Author Topic: Media articles and stats: No mercy for Saints as ruthless Richmond marches on  (Read 1532 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond continues winning run

By Howard Kimber
richmondfc.com.au
8:00pm AEST Sunday, June 30, 2013



RICHMOND               4.4 10.9 15.13 17.17 (119)
ST KILDA                   3.2   4.4    7.5      8.7   (55)

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Jackson 3, Grigg 2, Foley 2, Deledio 2, Ellis, King, A. Edwards, Vickery, Conca
St Kilda: Dennis-Lane 2, Steven, Montagna, Jones, Murdoch, Dal Santo, Riewoldt

BEST
Richmond: Foley, Vickery, Cotchin, A. Edwards, Jackson, Conca
St Kilda: Dennis-Lane, Armitage, Ray, Steven, Jones

INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
St Kilda: Nil

SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Jake King subbed out for Matt White in the third quarter
St Kilda: Seb Ross subbed out for Sam Dunell in the third quarter

Reports: Nil
Umpires: Dalgleish, Wenn, Foot
Official crowd: 52,184 at the MCG

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

Richmond notched its fourth straight win and consolidated sixth spot on the ladder with a convincing 64-point victory over St Kilda at the MCG on Sunday afternoon.

The Saints kicked the first two goals of the match and stayed in the contest until early in the second quarter, but from there it was all Richmond as the yellow and black piled on nine of the next 10 majors.

The Tigers’ midfield shone, with Trent Cotchin returning to his best form, especially in the opening half, and Dustin Martin, Nathan Foley and Daniel Jackson all having influential roles.

The performance of Nathan Foley was hugely encouraging for the Tigers as he continues to head back to the form he enjoyed before hurting his Achilles tendon early in 2012.

Foley racked up 23 touches and kicked two goals to be amongst the best on the ground.

Ty Vickery stood up in the absence of Ivan Maric with help from Orren Stephenson, while youngsters Brandon Ellis and Reece Conca continued to show their growing maturity.

Winners were much harder to find in St Kilda jumpers, though Nick Riewoldt (22 disposals, eight marks and one goal) gave everything as always, but ultimately lost the ‘battle of the cousins’ as Jack kicked three goals and had a hand in a number of others.

Nick Dal Santo had plenty of the football (25 disposals and one goal) as did Clinton Jones (24), David Armitage (25) and Jack Steven (23). Trent Dennis-Lane was the only multiple goal kicker for St Kilda with two.

The win takes Richmond to a 9-4 record ahead of a clash with North Melbourne this Saturday afternoon.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2013-06-30/richmond-continues-winning-run

Offline one-eyed

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No mercy for Saints as ruthless Richmond marches on

afl.com.au
6:49pm AEST Sunday, June 30, 2013



THE RE-EMERGENCE of Richmond as an AFL powerhouse continued at the MCG on Sunday afternoon as the Tigers convincingly beat St Kilda 17.17.119 to 8.7.55 in front of a crowd of 52,184.

The Saints kicked the first two goals of the match and stayed in the contest until early in the second quarter, but from there it was all Richmond as the yellow and black piled on nine of the next 10 majors.

Even such a convincing lead would have seen Tiger fans nervous in recent years, if not thinking that the game could be lost then at least that the margin would be brought back to something much smaller, costing valuable percentage.

But it wasn't to be, and the manner in which they kept stretching the lead was that of a team in serious contention of reaching the upper echelons of the ladder.

The class of the Tigers’ midfield shone through with Trent Cotchin returning to his best form, especially in the opening half, and Dustin Martin, Nathan Foley and Daniel Jackson all having influential roles.

The performance of Foley was hugely encouraging for the Tigers as he continues to head back to the form he enjoyed before injuring his Achilles tendon early in 2012.

Foley racked up 23 touches and kicked two goals to be among the best on the ground.

The hole created by the absence of Ivan Maric was well filled by Tyrone Vickery (18 disposals, 11 marks and a goal) who seemed to relish the added responsibility of being first ruck, while youngsters Brandon Ellis and Reece Conca continued to show growing maturity.

Adding to the Tigers' stocks was the performance of Aaron Edwards. It seemed that Edwards was brought into the club as nothing more than solid back-up should key forwards fall over, but his efforts and attack on the ball and man since being elevated to the seniors four weeks ago have been those of a player desperate to make the most of a third chance.

Winners were much harder to find in St Kilda jumpers.

Nick Riewoldt (22 disposals, eight marks and one goal) gave everything as always, but ultimately lost the ‘battle of the cousins’ as Jack kicked three goals and had a hand in a number of others.

Nick Dal Santo had plenty of the football (25 disposals and one goal) as did Clinton Jones (24), David Armitage (25) and Jack Steven (23). Trent Dennis-Lane was the only multiple goal kicker for St Kilda with two.

