Author Topic: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to the Bulldogs  (Read 4096 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to the Bulldogs
« on: April 21, 2007, 12:07:35 AM »
Tigers fall to the Bulldogs
richmondfc.com.au
April 20, 2007

RICHMOND remains winless after four rounds following a 32-point loss to the Western Bulldogs at the MCG on Friday night.

The Tigers went down 14.16 (100) to 20.12 (132) in front of 36,821 fans.

Richmond looked threatening late in the third quarter, although they scored a wasteful 3.8 to 2.3 for the term. When Graham Polak goaled in the first minute of the last quarter they drew to within 15 points, but the Bulldogs pulled away again in a free-scoring term.

Matthew Richardson’s 700th career goal was a rare highlight for the Tigers, although Polak’s effort up forward in scoring three goals was notable. The ex-Docker had scored only nine goals in 76 games before the Bulldogs match.

Polak kicked two goals in the third quarter, including a crucial one after the siren, to give Richmond some momentum going into the final term.

He shaped as a potential matchwinner when he scored another major at the start of the last quarter, then took a mark within kicking distance. This time he missed, and the Bulldogs swept the ball up to the other end of the ground for Brad Johnson to score his first goal of the evening.

Another straight afterwards to Robert Murphy gave the Bulldogs a 27-point margin before Andrew Krakouer got one back for the Tigers. The Dogs then iced the game with successive goals to Adam Cooney, Shaun Higgins and Murphy, his fourth.

In the last quarter the Tigers scored six goals to the Bulldogs’ eight, but failed to go on with the revival that looked possible at the end of the third quarter. At that point the Tigers, with Shane Tuck leading the charge from the centre square, appeared capable of a miraculous comeback.

Richmond outscored their opponents in the second half, by a bare point, but paid the price for a first half in which the Bulldogs appeared too fast.

RICHMOND:                4.2,  5.5,   8.13, 14.16 (100)
WESTERN BULLDOGS: 6.4, 10.8, 12.11, 20.12 (132)

Goals:
Richmond: Polak 3, Hyde 3, Richardson 3, Schulz 2, Tivendale, P. Bowden, Tuck
Western Bulldogs: Darcy 4, Murphy 4, Cooney 4, Robbins 2, Higgins 2, Giansiracusa, Hargrave, Johnson, Boyd

Best:
Richmond: Tuck, Polak, Foley, J. Bowden, Hyde
Western Bulldogs: West, Cooney, Gilbee, McMahon, Harris, Boyd

Injuries: Richmond: Foley (corked hip)

Western Bulldogs: Cross (corked thigh), replaced in selected side by Robbins

Reports: Murphy (Bulldogs) reported by umpire Margetts for rough conduct towards Raines (Richmond) in the second quarter

Umpires: Vozzo, Margetts, Chamberlain

Official crowd: 36,821 at the MCG

http://richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=41683

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to the Bulldogs
« Reply #1 on: April 21, 2007, 12:21:09 AM »
Team stats

Kicks:        223 - 218
Handballs: 161 - 110
Disposals:  384 - 328
Marks:       113 - 120
Hitouts:       26 -  21
Tackles:       41 -  51
Frees:          26 - 19

Top 5's

Ranking points

West           158
Tuck            153
Harris          134
Polak           117
J.Bowden     116


Contested possessions

Tuck           13
West           13
Tambling      9
J.Bowden      8
Deledio         8


Uncontested posessions

Foley           27
West           23
Raines         23
K.Johnson    23

Gilbee          20

Effective Kicks

West           15
Gilbee         15
Raines         14
McMahon     13
Hyde           13

Inside 50

K.Johnson     9
Gilbee           7
Eagleton       6
McMahon      5
Hyde            5

Rebound 50

Harris           8
Raines          7
Gilbee          5
Hargrave      5
J.Bowden     5

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to the Bulldogs
« Reply #2 on: April 21, 2007, 03:47:42 AM »
Bulldogs back with bite
Len Johnson | April 21, 2007
The Age

THE Western Bulldogs got back on the winning list after successive hidings from Adelaide and St Kilda with a 32-point win over Richmond at the MCG last night.

If they didn't quite make a meal of it, the Bulldogs turned the win into a pretty substantial entree. At times in each quarter they led comfortably — by 25 points in the first, 39 in the second, 30 in the third and 43 in the last — but somehow Richmond managed to look threatening for most of the second half.

