Author Topic: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL  (Read 34363 times)

Offline georgies31

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #30 on: September 22, 2019, 11:30:38 AM »
First thing is we need to start well cannot afford a poor start again.Take ascendancy were at home get the tigger faithfull up and about and get the games on our terms.Dont let gws settle.There last 2 weeks they have tired in the last quarter big time gws something to take note

Start Martin in the guts and let De Boer go to him and drag him up forward and get him one on one.We need to support Martin.

Offline Rampsation

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #31 on: September 22, 2019, 11:47:02 AM »
We need to be take out deboer legally if posdible. First opportunity somebody gets they should take him out. If its not legal doesnt matter. If someone cops 8 weeks doesnt matter.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #32 on: September 22, 2019, 07:29:31 PM »
It's meant to be fine on GF day. A slight chance of a shower but that's further to the north according to Jane Bunn.


Saturday 28 September

Summary
    Min 9
    Max 18
    Possible shower.
    Possible rainfall: 0 to 0.4 mm
    Chance of any rain: 30%

Melbourne area

Partly cloudy. Slight (30%) chance of a shower. Winds west to southwesterly 15 to 25 km/h.

http://www.bom.gov.au/vic/forecasts/melbourne.shtml

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #33 on: September 22, 2019, 11:36:20 PM »
BARRETT: It's showtime for Dusty's Tigers and Toby's Giants

Damian Barrett
AFL.com.au
Sep 23, 2019


THE CLUB with everything to lose versus the one with nothing to lose.

The club with a 134-year history against the one with just eight years of AFL life.

The club with Dusty versus the one with Toby.

It's not the Grand Final match-up anyone expected, but in so many ways, Richmond-GWS presents as the perfect 2019 finale.

There is intrigue everywhere, even a possibility of a player making his AFL debut. Should the Tigers determine that Jack Graham's popped shoulder is too risky to take into a Grand Final, then Marlion Pickett has mounted a very strong case for inclusion after a six-week VFL stint, culminating with a best-afield performance in the VFL Grand Final on Sunday.

Richmond has been the dominant team of the past three seasons, but a loss in the Grand Final would leave it with just one premiership in that period.

GWS was a Grand Final afterthought as recently as the Saturday afternoon start time of its preliminary final against Collingwood. But one of the most courageous finals wins in VFL/AFL history has convinced the Giants they belong in this weekend's match.

With Greene and Lachie Whitfield to be added to the preliminary final-winning team – Greene after a controversial suspension and Whitfield after emergency appendicitis surgery last week – fresh, top-shelf, worrying-for-Richmond class will be added to the Giants' mix.

It is unlikely Stephen Coniglio will be given medical clearance to return for his first match after a knee injury suffered in round 17. But the Tigers have long known they would be without their best player, Alex Rance, balancing out the injury ledger in this match.

The forward lines of both sides pose massive problems for opponents, Tom Lynch and Jeremy Cameron spearheading the respective line-ups. Both are in sparkling form and were crucial to preliminary finals wins.

Lynch's 61 goals from his 24 matches has helped cover the injury and form issues of Jack Riewoldt (19 goals from 12 matches in 2019).

Giants key defenders in Nick Haynes and Phil Davis have been crucial all season, and their roles on Saturday will shape the result.

Haynes may be the most underrated player in the competition.

Then there's the swagger, the celebrity, the box office of Dusty and Toby.

Martin has been to this day before, resoundingly leading his Tigers to a win against Adelaide in 2017 and winning the Norm Smith Medal.

Greene hasn't, but he was born for this stage. Suspended from the preliminary final after consecutive weeks of roughing up the opposition's best player (Marcus Bontempelli in an elimination final and Lachie Neale in a semi-final), he will almost certainly, in his own smug way – and I'm not using that description as a negative – attempt to get inside the minds of Martin and Trent Cotchin.

In a match full of intrigue, Greene is the AFL's most intriguing player.

