humbled by Pies  (Read 890 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and Stats: Tigers humbled by Pies
« on: April 12, 2014, 01:36:33 AM »
Tigers humbled by Pies
Kristian Pisano 
April 11, 2014 11:52 PM


RICHMOND                        1.4          2.7          3.10        10.12  (72)
COLLINGWOOD                 4.3          7.5          10.10       16.14 (110)

GOALS
Richmond: Lloyd 3, Riewoldt 2, Martin, Arnot, Edwards, Thomas, Newman
Collingwood: Beams 3, Pendlebury 3, White 3, Elliott 2, Swan 2, Sidebottom, Blair, Ball

BEST
Richmond: Lloyd, Astbury, Martin
Collingwood: Beams, Pendlebury, Macaffer, Sidebottom, White, Fasolo, Witts

INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
Collingwood: Nil
 
SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Matthew Arnot replaced Tyrone Vickery at half-time
Collingwood: Josh Thomas replaced Brodie Grundy in the third quarter
 
Reports: Nil
Umpires: Fleer, Findlay, Pannell
Official crowd: 62,100 at the MCG

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Richmond has suffered its third loss in the opening four rounds of the 2014 season, going down to Collingwood by 38 points at the MCG on Friday, in front of 62,100 fans.

The Tigers trailed from the outset, managing to only kick three goals until three-quarter time, before piling on seven in the final term.

Richmond won or broke even in most statistical categories, but errors and a lack of polish saw the Magpies seal victory by the final change.

Collingwood kicked 54 points from stoppages, with 11 of their 16 goals coming from midfielders (three each to Dayne Beams and Scott Pendlebury).

Sam Lloyd was Richmond’s best player on debut, kicking three goals (including Richmond’s only two goals in the first half), accumulating 22 disposals (at 82% efficiency) and laying five tackles.

David Astbury was one of the shining lights in defence, keeping Travis Cloke goalless. The Pies went to Cloke six times inside 50, but he only managed two marks from those entries.

Dustin Martin was the Tigers’ leading disposal winner on the ground with 29 touches (including a goal), while Dan Jackson amassed 27 disposals and Reece Conca picked up 25 possessions and laid and equal-high seven tackles.

Richmond was unable to stop the run of the Collingwood midfielders, with Pendlebury (24 disposals, three goals), Beams (30 disposals, three goals) and Dane Swan (27 disposals, two goals), among the match-winners for the Magpies.

Richmond travels to Brisbane on Thursday night to take on the Lions at the Gabba.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2014-04-11/tigers-humbled-by-pies

Offline one-eyed

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Pies tear apart paper Tigers (Age)
« Reply #1 on: April 12, 2014, 02:41:29 AM »
Pies tear apart paper Tigers
   Jake Niall
      The Age
    April 12, 2014


COLLINGWOOD 4.3 7.5 10.10 16.14 (110)
RICHMOND       1.4  2.7  3.10  10.12 (72)

Goals:
Collingwood: D Beams 3 J White 3 S Pendlebury 3 D Swan 2 J Elliott 2 J Blair L Ball S Sidebottom.
Richmond: S Lloyd 3 J Riewoldt 2 C Newman D Martin M Arnot M Thomas S Edwards.

BEST:
Collingwood: Pendlebury, Beams, Macaffer, White, Ball, Maxwell.
Richmond: Lloyd, Astbury, Jackson, Houli.

Umpires: Troy Pannell, Robert Findlay, Craig Fleer.
Official Crowd: 62,100 at MCG.

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

This match was viewed as consequential, not so much for the winner, but for the loser. At 2-2 after four rounds, a team is respectable. At 1-3, you're in the bunker.

And when that loser is the Richmond Football Club - with the largest band of success-deprived supporters in the competition - that bunker should be underground and made of reinforced concrete, rather than sand. The talkback lines will be deluged with talk of Tiger failure, and the past greats who lambasted the paper Tigers this week will feel vindicated.