Goals by Graham Polak either side of three-quarter-time slashed the Bulldogs' lead to 16 points. And his long shot from the pocket to make it 10 was not that far away either. It gave the Tigers a sniff at their first win of the season, an unlikely prospect when they trailed by 39 points during the first half and by 30 late in the third term.

In the next 15 minutes, however, the Bulldogs added seven goals to two. The Adam Cooney brace at the end of this surge took their lead to 43 points, the biggest of the night.

Brad Johnson got the first of the sequence, but it was Robert Murphy who was the architect. He snapped two goals himself, one from either pocket and one from either foot and set up the first of Cooney's pair with as sweet a pass across a crowded 50-metre arc as you could hope to see.

In the end, the Bulldogs had too many options. Luke Darcy marked strongly to get four goals in the first half. Murphy got four for the game, too, playing as a mobile forward, while Cooney's three last-quarter goals took him to four for the night as well.

Making a much better fist of the third quarter than the first half, Richmond closed to within 22 points at the final change with a late goal to Polak. The Tigers had reduced a 33-point deficit at half-time to one they looked like they could possibly make good.

Andrew Krakouer created the final goal of the term, which enabled his side to add an inaccurate 3.8 to the Bulldogs' 2.3.

He persistently attacked the ball or harassed opponents as the Bulldogs struggled to run down the clock to the siren and it was his centring kick from almost under a boundary-line pack that Polak ran in, unopposed, to mark 15 metres from goal.

Nathan Foley was a key player for the Tigers in the term, continually getting his hands on the ball at the centre-square contests and setting a teammate up with a quick kick or, more often, a handpass.

Foley, indeed, had had a chance to cut the margin to 19 points a few minutes earlier, but his speculative shot from 40 metres out instead thudded into the goalpost.

It was a costly miss. From the kick-in, the Bulldogs took the ball the length of the ground for Shaun Higgins to run in and slot home their 12th goal.

Despite the fact that Richmond had collected 25 more possessions, it really looked like it could have been more.

Daniel Cross, probably the Dogs' best in the loss to St Kilda last week, was a late withdrawal from the Bulldogs' side. It did not appear to make much difference, as by half-time his replacement, Matthew Robbins, had kicked two goals.

Robbins' second goal, the Bulldogs' 10th, extended their lead to 39 points with plenty of the second quarter left.

Murphy was reported late in the term for making high contact with Richmond's Andrew Raines, but it appeared a case of Raines diving in for the ball creating the contact.

The Bulldogs kicked six goals in the first term, three of them to Darcy, who gave them a tall target at full-forward. His first goal came from a free kick against Luke McGuane; he took a grass-cutter pass from Robbins for his second and out-marked McGuane for his third.

The Bulldogs twice led by 25 points in the term, but late goals to Greg Tivendale and Matthew Richardson cut the margin to 14 at the first break. Richardson's goal, from a mark in front of his immediate opponent, Brian Harris, was his 700th goal.

The Age's Best:
Richmond: N Foley A Raines C Hyde J Bowden S Tuck G Polak K Johnson.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/bulldogs-back-with-bite/2007/04/20/1176697097692.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Tigers fall to the Bulldogs
« Reply #3 on: April 21, 2007, 04:10:43 AM »
Dogs get paws dirty
21 April 2007   Herald-Sun
Mark Robinson

It wasn't a Rocket spray, but his message was crystal: stop the downhill skiing and get back to the grind.

They did just that last night against a Tiger team that played to standard: competitive for periods and un-competitive and under-classed for the rest.

Twice the Bulldogs opened up this game. They kicked the first four goals of the second quarter and then five of six in eight minutes in the fourth.

Although the Bulldogs looked likely winners, they were the game-breakers.

Significantly, the Bulldogs found oomph in the forward line and it came from two blokes who missed most of last year with knee reconstructions. Luke Darcy kicked four goals, three in the first quarter, while the calmness and class returned to Robert Murphy's persona in a click of the fingers.

He roamed across half-forward, mainly on Andrew Raines and Chris Newman, which meant the Dogs didn't play so Johnno-centric.

With Brad Johnson again subdued by Joel Bowden, for the third time in as many outings, the Bulldogs' forward line had to make a contribution. They didn't last week. They did last night.

Better, too, was the Bulldogs' midfield and breakaway from half-back. The Tigers were competitive in that area, but did not have the polish. West, Gilbee and McMahon had 83 possessions.

What of the Tigers?

They had 30 shots at goal, but horribly over-possessed with handball.

Raines returned to form with his run and carry out of the back half, while the resolute Nathan Foley continued to find the pill. His disposal is solid without real penetration but, at 21, he will get better.

