Author Topic: Media articles and Stats: Tigers slump to sixth loss  (Read 648 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and Stats: Tigers slump to sixth loss
« on: May 17, 2014, 06:14:57 PM »
Tigers slump to sixth loss
Kristian Pisano 
May 17, 2014 5:43 PM



RICHMOND      2.3   4.8   6.16   9.20 (74)
MELBOURNE    1.3   4.5   9.6    14.7 (91)

GOALS
Richmond: Lennon 2, Edwards 2, Jackson, Riewoldt, Martin, Lloyd, Cotchin
Melbourne: Watts 3, Tyson 2, Pedersen 2, N. Jones, M. Jones, Riley, Dawes, Viney, Vince, Kennedy-Harris
 
BEST
Richmond: Martin, Deledio, Jackson, Cotchin
Melbourne: Tyson, N. Jones, Pedersen, Viney, Dawes, Howe, Watts
 
INJURIES
Richmond: Astbury (left knee), Cotchin (ankle)
Melbourne: Neville Jetta (Gastro) replaced in selected side by Jimmy Toumpas.
 
SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Shaun Hampson replaced by Ben Lennon in the third quarter
Melbourne: Aidan Riley replaced by Jay Kennedy-Harris in the third quarter
 
Reports: Nil
Umpires: Fisher, Nicholls, Ryan
Official crowd: 56,960 at the MCG

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

Richmond has lost its sixth game of the season, against Melbourne in front of 56,910 fans at the MCG.

In a tight, contested battle for much of the game, the Tigers failed to make the most of their opportunities in front of goal, kicking 9.20 for the day, compared to the Demons’ 14.7.

The biggest margin of the day was the final one (17 points), with no team able to maintain a consistent run of momentum.

David Astbury went down with a knee injury in the third term when he tried to shift his balance in a tackling attempt, with scans to determine the extent of the injury.

In his first game for the Tigers, Ben Lennon provided some much needed spark up forward, when he came on as the substitute in the third quarter, kicking two goals (including one with his first kick), collecting eight disposals, and showing good defensive pressure inside 50.

Dustin Martin was the Tigers’ best player all day running through the midfield, amassing 31 disposals, seven clearances, six inside 50s, and one goal.

Shane Edwards tried valiantly up forward all afternoon, kicking two goals and laying six tackles.

Jack Riewoldt and Ben Griffiths combined for 1.6 and eight marks between them, in what was a tough day for the forwards of both teams.

Daniel Jackson continued his consistent season with 30 disposals and five clearances, while Trent Cotchin worked hard in an enthralling head-to-head battle with Nathan Jones, collecting 26 disposals and laying six tackles, despite carrying an ankle injury.

The Tigers face the GWS Giants next Saturday afternoon at Spotless Stadium.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2014-05-17/tigers-slump-to-sixth-loss

Offline one-eyed

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Melbourne produces excellent second-half to defeat flat Richmond at MCG as Tom Hafey is farewelled
Herald-Sun
May 17, 2014


THE Tigers of old? Not even the Tigers of last year.

On a day of enormous significance for Richmond, a legend was farewelled with the sort of celebration that evoked memories of this club’s premiership-laden glory days.

Yet none of it could snap the Tigers out of a season that is now officially in crisis.

We’re not sure whether Tom Hafey used the phrase ‘Bad kicking is bad football’, but Richmond yesterday kicked its year away against a spirited Melbourne at the MCG yesterday.

The final score was Melbourne’s 14.7 (91) to Richmond’s 9.20 (74). That’s eight more scoring shots for the Tiges from nine more inside 50s.

If you’re a Richmond supporter, you’re as flat as the new Punt Road Oval surface. The Tigers chopped the ball up by foot and hand, missed a sickening amount of easy chances and then suffered bad luck as injuries struck in the second half.

Richmond face the press after a 'disappointing' loss to Melbourne

But throughout all of that they were beaten badly in contested ball, both on the ground — 138-122 — and in the air, where Melbourne took a staggering 19 contested marks to nine. The Tigers were also smashed in clearances 41-32.

This is a Richmond side who won 15 games last year to finish 5th. Barely nine months on they look good for 15th.

The disintegration of the Tigers has to be one of the most intriguing stories of the year. The problems are slapping the hierarchy in the face, yet no one knows how to fix it.

