Author Topic: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast  (Read 7946 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« on: April 28, 2007, 07:28:44 PM »
Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
richmondfc.com.au

THE TIGERS remain winless in 2007 despite a courageous performance against West Coast at the MCG.

The Eagles won by 23 points, 14.15 (99) to 11.10 (76), after the Tigers closed to within four points midway through the last quarter.

Richmond began the game as though they meant to defy the critics, many of whom had predicted a huge West Coast win.

The Tigers absorbed two early goals before unleashing their best quarter of the season, capped by four goals to small forward Richard Tambling.

Tambling created one goal himself, snaking through four Eagles defenders, but the rest were the direct result of Richmond’s decision to play the Eagles at their own attacking game.

Richmond could in fact have been further in front, with Jay Schulz missing three shots from inside 50 in the opening term, playing as a conventional full-forward with Matthew Richardson pushing up the ground.

The Eagles began to click after quarter time, with ruckman Dean Cox starting to find his share of the hit-outs after being blanketed early by Troy Simmonds.

Joel Bowden was in terrific touch for the Tigers and worked hard in defence, while sneaking forward in the fourth to kick a goal, while Graham Polak was superb, adding 12 marks to his 21 possessions.

For the Eagles, Daniel Kerr was simply devastating through the middle and closely supported by Andrew Embley and Adam Selwood, and while Chris Judd wasn't at his prolific self, he still found the ball 21 times.

Kane Johnson went to Judd shortly after the bounce and shadowed the Brownlow medallist for much of the first, while Kerr was initially minded by former rookie Nathan Foley.

The Eagles exploded out of the blocks and got their first goal within 30 seconds, while another to David Wirrpanda three minutes later suggested a black day for the Tigers.

But Tambling responded quickly and had his first on the board after converting a set shot, but Jay Schulz failed to capitalise on his own opportunity and sprayed the kick two minutes on.

Cleve Hughes snared the first of the second term before the Eagles finally ended the Tigers' six-goal streak when Ashley Hansen converted a set shot up the other end.

After the Eagles' ruckmen were jumped early, they righted themselves in the second and the visitors started to win more of the clearances with the likes of Kerr, Judd and Embley owning more of the ball.

West Coast wiped Richmond's six unanswered goals off the ledger throughout the term, keeping the Tigers to only one goal while snaring six to reclaim the lead and take an 18-point lead into the second half.

The Tigers' endeavour couldn't be questioned in the third term but they just couldn't break through to make a difference on the scoreboard. Brett Deledio tried to ignite the side with a goal from 50m early on, but their only other goal would come from Hughes in red time.

With Joel Bowden continuing to rack up the touches in defence, the Tigers kept the Eagles to just 2.3 in the third, which gave supporters hope the 18-point three-quarter time deficit could be reeled in.

Adam Hunter snared the first goal of the fourth but Kayne Pettifer quickly accounted for it while another to Hughes pulled the margin within two kicks at the eight-minute mark.

Shortly after, the MCG erupted when Pettifer unloaded with a long kick that had Joel Bowden on the end of it. Bowden's accurate snap put the Tigers within four points.

Youngster Jarrad Oakley-Nicholls will want to forget the next moment in a hurry, with the slight midfielder marking 50m out at the 16-minute mark with the chance to put his side in front.

He decided to kick to the top of the goal square rather than head for home, and the Eagles spirited the ball away, enabling Hansen to nail a goal.

The Tigers didn't kick another and the Eagles kicked away to claim the win and remain on top of the table with five wins.

Richmond now faces Geelong at Telstra Dome next Sunday evening, while West Coast will return home to Perth to meet the Western Bulldogs at Subiaco on Saturday.

Richmond   5.3    6.4     8.7    11.10 (76)
West Coast 2.6   8.10  10.13  14.15 (99)

GOALS

Richmond:Tambling 4, Hughes 3, J Bowden, Deledio, Jackson, Pettifer
West Coast: Lynch 4, Wirrpanda 3, Hansen 3, Hunter 2, R Jones, Glass

BEST

Richmond: Polak, Raines, Newman, J Bowden, Tambling, Deledio
West Coast: Selwood, Kerr, Embley, Hansen, Rosa, Lynch, Wirrpanda, Judd

Injuries: Nil

Reports: Tyson Stenglein (West Coast), reported for forceful conduct on Richard Tambling (Richmond) by umpire Pannell in the first quarter

Umpires: T Pannell S Ryan S Wenn

Crowd: 27,326 at MCG

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Eagles edge out dogged Tigers
« Reply #1 on: April 28, 2007, 07:36:05 PM »
Eagles edge out dogged Tigers
Adam Cooper | April 28, 2007 - 5:02PM
The Age

Best:
Richmond: G Polak A Raines C Newman B Deledio R Tambling M Richardson J Bowden.

Injuries: Richmond: A Krakouer (rested) replaced in the selected side by J Oakley-Nicholls.

West Coast extended their perfect start to the season by beating Richmond by 23 points at the MCG to notch a fifth-straight win.

