Author Topic: Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall just short of the Bulldogs  (Read 898 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Bulldogs hold their nerve during Tigers' second-half surge
Ben Guthrie 
afl.com.au
April 5, 2014



WESTERN BULLDOGS            5.4   9.5   11.9   15.10 (100)
RICHMOND                            2.4   3.4    9.6    15.8 (98)
 
GOALS
Western Bulldogs: Jones 3, Giansiracusa 2, Jong 2, Crameri 2, Cooney, Higgins, Dahlhaus, Hunter, Macrae, Stringer
Richmond: Riewoldt 4, Vickery 2, Griffiths 2, Cotchin, Martin, King, Petterd, Gordon, Jackson, Grigg,
 
BEST
Western Bulldogs: Boyd, Macrae, Murphy, Morris, Liberatore, Minson,
Richmond: Cotchin, Morris, Jackson, Conca, Ellis
 
INJURIES
Western Bulldogs: Roughead (shoulder)
Richmond: Vlastuin (concussion)
 
SUBSTITUTES
Western Bulldogs: Jordan Roughead (shoulder) replaced at three-quarter time by Daniel Giansiracusa
Richmond: Nick Vlastuin (concussion) replaced in the second quarter by Nathan Gordon
 
Reports: Nil
 
Umpires: Fisher, Stevic, Harris
 
Official crowd: 31,724 at Etihad Stadium

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THE DEFIANT Western Bulldogs have stunned a fast-finishing Richmond by two points at Etihad Stadium on Saturday afternoon.

The Bulldogs held on grimly in the second half after seeing a 37-point half-time lead whittled away, but they showed tremendous pluck to pull out the 15.10 (100) to 15.8 (98) victory.

The Tigers hit the front late in the final term when Shaun Grigg finished on the run with five minutes remaining, but a cool set-shot snap around the corner from veteran sub Daniel Giansiracusa gave the Dogs the breathing room they needed.

Young Dogs midfielder Jack Macrae was sensational with 30 disposals, six tackles and a goal; ruckman Will Minson finished with an astonishing 55 hit-outs and former captain Matthew Boyd was unshakeable in his commitment to the cause.

The Dogs left the sluggish Tigers in their wake in the first half with their run-and-gun style of football, charging to a lead of more than six goals at half-time.

The Tigers were shaken. Jack Riewoldt looked a shadow of his former self with just one disposal to half-time, their defence was all at sea and every move forward was a struggle.

In direct contrast to the first half, Riewoldt – with Trent Cotchin riding shotgun – sparked his team's revival with four second-half goals to almost carry his side over the line.

But it was not to be as the Bulldogs held firm, thanks largely to the composure of Macrae and Adam Cooney, the dash of Bob Murphy and the determination of Boyd, who had 29 possessions and eight clearances.

Richmond captain Trent Cotchin was the only constant four-quarter performer for the Tigers, almost single-handedly hauling his side over the line.

Nonetheless, his 28-possession, 11 clearance performance showed great character.

But the Dogs were not prepared to let their hard work slip, clinging to tackles and showing enough poise in the dying stages to emerge victorious.

It was the Bulldogs' first win over Richmond since round eight, 2011 and the side's first of the season.

The Tigers are now delicately poised at 1-2 with an important clash against Collingwood to come under the bright lights of the MCG next Friday night.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2014-04-05/match-report-bulldogs-v-tigers

Offline Lozza

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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall just short of the Bulldogs
« Reply #1 on: April 05, 2014, 05:51:18 PM »
Won't get within 10 goals of pies when they play one on one as will every team against us now.

dwaino

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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall just short of the Bulldogs
« Reply #2 on: April 05, 2014, 05:53:01 PM »
First to 100 always wins  :cheers

tony_montana

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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall just short of the Bulldogs
« Reply #3 on: April 05, 2014, 06:05:03 PM »

Offline Smokey

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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers fall just short of the Bulldogs
« Reply #4 on: April 05, 2014, 06:20:22 PM »
First to 100 always wins  :cheers

Lol Dwaino, was thinking that very thing deep in the last quarter when we hit the front 98-94.  I thought if the Dogs were on 93 then we had a chance but on 94 I just knew that unless we got the next goal then they would kick one and keep the prophesy alive!   :'(

Offline one-eyed

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Western Bulldogs hold off Richmond to record first win of 2014 (Age)
« Reply #5 on: April 06, 2014, 12:02:40 AM »
Western Bulldogs hold off Richmond to record first win of 2014
   Rohan Connolly
     The Age
    April 6, 2014


WESTERN BULLDOGS 5.4  9.5  11.9  15.10 (100)
RICHMOND                2.4  3.4    9.6   15.8 (98)

Goals:
Western Bulldogs: L Jones 3 D Giansiracusa 2 L Jong 2 S Crameri 2 A Cooney J Macrae J Stringer L Dahlhaus L Hunter S Higgins.
Richmond: J Riewoldt 4 B Griffiths 2 T Vickery 2 D Jackson D Martin J King N Gordon R Petterd S Grigg T Cotchin.

