Author Topic: Media articles & stats / North defeat dismal Richmond  (Read 610 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles & stats / North defeat dismal Richmond
« on: May 09, 2015, 05:39:09 PM »
'Tassie Thomas' fires as North smashes dismal Richmond

Mark Conway, with AAP 
May 9, 2015 4:26 PM


NORTH Melbourne has consigned a dismal Richmond to its third-straight loss with a 35-point win at Blundstone Arena on Saturday.

Just a goal apart at half-time, North Melbourne grinded out the 16.13 (109) to 10.14 (74) win on the back of six straight goals in the third term.

Lindsay Thomas was the star, kicking five goals from just nine kicks. It continues an impressive run for Thomas who has kicked 16 goals from seven games at the Tasmanian ground.

Recruit Shaun Higgins chipped in with three goals, and was well supported by Jack Ziebell and fellow forward Drew Petrie.

Local product Jack Riewoldt finished with three goals, the Tigers' best, but Richmond was outclassed as it sank to 2-4 for the season.

The game got off to a scrappy start, with both sides struggling to land early attempts at goal.

Dustin Martin and Shane Edwards were the standouts for Richmond in the first quarter, keeping the Tigers up to speed with the favourites.

A clash near the eastern boundary late in the opening quarter left Ben Griffiths concussed and in the hands of the trainers, escorted from the ground to be replaced by Nathan Gordon.

Play continued to be uninspiring in the second quarter, with more opportunities squandered.

In one example, a fine passage of play which saw a textbook interception by Mason Wood and kick on to Jarrad Waite, set the latter up for a near-square shot inside the 50.

But the subsequent attempt at goal faded to produce only a point.

Despite an early third-quarter goal from Jack Riewoldt, the Tigers weren't able to close the gap.

A trio of goals within five minutes to Drew Petrie, Shaun Higgins and Lindsay Thomas stretched the margin to 22 points, and by three-quarter time the Kangaroos were 41 points ahead.

While a flame briefly flickered in the final term as the Tigers opened with two straight goals, it was quickly snuffed out by the Roos as they followed with three straight goals.

Remarkably, 92 of North Melbourne’s points came from Richmond turnovers.

It was an even performance across the midfield for the Roos with only five players having 20 or more touches.

Martin and ex-Giant Anthony Miles were impressive for the Tigers with 30 disposals each.

North now has a 5-2 record at its Hobart ‘home’ and faces Essendon, Fremantle, Collingwood and West Coast in a defining month ahead.

Richmond coach Damien Hardwick now finds himself under the pump and looking for answers ahead of clashes against Collingwood, Port Adelaide, Essendon and Fremantle.


NORTH MELBOURNE   3.2  6.8  13.10  16.13  (109)
RICHMOND                    2.1  5.8   6.11   10.14   (74)

GOALS
North Melbourne: Thomas 5, Higgins 3, Harvey 2, Nahas 2, Brown, Wright, Petrie, Waite
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Miles 2, Martin, Maric, Morris, Edwards, Chaplin

BEST
North Melbourne: Petrie, Thomas, Harvey, Goldstein, Jacobs, Ziebell, Wright
Richmond: Miles, Martin, Edwards, Grigg, Riewoldt

INJURIES
North Melbourne: Jamie Macmillan (Achilles) replaced in selected side by Ben Jacobs
Richmond: Ben Griffiths (concussion)

SUBSTITUTES
North Melbourne: Lachlan Hansen replaced by Ryan Bastinac in the final quarter.
Richmond: Ben Griffiths replaced by Nathan Gordon at quarter-time.

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Nick Foot, Simon Meredith, Jacob Mollison

Official crowd: 16,131 at Blundstone Arena

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2015-05-09/lindsay-thomas-fires-as-north-melbourne-smashes-dismal-richmond

Offline one-eyed

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Roos thump error-riddled Tigers (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2015, 04:28:34 AM »
Roos thump error-riddled Tigers

Herald-Sun
May 10, 2015


RICHMOND’S heads were slumped as they walked into the three quarter time huddle.

After hanging on bravely in the first half, the Tigers’ credibility as a genuine finals chance took another major hit as the Kangaroos slammed home seven goals to one in a match-winning third quarter to triumph by 35 points.

Coach Damien Hardwick left his charges quickly at the last change, perhaps upset the Kangaroos had sourced 11 of their 13 goals to that point, directly from errant Richmond turnovers.

