Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers' winning run ends to North  (Read 3135 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers' winning run ends
richmondfc.com.au
4:48 PM Sun 18 July, 2010



RICHMOND'S winning run has been brought to a shuddering end, with North Melbourne handing out a 50-point drubbing at a wet MCG on Sunday afternoon.

North was the more committed and skilled team in the conditions, running out emphatic winners 15.13 (103) to 7.11 (53).

The Kangaroos and the Crows are now the only two sides outside the eight with any realistic hope of making the finals, and both kept their hopes alive with wins in round 16, aided by the Sydney Swans big win over Carlton earlier in the afternoon.

The Kangaroos battled through a tough first term, but a late Trent Cotchin hit on young Roo Sam Wright six minutes into the second term - which saw the 20 year old taken straight to the rooms and then to hospital - fired them up, and they booted three goals in four minutes to establish a nice buffer.

The Roos continued their dominance through the third quarter, kicking five goals to Richmond's solitary behind and closing the match as a contest.

The Kangaroos played far better wet-weather football, with their tall forwards staying deep and the small forwards leading up.

Conversely, the Tigers showed none of the terrific footy they played to beat Port on an AAMI Stadium mud heap to win their first match in 2010.

Ruckman Hamish McIntosh played his best game for some time as he dominated the stoppages with fellow tall Todd Goldstein.

Andrew Swallow led the way for the Roos with 31 touches, captain Brent Harvey was terrific as usual and Daniel Wells worked hard to go with his usual flashes of brilliance.

Leigh Adams led his team's scoring sheet with three goals, while Nathan Grima and Brady Rawlings were steady and strong at the back.

Better players were hard to come by for the Tigers, but veteran Ben Cousins - in his first week back in the side after illness - was terrific. He was especially influential in the first half - and had 12 first-quarter disposals - before tiring as the match wore on.

Brett Deledio continued his great form across half-back and fellow defender Kel Moore played well in the wet. Cotchin was exerting a tough physical presence on the game until his report, while Coleman Medal leader Jack Riewoldt finished with three goals.

Next week, the Tigers face top-of-the-table Collingwood in what should be a huge game at the MCG on Saturday afternoon, while North take on the dreadfully out of sorts Essendon.

Richmond          1.5   4.7    4.8     7.11 (53)  
North Melbourne  2.4  6.9  11.12  15.13 (103)

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, King, Collins, McGuane, Nahas
North Melbourne: Adams 3, Campbell 2, Hansen 2, Firrito, Harvey, Goldstein, Swallow, Wells, Pratt, Urquhart, Warren

BEST
Richmond: Cousins, Connors, Deledio, Tuck, Martin, Webberley, Moore
North Melbourne: Swallow, McIntosh, Adams, Goldstein, Wells, Rawlings, Firrito

INJURIES
Richmond: Will Thursfield (concussion)
North Melbourne: Sam Wright (ribs), Robbie Tarrant (thumb)

Reports: Trent Cotchin (Richmond) reported for charging Sam Wright (North Melbourne) during the second quarter.

Umpires: Stevic, Meredith, Mollison
 
Official crowd: 42,723 at MCG

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/6301/newsid/98448/default.aspx

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers' winning run ends to North
« Reply #1 on: July 18, 2010, 09:18:39 PM »

BEST
Richmond: Cousins, Connors, Deledio, Tuck, Martin, Webberley, Moore

Hmmm I am now very confused Webberley? Did I miss something. Little Kingy was miles better than Webberley today and a couple of others in that list
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

Offline one-eyed

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Roos close in on finals spot with win over Richmond (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: July 18, 2010, 09:55:40 PM »
Roos close in on finals spot with win over Richmond

    * Bruce Matthews
    * From: Herald Sun
    * July 18, 2010 8:51PM


ONE down on the interchange bench for nearly three quarters, another missing for the entire last quarter and steady rain driving faster than leaden legs.

North Melbourne had every reason to shut up shop early on a soggy MCG and start dreaming of the dry track against Essendon under the roof at Docklands next Saturday night.

But a spot in the top eight is now tantalisingly within reach and that realisation, mixed with pride, pushed on the Kangaroos to crush Richmond by 50 points, a small but significant boost for their poor percentage.

"We went into it knowing it was almost like a mini final for us," midfielder Andrew Swallow said.

Coach Brad Scott couldn't have been more satisfied with his Roo boys, their ranks depleted by midfielder Sam Wright ferried to hospital with a jumper full of sore ribs and defender Robbie Tarrant consigned to the interchange bench by a jarred thumb at three-quarter time.