It seemed at times that the Saints were intimidated by the ferocity of their opponents as they fumbled the ball or made errors through rushed disposals.

The Tigers were not convincing with their finishing by foot throughout the game, but they made up for it with an intensity that suggests that there is a hunger to take their season to places it has't been for many years.

The win takes Richmond to a 9-4 record and the Tiger Army is starting to save dollars for tickets to finals and not Fiji this September.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2013-06-30/tigers-show-saints-no-mercy

TigerTimeII

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foley was no where near the best

another dumbarse journo who dosnt watch the game and just reads stats   :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead

Offline TigerLand

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foley was no where near the best

another dumbarse journo who dosnt watch the game and just reads stats   :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead

Did Foley root your sister?
Go Tigers!

Offline YellowandBlackBlood

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foley was no where near the best

another dumbarse journo who dosnt watch the game and just reads stats   :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead

Did Foley root your sister?
Looks like he didn't use a prophylactic either! :rollin
OER. Calling it as it is since 2004.

Offline Judge Roughneck

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Howard Kimber

gave foley BOG

 :cheers :cheers

Online Andyy

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I was at the game. Foley was in the best, for sure. Some people are a few botched disposals and just chuck a fit. Haven't seen these people ragging out Jack tonight despite his 11 shots at goal resulting in three majors.

Dubstep Dookie

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foley was no where near the best

another dumbarse journo who dosnt watch the game and just reads stats   :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead

Did Foley root your sister?
Looks like he didn't use a prophylactic either! :rollin

Oh my!

Offline tigs2011

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stuff me what a demolition today was.  :clapping

Offline WA Tiger

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foley was no where near the best

another dumbarse journo who dosnt watch the game and just reads stats   :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead :banghead

Fair dinkum Username...you amaze just about every poster on this site with your continual berating of players that just don't deserve it....would of hated going over the top with you in WW1...you probably would of shot your own...your site name should be Unbelievable, that would sum up your comments on this forum.
DIMMA - You will be held ACCOUNTABLE...

“We are really excited about what we have brought in. We have got great depth of players that can take us where we need to go. We are just putting some cream on the top at the moment,” he said.

"Rucks:
Shaun Hampson is the No.1 man"

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers end St Kilda challenge in blink of an eye at the MCG (H-Sun)
« Reply #10 on: July 01, 2013, 07:48:05 AM »
Tigers end St Kilda challenge in blink of an eye at the MCG

    Sam Edmund
    From: Herald Sun
    July 1, 2013


IT WAS the 13 minutes of power football that added another dimension to Richmond's September dreams.

No, it was the 13 minutes that ensured that finals dream can now be considered a reality.

The Tiger army has tempted fate on more than one occasion in a 12-year finals hiatus, but surely the time has come to start dropping the 'F' word at Punt Road.

It's not simply the 9-4 record, including six wins in the last seven, that fuels rising expectation, but rather the manner Richmond is playing in putting sides away.

The Tigers midfield has been up in lights all season, but it was their forward firepower that added the eye-catching gloss to Sunday's 64-point thumping of St Kilda at the MCG.

Only eight points separated Richmond from St Kilda half-way through the second term before three key goalkickers in yellow and black caught fire.

Jack Riewoldt, Ty Vickery and Aaron Edwards went on a rampage, driving a six goal to one quarter that broke the back of the undermanned Saints.

With Sam Fisher, Tom Simpkin and Sam Gilbert all missing, it was the three big forwards who did the damage and ensured the Tigers could have more than a midfield ace up their sleeve come finals.

Riewoldt's third goal, by the 14-minute mark of the second quarter, had seen off Sean Dempster and then had Rhys Stanley struggling to do much better.

Unusually, Riewoldt's only knock was his poor conversion.

Vickery was monstering James Gwilt and marking everything in sight.

Edwards, playing just his fourth game this year, was so good it's hard to imagine him slipping back out of the side.

He played with passion and verve, but also precision. Most importantly, he drew attention from usual suspect, Riewoldt.

By half time the influential trio had combined for 20 marks, four contested, and five goals.

They did it all in front of a heaving yellow and black army behind the goals at the Punt Road end of the ground.

For a while there it was party time. So dominant was the assault that St Kilda skipper Nick Riewoldt was taking kick-ins in the shadows of the main break.

A half-time downpour proved the only thing capable of blunting the output of Richmond's big forwards, but the slippery conditions in the second half only served to highlight Richmond's pressure and hunger.

The Tigers' lack of tackling has been the one glaring flaw in the first half of the season, and while those numbers were never going to go through the roof in a dominant victory, they smashed the ball carrier when needed.

