Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Premier class - Wounded Tigers teach Cats a lesson  (Read 785 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Premier class: Wounded Tigers teach Cats a lesson

Richmond proves too strong for Geelong in Friday night battle


By Callum Twomey
afl.com.au
11 September 2020 10:30pm


GEELONG        0.3     1.4     1.5      4.7     (31)
RICHMOND     2.5     3.5     5.13     7.15     (57)

GOALS
Geelong: Ratugolea 2, Close, Hawkins
Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Castagna, Lynch, Rioli

BEST
Geelong: Stewart, Guthrie, Dangerfield, Menegola, Blicavs
Richmond: Riewoldt, Martin, Baker, Bolton, Grimes, Short

INJURIES
Geelong: Rohan (glute) replaced in selected side by Jarvis
Richmond: Soldo (left knee), Lynch (left hamstring)

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

THIS felt more like a warm-up bout than the main event. But either way the result was clear: a knockout win for Richmond over Geelong in a game that mattered.   

With a top-four spot up for grabs, the Tigers pulled apart the Cats to record a 26-point win at Metricon Stadium.

The impressive 7.15 (57) to 4.7 (31) win means the Tigers can seal a spot in a qualifying final by beating the last-placed Adelaide in the final round next week.

But the Tigers' win came at a cost, with injury blows to star forward Tom Lynch (hamstring) and ruckman Ivan Soldo (knee).

Lynch limped off the field in the third quarter and finished the game with his leg iced, while Soldo didn't reappear after his knee was tangled in the first half.

Although soured by the fitness concerns, Tigers coach Damien Hardwick will have had no worries with the way his side dismantled the Cats, whose last loss came against West Coast in round nine.

After a frenetic start to the contest, Richmond took control thereafter, holding Geelong goalless in the first term and restricting them to just one goal to three-quarter time.

It was only in the final term, with Richmond reduced to two players on the bench, that Geelong started its charge, booting three last-quarter goals to get within 15 points before a Jason Castagna major shut down their late dash.

The dominant performance could have been even more evident on the scoreboard if the Tigers had have kicked straight, with their inaccuracy the only thing preventing Geelong from suffering a blowout defeat.

Jack Riewoldt was important for the Tigers, kicking four goals in an imposing tune-up before the finals, but it was otherwise an even performance from the reigning premiers, with Dustin Martin (19 disposals), Shai Bolton (18) and Jayden Short (16) also busy in the tight affair.

Tom Stewart was among Geelong's best but it was a lacklustre showing from the star-studded Cats in a game that could have locked in a top-four berth.

Expect a different intensity, a stack of new tactics, some new faces and even more rigour if these sides meet again in the finals series. But Richmond's recent stronghold over Geelong, as shown on Friday night, will be hard to ignore if they do battle again.

Blicavs watch
After last year's controversial move to play Blicavs on the wing as the Tigers' forward line ran rampant in the preliminary final, attention was on where Chris Scott would deploy his most versatile player on Friday night. The athletic tall started on the wing against Marlion Pickett and continued to play as a free-wheeling midfielder with stints in the ruck. Blicavs finished with 18 disposals and was solid, but Riewoldt dominated in the air and Lynch was also potent before his injury struck.

The late change masters do it again
Rumours swirled on Friday afternoon of a late change at the Cats involving Gary Rohan as he nursed a glute injury. And Geelong, renowned for its propensity to make changes, did it again. This time, it was a very, very late call, as Rohan was ruled out with only minutes before the first bounce. In came first-gamer Ben Jarvis, and he looked comfortable at the level. The second-year medium forward took three marks, including a handy grab inside 50 in the third term for a shot at goal, and wasn't overawed by the occasion.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/499147/premier-class-wounded-tigers-teach-cats-a-lesson

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers close down disappointing Cats in heavyweight clash (Age)
« Reply #1 on: September 12, 2020, 05:27:04 AM »
Tigers close down disappointing Cats in heavyweight clash

By Jake Niall
The Age
September 12, 2020


Whatever Richmond's failings in behaviour this year, they remain the competition's topweight on the field and, barring an extraordinary mishap, will finish in the necessary top-four position at the end of next week and well placed for a reprise of 2019 and 2017.