Hardwick’s troops didn’t give up, but rather, coughed it up in dry conditions in Hobart.

And so a side that finished fifth in 2013 and seemed destined to launch forward from there again finds themselves in a deep hole in the early part of the season, at 2-4.

“They don’t shepherd, they don’t block, all they do is play individual football,” commentator Mark Maclure said on ABC radio. “I think we have found out that they are just not a very good side.”

“This team can’t take them to the promised land, I can assure you. The coach knows.”

Granted, Tiger big man Ben Griffiths was lost in the first term to a game-ending bout of concussion, Shaun Grigg rolled his ankle, Chris Newman went off late with a suspected groin problem and Steve Morris hurt his elbow, making things tough for Richmond.

But North Melbourne deserves much credit for holding their nerve throughout a tense first half and capitalising on their opportunities when they presented in the decisive third term.

Kanagas on-ballers Ben Cunnington and Jack Ziebell provided the hardness through the middle, even though the Tigers won the clearances (36-26) and inside 50s (50-41), underlining their own wastefulness.

North full back Scott Thompson kept Jack Riewoldt to three goals in his Tasmanian homecoming, Drew Petrie enjoyed perhaps his best game of the season with 10 marks, Todd Goldstein again looked like the best ruckman in the AFL and Brent Harvey again provided the electric run, quite incredibly, in his 390th game.

Roos’ small forward Lindsay Thomas was a thorn for the Tigers’ all day, kicking five goals including a left-footed snap from the boundary in the last term that helped blunt a last-minute charge of back-to-back goals from Richmond.

Richmond targeted Thomas physically but the livewire drew two high free-kicks in the third term that helped ignite the Roos’ charge, kicking accurately from a 50m set shot and then finding Jarrad Waite open in the forward pocket.

A frustrated Richmond also contributed to their own demise with some ill-discipline, when Shaun Edwards wandered across Sam Wright’s mark and Alex Rance caught Shaun Higgins high under an aerial ball, gifting the Roos’ two 50m penalties and certain goals from close range.

For Richmond, blue-collar pair Anthony Miles and Shaun Edwards worked tirelessly, helping provide much-needed support for the Tigers’ top-tier midfielders.

Brett Deledio, in his first game back from a month out with a calf problem, had nine possessions in a bright start and the Tigers looked damaging when he and Dustin Martin, who finished with 30 disposals had the ball in hand.

The Tigers closed the margin to five points early in the third term when speedster Taylor Hunt found some rare space up the middle and hit Riewoldt on the burst.

But for much of the day, slow and sloppy ball use marred the Tigers’ play, especially in the third-term swing.


NORTH MELBOURNE 16.13 (109)

RICHMOND 10.14 (74)

GOALS

North Melbourne: L Thomas 5, S Higgins 3, B Harvey 2, R Nahas 2, B Brown, D Petrie, J Waite, S Wright

Richmond: J Riewoldt 3, A Miles 2, D Martin, I Maric, S Edwards, S Morris, T Chaplin

Official Crowd: 16,131 at Blundstone Arena.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/afl-2015-north-melbourne-defeats-richmond-by-35-points-at-blundstone-arena-in-round-6/story-fni5f22o-1227348355709

Offline one-eyed

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North Melbourne turn it on after half-time to defeat Richmond (Age)
« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2015, 04:31:06 AM »
North Melbourne turn it on after half-time to defeat Richmond by 35 points

   Jesse Hogan
      The Age
    May 10, 2015



NORTH MELBOURNE 3.2 6.8 13.10 16.13 (109)
RICHMOND 2.1 5.8 6.11 10.14 (74)

GOALS -
NM: Thomas 5, Higgins 3, Harvey, Nahas 2, Brown, Petrie, Waite, Wright.
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Martin, Edwards, Morris, Maric, Miles, Chaplin.

BEST -
North Melbourne:: Goldstein, Higgins, Cunnington, Thomas, Petrie, Ziebell, Harvey, Jacobs.
Richmond: Martin, Miles, Edwards, Grimes, Riewoldt.

