Demons put bite on Tigers
Len Johnson
The Age
July 15, 2006
MELBOURNE 1.4 5.9 8.12 9.16 (70)
RICHMOND 1.2 2.3 3.8 7.10 (52)
Goals:
Melbourne: R Robertson 4 A Davey C Sylvia J Rivers L Dunn D Ward.
Richmond: M Richardson 2 T Simmonds 2 K Pettifer J Schulz A Kellaway.
Best:
Melbourne: R Robertson J McDonald M Whelan S Godfrey B Pickett J White A Yze.
Richmond: T Simmonds B Deledio K Johnson N Foley P Bowden.
Umpires: M Stevic B Allen M Vozzo.
Crowd: 60,086 at the MCG.
MELBOURNE defeated Richmond by 18 points at the MCG last night, its 11th win in 12 matches, to maintain its top-four position.
Four goals to one in the final quarter — one helped by two 50-metre penalties and another by one — gave the Tigers a scoreboard respectability that they did not quite earn.
From the second minute of the second quarter, when the Tigers briefly took the lead, until the opening minutes of the last, Melbourne added 7.8 to 1.6. Melbourne had well and truly bolted before Richmond got anywhere near the door.
A last-quarter leg injury to Ben Holland, who had held Matthew Richardson goalless for the first three quarters, may sour the victory a little, but the 2006 Melbourne seems to have adequate reserves for anything but the most major of catastrophes.
Richardson had just kicked his first goal, added another soon afterwards as Melbourne reorganised and then Troy Simmonds outmuscled Nathan Carroll to mark in the dying seconds for another goal, the ball coming in after a 50-metre penalty.
Russell Robertson led the way for the Demons with four goals, two from speccies. On a night of limited highlights, his hanger over Joel Bowden in the second quarter and a soaring goal-square chest mark in the third were two bits of play to be thankful for.
Brad Green played well for the winners, but the pleasing thing for the Demons was that the win was achieved without a goal from David Neitz and limited contribution from players such as Cameron Bruce, Aaron Davey, Byron Pickett and Jeff White. Melbourne's class simply ran deeper than that of its courageous opponent.
The Demons led by 34 points at the last change. Two goals to Robertson and another to Daniel Ward seemed enough to put the game out of Richmond's reach.
Robertson was giving Bowden a hell of a night, even though the Tiger playmaker had had a lot of the ball. Midway through the term, Andrew Raines was switched onto the mercurial Demon forward.
Richmond got its first goal since the opening two minutes of the second quarter when Andrew Kellaway goaled from 40 metres out 20 minutes into the term.
The Tigers were pushing hard and when Brett Deledio dived courageously on the ball late in the term and won a free kick, could have closed to within five goals. Deledio was unable to take the kick, however, and Andrew Krakouer's effort from about 40 metres missed way to the left.
A dominant second quarter allowed Melbourne to lead by 24 points at half-time. After the stalemate that was the first quarter, both sides had a goal within a few minutes of the bounce to start the second.
Jay Schulz, about fourth in line at best, marked strongly 20 metres out from goal to kick the Tigers' second and put them in front for the first time in the night. Scarcely had the calicos been furled, however, than they were out again to acclaim a goal by Demon Jared Rivers.
That goal followed run out of defence from Davey and Pickett that was to become the hallmark of Melbourne's method as they added 4.5 to 1.1 for the term.
With the Tigers pushing numbers back behind the ball, Melbourne countered this by being prepared to carry the ball into attack before using one decisive kick to create a scoring chance. The example par excellence came when Ward took five bounces to carry the ball from inside his own defensive 50 to just outside the attacking 50, touched the ball down once more before cutting inside to chip a pass to Colin Sylvia for the Demons' fifth. This came minutes after Robertson had kicked Melbourne's fourth goal.
Richmond, on the other hand, seemed short of attacking options. At one point it seemed the plan was to set the ball up for a Richardson speccy. It wasn't working. Nor was Nathan Brown finding many chances coming his way as Matthew Whelan closed him down.
The Tigers gifted a couple of goals to Melbourne, too. Bowden hand-balled straight to Davey for one goal, then Raines kicked straight to Davey in another turnover and was fortunate when Rivers missed the shot that resulted.
Indifferent conversion — most of nine first-half behinds coming from set shots, five from "posters" — kept Richmond within touch.
The first quarter was surely one of the most tedious played this year.
The quarter's two lonely goals — one to each side — had not that much to recommend them. Lynden Dunn copped just enough contact to his leg to be paid a free kick for a trip and Melbourne's first, then Kayne Pettifer snapped a goal between three defenders.
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