And if Dusty is Brad Pitt at the box office, then Toby is Leonardo DiCaprio.

Once Upon A Time At The MCG
… coming to your screens this Saturday.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/2019-09-22/barrett-its-showtime-for-dustys-tigers-and-tobys-giants

Offline Owl

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #34 on: September 23, 2019, 09:28:10 AM »
Brad Pitt from Snatch ill take that, knock that prick right out lol
Lots of people name their swords......

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #35 on: September 23, 2019, 11:39:48 PM »
Estimated attendance
100,024

Opening times of Gates
Public            9.30am
AFL Reserve   9.30am
MCC Reserve  8.00am

Curtain raiser
10.00am-11.50am - NAB U/18 All-Stars

Pre-match schedule
11.55am   Presentation for curtain raiser match
12.15pm   Sprint heats
1.02pm   Teams warm-up
1.26pm   Motorcade and entertainment
2.13pm   Team entry
2.26pm   National anthem
2.30pm   Match commences

Cheer squad locations


Richmond: M3
GWS GIANTS: M33

https://www.mcg.org.au/whats-on/events-calendar/2019/september/2019-afl-grand-final

Offline one-eyed

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Which Tiger gets 'de Boered' - Dusty or Dion? (Age)
« Reply #36 on: September 24, 2019, 03:08:56 AM »
Which Tiger gets 'de Boered' - Dusty or Dion?

Jake Niall
The Age
24 September 2019


In their only encounter this year, Matt de Boer harassed, goaded and negated Dustin Martin to the point that Dusty garnered only 15 disposals, was distracted and then suspended for an off-the-ball strike on the tiresome tagger, as the Giants romped to a 49-point victory.

Given that history of negation and de Boer's subsequent successes on Patrick Dangerfield, Marcus Bontempelli and Scott Pendlebury, the Tigers should be prepared for an encore, and for Dusty to be "de Boered" again in the grand final, albeit the Giants cannot budget for Martin to be as subjugated as in round three.

But if Martin is Richmond's – and arguably the game's – most damaging footballer, there's another midfielder whom Leon Cameron might consider placing in the de Boer crosshairs.

Dion Prestia has never been celebrated like "Dusty" or his skipper Trent Cotchin, nor did his arrival at Punt Rd in the trade period of 2016 have anything like the high-fiving and coverage that accompanied his ex-Gold Coast team mate Tom Lynch, the subject of a fierce competition between the Tigers, Collingwood and Hawthorn.

Prestia, though, has been a stealth star in 2019. Hitherto, understated and underrated, Prestia has been not only Richmond's best performer since the round 14 bye, he's also the highest ranked player in the AFL, according to Champion Data's player ratings, which are said to give a more accurate, calibrated measure of a player's contribution to his team.

Over that period, when the Tigers have won 11 straight, Prestia has led the Tigers in disposals (30.1), contested possessions (12.8) and clearances (6.1).

He's in the top three in several other categories, such as tackles and inside 50s. He will probably vie with Dylan Grimes for Richmond's best and fairest. Prestia's influence against the Cats last Friday rivalled that of Lynch and Bachar Houli, as he booted two crucial goals from 28 telling possessions.

Prestia gets the ball more than any other Tiger, and while he doesn't catch the eye like Martin, one can mount a case that de Boer would help the GWS cause more by an assignment on Prestia than Martin.

The case for playing de Boer on Prestia is buttressed by the fact that Martin spends significant time as a forward. This was most pronounced in the qualifying final against the Brisbane Lions, when Dusty was deployed forward (whether that was Dusty's choice or Damien Hardwick's) and booted six goals from just nine disposals.

Richmond scores more often when kicking to Martin than any other forward. The Tigers are expert in isolating Dusty in genuine one-out contests in which he can beat the defender either in the air (with body-work rather than a high mark), or on the deck. Most midfield taggers are ill-suited to playing as a defender on him.

