Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Slow-starting Tigers find top gear to down Hawks  (Read 963 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Slow-starting Tigers find top gear to down Hawks

Ben Guthrie
afl.com.au
Mar 9, 2019 10:07PM


HAWTHORN   5.0       9.5       11.7     13.9 (87)
RICHMOND     2.3       2.7       9.8       14.11 (95)

GOALS
Hawthorn: Roughead 5, Breust, Henderson, Scrimshaw, Burgoyne, Shiels, O'Meara, Worpel, Smith
Richmond: Riewoldt 3, Higgins 3, Cotchin 2, Weller 2, Butler 2, Nankervis, Balta

BEST
Hawthorn: O'Meara, Roughead, Worpel, Shiels, Breust, Cousins
Richmond: Cotchin, Martin, Higgins, Prestia, Graham

INJURIES
Hawthorn: Brand (right ankle)
Richmond: Grimes (corked glute)

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Fleer, Donlon, Whetton

Official crowd: 6982 at University of Tasmania Stadium (Launceston)

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

RICHMOND captain Trent Cotchin has sparked a sensational second-half comeback, the Tigers coming from 40 points down at half-time to claim an eight-point victory over Hawthorn at University of Tasmania Stadium on Saturday night.

Cotchin booted two goals with less than five minutes left in the contest, the second – a shot on the run from 50m out of a centre clearance – providing a great example of how the 6-6-6 starting positions could impact in the dying stages of matches in 2019.

The Tigers kicked 12 goals after half time to flip the game on its head, seizing a 14.11 (95) to 13.9 (87) victory in Launceston.

Cotchin was outstanding when the game was up for grabs in the last five minutes, gathering 10 touches and kicking two goals in the final term to lead his team to an exciting JLT Community Series win.

That result looked extremely unlikely at the major break with Richmond's lack of pressure around the contest and its uncharacteristic errors by foot in the first half nowhere near resembling its trademark brand of football.

The Hawks were far and away the better unit in the first half, with Jaeger O'Meara (35 touches) doing as he pleased, as young tyro James Worpel (24 disposals, 13 contested, nine clearances and eight inside 50s) again stepped up in the absence of the injured Tom Mitchell.

Jarryd Roughead played with energy and looked unencumbered in attack as he snagged five goals, while Luke Breust, despite being wayward in front of goal, looked sharp in his first hit-out for the pre-season.

The Hawks though could not slow Richmond's momentum as it slammed on seven goals to two in the third term to cut the margin to 10 points late in the quarter and give itself a chance at completing the comeback.

Another concern for Hawthorn was the gut punch delivered by Liam Shiels on Jack Graham in the third term which could come under scrutiny from the Match Review Officer.

The Tigers lifted their intent and want for the contest in the second half with Dustin Martin (30 disposals and 10 clearances) and Jack Higgins (19 disposals, 10 contested, three goals) vital to the comeback.

Jack Riewoldt was another key beneficiary with the forward booting three goals and taking three marks inside 50 for the contest, while Dan Butler was another Tiger who worked into the game.

What we learned

Hawthorn: The influence of Worpel and fellow youngster James Cousins will be pivotal in the Hawks covering injured midfielder Tom Mitchell this season. Worpel is a prime breakout candidate, but Cousins (21 disposals and five clearances) was also impressive with his poise and smarts in traffic.

Richmond: Richmond's game style is still predicated on ferocious forward pressure. The Hawks were all over the Tigers early in the contest, but Damien Hardwick's side lifted its rating in the second half. It went back to basics and started winning contested ball and putting heat on the opposition. When the Tigers do that consistently, they are one of the best teams in the AFL.

New faces

Hawthorn:
With Grant Birchall still injured, former Sun Jack Scrimshaw was a solid performer. Scrimshaw had 12 disposals in the first term and four marks, before fading out of the game. Mitch Lewis also looked promising, especially his attack on the footy in the air.