In a year defined by restrictions on movement and shutdowns, the Tigers closed down hitherto freewheeling Geelong, holding the Cats to one goal in three quarters to win by 26 points, in a display that was redolent of Richmond's late-season surge of last year when they stormed to the premiership.

Geelong rallied in the final quarter and cut the margin of more than five goals to 16 points at the mid-point of the final term, raising the prospect of a ridiculous comeback, as the Cats belatedly discovered some fluency.

The Cats, having taken only two marks inside forward 50 in three quarters, managed three in four minutes, as Esava Ratugolea marked high twice and converted and Tom Hawkins nailed another.

But the result was sealed when Hawkins missed a Steve Johnson-style hook shot from an angle and then Jason Castagna, often profligate, kicked accurately to put the margin beyond three goals.

But the Richmond victory, essential to their top-four prospects, came at significant cost – ruckman Ivan Soldo hobbled off with a knee injury just before half-time, while key forward Tom Lynch was forced off and had an ice pack on his left hamstring in the third term.

Soldo's injury appeared significant, Lynch's less so, but the finals bye might be important to Richmond. Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said Soldo’s injury appeared to be an ACL.

Geelong's poor performance against a fellow contender will re-heat the concerns about the Cats' ability to perform in finals, or finals-like games, although they will regain significant players, including skipper Joel Selwood, Gary Ablett and Gary Rohan.

Patrick Dangerfield, so often the catalyst for the Cats, was not overly effective. There was, admittedly, more at stake for Richmond than the Cats, who will still make the top four with a final-round victory over Sydney.

Richmond's defensive mastery was led by their premier backman Dylan Grimes, who was outstanding behind the ball, cutting off the sporadic Geelong attacks with timely intercepts and lending a hand to teammate Noah Balta in his successful negation of Geelong's powerhouse key forward Hawkins.

The Tigers were wasteful with opportunities, but created far more of them than Geelong. Jack Riewoldt booted four goals in an impressive display, while Dustin Martin asserted his class in the third quarter when Richmond built that decisive lead – sufficient against a constipated Geelong.

The pattern of the match was decidedly on Tiger terms for the bulk of the four quarters, as the Cats struggled with Richmond's frenetic pressure and were largely impotent in attack, where Hawkins was held, not so much by Balta, but by Richmond's team defence and Geelong's shoddy delivery.

It is a measure of Richmond's defensive capability that the Tigers held Geelong, the best scoring team in the competition this year, to one goal in three quarters.

While both sides defended stoutly, the difference to this point was that Richmond moved the ball with far greater speed and fluency. Geelong's more careful ball movement – so effective in 2020 – allowed the Tigers to out-number Hawkins in Geelong's scoring territory, which lacked a secondary threat.

Richmond's advantage was established in the first quarter, when the Tigers once again defied their weakness in the clearances to have control of both territory and the scoreboard.

Beaten in the clearances 13-6 in that first term, the Tigers still had the match on their terms. Their trademark pressure and territory game were evident.

Perhaps the most ominous sign, however, was the crowding of Hawkins by the Richmond defence.

The Cats had lost Rohan before the game, replacing him with debutant Ben Jarvis. The absence of Rohan, who had been Hawkins' best foil in attack and made the opposition reluctant to double-team the leviathan forward, seemed to allow Grimes and Nick Vlastuin to leave their less potent opponents.

The Cats settled in the second quarter, as their field position improved and Hawkins had some presence – his handball setting up their first major to Brad Close – but scoring remained an issue.

A goal to Lynch late in the second quarter meant the Tigers still maintained a handy lead in a first half that was more notable for pressure than highlights.

At the end, the difference between the sides was in both method and cohesion. The Richmond game – and players – stood up. Geelong's didn't. If they meet again, the Cats will need to find their best selves, not this version.

RICHMOND 2.5 3.5 5.13 7.15 (57)
GEELONG  0.3 1.4 1.5  4.7 (31)

GOALS - Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Lynch, Castagna, Rioli
Geelong: Ratugolea 2, Hawkins, Close

BEST - Richmond: Grimes, Riewoldt, Martin, Vlastuin, Bolton, Nankervis
Geelong: Guthrie, Blicavs, Stewart, Ratugolea, Atkins

INJURIES
Richmond: Soldo (knee), Lynch (hamstring).