INJURIES - North Melbourne: Macmillan (Achilles, replaced in selected side by Jacobs). Richmond: Griffiths (concussion), Newman (hip).
SUBSTITUTE - North Melbourne: Bastinac (replaced Hansen in Q4). Richmond: Gordon (replaced Griffiths in Q2).
UMPIRES - Foot, Meredith, Mollison.
CROWD - 16,131 at Blundstone Arena


It is a good thing Tasmania is already a rusted-on football state, otherwise any uncommitted fans testing the waters at the North Melbourne-Richmond match would, at least until half-time, been committed to finding another pastime.

From what followed in the third quarter even rusted-on Tigers would have been considering a similar course of action, such was the way their team turned a tight tussle into a nonchalant 35-point victory for the Kangaroos.

Only 11 goals were scored in the first half in front of a crowd of 16,131 at Blundstone Arena, despite the dry conditions. The first 11 minutes of the third quarter kept to that script, with only a goal each. The second of those, to local boy Jack Riewoldt, cut the Tigers' deficit to four points.

On paper it was inconceivable that just 20 minutes later they went to the three-quarter-time huddle with a deficit of 44 points. Watching it live it was not much better, for even neutrals would have been tearing their hair out at the Tigers' repeated skill errors which led to turnovers which almost invariably led to goals for North.

Even players the calibre of Brett Deledio were culpable as the Kangaroos notched six consecutive goals.

While the Tigers boasted the stand-out players of the first half, Dustin Martin and Shane Edwards, in ruckman Todd Goldstein and forward flanker Shaun Higgins the Kangaroos boasted two players who were influential for the entire match, in addition to a more even spread of contributors.

Harvey ran riot on his preceding visit to Blundstone Arena, against St Kilda in round 17 last year, and threatened to do the same against Richmond after snaring three disposals, including a goal, in the first four minutes of the match. The player shifted on to him in response, Chris Newman, deserved credit not only for quelling Harvey but also for his tenacity in improbably running down the Kangaroos' Robin Nahas as he streamed forward to win a stuff.

Richmond ruckman Ivan Maric's squandered kick from 10 metres out early in the first quarter set the tone for what was a largely awful display of set-shot kicking in the first half. The Tigers never achieved anything better than scoreboard parity in the first half, although that was partly influenced by their inaccuracy.

Given the dry conditions the poor skills were inexplicable. The worst of it came mid-way through the second quarter where in the space of a minute there were three conspicuous blunders: Mason Wood missing on the run into goal for North, Martin turning the ball over in the back pocket and then the Kangaroos' Jarrad Waite missing the resulting set-shot from 20 metres on only a slight angle.

Had it not been for two fine contested marks by Richmond small men, Edwards and Steve Morris, that each converted to goals there would literally have been nothing at all to savour from either side about the second quarter.

North begin to add some polish to their game in the third quarter. The first signs of this were long-range set shots from Lindsay Thomas, hitherto barely sighted, and Drew Petrie, hitherto only influential when pushing up into the back half, split the goalposts. As the Kangaroos went on their five-goal streak to finish the quarter it was fitting that both Goldstein and Higgins were involved: Goldstein twice making pivotal interceptions in the centre, former Bulldog Higgins as one of the goalscorers after Edwards carelessly conceded a 50-metre penalty.

Scoring the first two goals of the final quarter, through the hard-working Anthony Miles and Riewoldt, raised the possibility the Tigers could add a degree of respectability to the scoreline. That possibility disappeared when the Kangaroos kicked the next three goals.

Even though Lindsay Thomas kicked five for the match, it was only his final goal, from about 40 metres hard on the boundary, that was particularly noteworthy.

The late high pack mark from key-defender Troy Chaplin, and his resulting goal, was one of the few things Tigers fans had to savour about the second half.

For Kangaroos fans, even though their team did not bury the Tigers on the scoreboard in the final quarter, they should be comforted to have achieved such a decisive win while barely breaking a sweat.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/north-melbourne-turn-it-on-after-halftime-to-defeat-richmond-by-35-points-20150509-ggxyft.html

Offline tdy

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Re: Media articles & stats / North defeat dismal Richmond
« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2015, 10:21:19 AM »
I wonder if OER total comments are down this week after the game? Are the forums losing the fans too?

Offline Smokey

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Re: Media articles & stats / North defeat dismal Richmond
« Reply #4 on: May 10, 2015, 12:42:27 PM »
I wonder if OER total comments are down this week after the game? Are the forums losing the fans too?

There's nothing more to be said that hasn't already been said.  I just don't care any more.   :thumbsdown