Best:
Western Bulldogs: Macrae, Boyd, Liberatore, Minson, Cooney, Murphy.
Richmond: Cotchin, Riewoldt, Jackson, Thomas, Conca, Martin.

Injuries: Western Bulldogs: J Roughead (shoulder).
Richmond: N Vlastuin (concussion). Reports: Nil.

Umpires: Matt Stevic, David Harris, Leigh Fisher.
Official Crowd: 31,724 at Etihad Stadium.

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It went without saying - even before Saturday's game - that at 0-2, the Western Bulldogs needed a win. But deep in the final term against Richmond at Etihad Stadium, they needed one so much more.

It was a terrific effort from the Dogs, who ran harder, worked harder and stayed in front the whole afternoon. Well, virtually the whole afternoon. But having led from the four-minute mark of the first term, and by as much as 38 points, with less than three-and-a-half minutes remaining, almost unbelievably, the Dogs trailed.

Richmond, which could manage just three goals in the first half, booted a dozen in the second. The last of those, to Jack Riewoldt, his fourth after having barely touched the ball in the first half, put the Tigers in front. It was the sort of scenario that can crush the spirit of a young and emerging side, not just for a day two, but for a season.

Perhaps one of the Bulldogs' most experienced heads, Daniel Giansiracusa, recognised that, too. He'd come off the substitute's bench at three-quarter time and already provided a steadying goal as the Tigers crept within a kick. Now, engaged in a one-on-one battle with Brandon Ellis near goal, he'd be slung to the ground without the ball and awarded a free kick.

Just over two minutes remained, and the stadium seethed with anticipation. But as everyone seemed to pause for breath, Gia was off, playing on, reducing the tightest of angles, and delivering the final jab of what had been a pulsating final-round sparring match.

Without taking anything away from Richmond, which was awful for much of the game, a win to the Tigers would have been something of a steal. They'll have other days. But this was a big moment for Brendan McCartney's team. It showed discipline. Plenty of enterprise. And most significantly, the resilience to withstand the oncoming tide. A valuable lesson. And one earned along with the match points.

The Bulldogs had certainly made all the early running. They'd stuck resolutely to a one-on-one game, refusing to allow the Tigers any overlap or run. And when they won the ball in defence, they worked harder back towards their own goals, Richmond's trailing in their wake another sign Damien Hardwick's side wasn't on its game.

Richmond had the first goal on the board, but couldn't buy one thereafter. It took a Bulldog error, a misdirected handball from Tom Williams, to produce the second goal to Dustin Martin, and that was answered soon enough by the Dogs' Lin Jong. And by half-time, the Tigers would have only three. Trent Cotchin couldn't have done a lot more, with 13 disposals and seven clearances to the long break, but he had precious little help.

The Bulldogs, in contrast, had no shortage of runners jumping on board. Jack Macrae had accumulated 19 possessions to half-time. Old stager Matthew Boyd was nearly as prolific, Stewart Crameri covered plenty of territory up forward, Shaun Higgins turned back the clock a couple of years, and in defence, Dale Morris had given Riewoldt barely a sniff, the Coleman medallist with just one touch at the long break.

But Cotchin's consistency aside, it was Riewoldt who did as much as any Tiger to get his side going in the third term. He worked harder to get involved in play than he had during an at-times sulky looking first half.

Richmond had indeed looked more up for the fight as soon as the third quarter began, booting three of the first four goals of the term. Yet even then the Bulldogs remained resistant. Ty Vickery and substitute Nathan Gordon, on to replace the concussed Nick Vlastuin, brought the gap back to less than five goals. But from the next bounce, the Bulldogs went forward for Macrae to mark practically unopposed. If the Tigers' tyres suddenly had a little more air, that would have deflated them again.

Riewoldt created much of the spark that had been sorely missing for the much of the afternoon for the yellow-and-black. Two goals after strong marks late in the third term brought the Tigers back within striking range. The first of the last quarter reduced the gap to single figures. And his fourth, from right on the 50 with only minutes remaining, just about brought house down.

