Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Inaccurate Tigers dealt tough defeat by North  (Read 726 times)

Offline mightytiges

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Inaccurate Tigers dealt tough defeat by North

Richmond was left to lament inaccurate goalkicking, as North Melbourne ended its 14-game losing streak and dealt a blow to the Tigers' finals chances.

By AAP
16 July 2022


NORTH MELBOURNE  4.0   10.2    12.2     14.8 (92)
RICHMOND               2.5   3.12    8.16    11.22 (88)

GOALS
North Melbourne: Zurhaar 6, Curtis 3, Goldstein, Scott, Simpkin, Stephenson, Young
Richmond: Cumberland 3, Riewoldt 2, Baker, Balta, Graham, Miller, Rioli, Short

BEST
North Melbourne: Zurhaar, Simpkin, Davies-Uniacke, McKay, Greenwood, Curtis
Richmond: Prestia, Short, Cotchin, Cumberland, Nankervis

INJURIES
North Melbourne: Larkey (heel)
Richmond: Gibcus (shoulder)

SUBSTITUTES
North Melbourne: Charlie Lazzaro (replaced Larkey in the fourth quarter)
Richmond: Jake Aarts (replaced Gibcus in the fourth quarter)

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

Richmond was left to lament inaccurate goalkicking, as North Melbourne ended its 14-game losing streak and dealt a blow to the Tigers' finals chances in a thrilling four-point result on Saturday.

The Kangaroos recorded just their second win of the season, giving Leigh Adams a dream start as caretaker coach with the 14.8 (92) to 11.22 (88) victory at Marvel Stadium.

The surprise result, set up by a six-goal haul from Cam Zurhaar, handed the Tigers a second straight loss as they slipped to 9-8 and were left clinging onto eighth spot.

Zurhaar booted five goals in the first half – during which North kicked 10 goals to three – and set up the unlikely victory, before the forward kicked the match-winning goal with just under three minutes remaining.

Richmond hit the front when Jack Graham converted a free kick but Zurhaar responded when he gleefully accepted Todd Goldstein's expert hitout at a boundary throw-in and snapped truly.

The Tigers had plenty of strong contributors through the middle – including Dion Prestia (26 disposals), Trent Cotchin and Jayden Short (24 each).

Veteran spearhead Jack Riewoldt kicked 2.6 and third-gamer Noah Cumberland 3.4.

Jy Simpkin was superb for the Roos with 34 disposals and a goal, while Paul Curtis kicked three goals.

It was a blow to the Tigers' finals chances, leaving them clinging to eighth spot on percentage ahead of a clash with Fremantle in round 19.

https://www.richmondfc.com.au/news/1173472/inaccurate-tigers-dealt-tough-defeat-by-north
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Offline one-eyed

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‘Richmond killing Richmond’ as Kangaroos pull off miracle win (Age)
« Reply #1 on: July 17, 2022, 04:28:24 AM »
‘Richmond killing Richmond’ as Kangaroos pull off miracle win

Jon Pierik
The Age
July 17, 2022


Frustrated Tigers coach Damien Hardwick declared “Richmond was killing Richmond” after his wasteful side fell to a four-point loss to bottom-placed North Melbourne on Saturday.

Successive defeats to the Gold Coast Suns, having conceded a seven-goal lead, and the Kangaroos have left the Tigers stuck on nine wins and clinging to a spot in the top eight, with Fremantle (Marvel Stadium) and the Brisbane Lions (MCG) to come.

They trailed by 32 points at half-time to the Kangaroos at Marvel Stadium but regained the lead late in the final term only to fall behind for good when Cam Zurhaar snapped his sixth goal - a career high - for the Roos to win 14.8 (92) to 11.22 (88).

Hardwick lamented Jake Aarts’ decision to play on and not take a set shot for goal which could have won the game with under a minute remaining, while he also said it was “ridiculous” how the Tigers had set up at the boundary thrown in which led to Zurhaar’s goal.

“It probably sums us up really, it’s Richmond killing Richmond at the moment. There have been games this year,” Hardwick said.

“We are what I think is a quite capable side. Unfortunately, we are not doing the things long enough, well enough, and that’s on me.”

Hardwick said Aarts, who had been the medical sub, would want his time over.

“He’ll know that. We know that. The fact of the matter is, we are not in that situation. Until you are in that situation, you don’t know,” Hardwick said.

“What we have got to realise is that players try and win. Unfortunately, he probably made a decision that, if he had his time again, he would take back. But the reality is, he made it, so we move on.”