"We knew with the weather we had to get a score on the board pretty early, try and get a couple of goals lead, and we luckily did that and just built on it as we went along," Swallow said.

"The main message Brad got across to us was that we were going to get what we deserved today.

"If we turned up and played the way we know we can play, we were going to get that result, and we did that."

Swallow led the way with four-quarter consistency that deserted even the best in cold, wet conditions where precise disposal was impossible and fraught with turnover dangers.

His outstanding 31-possession contribution was topped by a timely goal on the run just before halftime, two score assists and eight tackles to present an easy choice for the Eureka Medal adjudicators.

You could imagine a head-over-the-ball disciple like Scott would've loved to be out there slipping and sliding into the contests rather than trying to influence them with a phone to his ear.

But it wasn't simply grab the ball and roost it for the Roos. Instead, they reaped the rewards of risk-taking deep in defence to rebound with run and spread that so often caught out the Tigers.

Without vice-captain Drew Petrie and lively forward Lindsay Thomas, and in conditions not suited for the high-flyers, someone had to step up.

Leigh Adams presented a viable target and two of his three goals were most valuable in the first half when the contest was very much alive.

"It was a bit like the old days, get it on the boot. You could tell in the last quarter, a couple of times we mucked around with the ball and let them back into the contest. So it was a matter of just doing the simple things," Swallow said.

"We knew Richmond had been pretty good at getting guys back, they don't really play one-on-one in defence, they zone off. We had to make sure when we went in there we were really accurate and we had to get it in quick.

"Towards the last quarter, we probably ran out of steam a little bit. Definitely when you lose two guys, it makes it difficult, especially towards the end of the game."

Tigers goalkicking ace Jack Riewoldt bagged two in the first half before the Kangaroos blew Richmond away with five goals to nil in the third quarter.

While he added another when the game was effectively over, opponent Nathan Grima walked off with head held high.

Grima did enjoy assistance from fellow defenders Michael Firrito and Scott Thompson, a collective effort that reflected North Melbourne's superior cohesion and ball handling on a difficult afternoon.

 

Scoreboard:

NORTH MELBOURNE 2.4 6.9 11.12 15.13 (103)
RICHMOND             1.5 4.7   4.8     7.11 (53)

Goals: North Melbourne: L Adams 3 L Hansen 2 M Campbell 2 A Swallow B Harvey B Warren D Pratt D Wells G Urquhart M Firrito T Goldstein. Richmond: J Riewoldt 3 A Collins J King L McGuane R Nahas.

Best: North Melbourne: A Swallow L Adams D Wells H McIntosh N Grima M Firrito B Warren. Richmond: B Cousins S Tuck D Connors B Deledio.

Umpires: Matt Stevic, Simon Meredith, Jacob Mollison.
Official Crowd: 42,723 at Melbourne Cricket Ground.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/roos-lead-tigers-in-the-wet/story-e6frf9jf-1225893583743

Offline one-eyed

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Stats: Tigers vs Kangaroos
« Reply #3 on: July 18, 2010, 11:04:20 PM »
Team Stats

Disposals          316 - 378     
Efficiency%         69 - 72 
Kicks                188 - 210
Handballs          128 - 168
Con. Marks            5 - 9
Uncon. Marks       55 - 75
Tackles               82 - 85
Clearances          49 - 39
Clangers             44 - 44   
Hitouts               40 - 47  ( Graham 27, Vickery 11 // Goldstein 26, McIntosh 18 )
Frees                  12 - 21  ::)
Con. Possies      131 - 136 
Uncon. Possies   172 - 233   
Inside 50s           53 - 49   :-\
Assists                 5 - 18
           

