Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers' Dreamtime redemption  (Read 815 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Tigers' Dreamtime redemption
« on: May 27, 2017, 11:50:15 PM »
Match report: Tigers' Dreamtime redemption

afl site
27 May 2017


RICHMOND has hung on in a thriller in front of a record home and away Saturday night crowd of 85,656 in the Dreamtime at the 'G game, defeating Essendon by 15 points.

A goal to Tigers ruckman Toby Nankervis with less than two minutes to go put the result beyond doubt, although the crushing last-minute defeats of the past three rounds would still have been at the front of mind for anyone in yellow and black.

Even the most pessimistic Tigers fans would have dared to think the game was won at that point after a pulsating contest that saw the lead change nine times in the first three quarters.

In the end Richmond's 71-42 inside 50s and superior forward pressure was enough to give them the win 11.15 (81) to Essendon 10.6 (66).

Essendon jumped the Tigers to kick the first three goals in the opening six minutes, but Richmond began to work its way back into the contest from midway through the first quarter when it gained the lead for the first time.

The game then settled into an arm-wrestle with the Tigers missing set shots but winning the territory battle, while the Bombers made the most of their chances inside 50.

Jack Riewoldt was a serial offender in front of goal, uncharacteristically missing two easy set shots in the second and third quarter, reflecting the struggle Richmond was having in converting.

However, when the moment arrived midway through the final term with scores level, Riewoldt kicked a drop punt goal from the 50-metre mark after a brilliant don't argue from Trent Cotchin started the passage of play across half back.

Dustin Martin was outstanding all night, finishing with 30 touches and winning the Yiooken Award for best afield, while Essendon's Dyson Heppell, Brendon Goddard and Zach Merrett were prolific in bursts but could not sustain their effort for four quarters.

The Tigers would have been most upset if they had lost by less than a goal for the fourth game in succession after a controversial free kick was paid against Jayden Short for a deliberate rushed behind right on half-time.

As usual, Tigers full back Alex Rance was harder to get through than barbed wire, thrashing Cale Hooker in the first half before turning his mind to defeating a red hot Joe Daniher.

Daniher had 11 touches and three goals in the first half but just six touches and no goals  in the second and was largely ineffective.

Essendon small forwards were also quiet with Green, Orazio Fantasia and Anthony McDonald-Tipungwuti kicking just two goals between them.

By contrast Richmond put enormous amounts of forward pressure on and benefited from great cameos by second-game player Shai Bolton, with Jason Castagna, Bolton and Daniel Rioli laying 14 tackles between them.

MEDICAL ROOM

Essendon: TBC
Richmond: TBC

NEXT UP

Richmond plays North Melbourne at Etihad Stadium on Saturday night in a crucial match-up, while Essendon takes on Greater Western Sydney in a twilight Saturday match to keep their finals hopes on track.


RICHMOND   4.4   6.9   9.12   11.15 (81)
ESSENDON   6.0   8.1   10.3     10.6 (66)

GOALS
Richmond: Riewoldt 2, Edwards 2, Caddy 2, Lloyd, Elton, Martin, Ellis, Nankervis
Essendon: Daniher 3, Goddard 2, Fantasia, Heppell, Green, Stewart, Zaharakis

BEST
Richmond: Martin, Ellis, Rance, Cotchin, Houli, Nankervis, Grigg
Essendon: Zaharakis, Goddard, Hurley, McGrath, Parish, Watson

INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
Essendon: Nil

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Dalgleish, Stevic, Deboy

Official crowd: 85,656 at the MCG

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers' Dreamtime redemption
« Reply #1 on: May 28, 2017, 12:01:50 AM »
Five talking points: Richmond v Essendon

afl.com.au
28 May 2017


1. Was Richmond Short-changed in controversial deliberate rushed behind ruling?
Just before half-time the full, roaring ire of the Tiger faithful shook the MCG after an umpiring decision that is certain to be hotly debated. Bomber James Stewart bombed long to a vacant goalsquare, where the ball stopped dead little more than a metre out, and Tiger Jayden Short beat Josh Green to the ball before knocking it through. The resultant free kick gifted Green the easiest of goals, putting the Dons four points clear against the flow of play, to howls of protest from the yellow-and-black army. We await the post-mortems with interest. It must be said that Stewart could have avoided the whole issue by handballing to speedster Anthony McDonald-Tipungwuti, who might well have run the ball in to point-blank range. On that front, thankfully the Tigers got up.