Jack Riewoldt finished with 2.6 and encapsulated the Tigers’ woes in front of goal. His two late goals in the third term dragged his side back into the contest, but he then botched two regulation attempts in the final term.

The defeat was compounded by having Toby Nankervis on report for a knee to the head of Flynn Perez in the first term.

Hardwick said the Tigers still had time to rebound with five games remaining - but they clearly have work to do.

“Our system itself held up, 60-odd inside 50s, 30-odd scoring shots - we just didn’t execute,” he said. “It was not as if they were hard shots on goal. We kicked 1.9 from inside 30. We are paid to kick goals. We didn’t. That’s the reality of it.”

Utility Josh Gibcus (heel) was subbed off and is in doubt for the Dockers’ clash.

North Melbourne released the shackles of a tortuous 2022 campaign and inflicted major damage on Richmond’s top-four hopes.

After a week when coach David Noble was terminated, and Leigh Adams installed as caretaker, the Kangaroos celebrated just their second win of the season and ended a 14-game losing streak.

The eighth-placed Tigers had a chance to advance a game clear of the Western Bulldogs and St Kilda in ninth and tenth places respectively, but now find themselves in a major fight to even make the finals, for they face Fremantle (Marvel Stadium) and Brisbane Lions (MCG) over the next fortnight.

The defeat, coming after last week’s fade out against Gold Coast, was compounded by having co-captain Toby Nankervis on report for a knee to the head of Flynn Perez in the first term.

Adams made positional changes, including sending the much-maligned Jaidyn Stephenson to half-back, and this helped the Kangaroos to a 32-point lead by the main break.

Forward Cam Zurhaar, who had Dylan Grimes as his initial opponent, booted a career-high six goals, including five to half-time - each with a typically boisterous celebration. He saved the best for last when, with his side trailing by two points with just over two minutes remaining, he sliced through a snap from the pocket to regain the lead for good.

Tigers’ forward Jake Aarts could have taken a set shot with under a minute remaining but opted to play on, the Tigers then squandering their last hope.

Jy Simpkin, with 34 touches, later dedicated the win to Noble, while Luke Davies-Uniake and Jed Anderson also found plenty of the ball. Stephenson, with 23 touches and 835 metres gained, was superb.

The Tigers were led by former skipper Trent Cotchin and robust midfielder Dion Prestia but paid the price for their horrible kicking for goal. Jack Riewoldt finished with 2.6, including squandering two regulation attempts in the final term.

Trailing by five goals, the Tigers pressed with the opening two goals of the third term, including a touching moment when Daniel Rioli converted, kissed his biceps and looked to the heavens in a tribute after the passing of Willie Rioli senior.

The Kangaroos, though, weren’t done. Paul Curtis and Simpkin responded, before Riewoldt discovered his kicking boots with two long bombs. When Noah Balta delivered from 55m after the siren, the Tigers were suddenly within 10 points at the final change.

Nankervis was particularly influential in the ruck and around the ground against Todd Goldstein.

The Kangaroos faded against Collingwood last week, and now faced another challenge. The Tigers closed to within four points within 20 seconds of the opening bounce, but Goldstein responded with a bomb of his own. The Tigers kept pressing and had their first lead since the 24-minute mark of the first term when Jack Graham converted from 35m. But the Kangaroos weren’t done, Zurhaar delivering the fatal blow.

New look
Stephenson has had a poor season up forward but was given a fresh challenge by Adams when sent to defence.

He spent considerable time on Jack Graham but made his presence felt in the first term with a 50m goal. Could he reinvent his career as a rebounding half-back?

Phoenix rising
The confrontational Tigers have long conceded too many free kicks, frustrating coach Damien Hardwick. Prestia paid the price in the first tern when his unwillingness to hand the ball back to the Kangaroos resulted in a 50m penalty. A quick kick inside 50 resulted in Phoenix Spicer snapping successfully just as the siren sounded, giving the Roos a seven-edge at the first change despite trailing 16-7 in side 50s.

MRP scrutiny
Ben McKay was stoic in defence but is likely to come under match review scrutiny for a late, airborne bump into the back of Shai Bolton in the second term. Bolton was awarded a 50m penalty.

NORTH MELBOURNE 4.0 10.2 12.2 14.8 (92)
RICHMOND              2.5 3.12 8.16 11.22 (88)

GOALS
North Melb: Zurhaar 6, Curtis 3, Scott, Young, Goldstein, Simpkin, Stephenson.
Richmond: Cumberland 3, Riewoldt 2, Balta, Baker, Graham, Short, Rioli, Miller.