Individual Stats

player           D EFF% K H G B CM UM T CL C 
   
Connors, D     30 50 26   4 0 0 0 8   4   2 3
Cousins, B      27 74 11 16 0 0 0 4   3   6 3 
Tuck, S           26 69 11 15 0 0 0 4 11 13 1
Deledio, B      24 79 17   7 0 0 0 6   2   1 2
Edwards, S     18 89 10   8 0 0 0 1   5   6 0 
Martin, D       17 65   7 10 0 0 1 1  11   3 2 
Webberley, J  17 76 10   7 0 0 0 3   1   4 1 
King, J          16 56 12   4 1 1 0 3   5   6 1
Collins, A      14 57   9   5 1 0 0 3   4   0 3 
McGuane, L   14 86   8   6 1 1 0 5   3   1 0 
Moore, K       14 79   7   7 0 0 1 6   1   1 0
Newman, C    14 71 12   2 0 0 0 2   3   0 1 
Cotchin, T     12 50   9   3 0 1 0 1   3   1 4
Nahas, R      11 64   4   7 1 0 0 0   5   0 4 
Tambling, R  11 82   3   8 0 0 0 1   4   0 2
Graham, A      9 89   4   5 0 0 0 0   4   2 4 
Farmer, M       8 63   6   2 0 0 0 1   3   1 2 
Riewoldt, J     8 75   8   0 3 2 3 1   3   0 2 
Astbury, D      7 57   4   3 0 1 0 2   1   0 2
White, M        7 43   5   2 0 1 0 1   1   1 2 
Thursfield, W  6 50   3   3 0 0 0 2   0   0 1 
Vickery, T       6 67   2   4 0 0 0 0   5   1 4


player        FF FA CP UP I50 A        
 
Connors, D    0 1  7 21 4 1       
Cousins, B    3 1 16 12 3 1     
Tuck, S         0 0 14 13 4 0       
Deledio, B     0 0   3 20 6 0       
Edwards, S    1 0 10   9 2 0     
Martin, D       1 2 10   8 3 0     
Webberley, J  0 1   7 10 3 0   
King, J          1 0   7   8 4 0     
Collins, A      0 1   6   7 4 0     
McGuane, L   0 0   4   9 2 0       
Moore, K       1 0   5   9 0 0       
Newman, C   1 1   4   7 4 1     
Cotchin, T     1 1   5   6 4 0       
Nahas, R      0 1   6   3 2 1     
Tambling, R  0 1   4   7 2 0     
Graham, A    1 4   3   3 2 0       
Farmer, M     0 1   5   2 0 0   
Riewoldt, J    0 2   5   1 1 0     
Astbury, D     0 0   2   5 0 1   
White, M       1 1   3   5 1 0     
Thursfield, W 0 0   2   4 0 0     
Vickery, T      1 3   3   3 2 0 

http://superstats.heraldsun.com.au/gamestatslive/5015592.html
http://xml.afl.com.au/swf/live_stats.htm?gameID=10281607

Offline one-eyed

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Kangaroos stand ground in wet (Australian)
« Reply #4 on: July 19, 2010, 04:43:41 AM »
Kangaroos stand ground in wet
Stephen Rielly
The Australian
July 19, 2010


THE decisive moment in a football match is rarely witnessed in the earliest minutes of the second term. It was yesterday at the MCG.

While there may be some interest in the reason why Trent Cotchin uncharacteristically dropped his shoulder into Sam Wright's back at the five-minute mark, there was nothing uncertain about what followed.

That is, when the blow was delivered Richmond led by a point. That as Wright was being ferried to hospital in a daze, North piled on nine of the next 11 goals and Cotchin, a certain presence in the game in the first term, became peripheral.

By the game's end he was almost as out of it as Wright.

"Brent Harvey went forward and kicked a goal from the resulting 50m penalty. That really gave us a bit of a spark and I think the guys definitely got a bit of a spark," North coach Brad Scott observed.

"No one likes to see their teammates go down like that. Nothing against Trent Cotchin.

"He's a ball player and sometimes it's a split-second decision of whether you go for the ball or whether you stay.

"We didn't think there was anything untoward in it at all but we're really pleased that Sam was able to put his body in a position a lot of people don't like being in."

Scott's counterpart, Damien Hardwick, didn't attach quite the same importance to the incident. It wasn't in his interests to do so, of course. Cotchin has a date with the AFL tribunal ahead.

Rather, the Richmond coach was far more interested in acknowledging North's superiority on a wet afternoon when physical size, strength and straight-ahead football basics were required.

The Tigers, even in their darkest moments this season, have been a formidable force around the ball. The No 1 ranked clearance side in the game, in fact.

Yesterday, they were utterly dominated in this department by Hamish McIntosh and Todd Goldstein in the ruck and Andrew Swallow at their feet, to the extent that at half-time Richmond had not registered a single centre-square clearance.

The count was 0-9 at the main break and 3-10 at the last change, numbers that surely influenced and absolutely reflected the broader state of the game. At three-quarter-time North led by 46 points and, against an improvement from Richmond in the final quarter, won by 50.

North, man-for-man a bigger-bodied combination, used that weight and power astutely in the contest and forcefully when the ball had to be won.