2. Dusty's value continues to rise
Just days after Essendon confirmed its interest in Richmond superstar Dustin Martin as a restricted free agent at season's end, the bullocking midfielder enhanced his value with another brilliant performance against the Bombers. Last year Martin received a maximum six Brownlow votes in two outings against Essendon, and he appears to have another three in the bag after receiving the Yiooken Award for being best-afield. Martin gathered 30 possessions (13 contested), six clearances, seven tackles and a goal. His supreme effort and composure finally lifted the Tigers to a win in a close one.

3. Daniher versus Rance

The dream match-up of the Dreamtime blockbuster didn't quite eventuate – with Tigers defender Alex Rance generally obliterating Cale Hooker, and Bombers key forward Joe Daniher predominantly being opposed to David Astbury – but we were still treated to some fascinating contests between the star duo. The in-form Daniher had three goals on the board by the 10-minute mark of the second term, prompting Rance to troubleshoot on him at various stages. Most notably, they had an epic duel in the Essendon goalsquare early in the last quarter, with Daniher flying high from behind and Rance also attempting to mark. Both players got good purchase on the ball but the umpire called a ball-up, deciding against awarding the ball to the man in front.

4. Jittery Jack finds something late
Tigers spearhead Jack Riewoldt is one of the most clinical exponents of the set shot, as he showed late in the first term, so it was a shock to see the normally ice-cool forward fluff two elementary chances either side of half-time. Late in the second term Riewoldt had a chance to level the scores but hooked badly from 35m; and early in the third quarter, after a change of footwear, he could have put the Tigers eight points up but again missed to the left, this time from directly in front, just 20m out. Then minutes later, a bad bounce robbed Riewoldt of a miraculous goal off his left foot while lying on his back. Just when it appeared it just wasn't his night, Riewoldt put the Tigers six points up when he nailed a set shot from 50m midway through the final term. Richmond wasn't headed thereafter.


5. Tigers absorb early Bomber blitz

When a razor-sharp Essendon flew out of the blocks with the first three goals inside the opening six minutes, it seemed Richmond's three successive heartbreaking losses had finally taken their toll. The game soon took on a completely different complexion, however, as the Tigers lifted their work-rate and the Bombers started to miss targets. Richmond kicked the next three goals before Essendon responded with three of the next four to lead by eight points at the first change, with Brendon Goddard on fire with 13 touches and two goals.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2017-05-27/five-talking-points-richmond-v-essendon

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond end late-game curse with Dreamtime win over Essendon (H-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: May 28, 2017, 03:11:21 AM »
Richmond end late-game curse with Dreamtime at the ‘G win over Essendon at the MCG

RUSSELL GOULD,
Herald Sun
28 May 2017


CALL it a sliding paws moment.

Recent history hasn’t been kind to Richmond. An overturned match-winning goal too just last week.

Scratchy in close games they say.

So they arrived at the MCG facing a scenario which, without being season defining, had significance.

Edge of the top four with a win, or out of the eight with a loss.

But for 10 points across the past three games, the Tigers could have been on top of the ladder. So out of the eight? No thanks.

If not for bad kicking at goal in the second quarter at the packed MCG, the Tigers could have been well on top of Essendon too.
Jack Riewoldt kicked a crucial goal in the fourth quarter. Picture: Wayne Ludbey

The Tigers had 15 shots to the Bombers seven, had lapped them in inside 50s, were cleaner through the middle of the ground, and had more options up forward in a moving, mix-match attacking set up.

But the bad outdid the good, it was 6.9 to 8.1.

Essendon kicked six opening-quarter goals, two to Brendon Goddard who was operating on the wing and in the midfield, a rising Dyson Heppell also getting his hands on the footy.

