Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers  (Read 3418 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers
« on: March 24, 2011, 11:33:43 PM »
Blues hold on
richmondfc.com.au
10:41 PM Thu 24 Mar, 2011



Carlton            2.8   9.10   9.13   14.20 (104)
Richmond       3.0   7.0     13.3   13.6 (84)

GOALS
Carlton:  Betts 3, Garlett 2, Walker 2, Curnow, Gibbs, Carrazzo, Murphy, Judd, Armfield, Hampson
Richmond:  Riewoldt 6, Morton 2, Jackson 2, Graham, Vickery, White

BEST
Carlton:  Gibbs, Murphy, Robinson, Grigg, Curnow, Simpson, Judd, Warnock
Richmond:  Riewoldt, Nahas, Jackson, Houli, Newman, Cotchin

INJURIES
Carlton: Waite (concussion)
Richmond: Nil

Reports: Nil

Umpires:  Rosebury, Stevic, Nicholls

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A SIX goal performance from Coleman medallist Jack Riewoldt was not enough to get Richmond home as Carlton shook off their third quarter blues to steady in the last term and win by 20 points.

Carlton led by 22 points at half time but a six goal turnaround in the third quarter saw Richmond lead by 14 but Carlton's class shone through in the final term, the Blues running away from a courageous and much-improved Richmond.

Carlton kicked 14.20 (104) to Richmond's 13.6 (84)

Carlton were led to victory by inspirational skipper Chris Judd, who had 25 touches and kicked a timely goal, while Marc Murphy had 19 first-half disposals helped give Carlton a 22-point buffer at the main break.

Mitch Robinson also got plenty of the ball for Carlton, with 29 possessions.

Jack Riewoldt led the way for the Tigers with six goals in a tough performance up front while Chris Newman and Daniel Jackson both started the season in good touch.

Richmond jumped the gun at the start and provided the Tiger faithful with some immediate joy, kicking the first two goals of the match through Mitch Morton and Riewoldt.

Carlton quickly responded and soon gained the ascendancy but some terrible kicking in front of goal meant the Blues took only a two-point lead into quarter time despite having seven more shots on goal than the Tigers.

There were no problems with accuracy for Carlton in the second term, however, as the Blues piled on seven goals with the mercurial Eddie Betts leading the way with two to give him three for the half.

The Tigers hung tough and responded after Carlton jumped to a 21-point lead to get the margin to as low as nine. A poor decision in defence by Shane Edwards on the stroke of half time, however, handed the outstanding Marc Murphy a goal and presented Carlton with a 22-point half time lead.

It wasn't all good news for Carlton though as Jarrad Waite became the first player in the AFL to be substituted under the new substitution rule after he received a heavy knock.

It was subsequently revealed that he was diagnosed as having a concussion.

The new directive preventing a player returning to the field after a concussion is sure to come under scrutiny in the coming days.

The Blues were cruising at half time but when Richmond cranked up the intensity in the third quarter, Carlton could not find an extra gear.

Jack Riewoldt booted three goals as Richmond turned a 22-point deficit into a three-quarter time 14-point lead with Carlton not kicking a major in the period.

When the final quarter started, the Tiger faithful were hobehind as an unlikely victory seemed to be within grasp.

It wasn't to be, however, as Carlton's classy midfield of Judd, Murphy, Robinson and Bryce Gibbs lifted the Blues to their sixth straight win over the Tigers.

Richmond continued to try right up until the final siren in a performance that surely would have given heart to coach Damien Hardwick but the Tigers mentor will no doubt be ruing one that got away.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/6301/newsid/109932/default.aspx
« Last Edit: March 25, 2011, 01:54:57 AM by one-eyed »

Offline Infamy

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Re: Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers
« Reply #1 on: March 25, 2011, 12:42:21 AM »
When the final quarter started, the Tiger faithful were hobehind as an unlikely victory seemed to be within grasp.
Stupid swear filter
ar$e is hardly offensive and breaks real words

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers
« Reply #2 on: March 25, 2011, 01:58:54 AM »
Quote
BEST
Carlton:  Gibbs, Murphy, Robinson, Grigg, Curnow, Simpson, Judd, Warnock
Richmond:  Riewoldt, Nahas, Jackson, Houli, Newman, Cotchin
Either that's a typo or the author isn't a fan of Grigg's disposal lol.
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Offline one-eyed

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Tigers roar but Blues triumph (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #3 on: March 25, 2011, 05:29:55 AM »
Tigers roar but Blues triumph
Mark Robinson
Herald Sun
March 25, 2011


NEW names, new rules, new Tigers, same old Jack, and a massive relief for Carlton coach Brett Ratten. Welcome, everyone, to the 2011 footy season.

