Author Topic: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020  (Read 13506 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #30 on: October 06, 2020, 12:01:10 AM »
"Did they miss a trick by not playing this at the Adelaide Oval?"

@kanecornes asks whether Richmond should have nominated the Adelaide Oval to host its final this weekend against St Kilda.

Watch here: https://twitter.com/FootyonNine/status/1313079061862846464

Cornes said Richmond should have chosen to play the Semi Final at Adelaide Oval to get use to playing there before the Prelim. Stay the whole week in between too to train there. Caro said that would've been an arrogant message to St Kilda that Richmond has dismissed them and is already focusing on the Prelim. Cornes replied that St Kilda has won 2 and lost 10 at Adelaide Oval. Caro counted that the Saints won both their games at Adelaide Oval this year including against Port while Richmond lost to Port there. Metricon makes more sense given it is only 100m away from where Richmond are staying.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #31 on: October 06, 2020, 03:19:38 PM »
ST KILDA will head to the AFL's Appeals Board on Wednesday night in another bid to get defender Ben Long off his one-match suspension.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/514920/long-shot-saints-taking-defender-s-ban-to-afl-appeals-board


Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #32 on: October 06, 2020, 06:59:01 PM »
Craig McRae's preview:

St Kilda match-up

“They had our measure early in the year and we have grown a fair bit from that game, and they have the same. They have got a lot of threats and unfortunately have got a couple of injuries, but I am sure they will get some players back in who will play pivotal roles for them.

“We are certainly going to have to be near the top of our game to stretch them.”

St Kilda’s aerial power

“Their aerial power is a strength of theirs and one of our great strengths is getting the ball to ground. We did that on the weekend, but I think we have got some RFIs (Room for Improvements) in terms of ground level support and I have already addressed that with some of our smalls this week. Hopefully, we get a spike in that area.”

Saints ability to get 'walk-in' goals

“Yeah ‘Butts’ (Dan Butler) has had a great year for them and they attack the goal-front really well, and back the contest in. They get a lot of goals from the goal square or around that area like you said. (It is usually) running into an open goal or getting a crumb off, so our aerial power is going to need to be strong, but that ground level support to back it up at both ends is going to be really important.”

https://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/822957/coaches-corner-qualifying-final

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #33 on: October 06, 2020, 10:57:47 PM »
Who is the player from St Kilda that worries you the most, could it be Dan Butler
Rowan Marshall for mine. We're fortunate Ryder is out but Ryder didn't play against us earlier in the season either and Marshall still was the dominant big man on the ground against Nank (Soldo didn't play in that game either).
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Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #34 on: October 07, 2020, 08:23:56 PM »
MEGA-PREVIEW: Tigers v Saints, stats that matter, who wins and why

St Kilda has a good record against Richmond, will there be another surprise?


By Riley Beveridge
afl.com.au
7 October 2020


SUMMARY

St Kilda celebrated its return to the finals with a thrilling victory over the Western Bulldogs last week. Its reward? A semi-final against a side who has won two of the last three premierships, where it will be missing experienced duo Paddy Ryder and Jake Carlisle. The Saints, and Brett Ratten in particular, have a good recent record against the Tigers. Ratten has won 10 of 11 games against Richmond in his coaching career, but victory at Metricon Stadium on Friday night would undoubtedly top all of them. Still, if this season has taught us anything, it's to expect the unexpected. Maybe there's a 'Miracle at Metricon' in the works.

WHERE AND WHEN: Metricon Stadium, Friday 9 October, 7.50pm AEDT

WHAT HAPPENED THIS YEAR?

Round four: St Kilda 15.3 (93) defeated Richmond 10.7 (67)
The most significant aspect of St Kilda's victory over Richmond earlier in the season was the control it had over the entire contest. The Saints led at every change in a mature performance, having the measure over the Tigers in most areas of the field. Dan Butler tormented his former side to kick three goals from 14 disposals, while Tim Membrey (seven marks, three goals) and Jack Steele (21 disposals, 10 tackles) were also among the best.

WHAT TO WATCH FOR

Richmond
Will the return of Tom Lynch solve Richmond's issues going inside 50? Throughout the season, the Tigers ranked No.1 in the League for marks inside the forward arc – averaging 10.3 per game. However, in last week's defeat to Brisbane, the reigning premiers took less than half that amount – ranked seventh of the eighth sides playing finals. Richmond needs a reliable option inside 50 to maximise its scoring opportunities. Lynch should be that man.

St Kilda
Can the Saints cope without two of their best three performers from last week? According to Champion Data's AFL Player Ratings, Paddy Ryder (24.7 points) and Jake Carlisle (12.9) ranked first and third respectively during last week's narrow elimination final victory over the Western Bulldogs. Young gun Rowan Marshall will now have to shoulder the bulk of the ruck load without Ryder, while Carlisle missing could leave the side undersized down back.

WHAT THE STATS SAY

St Kilda scored 15 goals from 38 inside 50s when these sides last played, with its conversion rate of 39.5 percent equating to the club's best return on the season.