Leon Cameron, certainly, will be considering this question of opponent for his midfield gadfly. He can make contingency plans, starting de Boer on Martin at centre bounces and then assigning a defender to man him when the superstar is forward.

Prestia would be a straightforward role for de Boer, because he doesn't play as a target forward. He'll remain on the ball for the bulk of the game, much like Pendlebury. De Boer's art of negation is more suited to the midfield than to defence.

Richmond football boss Neil Balme acknowledged that these de Boer scenarios are contemplated and war-gamed, while noting that the choice of opponent for de Boer is a GWS decision.

"If they want to play someone on someone, they'll play someone on someone. And if they play someone on someone, they'll end up playing him on someone else.

"Of course we think about it, we look at and say may happen if, if, if. But again we can't do much about it."

Most teams can't do much about Dustin Martin and, in the selfless de Boer, GWS has a player who has actually made Martin lose his implacable focus on the ball. If Dusty is the obvious target, Prestia's form – and less complicated position – gives the Giants another option.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/who-gets-de-boered-dusty-or-dion-20190923-p52u61.html

Offline one-eyed

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The Tiger that needs “a lot of attention” in Grand Final (SEN)
« Reply #37 on: September 24, 2019, 03:11:11 AM »
The Tiger that needs “a lot of attention” in Grand Final

By SEN
24 Sep 2019


GWS should tag in-form Richmond midfielder Dion Prestia in Saturday’s Grand Final, according to Nick Dal Santo.

The consistent midfielder is having an outstanding season and has further enhanced his credentials this finals series.

Prestia, 26, is averaging 30 disposals, 7.5 clearances, 7.5 tackles and seven inside 50s in September and Dal Santo feels the former Sun is the man the Giants should look to lock down on.

“The one that needs a lot of attention come Saturday afternoon – Dion Prestia,” Dal Santo told SEN Afternoons.

“He should be tagged by Matt de Boer - I would have him ahead of Dusty (Dustin Martin). The last two weeks at centre bounces while Dusty has been in there - they’ve won three as a team and lost 15.

“Three from 18 when Dusty Martin has been at centre square bounces in finals.

“I’d have Aidan Corr on Dustin Martin when he goes forward … De Boer goes to Prestia – the No.1 ranked player in the competition since the bye. He is an absolute jet.”

Richmond is gunning for a second flag in three years when they meet GWS at the MCG in this weekend’s decider.

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2019/09/23/the-tiger-that-needs-a-lot-of-attention-in-grand-final/

Offline Slipper

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #38 on: September 24, 2019, 07:52:06 AM »
What are the rules if the game is a draw?

Extra time?

Is a replay possible?

Offline lamington

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #39 on: September 24, 2019, 08:27:14 AM »
They changed the rules to have extra time which was experienced with port vs eagles a couple or so years ago? So there will be no replay

Offline Slipper

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #40 on: September 24, 2019, 08:31:41 AM »
They changed the rules to have extra time which was experienced with port vs eagles a couple or so years ago? So there will be no replay

Thanks

I wasn't sure if it applied to the GF

Offline georgies31

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #41 on: September 24, 2019, 08:47:07 AM »
We must cut there  midfield supply to there forwards go a long way to winning the match our midfield has to breake even.Pressure and tackling wave from forwards and midfield has to strong, pies last week didn't do that.

Offline one-eyed

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McGuane: Expect plenty of chaos this Grand Final (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #42 on: September 24, 2019, 12:56:23 PM »
McGuane: Expect plenty of chaos this Grand Final

Mick McGuane,
Herald Sun
24 Sep 2019


The stage is set for the biggest game of the year.

But how will things play out when Richmond and Greater Western Sydney clash on Grand Final day?

Ahead of the massive game, read Mick McGuane’s ultimate preview to see exactly where both sides sit.