Damien Hardwick was emotional last night to the point where he was holding back tears. He has been repeating himself for six weeks, but you got the feeling yesterday was the tipping point.

Something has to give. Maybe, as captain Trent Cotchin suggested in the rooms, players need to be “put on notice”.

A game bogged down in trench warfare in the first half — 14 ball-ups and five throw-ins in the first 13 minutes — exploded to life in the second.

Yes, Richmond sprayed the ball in front of goal, but they were out-hunted and out-worked by a Melbourne side that has long been a laughing stock of the competition.

Most significantly, Richmond simply can’t rebound anymore.

Brandon Ellis ran around in circles at half-back and then chipped it 8m to a contest, Bachar Houli dropped an easy mark when his side were away and Dustin Martin put one out on the full sprinting forward.

The silky ball movement has turned into sand paper.

What has happened to Ty Vickery? Steve Morris doesn’t look to have the same hunger, which hurts because he’s never going to be a big ball winner.

Jack Riewoldt had his colours lowered by Tom McDonald, Reece Conca isn’t having an influence and Troy Chaplin had one of those games that pose questions on his longevity.

At the end of it all, a gaping wound was salted by a serious injury to David Astbury, with the luckless defending dislocating his other knee cap when he was wrong-footed by Jack Viney.

Cotchin, who battled through an ankle injury Hardwick said should have sidelined him after quarter-time, was matter-of-fact.

“Look, I just think we wasted a lot of opportunities but the reality is we lost the game and it’s back to the drawing board,” Cotchin said.

“We’ve only won two games this year and we’ve got a lot of work to do. I wouldn’t say we’re shocked, it’s disappointing and we’re not hiding away from that.”

Players and fans of the Melbourne and Richmond football clubs have remembered the life of legendary AFL figure Tom Hafey who died ages 82 last week.

Cotchin was kept in check by the super impressive Nathan Jones, who willed himself to 13 last quarter possessions in a haul of 33 to see his side home.

The future of Melbourne — Dom Tyson and Jack Viney — were immense, while Jack Watts had 10 disposals, four marks and kicked two goals in the last 30 minutes.

The Demons’ much-maligned big men feasted on the high ball. Cameron Pedersen, Jeremy Howe and Max Gawn took 11 contested grabs between them.

Pedersen produced a blinder in the absence of James Frawley. He and Chris Dawes laid a combined 16 tackles.

It was the sort of hunger Hardwick is screaming out for.

http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/melbourne-produces-excellent-secondhalf-to-defeat-flat-richmond-at-mcg-as-tom-hafey-is-farewelled/story-fnelctok-1226921199697

Offline one-eyed

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Melbourne posts gutsy AFL win over wasteful Richmond (Age)
« Reply #2 on: May 17, 2014, 08:09:14 PM »
Melbourne posts gutsy AFL win over wasteful Richmond
  Peter Hanlon
    The Age
    May 17, 2014 - 6:43PM


MELBOURNE 1.3  4.5  9.6  14.7 (91)
RICHMOND 2.3  4.8  6.16  9.20 (74)

Goals:
Melbourne: J Watts 3 C Pedersen 2 D Tyson 2 A Riley B Vince C Dawes J Kennedy-Harris J Viney M Jones N Jones.
Richmond: B Lennon 2 S Edwards 2 D Jackson D Martin J Riewoldt S Lloyd T Cotchin.

Umpires: Ben Ryan, Mathew Nicholls, Leigh Fisher.
Official Crowd: 56,910 at MCG.

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

Jack Watts has fronted post-game inquisitions and kept his chin up in some solemn and gloomy changerooms through his five-and-a-bit seasons as a Demon, so deserved to air his take on happier times.

"I think in the past we've thought that individually we had to do something special to win a game of AFL footy," Watts said after Saturday's collegiate win. "Whereas if every player just plays his role when it's his turn to go, that's when you win games of footy."

Even with the mandatory modern leaning on "the process", it summed up where the Demons were better than Richmond, and are getting better in general.

Nathan Jones went head-to-head with Trent Cotchin, having done so this season with Marc Murphy and Gary Ablett. His cause was helped by an ankle injury to the Tigers' captain, yet he kept churning away for the team good. Jones' 13 last-quarter possessions were back-breaking for an ailing opponent.