But the Bombers had a disconnect up forward as the game progressed. If you could still sub someone out mid-game, Cale Hooker could have found himself in a green vest at half-time.

In a game of frequent lead changes, the Tigers looked to have them covered, but only just on the scoreboard, and then it came.

There was seconds remaining before half-time, the momentum with Richmond.

The Bombers burst through the middle of the ground. James Stewart, quiet in a forward line functioning mainly on the efforts of Joe Daniher, found himself in open ground.

He looked up, and no-one was in front of him. It was 70m of vacant MCG grass. So, with teammates getting to top speed at his left and right, Stewart hoofed it.

It went long and straight before checking in the square, spinning back on itself.

Tiger Jayden Short was on to it first. He’d raced after it, with Bomber Josh Green trying to get past him, on his tail the whole way.

Unable to slow down Short went to ground, slid from the top of the square, and sent the ball careering over the goal line.

Short didn’t know Green had stopped chasing hard. Short didn’t know he was the only one in the square.

Short didn’t see the umpire standing near the point post to his right, who, as the crowd arched forward, Tiger fans thankful, Bombers otherwise, blew his whistle.

Umpire Curtis Deboy told Short he thought it was deliberate. It was of course, the young Tiger was only ever going to do one thing.

But was this too deliberate?

Green took the free kick, kicked the goal and put the Bombers in front by four points at the main break. A potential momentum shifter in a tight game.

There’s not quite a word to encapsulate the sheer, unadulterated anger that then enveloped the MCG.

It was a Richmond home game, and a crowd of 86,656 was dominated by Tiger fans. You can imagine.

It could have broken the Tigers. Not a-bloody-gain.

But it was only half time. And it didn’t.

Josh Caddy, prominent but wayward, found a goal early in the third term to give his team the lead. Then Dusty Martin, going as he does again, got another, then Branden Ellis.

It was the third lead change of the term, but the Tigers were in front, unbowed by that wicked pre-break hand of fate.

Essendon was never far away, creeping forward time and again, and time and again breaking down, by hand and foot. Quality didn’t match Bomber effort.

But Richmond was in front going in to the final term, the goal from Ellis did it.

Scores were level in the last, it rained, got messy, but the Tigers still looked better.

Then Jack Riewoldt stepped up. He nailed the first goal of the final term when it mattered most.

VOTES


3. Dustin Martin

2. Branden Ellis

1. Dyson Heppell

BEST


Richmond: D.Martin, B.Ellis, T.Cotchin, A.Rance, B.Houli, S.Edwards

Essendon: D.Heppell, B.Goddard, M.Hurley, D.Parish, Z.Merrett, A.McGrath

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/more-news/richmond-end-lategame-curse-with-dreamtime-at-the-g-win-over-essendon-at-the-mcg/news-story/273c9dbdd170a7daaf3ed7745dcaf627

Offline one-eyed

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This time, Tigers DO get there in the end (Age)
« Reply #3 on: May 28, 2017, 03:13:27 AM »
This time, Tigers DO get there in the end

Rohan Connolly
The Age
28 May 2017


RICHMOND 4.4 6.9 9.12 11.15 (81)
ESSENDON 6.0 8.1 10.3 10.6 (66)

GOALS:
Richmond: Caddy 2, Riewoldt 2, Edwards 2, Ellis, Martin, Lloyd, Elton, Nankervis.
Essendon: Daniher 3, Goddard 2, Heppell, Zaharakis, Green, Stewart, Fantasia.

BEST: 
Richmond: Martin, Cotchin, Rance, Ellis, Edwards, Houli.
Essendon: Zaharakis, Goddard, Heppell, McGrath, Parish, Dea.

UMPIRES: Matt Stevic, Jeff Dalgleish, Curtis Deboy.
CROWD: 85,656 at MCG.

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

You can only take so much as a supporter, and no fan deserves to be put through what Richmond fans spent the last quarter on Saturday night grappling with.

And that was the prospect of, after three losses by less than a goal, potentially a fourth, this one after having dominated the Dreamtime game against Essendon everywhere but the scoreboard for the best part of three quarters.