The Eagles were made to work all the way for the win, as Richmond crept within four points when Joel Bowden snapped truly 10 minutes into the last quarter.

But some poise under pressure from the side which knows how to win the close ones meant West Coast kicked the last three goals of the game and won 14.15 (99) to 11.10 (76).

Full-forward Quinten Lynch booted four goals and Ashley Hansen three for the Eagles, while Daniel Kerr continued his brilliant season and winger Andrew Embley had a fine return at the MCG after last year's Norm Smith Medal win during the grand final victory.

Richmond made a blistering start to the game in the first quarter, inspired by Richard Tambling's four goals and shooting to a 15-point lead.

That margin became 21 points when Cleve Hughes took a strong mark and goaled in the second minute of the second quarter, but the Eagles switched the tempo by playing tighter and stopping the Tigers' run.

By forcing the mistakes the Eagles wrested back control of the game during the second quarter and booted six unanswered goals to keep Richmond at arm's length for much of the game.

The Tigers clawed back in the final quarter through three quick goals, and had the opportunity to hit the front when Jarrad Oakley-Nicholls took a kick from 55 metres out.

But the young man went for a chip kick to 20 metres out from goal, and West Coast was able to rebound and whisk the ball to forward Hansen, who kicked the decisive goal after a strong mark.

Hansen was one of the Eagles' best along with Kerr, Embley, captain Chris Judd, half-back Adam Selwood and midfielder Matt Rosa.

Richmond's best included Andrew Raines, Chris Newman, Brett Deledio - who played in the midfield for most of the game - and Matthew Richardson, who played in the ruck early and never stopped trying.

Despite the Tigers' good work in stretching the Eagles, defeat condemned Richmond to five straight losses to open the season, a streak last witnessed in 1983.

Richmond will again rue their costly mistakes and missed chances, as several opportunities went begging in the last quarter while forward Jay Schulz failed to cap the good work of his teammates by missing four set shots.

The Tigers were also on the end of a lopsided free kick count of 29-13.

The only blight on West Coast's day was the report of Tyson Stenglein, who was booked for making front-on contact on Tambling in the first quarter.

AAP

http://realfooty.com.au/news/news/eagles-edge-out-tigers/2007/04/28/1177460033661.html

Moi

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #2 on: April 28, 2007, 07:47:45 PM »
Injuries - Krak (rested) - never seen that before lol

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #3 on: April 28, 2007, 07:54:51 PM »
Team stats

Kicks:         196 - 217
Handballs:  118 - 183
Disposals:   314 - 400
Marks:        121 - 107
Hitouts:       18 - 29
Tackles:       58 - 45
Frees:          13 - 29  ::)  

Top 5's

Ranking points

Kerr              140
Polak             126
Joel Bowden   121

Selwood         117
Newman        113

Contested possessions

Kerr             13
Polak            12
Judd            10
Deledio          9
Armstrong      7

Uncontested possessions

Embley          28
Joel Bowden   27
Selwood         25
Rosa              19
Stenglein       18

Effective kicks

Joel Bowden   19
Embley          16
Kerr               14
Wirrpanda      11
Polak             11

Inside 50

Priddis           8
Embley          7
Rosa              7
Judd              6
Stenglein       5

Rebound 50

Joel Bowden   7
Newman        6
Raines           6
Polak             4
Richardson     4

Moi

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #4 on: April 28, 2007, 07:56:55 PM »
Any way of getting the stats for number of possessions per goal?
Thought we were more direct today and would have come down a bit from previous weeks.

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #5 on: April 28, 2007, 10:51:55 PM »
Any way of getting the stats for number of possessions per goal?
Thought we were more direct today and would have come down a bit from previous weeks.
Wouldn't that be total disposals divided by the number of goals lol  :wallywink. Agree we played more direct footy today  :thumbsup.

Injuries - Krak (rested) - never seen that before lol
Code for dropped going by what Plough said before today's game. 
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

letsgetiton!

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #6 on: April 28, 2007, 10:57:32 PM »
when will tuck  petts tivs and gas be "rested"

Offline TigerRocket

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #7 on: April 29, 2007, 01:03:47 AM »
 ;D We should never be happy with a loss but it was a hell of a lot better today!! Some positives:
Backline much better with Polak @ CHB he is a natural there. I think it is time for Moore to replace Gaspar, we just can't have his poor disposal any longer. Leading goal scorers Bling and Cleever play them and they will deliver. Finally started Delidio in the right position, he did a job on Judd in the 3rd quarter, we just couldn't control Kerr >:(
Richo can be so dangerous running around the ground, whilst his disposal is not the best it makes our forward line more predicable (if only Sarge had got those set shots early >:(
Lets see Polo in for Tucky (his disposal was not good today), and Jack in for Petts.  :D
Next Sunday and the pussies .... we have got a real show given today's effort :gotigers

Offline Tigertailz

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #8 on: April 29, 2007, 01:14:32 AM »
im sorry fellow one eyed forumers but gasper is not up to the afl level.i cant question his one percenters over the years but man oh man im sick of the poo skill level...he is history

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Mistakes cost Tigers a win
« Reply #9 on: April 29, 2007, 04:27:51 AM »
Mistakes cost Tigers a win
Lyall Johnson | April 29, 2007
The Age

NO TEAM likes to be called "gallant in defeat", but second-bottom Richmond yesterday took it to the reigning premier and almost pulled off a miracle win when just about the entire football world had predicted a monumental thumping.

