Cats put squeeze on TigersMartin Blake
July 25, 2011GEELONG 4.2 11.5 16.9 17.11 (113)
RICHMOND 1.2 1.4 5.5 7.9 (51)
GOALS:
Geelong: Hawkins 3, Varcoe 3, Christensen 2, Stokes 2, Byrnes 2, West 2, Bartel, Corey, Duncan.
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Nahas 2, Foley, Vickery.
BEST:
Geelong: Scarlett, Kelly, Christensen, Stokes, Corey, Selwood.
Richmond: Cotchin, Tuck, Rance, Foley, Deledio, Nahas.
INJURIES:
Geelong: Podsiadly (head knock), Stokes (head knock), Byrnes (calf), Johnson (bruised buttocks) replaced in selected side by Milburn.
Richmond: Newman (knee), Batchelor (shoulder).
UMPIRES: Wenn, Stewart, H Ryan.
CROWD: 33,761 at Etihad.
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GEELONG spent the week focusing on defence as it prepared to confront Richmond yesterday. The Cats were leaking badly after a hot start to the season and coach Chris Scott had noticed. His team had conceded 104 points (against the Brisbane Lions), 96 points (West Coast) and 115 (Essendon) in three rounds.
"I don't think it's any secret out there in the competition in the last month that we've been easy to score against," Scott said. "That's not what we want to be about so we need to arrest it."
Thus a game was set up and won. With manic forward pressure and accountability from the start, Geelong strangled Richmond in the first half, racing to a match-winning 10-goal lead. That the margin stayed almost exactly the same in a forgettable second half was largely irrelevant — the Cats had proven attentive to their task when it counted. "We've arrested it for a game, probably a half of one game," said Scott. "We've got to keep getting better in our area because it was our strength earlier in the year, and it's been a weakness in the last month."
Geelong won by 62 points, continuing a trend of massacres against the Tigers, who are a shell of the team that was ninth on the ladder after nine rounds. Richmond was never going to win; Brett Deledio's horrendous turnover by foot in the first two minutes (reprieved by Shannon Byrnes's missed shot on goal) drew an audible groan around the stadium. Worse, captain Chris Newman went down with a knee injury and before half-time, Jake Batchelor (shoulder) had gone as well.
It contributed to a lame second half. "It translates to tired players, poor skill execution and ugly football, in my view," said Scott, seemingly suggesting, that the new interchange rule had not helped. "I don't mind the sub rule. I'd prefer if it was four interchange plus a sub but I understand the AFL's rationale for making the game less congested."
Geelong's small forwards had a picnic, Allen Christensen, Mathew Stokes, Byrnes and Travis Varcoe extracting nine goals between them. Christensen (26 disposals, two goals) will surely be rewarded with a Rising Star nomination this week, although he said he did not especially care. "I play for Geelong," he said. "What more could you want? It's only an award. I get to play for the Cats."
Veteran Matthew Scarlett played a superb full-back's game on Jack Riewoldt, albeit with Richmond starving him of opportunities (35 inside-50 entries). Scarlett had 27 disposals as a set-up man and held Riewoldt to two goals; the Tiger's third goal came while his primary opponent was on the bench.
Geelong continues to rest men with ailments, with Steve Johnson (soreness) sitting out yesterday and Brad Ottens (knee) and Cameron Ling (soreness) to return soon. It is what Scott calls "our best 22 given a whole lot of factors". But it also allows the rookie coach to have a close look at the likes of Christensen, Mitch Duncan (26 disposals), Josh Cowan and Trent West, who rucked most of the day and kicked two goals. Those types of players are bound to stave off Geelong complacency, for they are playing for their footballing lives.
"It's probably not a cliche, I probably do pinch myself every day, waking up knowing I get to go to training every day," said Christensen. "I'm really lucky. I can't take for granted being in there. There's a lot of boys who are out of the team who can still come back in. You've got to put your best foot forward every week."
Richmond's level of effort was reasonable, led by Trent Cotchin (37 disposals, 21 contested balls) and Shane Tuck, and by Alex Rance's effort in keeping James Podsiadly goalless until the latter was benched at three-quarter-time with a head injury. But the execution was dreadful.
The consensus at round nine was that the Tigers were going places. Right now, they look to be back on the Road To Nowhere.
WELCOME BACK SHANEThe return of Shane Tuck was one of Richmond's few positives. The midfielder had 32 disposals, 14 contested possessions, five clearances and four rebound 50s in his first game since round 10 and his fifth this season.
WEST MARKS TERRITORYTrent West earned the right to keep his spot ahead of Geelong ruckman Brad Ottens with a solid performance against Brisbane last week and made the call to drop him harder yesterday. The Cats didn't recall Ottens from suspension, and West delivered with 14 disposals and four inside 50s.
SQUAD MANAGEMENTGeelong forward Steve Johnson was a late withdrawal from the game, replaced by veteran defender Darren Milburn with "soreness" carried over from a corked buttock. More likely he was rested. According to Twitter, Johnson knew he wasn't playing as early as Saturday, allowing him to stay up and watch Cadel Evans in the Tour de France.
TERRIBLE TIGERSJack Riewoldt kicked Richmond's only first-half goal. The last time the club failed to kick more than one goal in a half was round three, last year. Tyrone Vickery broke the goal drought early the third quarter.
- MATT MURNANE
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