The Tigers last night narrowly failed to conjure the greatest upset in recent memory, when they came from four goals at half-time to rattle the Blues all the way to the final siren.

The final margin was 20 points to Ratten's men, but not before the Tigers had put the fear into every Blues fan - and even the coach.

Ratten, who is out of contract at the end of the season, could not possibly have contemplated the fall-out if his Blues lost to the Tigers last night.

Indeed, the Blues took back the lead off the gallant Tigers at the 18th minute of the final quarter.

From there, they kicked the next two goals and the upset - and accompanying headlines - were put away.

The Blues were inspired in a terrific final quarter by their captain Chris Judd.

Trailing by two goals at three-quarter time in the season-opener in front of 60,000 fans, Judd kicked the first goal of the quarter, had a hand in several others and won crucial stoppages by will and brilliance.

The Tigers were led by the game's new cult hero, Jack Riewoldt.

Jumping Jack kicked six of Richmond's 13 goals, including three in an electric 12 minutes in the third quarter.

The Tigers say they are stirring, and when Jack has the ball in his hands, they are cheering.

Few players - probably Buddy Franklin, Jonathan Brown, Barry Hall and Nick Riewoldt - create a collective anticipation when the ball goes near them. Jack Riewoldt does and the roar after everyone one of his marks is another reason why our game is great.

The Tigers' third-quarter revival was made on the back of the efforts of Trent Cotchin, Riewoldt, Robin Nahas' run through the middle and Dan Jackson's grit at the contest.

With three debutants playing, it was almost a win for the ages.
Carlton's Jarrad Waite, meanwhile, made peculiar history when he became the first ''concusssion'' case of the year.

In a behind-the-play incident that will be heavily scrutinised by the AFL match review panel, Waite was crunched by Tiger Alex Rance.

Rance blocked Waite's run, made contact with his face, and so Waite left the ground with a bloodied mouth.

Under the new rules, concussed players are not allowed to return to the field, which meant the Blues had to activate substitute Kane Lucas.

Richmond named Daniel Connors as its substitute player.

Connors, who played 14 games last year and was tipped to have a solid year ahead of him, had three debutants preferred over him.

A confusing choice, but one which almost made coach Damien Hardwick a hero.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/tigers-roar-but-blues-triumph/story-e6frf9jf-1226027735012

Offline one-eyed

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Blues survive Tiger scare (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #4 on: March 25, 2011, 05:31:52 AM »
Blues survive Tiger scare
Mark Stevens
Herald Sun
March 24, 2011 9:17PM


CARLTON has survived a massive scare to open the season with a 20-point win against Richmond.
The Blues trailed 14 points at the last change after a horror third term, but finished off the Tigers with five unanswered goals when it counted most.

Coach Brett Ratten, fighting for his future this year, would have been as relieved as anyone with the final result after his players squandered countless opportunities in front of goal throughout the match.

Given the Blues had 34 scoring shots to 19 and dominated the inside 50 count, they should have won by more.

But Richmond, inspired by six goals from Jack Riewoldt, deserve credit for putting up a far more meaningful display than in recent Round 1 disasters.

The matched turned sensationally in the third term with the Tigers kicked 6.3 to Carlton's 0.3.

Missing the concussed and subbed-off Jarrad Waite, Carlton's forward line was ineffective as Richmond began to win the contested ball and run it from half-back.

Riewoldt was invaribly the target as the Tigers continually pumped it forward and the superstar forward added another three goals to go with his three in the first half.

His mark five metres from goal and cheeky snap as the siren sounded completed an incredibly painful third term for the Tigers.

But after an arm wrestle for the first half of the final term, with Richmond clinging to the lead, reality was restored.

Carlton dominated play in the first half, with 19 scoring shots to seven, yet could not produce the early kill.

The Blues sprayed 2.8 in the first term, wasting countless opportunities starting with a miss from 20m by ruckman Shaun Hampson.

By half-time, it was 9.10 to 7.0 - an extraordinary difference in efficiency in front of goal.

Further summing up the domination, Carlton had 38 inside 50s in the first half to Richmond's 13.