Richmond had more of the better players on the ground. It certainly had the better of time in the forward half, the final inside 50 count a very lopsided 71-42.

What it didn't have, until big man Toby Nankervis slotted only the second goal of the last quarter with just one minute and 50 seconds left on the clock, was a winning break. No wonder the roar which greeted his long bomb smacked as much of relief as jubilation. It had been some struggle.

In front of a massive crowd of 85,656, the biggest for one of these annual blockbusters, this was a game which started in fourth gear, no "getting to know you's" necessary, though early on it was Essendon doing all the talking.

The Bombers had the Tigers on the back foot immediately with three goals in under six minutes, Orazio Fantasia snapping the first then putting a pass on Joe Daniher's chest for the second.

After Dyson Heppell nailed Kane Lambert in a tackle and Brendon Goddard pounced on the spoils, it was 18 points the difference and Richmond had only touched the ball 10 times.

But that pattern was as good as reversed for the next 10 as the Tigers suddenly found their line. Sam Lloyd converted from outside 50. Shane Edwards, wearing the No.67 in this Dreamtime game, put through the next. And when Josh Caddy dobbed one from 55 metres, with the ball seemingly locked in Essendon's defensive 50, Richmond were in front.

Cue the next momentum shift, with the Bombers kicking three of the last four goals of the quarter, all in "red time". That little period, however, seemed more of a mirage the longer the second quarter ticked over.

It was Richmond now dominating play at least, the Tigers with 18 forward entries for the second quarter to Essendon's nine. The problem, as in last week's now infamous loss to GWS, however, was not converting that dominance.

For all their superiority in field play, the Tigers still went into half-time trailing after 2.5 for the quarter, a couple of the misses, one of Josh Caddy's and particularly one of Jack Riewoldt's, gettable to say the least.

Richmond had regained the lead after 10 minutes of sustained forward pressure, the Bombers continually forced into hurried disposal and turnovers, Edwards pouncing on one of them for his second goal.

The one-point margin at that stage should have been a bit more, and nervous Tiger fans became angry ones in the last minute before the long break, when they were again on the wrong end of controversy and drama, Jayden Short penalised for a deliberate rushed behind after he'd won a foot race to a ball bouncing in the defensive goalsquare.

His pursuer, Josh Green, had wisely kept his distance, and the five-metre gap between the pair was enough in the umpire's mind to constitute a penalty when Short rushed the ball through his defensive goal.

But if the Bombers were perhaps lucky to be in front come half-time, they were even luckier to only be three points in arrears come the last change. By then, Richmond's edge had in territory had become pronounced enough to warrant a lead more in the order of five or six goals than less than a kick.

Essendon somehow found themselves nine points up midway through the quarter due almost entirely to efficiency.

After David Zaharakis slotted a goal on the run, the Dons had 10.2 on the board from just 27 forward entries. That was a strike rate of around 38 per cent, the normal level somewhere in the low 20s.

Richmond, meanwhile, had gone inside 43 times for seven goals. You didn't need to do the math on that to know the Tigers once again were threatening to blow a golden opportunity.

The inside 50s for the quarter ended up 22-9 Richmond's way. Fortunately, by then, Dustin Martin, later awarded the Yiooken Medal as best on ground, and Brandon Ellis had at least offered some reward for effort and there hovered a sense of inevitability over the result.

Which is sort of how it panned out. Though after what the Tiger army have been through this past month, they'd probably beg to differ.

Votes

Dustin Martin (Rich)  8

Trent Cotchin (Rich) 8

David Zaharakis (Ess) 7

Brendon Goddard (Ess) 7

Alex Rance (Rich) 7

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/richmond-v-essendon-this-time-tigers-do-get-there-in-the-end-20170527-gwena9.html

Offline Yeahright

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers' Dreamtime redemption
« Reply #4 on: May 29, 2017, 06:54:04 PM »
Both players got good purchase on the ball but the umpire called a ball-up, deciding against awarding the ball to the man in front.


So the pissant went against the rules and made a completely different decision and this has been deemed okay?