Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Injury-hit Tigers end Dogs' undefeated streak  (Read 751 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Still the team to beat: Injury-hit Tigers end Dogs' undefeated streak

By Riley Beveridge
afl.com.au
May 1, 2021


RICHMOND                       1.4    2.8     7.10    11.11 (77)
WESTERN BULLDOGS        3.6    5.9     6.10      7.13 (55)

GOALS
Richmond: Lynch 3, Bolton 3, Aarts, Riewoldt, Graham, Baker, Houli
Western Bulldogs: Naughton 3, Scott, Bruce, Smith, Schache

BEST
Richmond: Lynch, Cotchin, Bolton, Houli, Short, Broad
Western Bulldogs: Dale, Liberatore, Bontempelli, Treloar, Daniel, Macrae

INJURIES
Richmond: Cotchin (hamstring)
Western Bulldogs: Nil

SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Naish (replaced T.Cotchin)
Western Bulldogs: McNeil (unused)

Crowd: 52,402 at the MCG

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IF YOU come at the kings, you best not miss.

A wounded Richmond proved it remains the AFL's benchmark on Friday night, fighting back from 25 points down to bring the Western Bulldogs' unbeaten start to the year to a grinding halt in a MCG thriller.

The reigning premiers had been challenged by the League's new kids on the block, who took the fight to the Tigers from the outset and arguably should have led by more in the game's early stages if not for some wasteful finishing.

But spurred on by five consecutive goals on either side of half-time, a tidal wave of Richmond momentum carried the Tigers to a resounding comeback and a statement 11.11 (77) to 7.13 (55) victory.

Tom Lynch had almost been the villain as Richmond fell into an early deficit, missing a series of gilt-edged chances and squandering his first five shots on goal as the Bulldogs seized the early running and shot into a commanding lead.

But he would quickly become the hero, adding three goals in the third term to complement 12 marks and 11 score involvements in a towering performance that inspired the thrilling turnaround.

Triple-premiership skipper Trent Cotchin displayed the hunger of a captain desperate to make it four, with his brave second-half performance setting the tempo for his side's gritty response.

He finished with 24 disposals and seven clearances, while the class and dare of Bachar Houli (31 disposals, one goal) and Jayden Short (26 disposals, nine marks) added a rebound threat the side had lacked to half-time.

The Bulldogs, as the plucky up-and-comers, played their part in what proved to be an instant classic. Marcus Bontempelli (26 disposals, four tackles) was brilliant, while Caleb Daniel (34 disposals) and Bailey Dale (27 disposals) were the side's creative outlets.

Western Bulldogs utility Aaron Naughton has a moment he'd rather forget, spraying a shot at goal off his shin with the game in the balance

But having led by more than four goals in the second quarter as the Dogs grabbed control of the contest, Luke Beveridge had every reason for thinking 'what could have been?'

Bontempelli's wayward set shot on the stroke of half-time was a wasted opportunity to further Richmond's first-half misery, while Patrick Lipinski's poster in the final term missed the chance to stem the bleeding and draw the Dogs level at a crucial juncture.

Instead, Houli converted a long-range effort at the other end and Shai Bolton kicked two more in quick succession to ensure panic over Richmond's indifferent start would be held at bay. The Tigers are still the team to beat.

This is why the Tigers are king

It was a third quarter that completely changed the dynamic of the match, and perhaps the season. Having trailed by 19 points at half-time, Richmond was staring down the barrel of a second straight defeat and a 3-4 record on the season. But not willing to accept that fate, the Tigers dominated contested ball (+12 in contested possessions) and territory (+13 in inside 50s) throughout the term to kick five unanswered goals and completely swing the match. The Dogs went nearly 20 minutes without a single possession in its forward half, highlighting the complete control the reigning premiers had over the contest. Have no doubts, Richmond is still the team to beat this season.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/603831/still-the-team-to-beat-injury-hit-tigers-end-dogs-undefeated-streak

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers step up a gear to snap Bulldogs’ golden run (Age)
« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2021, 05:23:26 AM »
Tigers step up a gear to snap Bulldogs’ golden run

Jon Pierik
The Age
April 30, 2021 — 10.49pm


No Dusty, no worries. Reports of Richmond’s demise may have been premature after the Tigers inflicted the Western Bulldogs’ first defeat of the season with a stirring 22-point win at the MCG on Friday night.