Debutant Matthew Arnot came with a hard reputation and he didn't disappoint. The youngster finished with a Richmond-high seven tackles, none better than when he pinged Jarryn Geary in a bear-like grasp that allowed Daniel Jackson to stroll in for one of his three goals.

His attack was so ferocious he may find himself in trouble with the match review panel for charging in low and taking out Dempster's legs in the last term

Steve Morris played like an animal - again - corralling and harrassing and scragging.

The end result was Richmond's staggering 70-31 inside 50m domination. It was a belting.

Nathan Foley was excellent in what has to be his best game since recovering from a long-term achilles injury.

Cotchin had 18 disposals at half time, but took the foot off the pedal in the second half while Brett Deledio and Dustin Martin tallied their usual quota.

St Kilda was largely reduced to counter-attacking football and despite the efforts of Riewoldt and Nick Dal Santo against the tide, it didn't threaten beyond the early exchanges.

http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/tigers-end-st-kilda-challenge-in-blink-of-an-eye-at-the-mcg/story-fnelctok-1226672196881#mm-breached

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers sharing the load (Age)
« Reply #11 on: July 01, 2013, 07:51:24 AM »
Tigers sharing the load

    Emma Quayle
    The Age
    July 1, 2013



RICHMOND 4.4 10.9 15.13 17.17 (119)
ST KILDA     3.2   4.4   7.5      8.7 (55)

GOALS
 Richmond: Jackson 3, Riewoldt 3, Deledio 2, Foley 2, Grigg 2, Edwards, Ellis, King, Conca, Vickery.
St Kilda: Dennis-Lane 2, Murdoch, Jones, Steven, Montagna, Dal Santo, Riewoldt.

BEST
Richmond: Cotchin, Vickery, A Edwards, Jackson, Deledio, S Edwards, Foley, Conca, Houli, Rance.
St Kilda: Steven, Armitage, Riewoldt, McEvoy, Dal Santo, Dennis Lane, Montagna, Murdoch.

UMPIRES Wenn, Dalgleish, Foot.
CROWD 52,184 at MCG.

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

Here is what we were dealing with. A St Kilda side that, if not completely starting over, is being recast. A Richmond team starting to realise what it could be, wanting to impose itself, not willing to wait.

A St Kilda defence that needs more off-season bolstering, that was missing Sam Fisher and Tom Simpkin and looked extremely young. A Richmond forward line that can get three or four goals from Jack Riewoldt without seeming to really rely on him.

The St Kilda forward line might have been all right, had its midfielders been able to get the ball down more often, in less-rushed ways. But the Tiger defenders are harder to rattle than they once were, and have less stressful work to do since Richmond was the team with the young midfield.

Richmond's 64-point win can be described as mature, composed, controlled. Even certain.

The Tigers might still be a team in the making, but when they were less cooked they might have taken until after half-time to find their way into a game, feel like the better side and then start playing that way.

True, it wasn't until Ty Vickery dropped to the half-back line and took a couple of strong marks that the Tigers took charge. But that happened halfway through the first quarter.

The Tigers had good players everywhere. Like they did against the Western Bulldogs a week earlier when they won in every part of the ground. First, Vickery took those two marks. Then, he made his way forward and took more. With Riewoldt there, and Aaron Edwards running up, then back, then across, doing everything he could to get into some space, Richmond simply had too many marking targets for the Saints to keep under wraps.

With Sean Dempster and James Gwilt kept so busy, from start to finish, it meant that when the ball did reach the ground, the likes of Nathan Wright, Jimmy Webster and Jack Newnes had lots of work to do, without much time at all to think about it. It was hard work.

That didn't stop, because the Tigers didn't stop. Add fade-outs to the things they have started to expel from their game. Richmond didn't so much wear down the Saints in the middle as deny them the chance to ever really get going. St Kilda snuck a goal at the start of the game, and another at the start of the second quarter, but Richmond had them covered for numbers, for concentration and for urgency, through the midfield and throughout the night.

Trent Cotchin played one of his best, most dynamic games in recent weeks. He kept his feet after Edwards flew over him during the second quarter, turned sharply, ran to where the ball dropped, intercepted a St Kilda handpass and handballed to Shaun Grigg for a goal. Brett Deledio was good again, too. Late in the third quarter he watched as Cotchin kicked long into the goal square, where he was sandwiched between two Saints. He reached up, tapped the ball down, then soccered it through for another.

But there were plenty of players who, in playing their own part, bought them the time and space to do those things. Dustin Martin, Shane Edwards, Nathan Foley, Reece Conca, Shaun Grigg and Brandon Ellis have helped the midfield bat deeper. No wonder Dan Jackson couldn't stop smiling: he kicked three goals.

In defence, Alex Rance, Troy Chaplin, Bachar Houli, Chris Newman and Steve Morris understand each other. Last week was a no-fuss win, this one was the same, and next week brings the chance for another. The more there are, the better the Tigers will be getting.