The Blues also had the ball in their forward half 71 per cent of the time. The margin should have been more like 50 than 20 points at the long break and the Blues almost paid the ultimate price.


Scoreboard:

CARLTON 2.8 9.10 9.13 14.20 (104)
RICHMOND 3.0 7.0 13.3 13.6 (84)

Goals: Carlton: E Betts 3 A Walker 2 J Garlett 2 A Carrazzo B Gibbs C Judd D Armfield E Curnow M Murphy S Hampson. Richmond: J Riewoldt 6 D Jackson 2 M Morton 2 A Graham M White T Vickery.

Best: Carlton: M Murphy B Gibbs C Judd E Betts R Warnock K Simpson. Richmond: J Riewoldt C Newman D Jackson S Grigg T Cotchin L McGuane.

Injuries: Carlton: J Waite (concussion). Richmond: N Foley (gastro).

Reports: Nil.

Umpires: Matt Stevic, Mathew Nicholls, Brett Rosebury.

Official Crowd: 60,654 at Melbourne Cricket Ground.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/blues-wastefulness-keeps-tigers-alive/story-e6frf9jf-1226027688393

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers
« Reply #5 on: March 25, 2011, 05:33:27 AM »
Daniel Connors and Kane Lucas will forever be an answer to a quiz question
Matt Windley
Herald Sun
March 24, 2011 11:22PM


DANIEL Connors and Kane Lucas will forever be an answer to a quiz question after being named as the competition’s first ever substitutes.

Jarrad Waite also went in to the record books as the first player taken off the ground under the new concussion rule after a clash of heads with Luke McGuane in the second quarter. Lucas went on, Waite wanted to come back in the second half but couldn’t.

Carlton were nearly left red faced by their wastefulness in front of goal in the first half. The Blues had 38 inside 50s to 13 but could only muster 9.10 (64) to Richmond’s 7.0 (42).

Betting agencies may as well pay up on Jack Riewoldt for the Coleman Medal right now.

The man is a freak and single-handedly dragged his team back in to the game in the third quarter with four kicks, four marks and three goals.

First gamers impressed. Jake Batchelor (13 possessions), Reece Conca (15) were good for Richmond, Ed Curnow (24) and Nick Duigan (13) even better for Carlton.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/daniel-connors-and-kane-lucas-will-forever-be-an-answer-to-a-quiz-question/story-e6frf9jf-1226027735781

Offline one-eyed

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Riewoldt bag can't stop Blues (Age)
« Reply #6 on: March 25, 2011, 05:35:08 AM »
Riewoldt bag can't stop Blues
Martin Blake
March 25, 2011



CARLTON 2.8 9.10 9.13 14.20 (104) defeated RICHMOND 3.0 7.0 13.3 13.6 (84)

GOALS Carlton:  Betts 3,  Walker 2,  Garlett2,  Carrazzo,  Gibbs,  Judd,  Armfield,  Curnow,  Murphy,  Hampson. Richmond:  Riewoldt 6,  Jackson 2,  Morton 2,  Graham,  White,  Vickery.

BEST Carlton: Murphy, Robinson, Judd, Simpson, Gibbs, Russell, Curnow, Betts. Richmond: Riewoldt, Newman, Cotchin, Jackson, Houli, Conca.

UMPIRES M Stevic, M Nicholls, B Rosebury.
CROWD 60,654 at MCG.



BRETT Ratten had predicted that last year's Coleman medallist Jack Riewoldt would hold last night's season-opener in his hands. Carlton, missing its two main tall defenders, needed to find a way to curtail him.

So it turned out. For three quarters, the Blues cut the supply lines to Riewoldt, and profited. But for 25 minutes in the third quarter, Richmond found a way through the new, modern forward press that Ratten has his team playing, and the brilliant Riewoldt booted three goals, threatening to steal the game from Carlton.

..In the end the 22-year-old Tasmanian's six goals from limited opportunities was not enough to beat the more even spread of workload employed by Carlton. The Blues, who had gone from 22 points up at half-time to 14 points down at the last change, overran Richmond with five goals to none in the final quarter to win 14.20 (104) to 13.6 (84).

It was an appropriate celebration for 200-gamer Heath Scotland, a fine player for a long time. Even so, there were major worries for the Blues, notably at the back. Ratten's team has a magnificent midfield group but is weak at both ends.

Paul Roos had made one of the week's more prescient comments when he said that if Chris Judd won Carlton's best and fairest again in 2011, the Blues would be in trouble. The implication was quite clear. The Blues need to stop asking their captain to carry them; gifted players like Marc Murphy and Bryce Gibbs need to stand up.

