Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Profligacy hurts Tigers in GWS thriller  (Read 1680 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Profligacy hurts Tigers in GWS thriller

Adam Curley
AFL media
14 July 2018  10:19 pm


RICHMOND has lost four out of four interstate games in 2018 after being outlasted in a two-point thriller by GWS at Spotless Stadium on Saturday night.

Inaccuracy in front of goal was the reigning premier's biggest problem as they wasted many gettable scoring opportunities, while the class of GWS saw the home team make the most of their forward thrusts.

A third quarter that saw the Tigers kick 0.5 was costly in the end as GWS got home.

Tigers star Jack Riewoldt snapped a goal at the death to give his side a chance to steal victory, but GWS won the vital next centre clearance through Dylan Shield and hung on to prevail 11.13 (79) to 10.17 (77).

Lachie Whitfield was outstanding for the Giants and was well supported by Callan Ward and Stephen Coniglio, while Toby Greene kicked two goals in his first game back from injury.

Daniel Rioli was a constant threat inside 50 for the premiers and grabbed three goals, with Brandon Ellis, Dion Prestia, Kane Lambert and Dustin Martin the chief ball-winners.

The Giants kicked four of the first five goals of the match in an enterprising start built on fierce tackle pressure, but the visitors worked their way into the contest and a couple of classy finishes from Rioli reduced the margin to 10 points at the first change.

Richmond carried their momentum into the second term and they hit the front at the 16-minute mark thanks to a brilliant snap from Martin.

Rioli nailed his third and Toby Nankervis floated forward to give Richmond another early in the last, before Greene grabbed his moment when he slotted his second from a tough angle to give the Giants a 13-point advantage.

Jayden Short launched a trademark bomb from a set shot from outside 50 to get the Tigers within seven points, but Jason Castagna let another chance slip and he finished with 0.5 for the night.

The Giants tried to control the dying minutes but kept letting Richmond back into the contest, and while Riewoldt gave them life with less than a minute to play, GWS managed to sneak away with the result.

GREATER WESTERN SYDNEY  4.3   7.6   10.10  11.13 (79)

RICHMOND                              2.3   6.10   6.15  10.17 (77)

GOALS
Greater Western Sydney: Langdon 3, Kelly 2, Taranto 2, Greene 2, Griffen, Coniglio
Richmond: Rioli 3, Riewoldt 2, Caddy, Martin, Prestia, Nankervis, Short

BEST
Greater Western Sydney: Ward, Coniglio, Whitfield, Shiel, Davis, Griffen
Richmond: Martin, Lambert, Rioli, Grimes, Prestia, Short

INJURIES
Greater Western Sydney: Nil
Richmond: Nil

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Findlay, Hosking, Margetts

Official crowd: 14,456 at Spotless Stadium

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2018-07-14/round-17-match-report
« Last Edit: July 15, 2018, 07:02:04 AM by one-eyed »

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles & stats: Profligacy hurts Tigers in GWS thriller
« Reply #1 on: July 14, 2018, 11:02:31 PM »
Talking Points:

afl.com.au
15 July 2018


The curious case of the Tiger tackles
Despite basing its game heavily on pressure, Richmond's tackle numbers this year have not been overly high, averaging 63.6 a match, which is 12th in the competition. The tally was once again low against the Giants, with the Tigers laying just 50. The injured duo of Jack Graham (shoulder) and Reece Conca (ankle) have generally been barometers for Richmond's pressure this season and it was noticeably down in periods on Saturday night, particularly in the opening half of the first quarter. While the manic pressure returned in a high-octane final term, it was a case of too little, too late.

Wanted: One Butler to deliver silver service
Small classy forward Dan Butler is still facing another two to three weeks on the sidelines with an ankle injury and was missed in the upset loss to the Giants. Butler draws a quality defender away from Daniel Rioli and Jason Castagna, and while Rioli was the team's leading goalkicker with three, Castagna struggled under the enormous Giants pressure, kicking five behinds. Butler's replacement, Shai Bolton, was lively in patches but struggled to have a real impact. Rookie Tyson Stengle kicked six goals in the VFL and could come into contention for a senior game.