BEST
North Melb: Simpkin, Anderson, Stephenson, Zurhaar, Davies-Uniake, McKay.
Richmond: Cotchin, Prestia, Nankervis, Short, Cumberland.

INJURIES
North Melb: Larkey (heel).
Richmond: Gibcus (shoulder).

CROWD – 22,666 at Marvel Stadium.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/kangaroos-pull-off-miracle-win-derail-richmond-s-finals-hopes-20220715-p5b1vi.html

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Shanks, brainfades and pure elation in three chaotic minutes (Fox)
« Reply #2 on: July 17, 2022, 04:32:11 AM »
‘The lack of game state knowledge…’: Shanks, brainfades and pure elation in three chaotic minutes

Ben Waterworth
Fox Sports
July 16th, 2022 9:30 pm


Caught your breath yet?

Because the last three minutes of Saturday’s North Melbourne-Richmond clash might be the most chaotic, rollercoaster three minutes we’ll see on a footy field this season as players struggled with composure and efficiency.

Ultimately, it was the Kangaroos that walked away with a remarkable four-point upset win to break a 14-game losing streak. But they did it the hard way.

After trailing by 32 points at half-time, Richmond launched a second-half comeback and hit the lead thanks to a composed set-shot attempt from Jack Graham.

And there’s where the composure seemingly ended for three minutes.

North Melbourne then had a chance to quickly pinch it back, only for a snap attempt from Charlie Lazzaro to hit the post.

Richmond’s Ben Miller, despite his team leading by two points, then quickly brought the ball back into play from a kick-in. It backfired, with the kick landing in space before Kamdyn McIntosh pinged for a throw thanks to North’s pressure.

Then Hugh Greenwood panicked, taking the advantage and wasting a shot at goal that led to a boundary throw-in.

“I’m not sure why Ben Miller was in such a hurry,” Montagna said.

“And then Greenwood trying to take the advantage with a left-foot checkside on the run – probably not his go.”

Amid the chaos, though, came a moment of brilliance, with veteran ruckman Todd Goldstein palming the ball perfectly into the lap of Cam Zurhaar, who pounced and snapped his sixth goal to give North the lead again.

But as shrewd as the Roos set play was, Montagna was flabbergasted how Zurhaar had so much space.

“The Richmond defenders just didn’t track him going through,” Montagna said.

“They allowed him to get the running start and Goldstein, with all the experience in the world, great set play.”

After a series of stoppages, Miller took an intercept marks at half-back, only to shank his kick out of bounds on the full.

The Roos then moved the ball forward where Curtis Taylor marked just outside 50. But instead of taking his time, he played on with a kick to Luke Davies-Uniacke, who was just metres from the goal line.

But Taylor’s kick had too much juice on it, sailing through for a behind to give the Tigers 57 seconds to move the ball coast-to-coast and pinch victory.

“They could’ve taken up 30 seconds there, the Kangaroos,” Montagna said.

The Tigers kicked long straight down the middle of Marvel Stadium, leading to a mark to Noah Cumberland, who then found Jake Aarts inside 50. Aarts marked around 40m out from goal with 44 seconds left … and played on. And North’s Bailey Scott was there to apply immediate pressure, forcing a rushed handball then a rushed kick at goal that was thumped through for a rushed behind.

And that was enough for North Melbourne to hang on by four points.

Miller and Aarts’ respective decisions late in the game no doubt would’ve frustrated fans. But ultimately Richmond lost the game due to its inaccuracy, booting 11.22. It had an extra 11 scoring shots and 21 inside 50s than the Roos and still lost.

Of shots taken within 40m on Saturday, Richmond kicked 2.11 for the night.

“Richmond squandered plenty of chances and they’ve left the door open in that top eight for a number of clubs,” Montagna said.

Western Bulldogs legend Brad Johnson added on Fox Footy: “Richmond were all over them – 33 scoring shots for the game. That’s the only separation in the game there.

“Other than that, they controlled the front half game, repeat entries – they had it all going their way. But in the end, they just weren’t clean enough.”

The Tigers are now clinging to a spot inside the top eight ahead of clashes with Fremantle, Brisbane and Port Adelaide after a horror loss to a North Melbourne side that sacked coach David Noble mid-week. The result follows the Tigers giving up a 40-point second-half lead against Gold Coast last week.

https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/teams/richmond-tigers/afl-news-2022-damien-hardwick-press-conference-after-richmond-tigers-lose-to-north-melbourne-leigh-adams-jake-aarts-ben-miller/news-story/fdbfb447073ba8c0e5ce049f236bb5c0