Here was an example of Roos's point working for Carlton. Murphy was superb all night for the Blues, clocking a game-high 31 disposals and a goal, running hard into the spaces and winning big numbers in close (16 contested balls). Richmond sent Shane Edwards to his side after the long break, and while this worked for a period, Murphy was still the most effective player on the field in a close-run race with Mitch Robinson (29 disposals), a surprise packet in midfield rather than up forward, and Riewoldt.

Gibbs surprisingly started on the bench but also had a significant hand in Carlton's first-half domination. With some support, Judd also had a whale of a game, winning 10 clearances and ending with 25 disposals and a goal. Throw in Kade Simpson, a vastly underrated midfield ball-winner who was good again last night, and Carlton has the depth and talent and speed in midfield to trouble most teams. The Blues' domination of stoppages 49-26 hurt Richmond badly.

Richmond was only in the game at half-time by dent of straight kicking (and Carlton's profligacy). The Tigers had logged seven straight goals from 13 forward-50 entries, a tribute to Riewoldt's smarts, and a sign that Carlton's defence is less than great. By contrast the Blues had missed too many set shots, including four in a row early in the game. Richmond kicked eight goals before Trent Cotchin's miss early in the third quarter.

This allowed Riewoldt to influence the contest. The big man was on from the start, launching himself into a couple of marking contests, chirping at opponents and goading them. All he needed was some Sherrin in his direction. Ratten chose Simon White as his opponent in the absence of Paul Bower and Michael Jamison, but it was a big ask. White was in just his seventh game, and he struggled.

When the tumult came in the third quarter Ratten switched the veteran Bret Thornton to Riewoldt for a few minutes, but this was worse. Richmond threatened to steal the game with five goals in a row, and Ratten went back to White, who held firm in the last quarter when the football stayed in Carlton's half. Richmond had been brave, but Carlton had been called upon to go to the well once more, and the last quarter provided the answer.

The Blues would have been encouraged by a couple of newcomers, notably the fine debut of Ed Curnow (24 disposals) in the middle, and Nick Duigan's run off half-back, and Jeremy Laidler's stoic defence. Similarly Richmond drew an impressive start from Bachar Houli, and draft pick Reece Conca also won plenty of football.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/riewoldt-bag-cant-stop-blues-20110324-1c8op.html

Offline one-eyed

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Hope back as footy saves us from footballers (Age)
« Reply #7 on: March 25, 2011, 05:38:29 AM »
Hope back as footy saves us from footballers
Greg Baum
March 25, 2011


I  ALWAYS turn to the sports pages first," US judge and sage Earl Warren once said, "they record people's accomplishments. The front page has nothing but man's failures."

Football's inexhaustible capacity and appetite for scandal has upended the paradigm. So at least let the sports pages this morning record Carlton's accomplishment and for Richmond, a sliver of hope. Mostly it was an optical illusion, created by its deadly straight kicking and Carlton's profligacy. Nonetheless, overwhelmed in the first half, the Tigers fought back in startling fashion to lead by 14 points at the last change before fading to lose by 20. Hope is not accomplishment, but nor is it abject failure. Hope is Jack Riewoldt and six goals. Hope is the lifeblood of the new season, and the supply appears to be bottomless.

Let the sports pages also show that to distract us from footballers, at last we have football. Though it is still March, it was not before time.

Warren made his observation in 1968. Last night was a return to some of the values of that time. The match was played in what once might have been called footy weather, before footy went all-weather, meaning no weather. The roads were clogged up, the windows fogged up. Everywhere was the musty smell of coats, scarves and beanies hastily liberated from their summer hibernation. Fortunately, the playing surface was pure 2011.

New rules compelled old formulations. Adapting to three-plus-one on the interchange, both sides began with two ruckmen on the ground, one in the middle, one up forward.

It worked, and it didn't.

Shaun Hampson and Robert Warnock kicked Carlton's first two scores, but they were both behinds. It started a rush. Nearly four quarters later, swings became roundabouts as Hampson - by then stiff in the legs - marked and kicked the goal that at last secured the game for the Blues.

But the sight of all that tall timber - to used another olde footballe term, encouraged both sides to kick long, another olde footballe idea.