A case of déjà vu for the Tigers?
The last time Richmond ventured to Spotless Stadium, a debutant named Shai Bolton very nearly won the match for the Tigers with a goal ruled touched by the video review. The Giants then raced the ball down the other end for a Jeremy Cameron goal and a 78 to 75 win. On Saturday night, Bolton had been brought back into the side for his first match since round two, and had a set shot in the dying minutes to take the lead. The ball sprayed wide off his boot and out of bounds on the full. While the Tigers drew within a point a minute later courtesy of a Jack Riewoldt snap, the Giants once again got the ball forward, kicking a behind to finish the match winners. The final score? An eerily similar 79 to 77.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-07-14/five-talking-points-greater-western-sydney-v-richmond

Offline one-eyed

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Giants the joker in the pack after upsetting Tigers in thriller (Age)
« Reply #2 on: July 15, 2018, 07:00:16 AM »
Giants the joker in the pack after upsetting Tigers in thriller

Andrew Wu
The Age
15 July 2018


Greater Western Sydney sent a warning to the rest of the competition they are not done with yet after posting a thrilling victory over Richmond that raised further questions about the reigning premiers' form on the road.

The Giants not only remain firmly in the finals race, but they are fast becoming the joker in the pack, a side with the star power to challenge the Tigers' quest for back-to-back flags.

Gallant in defeat last week in Perth against West Coast, the Giants showed tremendous character to hold off a desperate final challenge from the Tigers to prevail by two points.

Truth be told they should have run down the clock in more clinical fashion but there are no "what ifs" in victory.

The Giants set up their win with bursts in the first and third quarters but could not shake off a Tigers side that, as its song suggests, does not weaken until the final siren sounds.

"We knew they would come in the last quarter," Giants coach Leon Cameron said. "And we were coming back from Perth on a six-day break . I was really proud our guys found a way when it got really, really close."

Richmond trimmed what had been a four-goal margin to just one point with 26 seconds left. Had the final clearance gone their way, they may well have pinched the points and left the Giants wondering what may have been.

Instead it was the Tigers rueing their inaccurate kicking, of which Jason Castagna was the worst offender with five behinds, including a shot which hit the post nearing time on in the last.

"He'd be a little distraught about his zero five but I thought his game was terrific," Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said.

"He gave himself ample opportunities to play the game and that's what we want him to do. He'll go back to the drawing board with his process and get a better result next week but the pleasing thing for me was he kept lining up to take those shots on goal."

The loss was the Tigers' fourth on the road from as many trips interstate but it may be a weakness their rivals do not get to expose if they, as expected, hold on to a top-two finish and play their finals at their beloved MCG fortress.

The Giants enjoyed stellar performances from Callan Ward, Stephen Coniglio and Lachie Whitfield, while Heath Shaw played his finest game of the year, amassing 30 touches on top of several desperate defensive acts that saved scores.

Dion Prestia and Dustin Martin were important for the Tigers but this was not the even contribution one has come to expect from the premiership favourite.

There were two notable phases in the first quarter. The first 20 or so minutes belonged to the Giants, who were playing as if on fast forward.

It was not so much their running power that was exposing the Tigers like few have in the past 12 months, but their clean disposal.

Pressure forces errors but the Giants' play was characterised by one-touch gathers, handballs that released teammates into space and kicks to their forwards' advantage. They had four goals by time-on, including one to a pure snap by Josh Kelly on his non-preferred side.

The Tigers had not been allowed to play. Their trademark pressure was non-existent, illustrated by just four tackles in 24 minutes. That tally was doubled in the next six minutes, during which the ball lived inside the Tigers' forward 50. They were in the game, a point reaffirmed by a late goal to Daniel Rioli.

With the match played on more desirable terms, the Tigers went to work. Chains of quick Giants handball were replaced by dump kicks, which found yellow and black jumpers set up for such panic plays.

Martin won some important touches, Jack Riewoldt took a hanger and by midway through the term they were in front. This was the type of scenario where the Giants would have been blown away during their form slump in May but since regaining key personnel, they have shown more starch.

They held their ground until half-time then dug in their heels and pushed back hard. At one point the contested possession count in the third quarter read 26-12 in favour of the Giants.

Their reward came in a five-minute burst during which they piled on three goals against a Richmond side that was struggling to get their hands on the ball let alone string together any meaningful passages of play.

Though held goalless for the quarter, the Tigers were still large enough in the Giants' rearview mirror to cause them concern.

GREATER WESTERN SYDNEY
4.3 7.6 10.10 11.13 (79)
RICHMOND
2.3 6.10 6.15 10.17 (77)

GOALS - Greater Western Sydney: Langdon 3, Kelly 2, Taranto 2, Greene 2, Griffen, Coniglio
Richmond: Rioli 3, Riewoldt 2, Caddy, Martin, Prestia, Nankervis, Short

BEST - Greater Western Sydney: Ward, Coniglio, Whitfield, Shiel, Taranto, Langdon
Richmond: Martin, Lambert, Rioli, Grimes, Prestia, Short
Umpires: Findlay, Hosking, Margetts
Official crowd: 14,456 at Spotless Stadium

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/giants-the-joker-in-the-pack-after-upsetting-tigers-in-thriller-20180714-p4zri7.html