Richmond conceded 55 points from turnovers and 38 points from stoppages when it last played St Kilda, its second-worst differentials in both categories on the entire season.

Dustin Martin is the key man. In his nine finals since the start of 2017, his AFL Player Ratings average of 19.2 points is the best of any Richmond player throughout that period.

There could be a lot of stress placed on the Saints backline. Richmond ranks No.1 for time in forward-half differential this season. Meanwhile, St Kilda had a time in forward-half differential of -15.38 minutes last week – the worst of all eight teams playing in the finals.

There's no wonder Richmond wanted this game at Metricon Stadium. The Tigers have won their last nine games in Gold Coast, with an average winning margin of 46 points. St Kilda also boasts a relatively good record at the venue and is 2-1 there this year.

IT'S A BIG WEEK FOR …

Richmond - Toby Nankervis.
On paper, one of few Richmond deficiencies can be found in the ruck. But while dual premiership big man Nankervis has played only eight games this year, he enjoyed the best of them back in round four against St Kilda. Making his return to the side – and rucking solo on that occasion – Nankervis had 17 disposals, 26 hitouts, seven tackles and a goal. He was one of Richmond's most important performers, getting the better of youngster Rowan Marshall. Doing similar on Friday night will go a long way to helping his midfielders.

St Kilda - Dan Butler.
This is a man with a few things to prove. In his first game against his former side, where he was part of their premiership team back in 2017, Butler had 14 disposals and three goals to torch the Tigers. Now, he can do it on the biggest stage of all. Butler was restricted to just 22 games in his final two seasons with Richmond and left for more opportunities. He can continue to prove he was worthy of those chances if he again fires in the semi-final. It would cap a year where he also made the 40-man All-Australian squad.

PREDICTION:

Richmond by 20 points.

You can't keep a good team down for long and the Tigers have proved over the last four seasons that they are a very, very good team.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/514984/mega-preview-tigers-v-saints-stats-that-matter-who-wins-and-why

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #35 on: October 07, 2020, 08:26:22 PM »
Ben Long will miss this week’s semi-final against Richmond, with St Kilda failing in its turn to the AFL’s Appeals Board for his one-match ban to be scrapped.

https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/afl-tribunal-2020-appeal-ben-long-suspension-st-kilda-team-afl-finals-ben-long-jack-macrae-watch/news-story/87c56fa14ea1cdbcc4e7b79bbb07d4e2

Offline pmac21

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #36 on: October 07, 2020, 08:39:41 PM »
Not sure how they will cover his average 11 possessions off half back. 

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #37 on: October 07, 2020, 09:02:49 PM »
Not sure how they will cover his average 11 possessions off half back.
Long had 17 possies (5th most) and 7 tackles (2nd most) when we lost to them in round 4. Not a bad thing that he is out.
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Offline pmac21

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #38 on: October 07, 2020, 09:12:56 PM »
I'm tipping Jonathan Marsh to come in and play his best game ever. 

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #39 on: October 07, 2020, 10:27:57 PM »
Carolyn Wilson.  Your silly woman comparing Cotchin/Shiel v Long/McRae incidents as apples v apples. 
The general footy media is a disgrace which turns me off the game.  Never thought that would happen.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #40 on: October 08, 2020, 04:19:16 AM »
Ross Lyon & Matthew Lloyd's preview of the 2nd Semi Final: Richmond vs St Kilda

Brisbane took Richmond's defenders out of their comfort zones last weekend, which exposed a weakness in the Tigers' armour.

Ross Lyon and Matthew Lloyd analyse how St Kilda can do the same.

Watch here: https://twitter.com/FootyonNine/status/1313801494714490880


Score from Defensive 50:

St Kilda +32 pts (vs Bulldogs)
Richmond + 9 pts (2020 average)

Saints' one wood = Quick outside game.

Richmond will need to turn the match into a bit of a grind.

Defensive intercept marks:

Richmond average 5 intercept marks per game in 2020 but against Brisbane the Tigers had ZERO intercept marks.

Cameron and Hipwood came up the ground dragging Richmond defenders with them which prevented them from getting back into D50 to intercept mark. Opposition sides will now look at this although it isn't as easy to do as it sounds.

Richmond's forward line match-ups this week:

Lynch - Howard
Riewoldt - Wilkie
Castagna - Coffield
Rioli - Patton
Lambert - Geary
Caddy - Savage

Savage coming in will give the Saints offensive run off half-back.

Saints will need to intercept mark as they did against the Bulldogs although it's harder to do against Lynch and Riewoldt as opposed to the shorter Bulldogs forward line.

Odds: (PointsBet)

Richmond  $1.30
St Kilda  $3.70

Both Lyon and Lloyd are tipping us to win. Lloyd said he believes the Tigers will win this one "comfortably".