WHAT TO EXPECT — RICHMOND

CHAOS


Richmond loves chaos. It’s all about a surge mentality, keeping the ball in motion and moving it forward by any means possible. A tap on here, a kick off the ground there. Gaining metres at all costs is at the core of the game plan. The Tigers’ ball movement and ability to hurt teams off turnovers is also a strength and they are not afraid to use the corridor in transition. They try to get their forwards high up the ground and use speed from the likes of Daniel Rioli, Jason Castagna, Kane Lambert and Dustin Martin to get back to goal. Plus, it helps your structure when you have a key target like Tom Lynch marking the ball like he was in the preliminary final.

IF I WERE RICHMOND …

Clearly I’d be maintaining the system that’s been successful over a long period and has delivered another Grand Final berth. But I’d also reserve judgment about some of the opposition’s best players if they do get off the chain. The big concern is who could be that run-with player given the injury cloud over Jack Graham? I’d be looking at Kane Lambert, who is very task-orientated, very disciplined and can run all day. The other key is the Jeremy Cameron match up, with the Coleman Medal winner in red-hot form. I think there will be a lot of mix-and-match there between Dylan Grimes, David Astbury and Nathan Broad. But I’d be starting Grimes on Cameron and sending David Astbury to Jeremy Finlayson.

THE X-FACTOR

One from left-field — Shai Bolton. He didn’t have a great preliminary final, but he has had a pretty good year. He’s got speed, breaks the lines, possesses great creativity with how he uses the ball and creates excitement. Bolton is averaging 1.4 score assists this season — second at the Tigers behind only Dustin Martin. He also averages 5.7 score involvements — the sixth-best at the club. That’s because he picks the best option when kicking inside-50 almost every time. Bolton can also hit the scoreboard himself and brings high levels of forward-half pressure — a key aspect of the modern game.

THE STAR

Dustin Martin. But is he injured? The thing about Dusty is he’s so predictable about where he plays. He’s won just 15 disposals in defensive-50 this year — accounting for three per cent of his overall output. He is a player who does his damage between the arcs and when he floats forward inside-50. He starts the game and quarters at centre-bounces before Kane Lambert rolls up and Dusty is given the creative licence to drift forward. When he’s a forward he still wins a lot of the ball and when he wins it through contested possession or ground ball, he hits the scoreboard.

THE CONCERN

Richmond’s reluctance to tag. The Tigers never tag. GWS do. If Jack Graham (shoulder) doesn’t get up, that becomes even more of a concern given he has been a player Damien Hardwick has tasked with carrying out some run-with roles in the past. Yes, Richmond is in the Grand Final because of its system. But Lachie Whitfield had a career-high 42 disposals and 10 score involvements against the Tigers in Round 3. If he, or others, do get off the chain again, wouldn’t you want to lock them down?

THE KEY

Scoring from their inside-50 entries. The Giants have been the best team at defending their defensive 50 all year and have a formidable backline with the likes of Phil Davis, Nick Haynes, Heath Shaw, Zac Williams and Aidan Corr. Against Collingwood in the preliminary final, GWS conceded just seven goals from 53 entries while also holding the Magpies goalless for 67 minutes in the middle stages of the match. When Richmond played the Giants back in Round 3, there was a period during the third quarter where the Tigers had all the ascendancy in the territory battle and had 12 of 15 inside-50 entries yet kicked just two goals to one. The Giants can absorb numbers like the Sydney of old, so the Tigers simply have to be at their efficient best and ensure they choose the best options.

THE CHALLENGE

The Tigers’ ability to stay in the contested game. They are coming up against a team that’s very good around stoppage and that generally translates to contested ball win. In the first half against Geelong in the preliminary final, Richmond lost the contested possession count by 14. But the difference in the second half was just six as the Tigers got themselves back in the game. Richmond is a team that does not have to win contested ball numbers, but they can’t allow GWS to dominate this facet of the game. They need to keep it close — a challenge given that across the season the Tigers are a bottom-two team for contested ball.