Collingwood's advantage over Richmond remains as it has been for several years. Contrary to what you will hear over the next few days, the difference between the sides wasn't about effort - though Collingwood retains warrior qualities that the Tigers haven't found for three decades. No, the major cause of the defeat was class.

It mattered not that Travis Cloke didn't kick a goal in his 200th game. It mattered not that the Tigers won the clearances.

It mattered not that the Tigers made a junk-time charge and drew within five goals - having trailed by eight goals at one point. The game, really, was done by early in the third quarter and probably much earlier.

Collingwood's major supremacy was in the capacity of its players - and particularly gun midfielders Scott Pendlebury, Dayne Beams and Steele Sidebottom - to use the ball effectively, and to score themselves.

Pendlebury and Beams booted three goals each, while a partially revived Dane Swan - who improved, without fully regaining his powers of possession - added two. The Pies were comfortable victors, despite Cloke's ongoing lack of scoring, because their midfielders were so potent. Jesse White slotted three as Cloke's foil, showcasing his excellent mobility.

The most fateful contest was between Tiger skipper Trent Cotchin and his relentless tagger Brent Macaffer, who wore Cotchin like a wetsuit throughout the evening. Having entered the match without Brett Deledio, Richmond simply couldn't hope to win unless Cotchin maintained his high output. Macaffer's smothering, thus, was paramount. Macaffer, increasingly, is developing into a more muted version of Ryan Crowley.

Collingwood booted the opening four goals of the game and its quarter-time lead was - unusually for the 2014 Pies - built on efficiency. This pattern would continue for the next hour and a half. Often, Richmond sent the ball forward, only to allow the Pies to rebound in to space. Collingwood was far superior ''on the spread'' when running the ball from defence.

Collingwood's no-name defence - given the luxury of a loose man behind the ball - was utterly dominant and it perhaps is an emerging story. The Tigers did not mark the ball within cooee of goal. Tyrone Vickery, subbed out just after half-time to the cheers of the Tiger fans, barely touched it. Jack Frost did well to restrict Jack Riewoldt overall, with Riewoldt scoring only in the final quarter.

Collingwood's first four goals were created by cleaner use of the ball. Dynamic midfielders Pendlebury, Beams and Swan booted one goal each from skilful snaps. Swan, who started on the bench and went forward, appeared to be running more freely than he had hitherto this season. Pendlebury, matched to Matt Thomas, was highly productive in those early minutes and indeed for the entire first half.

Damien Hardwick, perhaps surprisingly, opted to deploy Thomas on Pendlebury, rather than his more seasoned tagger, Daniel Jackson; perhaps the Richmond coach felt that with Deledio missing and Cotchin subjected to the inevitable very hard tag, Jackson would be needed as a ball-winner.

But the major surprise was the impact made on the game by Collingwood's leviathan ruckman forward Jarrod Witts, who showed fine touch and mobility and was among the catalysts for Collingwood's ascendancy in the opening 10-15 minutes.

From that point, though, the Tigers squared up and even held an edge in general play for much of the next hour. The problem lay in an inability to convert - shots on goal were either botched, as Cotchin missed one you would expect him to make from 40 metres, or - more typically - the ball was butchered when one Tiger was seeking another.

The Tigers won the centre breaks decisively in the first half 8-3, were only marginally behind in forward entries (27-25 to the Pies) and contested ball (80-78), yet trailed by 28 points. Collingwood, in fact, often benefited from quick rebounds into a less congested forward.

The first game of mature-age recruit Sam Lloyd, with his three goals, was one of very few high points for the Tigers.

The worst moment for Richmond came just before half-time, when David Astbury out-manoeuvred Travis Cloke and marked, but his switch of play into the corridor was dropped by Dylan Grimes. Tyson Goldsack snatched the ball, gave it by hand to Jesse White, who made a regulation snap. In psychological terms, this was awful - the Tigers had been winning enough ball to be much closer. They just kept stuffing up.

