Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers stone the Crows  (Read 816 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Tigers stone the Crows
« on: June 15, 2013, 06:55:15 PM »
Tigers stone the Crows
By Nathan Schmook
afl.com.au
5:03pm AEST Saturday, June 15, 2013


RICHMOND    5.2    9.7   11.10    16.14    (110)                 
ADELAIDE      2.1   5.4     6.10     10.12    (72)         

GOALS
Richmond: Martin 4, Riewoldt 3, Grigg 2, Ellis 2, Cotchin, Newman, Maric, King, Edwards
Adelaide: Dangerfield 2, Callinan, Jenkins, Lynch, Porplyzia, Jenkins, Thompson, van Berlo, Mackay

BEST
Richmond: Deledio, Riewoldt, Ellis, Conca, Martin, Chaplin, Houli
Adelaide: Dangerfield, Sloane, Porplyzia, Thompson, Rutten

INJURIES
Richmond: Batchelor (knee soreness) replaced in selected side by Astbury, Astbury (head)
Adelaide: Nil
SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Matt White replaced David Astbury (head knock) in the third quarter
Adelaide: Ricky Henderson replaced Shaun McKernan in the third quarter.

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Margetts, Stewart, Meredith

Official crowd: 43,615 at the MCG

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

RICHMOND has climbed to sixth on the ladder and dashed Adelaide's slim finals hopes, beating the battling Crows by 38 points at the MCG on Saturday afternoon.

The Tigers returned from their round 11 bye full of run and handled the slippery conditions better, withstanding a late rally from Adelaide to notch a coming-of-age win - 16.14 (110) to 10.12 (72).

The Crows failed to respond after last week's 77-point loss to the Sydney Swans – their worst home loss in 19 years – and now appear incapable of returning to the September stage after a preliminary final appearance last year.   

Their third straight loss came despite brilliant midfielder Patrick Dangerfield, who was the best player on the ground with 28 possessions (19 contested), eight clearances and two goals.

Richmond controlled the match in the first half, building a 33-point lead early in the second quarter as star Brett Deledio roamed free across half-back.

It was a significant return to top form for Deledio, who received little attention from the Crows and had 17 possessions (14 uncontested) by half-time.

Crows stopper Nathan van Berlo was deployed to the damaging Tiger after the main break, keeping him to 11 touches in the second half, but the damage had been done.

Brandon Ellis (22 possessions and two goals) and Reece Conca (17) made impressive returns from injury, while Dustin Martin kicked four goals, building his performance in the second half. 

Coach Damien Hardwick said pre-game that 2013 had been Jack Riewoldt's finest season, despite being on track to kick significantly fewer goals than his Coleman Medal seasons of 2010 and 2012.

The coach reasoned that Riewoldt, who has kicked 34 goals this year, had become a selfless team player who set his teammates up and was contributing to a winning formula.

So it proved on Saturday, with Riewoldt kicking three goals but also setting up Martin and Chris Newman for early goals.

The Crows were led in attack by Josh Jenkins (two goals), while midfielder Scott Thompson (29 possessions) spent long periods in attack.

While he dragged his team back into the contest briefly in the fourth quarter, Dangerfield wasn't always able to cap his brilliance in front of goal, kicking 2.4.

Adelaide (5-7) has its mid-season bye next week before travelling to face Gold Coast at Metricon Stadium. 

Richmond has a chance to cement its place in the top eight over the next month with clashes against the Western Bulldogs, St Kilda, North Melbourne and Gold Coast (in Cairns).

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2013-06-15/tigers-stone-the-crows
« Last Edit: June 16, 2013, 03:07:02 AM by one-eyed »

Offline one-eyed

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Five talking points: Richmond v Adelaide (afl site)
« Reply #1 on: June 15, 2013, 08:00:23 PM »
Five talking points: Richmond v Adelaide
By Ashley Browne
afl.com.au
Saturday, June 15, 2013


1. Deledio untouched
Brett Deledio is at his most damaging for Richmond when he is left unopposed to create the play off half-back. Conversely, he is notorious for struggling to cope with a hard tag, so it was puzzling that Adelaide coach Brenton Sanderson chose to start the game allowing the Tigers to play an extra player in defence. Invariably, that player was Deledio who, with 10 disposals in the opening term, helped the Tigers get off to a bright start. And when Deledio was off the ground, or found an opponent, it was the likes of Bachar Houli or Chris Newman who found themselves unmarked, and both are also renowned for their smart use of the ball. After half-time, Nathan van Berlo was assigned to Deledio.