Richmond: Noah Balta found the going a bit tougher in his second JLT outing after starring against Melbourne last weekend. The athletic big man – in contention for round one – kicked a goal but had just seven disposals. Jack Ross also had seven touches, while ex-Saint Maverick Weller came on in the second half and had an impact with two goals.

Next up


Richmond opens the 2019 AFL premiership season with its now annual Thursday night clash with Carlton on March 21. The Hawks will travel to Adelaide Oval to face Adelaide, which went unbeaten through the JLT Community Series, on March 23.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/2019-03-09/match-report-hawthorn-v-richmond
« Last Edit: March 10, 2019, 12:34:41 AM by one-eyed »

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers, Hawks face anxious wait

James Bresnehan, Ben Broad,
Herald Sun
10 March 2019


A two-pronged “Jack Attack” boosted Richmond to a come-from-behind win over Hawthorn in an eight-point JLT thriller in Launceston last night but both sides are in danger of losing players for round one — Hawk Liam Shiels for striking and Tiger Nick Vlastuin with a jarred knee.

Jack Higgins and Jack Riewoldt kicked six goals between them to help dig the Tigers out of a huge hole at half-time and claim the round two contest.

The Tigers kicked 12 of the last 15 goals to come from 40 points down at the long break to take a 14.11 (95) to 13.9 (87) win.

COMETH THE MOMENT, COMETH THE COTCH

After the Hawks cruised to a big lead at the main break Cotchin, speaking on Fox Footy, acknowledged his side had copped a bath in the opening two quarters — and intended on doing something about it.

The premiership skipper was among the main players to get things back on his side’s terms, winning the hard balls before finally putting his side in front with five minutes remaining.

From the ensuing centre break, the Tigers nabbed a prized clean getaway — even more valuable under the new 6-6-6 rules — and Jack Graham’s handball found the captain who with one of his 10 final-quarter touches drilled another from 50m.

The game had gone up a notch, and Cotchin’s goal all but sealed it.


TWO WEEKS TO LOSE THAT RUST


Alex Rance chipping to an unmarked opponent 30m out? Unheard of.

Jayden Short missing a target by 20m to gift a Hawks goal? Get over yourself.

No, that did happen as the Tigers’ kicking skills showed there’s plenty to work on before the season opener against Carlton.

Richmond wasn’t alone in committing some forgettable skill errors.

The Hawks also had a couple of notable clangers but one thing’s for certain: with the solid running sessions of pre-season now well behind them, both sides will use the next fortnight to iron out that rust.



RICHMOND 14.11 (95)

HAWTHORN 13.9 (87)

Goals: Richmond: J Higgins 3 J Riewoldt 3 D Butler 2 M Weller 2 T Cotchin 2 N Balta T Nankervis

Hawthorn: J Roughead 5 I Smith J O’Meara J Scrimshaw J Worpel L BreustL Shiels R Henderson S Burgoyne

Best: Richmond: Cotchin, Higgins, Martin, Graham, Prestia

Hawthorn: O’Meara, Roughead, Shiels, Breust, Impey, Worpel

Umpires: Chris Donlon, Craig Fleer, Eleni Glouftsis, Alex Whetton.

Official Crowd: 6,982

Venue: University of Tasmania Stadium

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/more-news/trent-cotchin-helps-richmond-scrape-past-hawthorn-in-jlt-series-clash-in-launceston/news-story/772f833b1733d04feab533a461ad315d

Offline Tiger Khosh

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Thought Rance was in our bests

Offline georgies31

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Rance needs to lift up the gear from last season said it before
needs to defend first then attack and we need to free him up from taking the big monster forwards.

Offline Hard Roar Tiger

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Thought Rance was in our bests

Did some stupid poo last night but overall has looked imperious in both praccy matches
“I find it nearly impossible to make those judgments, but he is certainly up there with the really important ones, he is certainly up there with the Francis Bourkes and the Royce Harts and the Kevin Bartlett and the Kevin Sheedys, there is no doubt about that,” Balme said.