There was some finesse at times, from the likes of Daniel Wells and Harvey, but for the most part Scott's side played disciplined and aggressive wet weather football.

"I just thought they were harder than us. I thought North Melbourne were hungrier, harder and played a lot better than us on the day. They played very well and handled the conditions a lot better than we did," Hardwick conceded.

Winning territory can be as important as retaining possession on wet afternoons, but as much as Hardwick was able to point a critical over-use of handball from some of his better midfielders, such as Ben Cousins and Shane Tuck, North also played a smart game.

They consistently moved their opponents away from where McIntosh was going to hit the ball, for instance, and deployed a small half-forward line to stymie the creativity of Richmond's half-backs Chris Newman and Brett Deledio.

The likes of Leigh Adams, who finished with three goals, eight marks and 28 possessions in a break-out game, led up and at the ball all afternoon, opening up space behind him.

Adams, and Ben Warren, who finished with six marks from his flank, were honoured repeatedly, creating menace and muting Richmond's at once.

A rain-soaked football isn't exactly easy for a marking player to handle, either, and Richmond's main weapon, Jack Riewoldt, was understandably unable to impose himself on the match as a consequence. Which is not to say that fellow Tasmanian Nathan Grima, Riewoldt's opponent, did not deserve his scalp.

And in the end, North did slot 15 goals that were shared by 11 players. A sure recommendation for Scott's description of his side's performance as its best collective effort of the season.

Produced, with fine timing, ahead of an encounter with Essendon next Saturday that could move them into the top eight. Timing that deserted Cotchin with telling effect.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/sport/kangaroos-stand-ground-in-wet/story-e6frg7mf-1225893669297

Offline one-eyed

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Roos not romantics (Age)
« Reply #5 on: July 19, 2010, 04:49:08 AM »
Roos not romantics
MICHAEL GLEESON
July 19, 2010

 

THE romantic story would have had Richmond win - again - and keep its late- blossoming season's delirium for another week. The realist view knew a sobering moment was coming. Yesterday in the most bracing of conditions it arrived.

The loss that had been coming for Richmond, even if it didn't have it coming as it were, was delivered in purposeful fashion by a more composed and intelligent game from North Melbourne.

Andrew Swallow, the best player on the ground who Richmond had no answer for inside or outside the pack, summed it up when he said after the game that Brad Scott had warned his team that they would get what they deserved from the match.
           
''Brad said to us if we turned up and played the way we know we can play, we were going to get the result. Last week we didn't play well and we lost so it was a matter of going out there and working to our structures and then getting the midfield on their spread and we would get what we deserve,'' Swallow said.

North has to play the game honestly to get its result and yesterday was a game demanding honesty. In conditions that were miserable at the start and got only worse North played a sure-footed first term, a better second and made a wipe-out in the third.

Damien Hardwick said he didn't feel the result swung from the moment Trent Cotchin unwisely jumped late into the back of Sam Wright after a mark, but it appeared that moment provided a book mark for the contest.

North had been dominant at the centre bounce, getting favourable match-ups to reward the ruck ascendancy with nine clearances to zero for the first half. And when it moved it forward, it chose, irrespective of the slippery conditions, to try to work through the opponents of Chris Newman and Brett Deledio.

Richmond plays a zone defence and work that pair, as well as Daniel Connors, loose to run the ball out of the back line. North sought instead to look for its opponents such as Leigh Adams - who finished the game with three goals - and Matt Campbell to force tighter accountability and keep the runners deep. It worked.

When Cotchin sent Wright from the field, and then to hospital, it should have had the effect of helping give Richmond momentum for North would be denied that rotation, which on a wet day could significantly hurt a running side. North, however, had a goal immediately after the Cotchin bump and the consequent 50-metre penalty; Leigh Adams followed with another a minute later and Todd Goldstein took a one-handed mark to convert a third in three minutes. It was a defining stanza of play and thrust North out to a three-goal lead.

Cotchin, further to that, had been tagged well by Levi Greenwood and finished the game with just a dozen touches. While Richmond remained alive to the contest until half-time, it surrendered without a whimper in the third quarter when North kicked 5.3 to the Tigers' single behind.

Defender Nathan Grima grew up in Tasmania playing in frigid conditions such as those at the MCG yesterday. So, too, his opponent Jack Riewoldt. The Tasmanians are three years apart but played on one another. Their avenues to the game could not have been more different - Riewoldt a first-round draft pick carrying a name that would ensure attention. Grima came circuitously from South Launceston via Adelaide's Central District to North's rookie list.