UMPIRES Foot, Findlay, Mollison
CROWD 7061 at Metricon Stadium

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/tigers-close-down-disappointing-cats-to-move-into-top-four-20200911-p55ux4.html


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Tigers flex their AFL title muscles with 26-point win over Geelong (News)
« Reply #2 on: September 12, 2020, 05:27:52 AM »
Tigers flex their AFL title muscles with 26-point win over Geelong

Matt Turner
The Advertiser/Herald-Sun
September 12, 2020


Anyone who thought kebab-gate might derail Richmond’s season received a strong answer to the contrary on Friday night as the defending premier flexed its muscles against Geelong.

In one of the most highly-anticipated games of the season, the Tigers dominated most of the clash at Metricon Stadium, strangling the Cats’ ability to score, stifling their supply to in-form spearhead Tom Hawkins and peppering the goals themselves, on their way to a 7.15 (57) to 4.7 (31) victory.

Both sides have had key players sidelined in recent weeks and their injury lists added new names: Tom Lynch and Ivan Soldo for the Tigers and Gary Rohan for the Cats.

Lynch had ice on his hamstring in the third term while Soldo sustained a knee injury during the second quarter.

Rohan pulled out with a glute issue just before the game and was replaced by Ben Jarvis. Geelong is already without captain Joel Selwood (knee) and Rhys Stanley (groin), while Richmond is missing Dion Prestia (ankle) and David Astbury (knee).

But in welcome returns Gary Ablett (Cats) and Shane Edwards (Tigers) come out of quarantine on Tuesday. The pair joined Saint Dan Hannebury in a brutal training session at the AFL hub on the Gold Coast.

Geelong entered Friday night’s game as the league’s highest-scoring team this year and on a six-match winning streak but had its lowest half-time score since 1957.

The Cats closed a seemingly unassailable three-quarter lead to 16 points with three goals in four minutes to open the fourth term, only for Richmond to answer and notch its fifth win in its past six meetings between the teams.

A week earlier, the Tigers were dealing with the fallout of Sydney Stack and Callum Coleman-Jones’ protocol-breaking night out at a strip club and kebab shop on Gold Coast’s main party strip. The high jinks cost the club $100,000 and the duo their seasons, and questions were asked about how the incident would affect the Tigers’s tilt at a third flag in four seasons.

But now, if Richmond beat Adelaide in the last round of the regular season, they will again secure a top-four spot.

And they will head into the finals unbeaten this year in Queensland with star reinforcements such as Shane Edwards and Dion Prestia set to return.

Dylan Grimes might not get the three votes in this game in the Brownlow Medal count but he was a clear standout.

Playing his first match back from a hamstring injury, Grimes read the ball brilliantly in the air and barely lost a contest all game.

He provided great support for Noah Balta on Tom Hawkins and always made the right decision whether or not to peel off his opponent to impact the play.

Grimes finished with 16 disposals and six marks.

Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said during the week his team would be in trouble if they relied on Balta to beat in-form Hawkins one-on-one. Thankfully for Balta, he had plenty of help.

Geelong was unable to isolate Hawkins, whose only stat to quarter-time was one hitout.

In the second term, Geelong moved Patrick Dangerfield forward to keep Grimes more accountable and Hawkins started to get into the contest.

Then Nick Vlastuin and ruckman Toby Nankervis were among players able to get in the way and stop Hawkins from getting an easy run at marks. The key forward finished with 1.2 and six disposals, but Balta got the assistance he needed to keep him quiet.

While Hawkins was quiet, Richmond’s target man Jack Riewoldt kicked four goals but afterwards praised his side’s defence which paralysed the Cats.

“It was a really great team performance,” Riewoldt said. “It was disappointing to see a couple of injuries but we’ll get ready for Adelaide next week.

Geelong is the No 1 clearance team in the league and it dominated the statistic against Richmond. But, like other teams against the Tigers, it was unable to make the most of its 32-16 advantage in that area.

Hardwick said during the week that although his side did not like being smashed in clearances, it prided itself on what happened next from there, and his team’s pressure ensured the Cats’ possessions were hasty and delivery to their forwards often poor, at least for the first three quarters.

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/afl/tigers-flex-their-afl-title-muscles-with-26point-win-over-geelong/news-story/98c4ee2f64b786b25b4bbafb498faeac