It's a familiar plotline for the Richmond Football Club.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/pies-tear-apart-paper-tigers-20140411-36j3m.html#ixzz2yb3FK3rz

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Richmond digs itself into an even deeper hole (Age)
« Reply #2 on: April 12, 2014, 02:43:46 AM »
Richmond digs itself into an even deeper hole
   Jason Phelan
      The Age
    April 12, 2014


The need to find greater consistency of effort was preached loudly and often at Punt Road this week, but the search will go on after Richmond's season hit a low against Collingwood on Friday night.

Damien Hardwick demanded a more even effort from his players after they failed to fire in the first half of last week's loss to the Western Bulldogs, and while the effort might have been there in the first half this week the wasteful execution and woeful decision making at times would have left him aghast.

In his press conference following that loss Hardwick spoke of the Tigers digging themselves out of the hole had put themselves in with one unconvincing win against

But on the big stage of Friday night football against a side that was similarly struggling with one win after three rounds, Richmond only made that hole deeper.

With games against the Brisbane Lions, Hawthorn and Geelong before the bye, the Tigers are every chance to be 2-5 after seven rounds, but even the rebuilding Lions at the Gabba will be no pushovers for a team so clearly lacking in confidence.

After four rounds Richmond's drought-breaking return to the finals last year looks dangerously like yet another false dawn for weary Tigers supporters than the start of a new era of on-field prosperity it was heralded as at the time.

The Tigers are clearly missing the poise of Brett Deledio, who's every chance to miss another two games with an Achilles injury, but the absence of one player should not be enough to completely destabilise a side with top-four aspirations.

With so much responsibility falling on his talented shoulders, Trent Cotchin battled hard, but Brent Macaffer's superb blanketing role on the Tiger skipper exposed a midfield lacking flair.

Richmond, ranked second in clearances going into the match, won that battle handsomely against the Pies, but winning the ball without disposing of it effectively coming away from the stoppage is of little use.

Jack Riewoldt, so often emblematic of Richmond's fortunes, was again a prime example of the inconsistency that threatens to derail the Tigers' season. While he flashed glimpses of the brilliance he's capable of, he failed to have a meaningful impact against a side missing two quality key defenders in Ben Reid and Nathan Brown.

Sam Lloyd looks a handy pick up and may have a long career ahead of him, but that he was responsible for Richmond's only two goals in the first half in his AFL debut is a sad indictment on the Tigers' dysfunctional forward set-up.

Hardwick has spoken of the need to develop a more-rounded attack less reliant on Riewoldt, but to target Tyrone Vickery ahead of Riewoldt when he is so badly out of form is pure folly.

Vickery had two handballs to half-time and looked lost when the ball hit the ground. Bronx cheers greeted the scoreboard notification that he had been subbed out at the main break, with a heavily iced left quad perhaps his only saving grace.

But while the attack lacks cohesion, Richmond's forwards can have no confidence in how the ball is arriving in the forward half.

The run and carry that characterises the Tigers when they're on song has been in evidence all too rarely this year. Richmond's lack of spread and stop-start ball movement out of the back half is symptomatic of a nervous defensive unit that looked positively bereft of ideas at times.

A final flurry in the last quarter when the game was well out of reach only served to rub salt into the wounds of Tigers fans, who would be well within their rights to inquire as to where that free-spirited, attacking football was in the first three quarters.

History says it will be very difficult for Richmond to make the finals after a 1-3 start. Even ninth could be a stretch.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/richmond-digs-itself-into-an-even-deeper-hole-20140411-36j3n.html#ixzz2yb3yBubY

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Collingwood captain Scott Pendlebury inspires 38-point Round 4 win for Collingwood over Richmond at MCG
Herald-Sun
April 12, 2014



IT was supposed to be the summer of heartache that would be the making of the Richmond Football Club.

But at some point in the six short months since last year’s elimination final loss, the wheels have fallen off the Tiger train.

After three unconvincing weeks, the Tigers fell to a 1-3 record after last night’s 38-point loss to Collingwood at the MCG.