Riewoldt is the hottest player in the competition and even on the coldest day he was going to be the player Richmond looked to. Riewoldt's breeding, like Grima's, meant that even though these were not the conditions for full-forwards they might still have been conditions for Riewoldt.

''I think anyone who has had a look at Richmond would know that probably 80 per cent of their inside 50s would go to Jack so obviously I had to be close enough to him to impact and I had a lot of help from others like Spud Firrito. It makes it easier when you know where the ball is going to come because it goes to him nine times out of 10, but he took a couple of nice marks and kicked a couple of goals so probably broke even in the end, I reckon,'' Grima said.

''It is sort of weird to think we are playing on each other on the MCG [after growing up in Tassie together]. He was always going to play AFL and I got lucky so it was pretty rewarding.''

The final goal of the game told a tale of the match. A ball surged forward by North from the half-back line met two consecutive Richmond players only to confound them. The chill, rain and slippery conditions were ripe to make fools of even balanced players and in any event both Tigers saw the ball pass comically by.

The ball was soccered forward and it skidded and slid like a kid diving on wet plastic under a summer sprinkler to Ben Warren who was able to collect it and kick the goal.

THE MAIN MEN
Hamish McIntosh (North Melbourne):
The North ruckman has had a relatively lean year but this was a better effort, even with being kneed in the ribs by Angus Graham at a centre bounce. McIntosh offered the Roos first hands on the ball, which largely explained why they led the centre clearances 9-0 to half-time.

Jack Riewoldt (Richmond): These were not the conditions for marking forwards. Even Tasmanians who might be more familiar with frigid cold and steady rain. But Riewoldt still finished the day with three goals. He took a strong pack mark late in the game to kick his third, but really he was inconsequential to the result.

WHERE THE GAME WAS WON
North was the harder side that played the smarter football for the conditions. Most of their match-ups worked. Brad Scott was pleased in Ben Cunnington breaking even with Dustin Martin, and Trent Cotchin was kept out of the game. Brett Deledio after half-time was quietened by the Roos seeking to play through his opponent and force accountability.

WHERE THE GAME WAS LOST
Damien Hardwick reckoned on his side ''not coming to play'' and North being harder at the ball and hungrier to get possession and to win the game. It was not an unfair assessment. North was more balanced across the field, effectively closing it out from the centre bounce with its clearance dominance and playing better wet-weather football.

BEST -
North Melbourne: Swallow, Wells, Adams, Grima, McIntosh, Campbell, Warren.
Richmond: Tuck, Cousins, Connors, Deledio.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/roos-not-romantics-20100718-10g6p.html

Offline one-eyed

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Scott believes he and his team are starting to click (Age)
« Reply #6 on: July 19, 2010, 04:51:49 AM »
Scott believes he and his team are starting to click
SAMANTHA LANE
July 19, 2010



AS NORTH Melbourne coach Brad Scott was celebrating the healthiest win and most consistent team performance of his reign, Richmond's Damien Hardwick lamented the sub-standard approach of his side that led to a 50-point loss and a bubble bursting.

After the 16th match of his senior coaching career, Scott felt his side combined in the best way yet under his direction. A more tangible measurement, perhaps, is that North remains in contention to play finals and is just percentage behind Carlton on the ladder.

''I think that's the first time this year that we've really put together a really great, 22-man performance,'' Scott said. ''I thought it was a really disciplined, all-round performance. We went in with certain plans and the players implemented it really well.

''Leading into the break I think I said that our players now understand what we're trying to do at all times during games.''

Fellow first-year coach Hardwick said that his Tigers, after four wins straight, lacked hunger. ''In all honesty, I don't think our guys came to play. I thought North Melbourne were hungrier, harder and a lot better on the day,'' he said.

In Hardwick's mind, that was not a result of complacency but due more to an inability to adapt to wet weather footy on the MCG.

''They handled the conditions a hell of a lot better than what our boys did and a lot of it was probably due to North's pressure around the stoppages,'' he said.

In the second term North won all nine of the centre clearances, an area where Richmond has done well even when it was on a losing streak earlier this year. Hamish McIntosh and Todd Goldstein dominated young Tiger ruckmen Angus Graham and Tyrone Vickery, Andrew Swallow was best on ground with 31 touches, nine clearances and a goal, and Leigh Adams produced three goals in his 18th senior match.