Missing several premiership stars, including champion Dustin Martin - unavailable because of concussion protocols and visiting his father in New Zealand - the wounded Tigers rebounded from a two-goal first half and a 25-point deficit midway through the second term to post their finest win of the season.

The Tigers had a 3-3 win-loss record, with victories only over bottom-six sides Carlton, St Kilda and Hawthorn, heading into this clash but this performance reaffirmed why they remain a dominant force and ensures another blockbuster against Geelong next Friday night.

Their third term was a sight to behold. At one point, the Tigers dominated the inside-50 count 12-0, their comeback sparked by a Jack Riewoldt lead and goal. Then came a pivotal play when Tom Lynch marked on the edge of the goal square. To that moment, the under-fire forward had managed 0.5. This time he converted, and the Tigers were on a roll. Jack Graham sharked a tap to snap their next and the Tigers had their first lead when Lynch again bested Zaine Cordy and converted from 25 metres.

The Tigers’ ferocity was stunning, coming at a time when several of the Dogs’ prime movers, including Jack Macrae and Adam Treloar, all but disappeared. And why the Bulldogs could not handle the pressure will surely be one of their review points on a night their six-game winning streak to start the season, their best since 1946, was snapped.

The Tigers’ ability to win the ball in close and then their run and carry stalled the Dogs’ bright start, this igniting when they faced a four-goal deficit in the second term.

Ruckman Toby Nankervis had the better of Stef Martin, while the off-contract Shai Bolton, with three goals, and Trent Cotchin - subbed off late in the final term wth a hamstring issue and declaring he would have scans - had a major impact after half-time. Bachar Houli, the No. 1 ranked player on the ground, was dominant across half-back and delivered the sealer when his 50-metre drop punt cleared the pack.

“We managed to hang in there ... showed more composure,” Cotchin said.

Aaron Naughton was dangerous all night but the Dogs needed more from Josh Bruce and Josh Schache, the latter back in the side only because of Tim English’s concussion.

Skipper Marcus Bontempelli worked diligently all night, as did Bailey Dale and Bailey Smith, but the Bulldogs’ class, so obvious until this point, vanished when the Tigers lifted their intensity.

Early kick in the guts
The Tigers have had set-shot issues over the past month and that continued in the first term, with Lynch the primary culprit. Put under the spotlight through the week for a slow start to the season, the key forward had the better of Cordy in the air but botched three set shots. This appeared to knock his confidence, and Lynch, having marked just outside the goal square late in the term, made a bewildering decision to handball to Jake Aarts, who had to dodge defender Alex Keath before snapping the Tigers’ first. It didn’t get any better for Lynch in the second term, for he missed another two shots. We know what happened after the break.

Umpires in no rush
Veteran Tigers defender Dylan Grimes was fortunate to avoid being pinged for a deliberate rushed behind when he fumbled the ball through for a point late in the first term - when there was no opponent within metres. That should have been a free kick for the Bulldogs, although the Tigers were unlucky earlier when Easton Wood should have been pinged for holding the ball just metres from the Tigers’ goal.

Street smarts
Naughton showed his forward smarts in the second term when, dashing back to goal, he doubled back and accepted a short pass from Lachie Hunter. But his ugly shank late in the final term summed up the Bulldogs’ plight after half-time.

Target practice
There are few better playmakers from defence than Caleb Daniel. That he looks to take the difficult inboard kick when it’s there is what makes him a particularly dangerous weapon. He is clinical by foot and that was highlighted when he had 100 per cent accuracy with his nine kicks to half-time.

Best:
Richmond: Houli, Bolton, Short, Lynch, Balta
Western Bulldogs: Daniel, Bontempelli, Liberatore, Macrae, Dale

Votes:
9: Bachar Houli (Richmond)
8: Tom Lynch (Richmond)
8: Shai Bolton (Richmond)
7: Noah Balta (Richmond)
7: Caleb Daniel (Western Bulldogs)

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/tigers-step-up-a-gear-to-snap-bulldogs-golden-run-20210430-p57nr6.html