THE THEME

No regrets. The Tigers have been the best team for three years now. Coming away with only one premiership from that period of dominance won’t sit well. After a turbulent year which included a 7-6 start and the loss of Alex Rance among a host of other injury concerns, the Tigers have still managed to pull through and get their opportunity. Now they have to take it with both hands. And having won their past 11 games on the trot — including eight at the MCG — there are no excuses.

INJURIES


Jack Graham (shoulder) test

Nathan Broad (concussion) test

GWS — WHAT TO EXPECT

STOPPAGE SPECIALISTS

For the Giants, it’s all about their stoppage game. They rely on scoring from stoppages more than any other team in the competition. GWS led the AFL for clearances in the home-and-away season and have dominated that count in two of their three finals. They are a short-kicking side who is lethal by foot in transition from defence to attack and rank third in the competition for scoring once inside-50, hitting the scoreboard from 44.9 per cent of entries. The Giants are also a very good contested ball side and have won that count convincingly in two of their three finals, including against Collingwood in the preliminary final 164-148.

IF I WERE GWS …

I’d be tempted to send Matt De Boer to Dion Prestia. Everyone will think on the back of Round 3 — when De Boer shut down Martin and the Tiger was reported — that would be the logical match up again. But Prestia is a player who is in fantastic form, albeit largely flying under the radar given the focus on Martin, Shane Edwards and Trent Cotchin. Since the bye, Prestia has been the highest-rated player in the AFL, averaging 30 disposals and eight score involvements. If Dusty is sore or injured, it might be the perfect opportunity to give Prestia some close attention for the first time this year and something he probably wouldn’t even be expecting. Martin will likely spend significant time forward, anyway, and that’s where I’d be sending Sam Taylor to do a job on him.

THE X-FACTOR

Nick Haynes. We know he’s a star, but his influence on this game will be critical if the Giants are to prevail. GWS has to find a way to win the battle of the air against Tom Lynch and Jack Riewoldt and Haynes is as good as anyone in the competition at leaving his man and creating two-on-ones on opposition key forwards. What I like about Haynes is he knows when to spoil and kill the ball and when to back himself to take the mark. And when he does mark, more often than not, he hurts you with his ability to quickly rebound it back.

THE STAR


Toby Greene. Back in the team after a one-week suspension, he had a nervous wait from the sidelines in the preliminary final but is sure to have plenty of adrenaline built up now and you can bet he will be ready to explode. Last week’s media microscope won’t phase him one bit. This is the stage Toby Greene is made for and his last eight games of footy have been sublime. He’s a goalkicker, he’s a score involvement player, he’s physical and he makes those around him better. The Tigers will have to put plenty of work in to him.

THE CONCERN

Getting scored against behind the defence. We know the Tigers’ forwards like to push high up the ground and use their leg-speed through Daniel Rioli, Jason Castagna, Kane Lambert and Dustin Martin to get back to goal. The GWS defenders need to be conscious of that fast-break footy and ensure they are not leaving an open paddock for the Tigers to run into over the back. A goal-keeper needs to be retained, which is generally Phil Davis or Heath Shaw.

THE KEY

Win from stoppages. The Giants rely on scoring from stoppages more than any other team on record. They clearly outscored Collingwood 29-8 from stoppages in their preliminary final and have the best scoring differential from stoppages of any team this year. Let’s not forget that the Magpies killed the Tigers from stoppages in last year’s preliminary final. So, Shane Mumford versus Toby Nankervis and Ivan Soldo is going to be critically important to the outcome of this match.

THE CHALLENGE

Stopping Tom Lynch. We all witnessed the show he put on against Geelong in the preliminary final against a very measly defence. The spearhead had a season-high 19 disposals and 10 marks and his bag of five goals was his second-best of the year. GWS are a very good intercept team, with Phil Davis and Nick Haynes ranking No. 1 and No. 3 in the competition for intercept marks. And Davis, who generally takes the opposition’s best forward, is a logical match-up for Lynch. But is he fit, after struggling with back and calf issues on the weekend? It’s a big job if he’s not 100 per cent.