Up forward, Chris Dawes and Cameron Pedersen laid eight tackles each – Dawes in what his coach Paul Roos said wasn't a great personal game, but one in which he was his team's general, while Pedersen won the one-on-one contests that Damien Hardwick would rue as being key to the result.

"That's a great stat for two of our big boys to have 16 tackles between them," Watts said, noting the emphasis Roos has placed on his forwards "rolling up" to close off the corridor.

Max Gawn and Mark Jamar pushed forward to stretch an opposition defence that lost David Astbury in the third quarter, was already under pressure and thereafter couldn't hold back the tide. Jack Grimes went to a rampant Dustin Martin and matched him for output, Dom Tyson and Jack Viney played like the on-ballers on the rise that they undoubtedly are.

Jeremy Howe's reading of the incoming ball was a highlight, launching himself skyward and plucking marks deep in defence that were as thrilling as those in his earlier incarnation as a leaping forward. With Richmond still clinging on, he loped through a vacant middle and speared a pass to Jay Kennedy-Harris that gave the Demons a game-high 16-point lead that made safe a win of merit.

"That's the beautiful thing about Howey down back, when he flies for those marks ... as a forward you can see he's going to elevate and take a mark from an oppo kick, we can read it and go bang out to the other side," Watts said. "It gives us a lot of predictability as a team. He's embraced that role, he's playing fantastically well."

The gods were supposed to be with the Tigers but they were on the wrong end of some head-banging moments. Nathan Jones, with the game's first, and Tyson  both kicked goals with the help of ripping leg-break bounces. When Watts blasted a floating, wobbling mongrel punt to full-forward, it landed in Aiden Riley's lap surrounded by three Tigers.

Every Richmond miss amplified the drums of doom. Through the game's middle quarters they kicked 2.5 and 2.6. Shaun Grigg fluffed three gettable shots in open play in little more than five minutes either side of half-time; Ben Griffiths can kick it a country mile, but Tiger fans yearned for him to simply kick it straight; he too kicked three behinds.

Hardwick admitted to erring in subbing out Shaun Hampson just after the long break. Even though his replacement Ben Lennon had joined the goal-from-first-kick club before the scoreboard even announced his arrival,  Astbury's knee collapsing soon after as Viney sold him a most painful dummy left his team a rotation down.

Cotchin was having treatment in the rooms at the time, and had to pull his boot back on and wince back into battle. Not surprisingly, his coach wished he had more than one of him.

A tone of sorts was set in the opening minute when Reece Conca hesitated inside his defensive arc and Dawes mowed him down, dispossessing the Tiger with a seemingly perfect tackle. No free was paid – then, or for the next 17 minutes.

Finally the first infringement of the game was spotted when Gawn really was gone, but only eight frees were paid to half-time, building to 24 for the afternoon. Holding the ball, in particular, seemed to have been a silent victim of Joe Hockey's federal budget.

Watts' third goal – screwed around the body after positioning himself perfectly at the drop of the ball – illustrated perfectly Roos' assessment that his players are learning where to be for each and every contest. Beaming, Watts summed it up. "This is what footy's about, isn't it?"

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/melbourne-posts-gutsy-afl-win-over-wasteful-richmond-20140517-zrfyr.html#ixzz31xxW1BEk

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers slump to sixth loss
« Reply #3 on: May 17, 2014, 08:30:40 PM »

BEST
Richmond: Martin, Deledio, Jackson, Cotchin


Was I at the same game? Thought Lids struggled most of the day. Looked like he was having problems with that bloody Achilles
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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers slump to sixth loss
« Reply #4 on: May 17, 2014, 08:35:23 PM »

BEST
Richmond: Martin, Deledio, Jackson, Cotchin


Was at the same game? Thought Lids struggled most of the day. Looked like he was having problems with that bloody Achilles

Thought he was terrible quite frankly. Would not have made a difference if he was suspended TBH.
But till it is mathematically impossible for us to make finals we'll play him even if it means him snapping his Achilles. Whatever comes first.

Offline Golfprotiger

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Re: Media articles and Stats: Tigers slump to sixth loss
« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2014, 08:37:30 PM »

BEST
Richmond: Martin, Deledio, Jackson, Cotchin


Was at the same game? Thought Lids struggled most of the day. Looked like he was having problems with that bloody Achilles

Did Lids play........
Tommy Hafey - "There's nothing more tiger-ish than a bloody tiger, a wounded tiger''