2. Good Jack
Richmond full-forward Jack Riewoldt announced himself at the MCG with a pair of bright orange boots, easily spotted through the MCG gloom. It smacked of the day being 'all about Jack' but his team ethic was on show from the start. In the first term he worked furiously in the centre and helped push the ball forward. He then got involved in the next contest, keeping the ball in play and passing to Dustin Martin who snapped a great goal. In the second term he wheeled out of a pack 45 metres from goal but instead of blazing away, he saw Newman in a better position and speared the pass to him. Newman then goaled from the set shot. Before the match, Tiger coach Damien Hardwick said that Riewoldt was enjoying his best season yet because of the unselfish nature of his game and against the Crows he demonstrated why.

3. Road killed
Adelaide has now lost eight of its last nine outings at the MCG. The last time it beat a team not called Melbourne was round 20 of 2009 against Hawthorn.

4. Better effort
Sanderson put it on the Crows during the week after the lamentable effort against the Sydney Swans last week at home. Their endeavor and industry could not be faulted this time around and they kept the Tigers honest throughout, but it is hard to imagine two players they could least afford to have lost between seasons than key forwards Kurt Tippett and Taylor Walker. By the start of the final quarter ball magnet Scott Thompson was playing out of the goal square as the Crows went small. Not till Patrick Dangerfield kicked his second goal at the 25-minute mark of the final quarter, did the Crows have a multiple goalkicker. Tippett, by the way, returns to Adelaide next weekend, this time in a Swans jumper. Good thing for the Crows, they'll be on their bye week and, presumably, out of town.

5. King Patrick
Twice in 18 hours, we have been reminded that the spoils can go to those who play in losing sides. On Friday night, Carlton's Brock McLean won the David Parkin Medal for his fine performance in his side's 15-point loss to Hawthorn at Etihad Stadium. On Saturday afternoon, Dangerfield was universally considered the best player on the ground despite Adelaide's hefty loss. "It would be nice to have him at the Tigers," marveled Richmond coach Damien Hardwick. "He is an incredible player. He's a powerhouse, a very, very good player."

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2013-06-15/Five+talking+points:+Richmond+v+Adelaide+R12+2013

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers sound warning (Age)
« Reply #2 on: June 15, 2013, 08:02:58 PM »
Tigers sound warning

    Rohan Connolly
    The Age
    June 15, 2013 - 7:21PM



RICHMOND  5.2  9.7  11.10   16.14 (110)
ADELAIDE   2.1  5.4   6.10    10.12 (72)

GOALS:
Richmond:  Martin 4, Riewoldt 3, Ellis 2, Grigg 2, Newman, Maric, King, Edwards,  Cotchin.
Adelaide: Jenkins 2, Dangerfield 2, Mackay, Callinan, Porplyzia, van Berlo, Thompson, Lynch.

BEST:
Richmond: Deledio, Martin, Ellis, Riewoldt, Foley, Houli.
Adelaide: Dangerfield, Thompson, Douglas, Rutten, Sloane.

UMPIRES: Meredith, Stewart, Margetts.
CROWD 43,615 at MCG.

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

This was just the sort of game that last year, would have had Richmond more than a little anxious. Against an opponent in Adelaide down but capable. Coming off an inspiring win in Perth, but with that momentum having been interrupted by a week off. Yet going in expected to win if it was to prove itself a credible top-eight team.

It’s the sort of scenario that has seen the Tigers stumble before. But not this time. In fact, this performance smacked of finals credibility. Tough. Featuring a relatively even spread of contributors. And which when threatened even briefly, saw Richmond answer emphatically. That’s what the good teams do.

Only recently, had Richmond, having led all day, conceded its opponent the first two goals of the final term within four minutes and seen what had not long before been a six-goal lead slashed to just 19 points, panic might well have set in. Instead, the Tigers slammed on the next five goals to blow the margin out to 50 before the Crows managed a couple of meaningless six-pointers in junk time.

It was the Tigers who had made the early running. And who finished things off in style, its opponent, which last year came within a kick of a grand final berth, looking, as it has much of this season, a shadow of its former self. Not that Adelaide coach Brenton Sanderson could have levelled the same ‘‘insipid’’ accusation he had after the Crows’ belting at the hands of Sydney last week early in this game.

They gave it a decent enough crack. But an impotent looking forward set-up that simply didn’t have the capacity to make the most of its chances wasn’t going to be enough. And, really, it hasn’t been even since Taylor Walker went down on this same bogey ground for Adelaide seven weeks ago. Nothing illustrated that impotence better than midway through the opening term, by which time Richmond had enjoyed only two more inside 50s than its opposition, but already had three goals to one on the board.