THE THEME

Accuracy. The Giants need to continue to take their chances. They have won their past two finals with fewer scoring shots. Making the most of your chances is clearly huge in September and there is no pressure like scoreboard pressure. Conversion is one of the unheralded discussion points when it comes to the modern-day statistician, but it is still high on the agenda if you want to win premierships.

INJURIES

Stephen Coniglio (knee) test

Lachie Whitfield (appendix) test

Phil Davis (calf) test

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/expert-opinion/mick-mcguane-previews-the-afl-grand-final-between-richmond-and-gws/news-story/55580c11f05457d976fbf8e4473911a5

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #43 on: September 24, 2019, 01:38:18 PM »
A hallmark of the Giants' footy during the finals series has been their physicality and aggression, successfully getting in the face of their opponents.

"For the whole year, we've focused pretty ruthlessly on what we can control. I think that's the mark of a good side, that even under pressure, they can execute their role. That's what finals footy is, there's a lot of pressure involved," Grimes said.

"What they bring, whether it's physicality or all kinds of things and tools in their kit-basket, we're going to keep doing what we've done every week and focus on us.

"We'll bring the heat and bring the pressure because that's the way we play. We do play a physical brand of footy, but that's not to say we're going to go out of our way to, as you said, fight fire with fire."

https://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/2019-09-24/broad-graham-hit-the-training-track-in-bid-to-play

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs GWS @ the M.C.G. --- 2019 GRAND FINAL
« Reply #44 on: September 24, 2019, 07:53:18 PM »
Stats Files: How will each team win the Grand Final?

AFL.com.au
Marc McGowan
Sep 24, 2019


SATURDAY'S AFL Grand Final will pit two teams with drastically different methods in 2017 premier Richmond and Greater Western Sydney against one another.

What they have in common is seriously significant star power at the top and an army of role players beneath them.

Without further ado, here are the questions and numbers that matter ahead of this year's decider.

What decided the clubs' two clashes this year?


Round three: Greater Western Sydney 19.11 (125) d Richmond 10.16 (76) at Giants Stadium

The Tigers lost Jayden Short seven minutes into the game and Trent Cotchin barely played in the final term, while Giant Tommy Sheridan appeared for only 15 minutes. GWS outscored Richmond by 44 points from turnovers – the Tigers' worst result this season – and its 89 points from this source were the most against Damien Hardwick's side. The Giants also scored from 51.7 per cent of their inside 50s, which was better than any Richmond opponent in 2019, and won 62 more uncontested possessions (fourth-worst for Tigers).

Round 17: Richmond 13.16 (94) d Greater Western Sydney 9.13 (67) at the MCG

Beating the Giants at their own game was the key here. The men in orange scored just 21 points from clearances (fourth-fewest in 2019) and from just 14 per cent of clearance wins (second-worst percentage in any game this season). On top of that, the Tigers scored from 26.5 per cent of their clearances, which equated to the equal-third-best percentage in any match this year. Richmond racked up 34 points from defensive-50 chains – its most this season and the highest number GWS conceded – while scoring from 49.2 per cent of inside 50s. That latter effort was the equal-second-best percentage by a Giants opponent.

Which player on each team has been the statistical star in September?


Brownlow medallist Dustin Martin might have been a bit hampered on Friday night, but he's been crucial in the Tigers' two finals wins. Martin's 9.5 score involvements per match and involvement in 40 per cent of scores are No.1 at Richmond. His average scoreboard impact of 29 points is second in the finals behind only Eagle Jamie Cripps' 29.5. Fast-rising onballer Jacob Hopper is proving to be the Giants' Mr September. Hopper ranks first at GWS for disposals (25.7), contested possessions (15.7) and clearances (5.7) during the finals.