While finals are not an impossibility, no team has made September from the same low-point in the past four years, save for Carlton’s free finals pass at Essendon’s expense last year.

Did they believe their own hype, the Tigers? Ease off the accelerator over pre-season? Or simply fail to execute when the expectation, in Damien Hardwick’s fifth year as coach, was turned up to top-four levels?

Hardwick must answer those questions, and look for a way to restore bereft confidence levels, under a kind of heat that he has not yet had to experience in his time as senior coach.

Collingwoods Nick Maxwell could find himself in hot water after his late and high bump on Richmond captain Trent Cotchin, which Jon Ralph believes will lead to the veteran being charged with rough conduct.

Collingwood, on the other hand, gathered some much-needed momentum last night, led superbly once again by Scott Pendlebury.

Thriving under the captaincy that seemed bestowed upon him in his second season, Pendlebury brushed off the Matt Thomas tag and then won a one-on-one shootout with Cotchin, running to the end.

Pendlebury started the week in a moon boot and finished it with another three Brownlow votes.

But most importantly for Nathan Buckley’s cause is that the unrelenting skipper had mates, this time. Dayne Beams and Dane Swan found the kind of form that together, makes them one of the most potent midfields in the game.

Forward Jesse White also emerged as a dangerous foil for 200-gamer Travis Cloke, giving the forward line much-needed depth and helping validate the last season’s trade.

The win means the Pies this morning wake up back on an even keel at 2-2, breathing a sigh of relief after a win over the Swans and a commendable effort against the Cats in recent weeks.

But this match was never about the winner. A pre-season that almost universally stamped Richmond as a genuine top-four contender may have already gone down the gurgler amid major concerns in each third of the ground. They rallied in the last quarter, but that’s the frustrating part with the Tigers, they turn it on and off like no other team.

Most worryingly, though, is the lack of pace, endeavour and accuracy in the back half. They are butchering the ball by foot, Richmond.

Dane Swan played forward most of the night, but was back to his bullocking best. Picture:

Dane Swan played forward most of the night, but was back to his bullocking best. Picture: Michael Klein. Source: News Corp Australia
Nick Vlastuin, Cotchin and Dustin Martin were all operating below 40 per cent kicking efficiency heading into the three-quarter time break. And when they turned the ball over, their defence was exposed without Alex Rance and Brett Deledio to run the other way.

Richmond played pulsating footy last year, but they move the ball at snail’s pace this season. The flair is gone, and panic seems to have set in.

There is no respite, either. Next weekend’s clash against Brisbane away is a danger game and then the Cats and Hawks follow, leading into the bye.

It was an indictment on the Richmond side that at half time first-gamer Sam Lloyd was the Tigers’ most dangerous player.

Taking the place of out-of-favour hard nut Jake King, the man from Deniliquin in New South Wales showed so much natural goal sense, snapping cleverly across his body then curling home a dribbler in the second.

But he was the only bright note and they were the Tigers’ only two goals to half time.

You could hardly believe that the ball had been in Richmond’s possession 53 per cent of the game to that point, but they were wasting it at every turn.

The tall forward setup including Jack Riewoldt, Ben Griffiths and Tyrone Vickery was toothless again on a wet night.

As hard as the stagnant play made it for the Tiger forwards, Vickery looked a lonely man on the MCG with only two handballs at the main change.

He looked uninterested at times, unwilling at others. But he was also hurt, and subbed off at half time with ice on his leg. Some in the crowd clapped the crowd announcement that he had put on the red vest, early in the third.

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

RICHMOND:        10.12 (72)
COLLINGWOOD: 16.14 (110)

JAY CLARK’S BEST:
COLLINGWOOD: Pendlebury, Beams, Macaffer, White, Ball, Swan, Witts
RICHMOND: Lloyd, Jackson, Astbury, Conca, Houli

http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/collingwood-captain-scott-pendlebury-inspires-38point-round-4-win-for-collingwood-over-richmond-at-mcg/story-fndv8g1a-1226881308962