ARNOT BRINGS SOME GOOD NEWS
The bad news? Richmond supporters' newest infatuation, eight-gamer Nick Vlastuin, dropped out of the side pre-game with a shin injury. The good news? His withdrawal gave Matthew Arnot the chance to play his first game, 18 months after being drafted from the Oakleigh Chargers with a late pick. Arnot was known in his junior days for his no-fuss, hard-at-it approach and against the Saints there were signs that would translate well to senior footy.

EDWARDS FINDS HIS OWN SPACE

Richmond recruited Aaron Edwards to help pad out its forward line. On all available evidence, he wants to be much more than mere back-up. He worked exceptionally hard to get into space, he grabbed the ball cleanly and aside from collecting Trent Cotchin on one ambitious lead he seems to have already worked out how to find his own space and not get in the way of the other Tiger forwards he has begun to complement nicely.

FOLEY KEEPS WORKING HARD

Nathan Foley has been a useful inclusion too, rejoining the team seven weeks ago having missed the best part of a season with a ruptured achilles. Before he got injured, the one-time rookie was always busy, always on the move, always getting to where the ball was. Not much has changed. Foley still works hard, and as a consequence, still keeps getting the ball.

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/tigers-sharing-the-load-20130630-2p5cx.html#ixzz2XjrWdNeB

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond Tigers eye top after routing St Kilda Saints (Australian)
« Reply #12 on: July 01, 2013, 07:58:36 AM »
Richmond Tigers eye top after routing St Kilda Saints

    by: Courtney Walsh
    From: The Australian
    July 01, 2013


IN the pre-season, Richmond coach Damien Hardwick dared to tempt fate when declaring his Tigers would play in September.

Even though Richmond boasted a star midfield and emerging talent in other key positions, it was a bold call considering the Tigers' tortured history.

Yet, courtesy of a 64-point thrashing of St Kilda at the MCG last night, Hardwick's declaration seems almost certain with the Tigers now three wins clear of ninth-placed Carlton with two months of the regular season remaining.

Such is their standing, Richmond fans might now dare to dream of a loftier aspiration then simply playing finals for the first time since 2001, for a top-four finish is within grasp after victory yesterday put the Tigers within two points of premiers Sydney.

Despite conceding two goals in the first five minutes to Trent Dennis-Lane, Richmond was barely challenged beyond quarter-time.

This month is crunch time with the Tigers' next two matches, while against sides outside the eight in North Melbourne and the Gold Coast, no certainties.

Negotiate those challenges and Richmond has the opportunity to test the merits of its top four aspirations against the two sides immediately above it, namely Fremantle and Sydney. A massive challenge against Hawthorn follows to open August.

While Hardwick acknowledged the Tigers improved consistency, he refused to look any further ahead than the Kangaroos.

"We have got a team next week (that) if they play their best footy, they are capable of beating any team in the AFL," he said.

"We are still a fair way off all those (top sides) but we certainly think we have the calibre of player that will make us better over time."

So undermanned is St Kilda in defence and inexperienced in other areas, it is difficult to weigh just how well Richmond played yesterday. But there is no denying the Tigers are hungry.

Evidence they were treating this match seriously came in the first term when, with scores still balanced, Brandon Ellis benefited from the desperate defensive actions of a teammate to spoil when St Kilda were attempting to clear.

The Tigers were never headed.

With St Kilda missing defenders Sam Fisher, Sam Gilbert, Jason Blake and Tom Simpkin, Sean Dempster was forced from a tagging role to play as the key defender on Coleman medallist Jack Riewoldt.

The difficulty of this heady task became apparent with Riewoldt kicking Richmond's first two goals. . The spearhead finished with 3.5, with James Gwilt his opponent later in the piece.

But the lack of depth allowed Aaron Edwards, who spent several weeks in the reserves on joining the Tigers this year, to run rampant on long searching leads. He finished with 19 touches, nine marks and a goal.

Impressive, too, were Nathan Foley and Tyrone Vickery. Before the arrival of Trent Cotchin and Dustin Martin, Foley was the big hope in the middle of the ground until cruelled by serious injuries.

He returned from a lengthy absence in round seven and had been gradually building match fitness before kicking two goals from 23 touches.

A long winter continues for the Saints. While they have been largely competitive - the loss yesterday was their heaviest for the year - six of their last nine matches are against sides currently in the eight, with another against the ninth-placed Carlton.

It does give coach Scott Watters the opportunity to identify players he thinks can improve the team from 2014 and beyond, but that may lead to some pain for his club in the rest of the season.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/afl/richmond-tigers-eye-top-after-routing-st-kilda-saints/story-fnca0u4y-1226672218096