Who are the unsung heroes?


Richmond

David Astbury: Has won 40 per cent of his defensive one-on-one contests, ranked eighth of the top-75 one-on-one defenders.

Nick Vlastuin: The Tigers defender has amassed the fourth-most intercepts in the AFL this season.

Jason Castagna: His 36 forward-50 groundball-gets this year ranked equal 25th in comp.

Greater Western Sydney


Brent Daniels: Has more goal assists than any other player this year and ranks 16th for forward-50 groundball-gets.

Heath Shaw: The ex-Pie's been outmarked in only three of his 51 defensive one-on-one contests this season, which is the eighth-best result of the top-75 one-on-one defenders.

Matt De Boer: His 10 centre clearances during the finals is the equal-most of any footballer.

What difference will Toby Greene, Lachie Whitfield and Stephen Coniglio make?

Greene (suspension) is certain to return, reigning club champion Whitfield (appendicitis) is highly likely to and Coniglio is a 50-50 shot. That's an enormous amount of quality potentially coming into the Greater Western Sydney line-up on Grand Final day. They are all influential in generating the Giants' scoring opportunities when they play.

Which Tiger should Giants stopper Matt de Boer tag?

De Boer is the AFL's No.1 tagger and kept Dustin Martin to 15 goalless touches in round three but was absent for the round 17 rematch. Martin's frustration boiled over to the point he was suspended for an off-the-ball strike to de Boer's teammate Adam Kennedy. The 2017 Brownlow and Norm Smith medallist is the most common tagging target at Punt Road. He's had six 40-plus-minute match-ups this season and his output is 40 per cent down on those occasions. On the other hand, Dion Prestia – another potential option for de Boer's attention – has had only two such match-ups, against Luke Parker and Liam Shiels. Interestingly, Prestia performed 75 per cent better than usual in those circumstances. The only other Tiger to cop a tag in 2019 was Shane Edwards, who comfortably handled Blue Ed Curnow.

Will Richmond's turnover talents or the Giants' stoppage superiority prevail?

As pointed out at the top, these teams succeed in very different ways. Richmond generates 65.6 per cent of its scores from turnovers (No.1 in the AFL), whereas GWS scores just 51 per cent from this source (18th). The Giants make up for that by producing 45 per cent of their points from clearances (No.1) compared to the Tigers' 31 per cent (18th). Richmond has won all 13 games when it outscored the opposition from clearances and is 16 from 17 in matches where they rack up more points from turnovers than its rival. GWS' respective numbers are 14 from 16 and 11 from 11.

Game winning percentages

SCENARIO   SCORE MORE FROM TURNOVERS   SCORE MORE FROM CLEARANCES

2019                          82.4%                                        76.3%
Finals 2015-19            84.1%                                        83.3%

How can Greater Western Sydney win?

In simple terms, the Giants' hopes will skyrocket if they are up at quarter-time. They have a perfect record from 11 games this season when they lead at the first break. GWS is also unbeaten in 2019 when it: outscores the opposition from turnovers (11 matches), has more metres gained (13) and scores more accurately (10). Other key performance indicators for the Giants are higher disposal efficiency (11 wins from 12 contests) and out-pressuring the opposition (10 from 11).

How can Richmond win?


Sobering for the Giants' record when they have a fast start is the fact the Tigers have won 15 of 16 games when they win the second quarter and all 14 times they've won the third term. The 'premiership' quarter could be pivotal, with Richmond having a 3-7 record when it loses that period. Away from the quarter-based statistics, the Tigers are unbeaten when they: have more metres gained (16 matches), outscore the opposition from clearances (13), and win more disposals (12), uncontested possessions (11), contested possessions (six) and clearances (four).

Statistics provided by Champion Data

https://www.afl.com.au/news/2019-09-24/stats-files-how-will-each-team-win-the-grand-final