First night is a night of firsts. Heath Scotland was the first to run through a milestone banner, with the first baby in arms, of course. Mitch Morton kicked the first goal of the season; the Tigers would deal only in majors until the second half. Much-travelled Ed Curnow, now of Carlton, kicked the goal by a newcomer; there were six on the ground, and each had his moment. Richmond's runner conceded the first free kick by a non-player, for interfering with play.

Jarrad Waite set two firsts that were unprecedented. Knocked out in an accidental clash of heads with Alex Rance, he failed the new concussion test and was replaced - as distinct from interchanged - by Kane Lucas.

Carlton had three or four times as much of everything Richmond had in the first half. Riewoldt kept the Tigers in it, then with three in a row in the third quarter looked about to win it. His neatest  trick is to take standing chest marks in the middle of packs.

Another American judge, Oliver Wendell Holmes, had a thought about that. "I would not give a fig for the simplicity this side of complexity," he said, "but I would give my life for the simplicity on the other side of complexity."

Riewoldt has another deceptively simple skill: he kicks straight. He is not the better Riewoldt, not yet, but he is the better kick.

It is problematic which was more comprehensive, Carlton's ascendancy in the first half, or the surprise as Richmond turned it around in the second. In the first, Carlton ran a massive, Collingwood-style press, which worked for it in three ways. It created a wealth of scoring opportunity, mostly squandered. It exposed Richmond's shaky kicking. And it kept the ball out of the Blues' still suspect defence - and mostly out of Riewoldt's reach.

Suddenly, the tables turned. Here is a possibility that Collingwood won't like: Carlton's high-energy game in the first half took its toll, three interchange instead of four hampered its efforts to refresh, allowing Richmond back into the game. The Tigers began to run the ball instead of kick it.
It was like a tide turning. Riewoldt did the rest. Ultimately, Carlton's class told. But the plot made for a rousing beginning to 2011.

  So it could be seen that hope is more durable than scandal. So much for mankind's accomplishments. Now, I wonder what's on the front page.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/hope-back-as-footy-saves-us-from-footballers-20110325-1c8pv.html

Offline one-eyed

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Stats: Tigers vs Blues
« Reply #8 on: March 25, 2011, 05:58:48 AM »
Team Stats

Disposals     316 - 373
Kicks           189 - 230
Handballs     127 - 143
Con. Marks     12 - 9
Uncon.Marks   58 - 94  
Tackles           57 - 80
Clearances      50 - 46
Clangers         26 - 49
Free Kicks       27 - 22
Con. possies  127 - 148
Unco.possies  180 - 224
Inside 50s       37 - 69  :help
Assists            10 - 21
Efficiency(%)   77 - 73

Individual Stats

             D  K  H  G B SC SCA CM UM T CL C FF FA CP UP In50 A EFF

S.Grigg      23 13 10 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 3 1 0 1   6 16 3 1  76%
C.Newman 23 18   5 0 0 0 0 2 3 2 1 0 1 0   6 11 1 0  95%
T.Cotchin   22 17   5 0 2 0 0 0 4 3 1 5 4 0 12   9 5 1  61%
D.Jackson  22 14   8 2 0 0 0 0 1 7 7 5 3 3 12 10 3 1  61%
B.Deledio   19 11   8 0 0 0 0 1 3 3 1 1 1 0   4 13 1 0  83%
A.Rance     19   8 11 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 1 1   8 12 0 0  77%
B.Houli      18   9   9 0 0 0 0 1 9 0 1 0 1 0   3 16 4 0  76%
D.Martin    18 13   5 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 3 4 1 2   6 12 4 2  82%
R.Conca     15 11  4 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 2 1 1 1   5 10 0 0  85%
S.Edwards  15  8  7 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 2 0 1 0   6   9 2 0  69%
J.Batchelor 13  7  6 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 0 0 1   7   6 0 0  90%
A.Graham  13  7  6 1 0 0 0 1 3 8 3 2 2 2   7   5 3 1  83%
R.Nahas    13  3 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 4 1 1 0 0   3 10 1 0  75%
D.Astbury  12  6  6 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 1 1   5   7 0 0  90%
J.Riewoldt  11 11 0 6 1 0 0 4 2 4 0 0 1 0   8   3 0 0  54%
B.Helbig    10   5 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 1 2 1   3   6 4 0 100%
T.Vickery   10  6  4 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 4 2 2 2   6   4 0 1  66%
L.McGuane  9  4  5 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 2 0 2 2   4   4 0 0  88%
Mat.White   9  5  4 1 0 0 0 0 3 6 3 2 1 1   5   4 2 1  87%
N.Foley       8  3  5 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1   3   5 1 0  75%
M.Morton    8  6  2 2 0 0 0 2 1 3 3 0 0 2   5   4 3 1  62%
D.Connors  6  4  2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0   3   4 0 0  66%

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/super-scoreboard?match_id=10310101

Offline wayne

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Re: Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers
« Reply #9 on: March 25, 2011, 09:42:00 AM »
Blues V Tigers - Robbo's best and worst

MARK Robinson takes a hard-hitting look and the best and worst from Carlton’s win over Richmond in a mini-edition of The Tackle.