The Tigers looked dangerous when they went forward, Adelaide not so much. Skipper Trent Cotchin got the ball rolling with a left-foot snap, Jack Riewoldt pounced on a ground ball to soccer another, then Dustin Martin, who along with  Brett Deledio was dangerous right from the start, bombed one home from outside 50 metres.

The Crows’ goals came from opportunistic snaps more than calculated forward plays, both Ian Callinan and Josh Jenkins at least keeping their side in the hunt. But the patter continued. It was five goals to two at the first break, and seven goals to two by the eight-minute mark of the second term after  Riewoldt dished one off for veteran Chris Newman, then Brandon Ellis scouted the crumbs of another Riewoldt contest.

It took Adelaide more than 10 minutes of the second term to even enter  its forward 50. It had a brief flurry late in the half when Tom Lynch, Jason Porplyzia and Patrick Dangerfield, again at times seeming to play a lone hand, all kicked goals to reduce the gap to 20 points. But Riewoldt’s third goal from a perhaps fortunate free kick, undid much of that momentum.

Adelaide created at least its share of chances. But big men Jenkins, Lynch and Shaun McKernan, the latter eventually substituted off, simply couldn’t take enough grabs. It was left to Dangerfield to conjure something, and even he couldn’t produce enough magic. Not for want of trying, though. He’d finish with 28 disposals, 19 of them contested, eight clearances, two goals, even half-a-dozen hitouts. But he couldn’t be everywhere. Nor compete with the amount of support his opposition had. And the odd bit of luck, too.

Most of what tricks the Tigers had came off. None so spectacularly as Shaun Grigg’s half-volleyed goal.  Or the sheer luck of Shane Edwards’ accidental goal in the last term when Adelaide veteran Ben Rutten, attempting to concede the behind, merely tapped the ball on to his opponent’s boot.

But that was just an added bonus. Richmond didn’t need the luck. It grafted this win and one which makes the prospect of that yellow-and-black cry being belted out this September a bit more likely.

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/tigers-sound-warning-20130615-2oasw.html#ixzz2WHHGCtc3

Offline one-eyed

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Cotchin and Dangerfield put on a clinic at the MCG (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #3 on: June 16, 2013, 03:03:07 AM »
Richmond captain Trent Cotchin and Adelaide star Patrick Dangerfield put on a clinic at the MCG

    Warwick Green
    From: Herald Sun
    June 15, 2013 11:30PM


THE football world salivated during the week at the prospect of Gazza v Jobe, the battle of the AFL's two premier midfielders at Etihad Stadium on a Saturday night.

But the under card at the MCG a few hours earlier was not too shabby either, featuring the two young turks likely to assume the mantle: Richmond's Trent Cotchin and Adelaide's Patrick Dangerfield.

The 23-year olds, who were born two days apart in April 1990, loomed as the central players in their respective teams' quest to keep their finals aspirations intact.

There is much to admire about both men: they're both hard at it, no-nonsense footballers.

They have balance, poise and a penetrating kick, as well as the ability to split a game wide open.

Cotchin began in the centre square and had the first impact of the two, kicking the opening goal of the match when he landed a left-foot snap from 25 metres.

But it was Dangerfield who was the more influential player in the first half.

He set up Adelaide's first goal, going third man up in the ruck to tap the ball to Ian Callinan for a goal.

His contested-ball work (18 of 28 disposals) was extraordinary, but he also worked hard to run and create a second link in the possession chain.

The trademarks of his desperation were his smothers and spoils.In the slippery conditions it is never more evident which players have clean hands, and both Dangerfield and Cotchin were noticeable for this.

The Crows man even twice managed to gather the ball one-handed while dashing at top pace towards goal.

Had he managed to convert either there would now be new contenders for goal of the year.

Cotchin did not have his finest day, but a testament to his worth is that he still managed to have 22 disposals, 12 of them contested.

When Adelaide got to within 24 points at the start of the final term, and a late charge looked feasible, it was Cotchin who twice fed the ball out in heavy traffic at centre bounces to help arrest the Crows' momentum.

Both players had a combination of opponents trying to quell their influence, but still managed to shine in the gloom.

When they needed to break a tag they pushed deep forward, where they looked equally damaging.

In the end Dangerfield's contribution was the more dynamic, pushing for best afield honours in a team that was soundly beaten.

He could easily have finished with five goals instead of 2.4.