North's last two wins - a 36-point defeat of Port Adelaide in round 13 and yesterday's effort - were its healthiest of the season and it extended the lead on Richmond at every change.

North has a six-day break before it meets demoralised Essendon, then it plays the Western Bulldogs, Fremantle and St Kilda at Etihad Stadium.

''We had 22 contributors today and it was a great win,'' McIntosh said last night.

''In the midfield, there's been a lot of pressure on us the last two weeks, we'd really let ourselves down. But I thought we had a really good crack and the work-rate was really high.

''That's what we expect week to week, and hopefully now we continue that for the rest of the year.

''We're right in the mix now, every game now is a finals game really, we've got to make sure we play like we did today.''

Hardwick refused to single out onballer Richard Tambling, who finished with 11 touches yesterday, did not have a possession in the second term, and received Bronx cheers at one stage.

''We probably had about 21 other blokes in that category to be honest,'' he said. ''Ritchie didn't have a great day, but neither did a number of other players from our point of view.''

Richmond, which is yet to beat a Victorian side this year, will return to the MCG to play ladder-leader Collingwood on Saturday, a mission Hardwick described as ''the biggest challenge in footy at the moment''.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/scott-believes-he-and-his-team-are-starting-to-click-20100718-10g6j.html

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Familiar tale for a team still wet behind the ears (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #7 on: July 19, 2010, 04:53:55 AM »
Familiar tale for a team still wet behind the ears

  * Mark Robinson
  * Herald Sun
  * July 19, 2010


ON A miserable afternoon, misery returned to the Tigers.

The Tigers had won four matches in a row and five from its past six outings, but North Melbourne played solid wet-weather footy and Richmond tried to play dry-weather footy, which made this a no-contest after a quarter and a half.

The Kangaroos did everything the Tigers had succeeded at for six weeks: win the hard-ball, win it first, spread, run, and kick it long to tall targets.

Players floated in and out - Brett Deledio good first half, so-so second half; Ben Cousins the same; and Trent Cotchin, after being reported in the second quarter, lost his way.

The skipper, Chris Newman, took a virus into the game, took a knee to the ribs and was noticeably wounded in the rooms post-match.

Shane Tuck was the opposite of Deledio, Jack Riewoldt was quietened by the conditions and Kangaroos backman Nathan Grima, and Dustin Martin made 11 tackles.

Most of the rest simply didn't do enough, or work hard enough, in conditions that required unconditional attack on the footy.

"It was lesson for us as a group that if we don't come with a mindset and intensity that we've had for five or six weeks, we're not good enough to compete," Cousins said.

"North were first in, they were hungry, they had more intensity than we did.

"It took us a while to adjust in the conditions, we probably didn't kick it long, they kicked it long, I was probably a culprit especially before halftime, and it will be interesting to go over the tape to see where we had to be better at.

"Across the side we could've done more."

Cousin was singled out by coach Damien Hardwick in the post-match for using too many hands and not enough feet.

At halftime Cousins had 18 touches made up of six kicks and 12 handballs.

He finished with 11 and 16, some of which were of huge significance and some of which were not, although a game-high 16 contested possessions gave the Tigers composure in tight.

He was reluctant to talk about his own performance.

"Not bad for a bloke who the game has passed by," he joked. "It was nice to get back involved, but it's hard to think individually after a game like today."

Richmond's four-week burst, which had the AFL family in raptures, had its emotional let-down yesterday.

Cousins did not use as an excuse that the side was young, but said playing consistent, top-line footy was difficult.

"It's part of the ups and downs of a footy season," he said.

"The group has been up for a while and the art of being a super side is to be able to come in week in, week out. The top three sides virtually do it, the rest of the competition grapples with it.

"And it doesn't get any any easier for us. We play Collingwood this week, and they are the biggest test in football at the moment, and we will need to be a hell of a lot better than we were today.

"We took a few steps back today. We knew it was going to be a tough, danger game and we didn't bring it."

The loss also rekindled angst in the Tigers faithful.

At the 21st minute of the final quarter, Richard Tambling got Bronx cheers. It was his first mark and second kick, to go with five handballs and four tackles.

In the constant rain, and with plenty of ground balls, the opposition of Andrew Swallow, Leigh Adams, Brent Harvey, Daniel Wells and Ben Cunnington thrived and hunted, while Tambling and Co were meek and secondary.

It might've been due for the Tigers, but it wasn't meant to be this ... familiar.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/familiar-tale-for-a-team-still-wet-behind-the-ears/story-e6frf9jf-1225893673357