What I Think I Like:

1. Eddie Betts. Turned Chris Newman inside out several times, kicked three goals, was involved in four others, and they were the main course. His entree was a stinging tackle on David Astbury in the first quarter. He followed it with another in the second quarter which planted Rance into the MCG turf and gave Eddie a goal. Ratten wanted ruthless over summer and he got it from Betts.

2. Richmond's third quarter. Who saw that coming? Led Blues in contested possession, marks and inside 50s. Leaders Jackson and Newman at fore, as was Cotchin, who had stunk it up in the first half. Nahas and Houli gave them run, and Jack gave them goals. In the future, if Hardwick ever wants to emphasise effort, all he has to do is replay this quarter.

3. Weirdness of footy: Look at these stats, inside 50s 69-37, clearances 49-26, tackles 80-55, contested possession 147-128 and marks 103-70. The Tigers trailed badly in every category, yet led at the 18th minute of the final quarter. Reality is you can't apply numbers to leadership. Chris Judd stole this game from Richmond who almost stole it from Carlton.

4. Bryce Gibbs. Midfield has to be his go. Asserted himself in the second quarter and looked, at times, as the designated deliverer of the ball forward of centre. Why waste him at the back when he is efficient by foot? He finds targets, creates goals.

5. Not writing obituaries. One game doesn't make a season, but the corresponding game two years ago was Terry Wallace's killer. Actually, the loss to Melburne four weeks didn't help Plough, either. For Ratten, it was a game he couldn't lose. The headlines, the twitter, the blogs, the words ... it wouldn't have read too kindly.
Apologies: Mitch Robinson, Robbie Warnick, Bachar Houli.
 

What I Think I Don't like.

1. Brett Deledio's first half. First game, big night, leaders needed and Deledio couldn't get into the game. Improved after the break, but sometimes you have to wonder why he finds himself in a back pocket when his team needs explosion in the middle. Nahas did it last night. Deledio should do it most nights. To break any potential tag, you could perhaps play him as a back pocket rotating on-ball. Might work.

2. Chris Yarran's inactivity. Pre-season brochure had him as the creative half-back. Last night he was a lost half-back. While the Blues will stick to their guns, as they should, and play him down back next week, they should also not pigeon-hole him for an entire game. A move forward after half-time, as the Magpies have done with Leon Davis in the pre-season, might've sparked him. He certainly couldn't have done any worse.

3. Bret Thornton on the guns. Unfortunately, time and the game catches everyone.

4. Criticism of Alex Rance. OK, he hit Waite high, off the ball and should get a couple of weeks rest. But love his attitude. He tried to block Waite as Waite turned to double back. It happens 50 times in a game. The Tigers need some attitude and Hardwick would be quietly impressed.

5. Connors as the sub. People argue the sub will be the 22nd ranked player in the team. What rubbish. Connors is a better player than a quarter of the list _ they had three 18-year-old debutants for God's sake. The issue is, as the Tigers re-build: Play the kids, or play your best team? Surely, it's too early for this kind of talk.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/blues-v-tigers-robbos-best-and-worst/story-e6frf9jf-1226027887452
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Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Media articles and stats: Blues hold on against Tigers
« Reply #10 on: March 25, 2011, 10:01:11 AM »
Blues V Tigers - Robbo's best and worst

MARK Robinson takes a hard-hitting look and the best and worst from Carlton’s win over Richmond in a mini-edition of The Tackle.

What I Think I Don't like.

5. Connors as the sub. People argue the sub will be the 22nd ranked player in the team. What rubbish. Connors is a better player than a quarter of the list _ they had three 18-year-old debutants for God's sake. The issue is, as the Tigers re-build: Play the kids, or play your best team? Surely, it's too early for this kind of talk.


Personally loved it bcos a few weeks ago I suggested it  :rollin
"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)