But the most exciting part of watching this pair was knowing that they will be strutting their stuff for another decade.

www.adelaidenow.com.au/sport/afl/richmond-captain-trent-cotchin-and-adelaide-star-patrick-dangerfield-put-on-a-clinic-at-the-mcg/story-e6frecmc-1226664319682

Offline one-eyed

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Tag on Tiger Brett Deledio an hour too late for Adelaide (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #4 on: June 16, 2013, 03:04:45 AM »
Tag on Tiger Brett Deledio an hour too late for Adelaide Crows

    Glenn McFarlane
    Herald Sun
    June 16, 2013


ADELAIDE coach Brenton Sanderson told Fox Footy viewers at half-time that the Crows had made a decision to tag Brett Deledio in the second half.

Pity it came an hour too late.

In the most perplexing decision surrounding Richmond's 38-point win over Adelaide at the MCG yesterday that put it back into the eight, the Crows' brains trust allowed one of the Tigers' most important players as much space - and time - as he desired.

It hurt them badly. It may have even cost them any chance of winning the game.

Deledio might have been pipped for best afield honours by an extraordinary game from Adelaide's Patrick Dangerfield, but his impact was a telling one.

He admitted after the game that he was pleasantly surprised with the latitude afforded him after a month of close checking.

"Yeah, it was a bit of a surprise, I won't lie to you," Deledio said.

"I haven't had much of that (space) recently."

"I had a poor run when the side wasn't going well, and that's something I have got to work on.

"We knew they (the Crows) were going to come out firing after last week, and we wanted to meet them head on.

"We didn't want to be intimidated or let them get on the front foot."

The two best players afield yesterday both had 28 touches the difference came in the contested possession count.

Deledio had two; Dangerfield had 19, and it showed a measure of how each of them impacted on the contest.

The Crows' midfielder did it the hard way, dragging his team along, even if he didn't have enough teammates prepared to help with the heavy lifting.

The Tigers' star set up the win with a creative, damaging performance, dominating the first half across half-back when he didn't have an opponent and guiding his team home with a solid second half when Nathan Van Berlo was assigned to him.

Deledio's first seven possessions came at 100 per cent efficiency as he crafted his way through the Crows' zone, having 17 disposals to help set up a 27-point lead at the long break. And he went on with from there.

Sanderson admitted after the game that Deledio had been a source of much discussion in the Adelaide coaches' box.

"We talked about it a lot know (Deledio) is such a smart player the way he sets up behind the ball, they kept using him," the Crows coach said.

"We kept sending a forward up to our stoppages to try and win clearances, but (it) looks like that might have been a mistake (because) every time we won a stoppage we kicked it forward to their numbers and they were able to mop it up."

That happened far too often.

Dangerfield almost singlehanded lifted the Crows back into the contest - by sheer will as much as anything else - as the visitors drew within 19 points early in the final term before the Tigers once more put their foot to the floor. At times he was breathtaking in his determination and desperation.

Deledio said: "He (Dangerfield) is so strong over the footy. He gives them a lot of drive out of the guts, so we had to try and nullify him as much as we could.

"I shook his hand after the game, and it's a bit intimidating - he's so strong."

Richmond had its own powerhouse equivalent yesterday. While Dustin Martin wasn't as influential as Dangerfield, he produced another mature performance that yielded four goals (including his club's last) and 19 disposals.

"He (Martin) is so strong ... he is a bit like `Danger'," Deledio said.

Brandon Ellis continues to elevate his status within the team and the competition. Nathan Foley worked extremely hard, Troy Chaplin and Bachar Houli gave plenty of drive from the back half, while Jack Riewoldt had a great duel with young Crows defender Daniel Talia, winning on points or more's the point - three goals.

The Crows simply didn't have enough scoring options to realistically challenge the Tigers. That much has been apparent since Taylor Walker went down with a knee injury in Round 5, and it doesn't look like changing in what has been a frustrating year for Sanderson.

It was left to Dangerfield who else to be their leading scorer, with 2.4 that could easily have been five goals but for a bit of luck.

The Tigers, though, had nine individual goal-scorers in an even display that would have pleased coach Damien Hardwick.

Richmond has done the hard work and leapt back into the eight. Now the challenge is to stay there.

http://www.couriermail.com.au/sport/afl/tag-on-tiger-brett-deledio-an-hour-too-late-for-adelaide-crows/story-fnia3xzz-1226664342161

Offline 1965

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers stone the Crows
« Reply #5 on: June 16, 2013, 10:47:21 AM »

Yep a good player when he isn't tagged.

 :lol
Yeah we're already going to vote for him mate, you don't need to keep selling it.....

Offline Coach

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers stone the Crows
« Reply #6 on: June 16, 2013, 02:07:43 PM »

Yep a good player when he isn't tagged.

 :lol

Easy Tiger.