The best part is that he can find his own footy and, with a more productive outside group, he would be thought of even higher. The Tigers didn't help themselves – again – and Richo wasn't presented very well with the ball – again.

In the first quarter, he led to Andrew Krakouer peeling out of the middle. Richo was running towards the Southern Stand from the Punt Rd end, and Krakouer drilled it 10m behind him. It didn't lose the Tigers the game and there were probably another 30 efforts that made you shake your head, but it's the continuity of errors that hurts.

Wallace will look for positives as he should and, to be honest, there were some. Heavily criticised after losing to Collingwood, he would've noted which players turned it around. There would be ticks for Foley, Chris Hyde, Raines, Shane Tuck, Bowden and Graham Polak and half-ticks for half a dozen others.

The rest should perhaps also have a look in the mirror, without the winking, of course.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21594872%255E19771,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Valiant Tigers lack polish
« Reply #4 on: April 21, 2007, 04:14:34 AM »
Valiant Tigers lack polish
21 April 2007   Herald-Sun
Scott Gullan

IT'S not easy winning over the Richmond faithful if you're an outsider.

They have been known to eat their own so when an opportunity is presented like the one Graham Polak was given last night it needs to be grabbed with both hands.

The former Fremantle Docker had warmed the hearts of Tiger fans in the third quarter, kicking two goals and showing plenty at centre half-forward.

Then when Polak trotted in and kicked his third in the opening minute of the final term the margin was back to 16 points and for the first time for the evening the Tigers were a legitimate chance.

Forty seconds later, Polak's moment arrived. Bulldogs defender Jordan McMahon's clearing kick didn't have enough leverage to reach Nathan Eagleton and instead the new Tiger was able to stretch and take the grab.

The equation was this. Polak kicks it and the Tigers are within 10 points and the Bulldogs, who have been shaky the past fortnight, are officially under siege.

Polak's 40m shot from the pocket missed. One minute later Bulldogs captain Brad Johnson kicked a goal. Eight minutes later the Dogs lead was 39 points.

Let's for a minute try and picture what might have happened if Polak had kicked that goal. The ball goes back to the centre, Nathan Foley gets his 30th possession for the evening and kicks it long to Richooooooooo ...

Enough fantasy, back to reality. The right team won, the final margin of 32 points probably flattered the Tigers given the Bulldogs dominated proceedings for 80 per cent of the night.

BLUEPRINT ERROR

Apparently it took only two weeks for the football world to figure out how to stop the Western Bulldogs. Every expert in town had it sorted.

Pressure them and the young Dogs don't cope, don't run at them instead cut down their space and whatever you do just sit on Brad Johnson and they can't score.

Easy. Oh, there is one other minor proviso – you'e got to have the talent. Unfortunately, Richmond doesn't.

Last night they had the heart and the endeavour but not the cattle to execute. It was obvious pretty early when the Bulldogs raced to a five goals to one lead by the 18-minute mark of the first quarter that this was the case.

As for the `Stop Johnson and they can't score' theory, well, that was blown out of the water. Joel Bowden kept the Dogs' skipper in check – his return was 1.2 yet the Dogs kicked 20 goals. They had five multiple goalkickers with Robert Murphy, Luke Darcy and Adam Cooney kicking bags of four.

KNEES UP

After three fairly non-descript weeks fans were starting to wonder how long it would take Murphy, in particular, and Darcy to find form.

Both were coming off knee reconstructions – Darcy his second in a row – and had struggled to get back into the groove.

That was until last night. Darcy started at full-forward and had three goals by the 18-minute mark of the opening term which forced his former coach Terry Wallace to dispense with youngster Luke McGuane and assign veteran Darren Gaspar to him.

Murphy, who played as a floating centre half-forward, was dynamic kicking four for the night, including two crucial ones in the final quarter that had class with a capital C all over them.

TALE OF THE TAPE

Richmond overused the football and was made to pay. The Tigers had 57 more disposals, which included a lopsided handball count of 160-110. They went inside 50m the same number of times as the Dogs (56) but 3.8 goals in the third quarter falls into the shoot-yourself-in-the-foot category.

Foley (31 touches), Shane Tuck (31), Andrew Raines (30), Kane Johnson (25), Dean Polo (24) and Brett Deledio (23) all got plenty of dream team points but did not make much impact on the contest.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21594876%255E19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats: Same sad Tiger saga (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #5 on: April 22, 2007, 05:30:58 AM »
Same sad Tiger saga
22 April 2007   Sunday Herald Sun
Jackie Epstein

IT'S only Round 4, but already it has become a familiar routine.
 
