Tide turning for Tigers
10:19:43 PM Fri 28 April, 2006
Andrew Wu
Exclusive to afl.com.au
Richmond was winless and life did not look bright at Punt Road a week ago, but things turn quickly in football and the Tigers now have two wins on the board after accounting for Carlton by eight points in an error-riddled match at the MCG on Friday night.
The Blues started well in a free-flowing opening quarter for a 19-point advantage at the first change, however the Tigers controlled the game from thereon, finding the lead in the third quarter despite some inaccuracy in front of goal before holding off a late Carlton challenge for a 12.20 (92) to 11.18 (84) victory.
Too classy for Bret Thornton and too nimble for Lance Whitnall, Matthew Richardson, despite being guilty of poor kicking with 3.5, was outstanding for the Tigers, plucking 12 marks in a best-on-ground performance.
He complemented the work further up the field by Joel Bowden, who set up numerous attacks from defence with his 25 possessions, and Andrew Raines with 23, while Kane Johnson kept Carlton playmaker Nick Stevens to a relatively low 19 touches.
For the Blues, Ryan Houlihan and skipper Anthony Koutoufides worked tirelessly to find the ball 29 times each, while Heath Scotland and Andrew Walker were creative from defence with 27 and 25 possessions respectively.
The Blues started with Jarrad Waite, Brendan Fevola and Whitnall inside their forward 50 in a bid to stretch the Tigers' defence for height, the latter two both goaling inside the first six minutes, but so did Greg Tivendale and Richardson.
Number one draft pick Marc Murphy then produced a superb running goal from just inside 50 before Koutoufides crumbed and goaled, giving the Blues an 11-point advantage.
An errant disposal by Tivendale squandered a certain Tigers goal and the Blues made them pay deep in time on through Deluca for a 19-point break at quarter time.
Goals to Chris Hyde and Richardson narrowed the gap to three points in the second term, which the wasteful Tigers dominated, but a classy finish by Walker from just inside the boundary line steadied the Blues.
The standard of the match, which until then had belied both teams' modest standing on the ladder, then plummeted.
Normally reliable by foot, Matthew Lappin produced four shocking turnovers, Joel Bowden pinpointed Blue Jason Saddington, and Richardson, Greg Stafford and Patrick Bowden all missed set shots inside 30 metres for the Tigers.
Andrew Krakouer and Kayne Pettifer stopped the Richmond rot with clever snaps either side of a pair of Waite goals before Troy Simmonds ended the quarter appropriately by kicking his team's ninth behind of the term.
The errors continued in the third term as the Tigers finally got reward for their ascendancy, booting two of the opening three goals through Richardson and Hyde for a seven-point lead.
It was then Carlton's turn to be wasteful up forward, Fevola missing two set shots in three minutes and Fisher, needing only to spot Waite by foot for a likely Carlton goal, spraying his pass.
Goals to Andrew Krakouer and Tivendale doubled the heartbreak for the Blues and the Tigers were out to a 14-point advantage at the final change.
Under no pressure in the final term, Richard Tambling failed to find his target and from the resultant turnover Walker was able to carry the ball up the other end, where Waite snapped truly, but Pettifer replied two minutes later.
A late goal by Eddie Betts gave the Blues hope of stealing an unlikely win but the Tigers managed to hold on for their second victory of the year.
Terry Wallace admitted the match did not reach any great heights as a spectacle, but was pleased to come away with a win after such a difficult night at the office.
"It was extremely tough - I've got to say that … I can't recall (a game) that was much more difficult just from the fact that there were so many wasted opportunities, so much opportunity to ice a game and we just kept leaving the door open," he said after the match.
"You start getting horrible feelings when that happens that the result might all of a sudden twist and go in the other direction, but fortunately … they still give you four points for it."
Carlton coach Denis Pagan lamented his team's poor use of the ball and believed his players were worn down physically as the game went on.
"As it turned out a couple were short of a gallop and got really tired in the finish. It was a demanding game and it was last man standing at the finish," Pagan said.
"We just made so many errors and butchered the ball when we should have displayed some poise and composure. We played-on kamikaze style and mucked it up. When we could have gone forward quickly we hung on to the ball and messed up an opportunity."
RICHMOND: 2.3, 7.12, 11.15, 12.20 (92)
CARLTON: 5.4, 8.7, 9.13, 11.18 (84)
GOALS – Richmond: Richardson 3, Pettifer 2, Tivendale 2, Krakouer 2, Hyde 2, Foley
Carlton: Waite 3, Fevola 2, Whitnall, Koutoufides, Murphy, Walker, Deluca, Betts
BEST – Richmond: Richardson, Pettifer, Hyde, Raines, Tuck, Coughlan, J Bowden
Carlton: Walker, Scotland, Koutoufides, Simpson, Whitnall, Murphy, Houlihan
INJURIES – Richmond: Nil
Carlton: Scotland (hip)
REPORTS - Nil
UMPIRES - McBurney, Ellis, Jeffery
CROWD - 54,815 at the MCG
http://richmondfc.com.au/default.asp?pg=news&spg=display&articleid=261607