But having last week itself headed off an opponent after playing pacemaker for much of a game, this time Richmond found itself in the comeback position, and unfortunately for the Tigers, with a similar result for those cast in the respective roles.

The Western Bulldogs, in contrast, might have been cast for some time as one of the AFL's "can't buy a trick" teams had this one slipped away. One critical goal to a Bulldog favourite, and the script suddenly looks a lot different.

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/western-bulldogs-hold-off-richmond-to-record-first-win-of-2014-20140405-zqr82.html#ixzz2y14tn54l

Offline one-eyed

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Team effort from Bulldogs enough to squeeze past patchy Richmond (H-Sun)
« Reply #6 on: April 06, 2014, 12:04:58 AM »
Team effort from Western Bulldogs enough to squeeze past patchy Richmond
Herald-Sun
April 06, 2014


IN THE end an even team contribution triumphed over spasmodic bursts of individual brilliance as the Western Bulldogs hung on to win by two points over Richmond.

The Western Bulldogs were like favourite son Matthew Boyd; all grunt, intensity, constant motion and a determination to put the team first.

Richmond, on the other hand, produced a performance a bit like its enigmatic talisman Jack Riewoldt: surges of inspiration punctuating an otherwise lacklustre afternoon.

Riewoldt did not touch the ball in the first quarter and began the second term on the bench explaining his concerns down the phone. His first disposal only came late in the first half when he went in search of the footy in Richmond’s backline.

But he was at the forefront as the Tigers mounted a charge in the third quarter, setting up a Ty Vickery goal, hauling in a crowd-lifting pack mark and kicking two goals in as many minutes. He finished the match with four goals and flicked out a handball late in the match that nearly led to the match-winning goal.

But he, like most of the other Tigers, did not do enough across the four quarters.

Richmond had very few players who could put their hand up for having contributed throughout.

Skipper Trent Cotchin was in everything, winning countless clearances, his only blemish being his wastefulness in attack, missing several shots and at times looking for short passes when he could have taken the shot himself.

Otherwise, only the blue-collar brigade such as midfielder Matt Thomas, defender Steven Morris and third-string ruckman Orren Stephenson battled throughout.

In contrast, the Bulldogs had solid contributors everywhere.

They opted to go man on man from the first bounce, conscious that the Tigers could do some damage if they could get the ball into open space.

Yet it was the Dogs who looked prepared to do the hard work and off-the-ball running to create opportunities, while Richmond was unimaginative and reactive.

The Dogs set up their forward half in a way that created open space for their forwards to lead back towards goal. Three of their first five goals came through the strategy, notably when Stewart Crameri drove a 50-metre pass to Adam Cooney running into an open goal.

The often-maligned Dogs forward line worked efficiently, with Crameri, Liam Jones and Jake Stringer all looking threatening at times and Daniel Giansiracusa playing his usual handy cameo when he came on three-quarter time.

The Dogs’ senior players helped set the tone: Boyd and Tom Liberatore were at the bottom of every pack, Adam Cooney and Ryan Griffen used their pace to try to break lines, while Robert Murphy gave the Dogs great drive from the back half.

But the more pleasing aspect of the win was the contribution of the pups. Jackson Macrae won plenty of the ball and his disposals were polished and damaging.

Lin Jong worked hard, countering Dan Jackson and Shaun Grigg and chipping in with two running goals, while Lachy Hunter made several telling little contributions throughout.

Most concerning for coach Brendan McCartney would be that the Dogs again allowed the opposition into the match with a lapse of concentration.

Leading by 34 points late in the third term, the Dogs should have closed out the match.

Instead, they allowed Richmond to rally and when Riewoldt kicked his fourth goal in the dying minutes of the match, Richmond led for the first time since kicking the opening goal of the match.

Yet these Bulldogs are made of stern stuff, and they dug deep to get the ball to a stoppage at centre-half forward.

Vickery gave away a ridiculous free kick in the ruck contest and Liberatore used the advantage call to hook a left-foot snap to the goalsquare where super-sub Giansiracusa was one-out with Brandon Ellis.

The Dogs veteran declined to take possession and drew a smart free kick for holding the man. His goal from 20 metres sealed the win.


VOTES

3. Trent Cotchin (Rich)

2. Jackson Macrae (WB)

1. Matthew Boyd (WB)

BEST

RICH: Cotchin, Morris, Thomas, Riewoldt, Stephenson, Conca.

WB: Macrae, Boyd, Murphy, Liberatore, Dalhaus, Crameri, Jones, Cooney.

http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/team-effort-from-western-bulldogs-enough-to-squeeze-past-patchy-richmond/story-fnelctok-1226875528125