Coach Terry Wallace trudging into the post-match media conference at the MCG flanked by two reluctant charges fearful of an interrogation.

On Friday night the "lucky" players were Kayne Pettifer and Troy Simmonds.

Each sat patiently as the coach handled the bulk of questions fired their way.

What is left to dissect?

We know the Tigers can find the ball and we know they are just as adept at butchering it. More kicks, more handballs, more clearances, more hard-ball gets.

Yet it results in a 32-point loss that looked inevitable from the start.

A glance at the month ahead and further distress may not be far away. So far Matthew Richardson, Jay Schulz, Richard Tambling and Greg Tivendale have shown flashes. The latest were Nathan Foley, Andrew Raines and Graham Polak.

If they could all do it at the same time the Tigers may well have enough power to claim a victory.

The positives were the 30 scoring shots and showing a resolve to not give up.

At one stage during the second quarter it looked like the Bulldogs would turn the match into another clinic -- like their victory in Round 1 last year.

But the Tigers pegged back and gave them a fright.

It was just their finishing and chronic decision-making that restricted them at the height of their run.

A highlight, although not widely celebrated, was the 700th goal kicked by spearhead Richardson.

He became the 19th player in history to reach 700 and the third Richmond player behind Jack Titus (970) and Kevin Bartlett (778). But the chances dried up for Richo as Brian Harris got on top. Still, it's a feat that shouldn't go unheralded despite the result of the match.

At times the Bulldogs were back to their brutal best.

They were clean, swift, hungry and still nowhere near their maximum.

After their woes over the past fortnight it was a must-win match and a game they were expected to control.

Scott West was the supreme extractor and tackler, Adam Cooney the trump card and Lindsay Gilbee and Jordan McMahon the architects. The team had been accused of being too-Brad Johnson focused, but that theory was put to bed.

It may sound trite, but even if they had lost, the Bulldogs would have 'won' with Robert Murphy and Luke Darcy returning to form. The pair had been struggling to find their feet after knee reconstructions, but settled back into the big time with four goals each.

They looked confident and dangerous inside 50 and will be pivotal to the team's chances in September.

Youngsters Shaun Higgins, Dylan Addison and Jarrod Harbrow and debutant Tom Williams all chipped in and impressed.

Jake King and Shane Edwards played their first games for the Tigers and pleased the coach.

Edwards, 18, from North Adelaide, said the noise made it feel like he was playing before a crowd of 100,000 not 36,000.

He said Wallace's message to the group was to "just bounce back next week".

The coach has had to say that four times already and at the MCG on Saturday he will be praying for a different post-match scenario.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21597144%255E19742,00.html

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Re: Media articles and stats: Eade, Wallace 'good friends' (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #6 on: April 22, 2007, 05:34:43 AM »
Eade, Wallace 'good friends'
22 April 2007   Sunday Herald Sun
Jon Ralph and Jackie Epstein

BULLDOGS coach Rodney Eade yesterday diffused talk of a personal rivalry between himself and Richmond coach Terry Wallace.

Wallace and Eade are at the centre of a feud between the Dogs and Tigers that dates back to the 2001 controversy surrounding Tony Liberatore felling Matthew Knights behind play.

Eade said that while the rivalry had been played up, he and Wallace remain good friends.

"People would say there is a rivalry between Terry and I, but Terry and I got on pretty well when we were playing," Eade said.

"My dad passed away a couple of weeks ago and he phoned me up, just like when his dad passed away I spoke to him. I think there is rivalry as far as having played together, but we were pretty good teammates."

He believed the rivalry was more about the two clubs and the 2001 incident, which had been "overplayed".

Wallace, who has likened his fractured team to last year's Essendon outfit, is confident the structure will return by the second half of the season. Wallace was again left to rue a fruitless Friday night after the Tigers went down by 32 points to the Bulldogs.

He said plans that had promised so much during pre-season had been turned upside down.

"We still haven't got our structure the way that we'd like it and it hurts," he said. "Essendon went through the same sort of thing . . . they had to throw Patrick Ryder into the ruck.

"As we get a couple of the boys back and get our structure in place, we've got to show people that we've got a strong ride home to the latter part of the season."

The winless Tigers have a nightmare month ahead - West Coast (home), Geelong (home), Port Adelaide (away) and Adelaide (away).

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21598023%255E19742,00.html