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #41 on: October 08, 2020, 02:48:43 PM »
Richmond’s semi-final planning has drilled into the importance of limiting St Kilda’s uncontested marks. When the speedy Saints control the ball by foot they are hard to stop, and they kicked a season-best 32pts from D50 last week. Suspect the Tigers wouldn’t mind a dewy night.

https://twitter.com/SamLandsberger/status/1313969970938671104

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #42 on: October 08, 2020, 03:30:04 PM »
Would think we would prefer a drier night to exploit the Saints with our height up forward. One of the reasons IMO we chose to play this final at Metricon rather than the Gabba.
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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #43 on: October 08, 2020, 05:14:01 PM »
Finals questions: Richmond v St Kilda

Daniel Cherny
The Age
October 8, 2020 — 3.01pm


IS METRICON A TIGER PARADISE?
Richmond got their wish when the AFL allowed them to host this semi-final at Metricon Stadium. It was an intriguing decision from the Tigers, who are staying just down the road from the Gold Coast venue, given Richmond also have a strong record at the Gabba. More to the point, the Gabba is where the grand final will be held. But there is no doubt the Tigers play Carrara very well. They have won all six of their matches at the venue this season, the closest of which was a 26-point victory over Geelong. The Saints have only played three matches on the Gold Coast this season, overrun by Fremantle in round six before wins over the Suns and Hawthorn. It will also be interesting to see whether the two sides can draw anything near a sellout crowd.

WILL LYNCH BE RUSTY?
By the time Friday night rolls around it will have been four weeks since Tom Lynch's last AFL match. That night against Geelong he suffered a hamstring injury. It was hoped he would only miss one game, but the Tigers took a conservative approach with their star key forward, meaning he sat out the qualifying final loss to Brisbane. Richmond's forward line didn't function as well as the Tigers wanted against the Lions. Lynch had another injury scare this week with his troublesome finger, but has been cleared to take on the Saints, ironically at the venue he called home for eight years. He has proven himself to be a finals match-winner, and the Saints' tall defensive stocks are depleted by the absence of Jake Carlisle who has left their hub for the birth of his third child.

HOW MUCH WILL THE SAINTS MISS RYDER?

It was heartbreaking to see Paddy Ryder's reaction on the final siren last Saturday against the Western Bulldogs. Head buried in a towel, Ryder was left in tears after suffering a serious hamstring tendon injury in the dying stages of his team's elimination final victory, the first winning final the veteran big man had played in. Not only was this the opposite of a fairytale, it is also a huge loss for St Kilda, as Ryder was close to if not best afield against the Dogs. In the form he was in, he would have been able to exploit Richmond's lion-hearted but workmanlike ruckman Toby Nankervis. As it turns out, both sides will go in missing a best 22 ruckman, given the Tigers are without the injured Ivan Soldo. Rowan Marshall is now poised to play much more time in the middle. Marshall is a very good young ruckman, but has also been impressing up forward. His redeployment could throw the Saints off balance.

CAN HANNEBERY BACK UP TWO WEEKS IN A ROW?

After a horror first season at St Kilda, and then another injury-interrupted campaign this year, Dan Hannebery has finally got going for the Saints, and not before time. His timing is pretty good too. Back ahead of schedule in the final round of the season against Greater Western Sydney, Hannebery was a solid contributor, but he stepped things up a notch against the Bulldogs. The former Sydney star issued a reminder of why he was once among the best midfielders in the competition, with his hard-running helping him to19 disposals and a game-high five inside 50s. It's hard to have too much faith in Hannebery's body, but if he can replicate that form again it will go a long way to securing the Saints an upset victory.

WILL HILL PROVE HIS WORTH?

St Kilda's recruiting spree 12 months ago has undeniably reaped dividends so far. Dan Butler has exceeded even the club's wildest expectations with a season which had him on the cusp of All-Australian selection. While his season is now over, Ryder has worked brilliantly in combination with Marshall. Dougal Howard was outstanding in defence against the Dogs and has been pretty good all year. Zak Jones has been a consistent contributor. The missing link is Bradley Hill. The former Hawk and Docker was the Saints' most expensive acquisition but while he's teased at times, his form has been middling. It was telling that against West Coast in round 17, the Eagles' high-priced recruit Tim Kelly hauled his side over the line, while Hill sprayed an important shot when the game was there for the taking. Reputations are earned in finals, and Hill has a chance to put a year of patchy footy behind him with a starring performance on Friday night.

Prediction: Richmond by 30 points

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/finals-questions-richmond-tigers-v-st-kilda-saints-20201007-p562w4.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Richmond vs St Kilda @ Metricon, 2nd Semi-Final 2020
« Reply #44 on: October 08, 2020, 07:01:10 PM »
Jane Bunn on 7news just said it should be dry for tomorrow's night game at Metricon.

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

Min 15 Max 28

Partly cloudy.
Chance of any rain: 20%

Gold Coast area
Partly cloudy. Slight (20%) chance of a shower in the late morning and afternoon. The chance of a thunderstorm in the afternoon and evening. Winds northwesterly 15 to 20 km/h tending northerly 15 to 25 km/h in the early afternoon then becoming light in the evening.

http://www.bom.gov.au/qld/forecasts/surfers-paradise.shtml