And in the end — indeed, as it was throughout the day — it was not so much the Eagles' class but the Tigers' lack of it when it counted that cost them their first win of the year. Tiger fans might blame the umpires, but turnovers and poor decision-making were what killed them.

With the clock passing the 10-minute mark of the last quarter, Richmond had regained top gear and was pressing hard.

It had led at quarter-time by 15 points but fell three goals behind as the Eagles re-established order in the second and third terms. In the last term the Tigers showed enough spirit to give them a sniff of an unlikely win.

Young Cleve Hughes, in for his first game of the year, had just kicked a long goal off one step and Joel Bowden had snapped truly to put the Tigers only four points down.

But as Richmond piled on the pressure and the Eagles threatened to founder, the Tigers suddenly started making fundamental errors when precise execution was required.

Richard Tambling, who in the first quarter was brilliant with four straight goals to give the Tigers the start they wanted, was one of their best … and worst.

After splitting a pack on the half-back flank, he streamed toward the centre and drilled the ball straight over the head of Matthew Richardson in the centre square. It was pure luck that the turnover didn't result in a goal.

Jarrad Oakley-Nicholls, in only his fifth game, chipped a kick to the "hot spot" from 50 metres when he should have shot for goal. Jake King, in only his second match, shanked a kick out on the full from the same distance. Nathan Foley ducked through a pack only to handball over the head of a teammate and straight to an opponent.

In the first quarter, Jay Schulz squandered the chance to blow the game apart when he missed three set shots in a row from only 30 metres. He finished with four behinds.

The pressure was released, the Eagles jumped off the hook and made the Tigers pay with the sort of one-touch football that sets them apart.

With goals to Ashley Hansen, David Wirrpanda and Hansen again late in the quarter, West Coast saw off the challenge and sealed the 23-point win.

Having recovered from a slow start, the midfield class of Andrew Embley, Chris Judd, Daniel Kerr, Adam Selwood and Tyson Stenglein set up the win, the second quarter a six-goal-to-one effort.

Embley was brilliant, moving from half-forward into the middle where he consistently found his way through traffic and delivered accurately. Judd, as usual, performed under pressure, at times collecting the ball without a fumble under heavy pressure and finding a teammate with a precision pass. That's when he and Kerr weren't running down opponents with telling tackles.

Quinten Lynch was also back near his best, leading strongly and kicking four goals, one a monster from 55 metres.

But the Tigers were far from disgraced and coach Terry Wallace would have plenty to be pleased with. Notwithstanding the extra man posted permanently across half-back, the Tigers were as hard at the football as the Eagles, won many of the contested balls, ran as hard, if not harder at times, than West Coast and used the corridor well. They also had a number of younger players — and one new to the club in Graham Polak — step up.

Polak played easily his best game for his new side, patrolling the backline and taking strong marks to repel West Coast thrusts. Hughes might need to work on his marking, but is a likely type. Oakley-Nicholls knows where the ball is and uses it well, and Luke McGuane is an exciting and hard-working defender who put in his claim for mark of the year with a spectacular grab.

Andrew Raines, despite going quiet for parts of the match, was also back near his best and giving the team plenty of drive from defence.

For much of the day the Tigers looked an impressive unit that belied their standing on the ladder.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/rfmatchreport/mistakes-cost-tigers-a-win/2007/04/28/1177460043399.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #10 on: April 29, 2007, 04:30:23 AM »
From the Age:

The Richmond camp was as frustrated by another loss of a game it might have won, the Tigers having been in a realistic winning position in every round to date. Again, errors and poor kicking for goal proved costly, with key forward Jay Schulz finishing the day with 0.4.

But Wallace said it was the Tigers' style of play at the critical stage of the game that had cost it a chance of victory as much as the clanger count.

"At times today it (execution) was terrific, at times today it put us in a winning position," he said. "But what it is at the moment is not consistent, and consistency is what wins you games. We've got to learn how to win those games, and there's a way and manner to win those games.

"It was more our style of play. Once we got them under the pump, we really needed to pressure them up. I thought we had a few too many blokes sitting back loose across the half-back line rather than playing that real one-on-one football that wins tough, uncompromising games, and I think they were probably just a little bit more experienced in what it takes to win those type of games."

Wallace said the Tigers had structured a side with an eye on the future. It featured Schulz in the key forward post, Cleve Hughes, who kicked three goals, at centre half-forward, and Graham Polak, who has been forced into relief ruckwork this season, a top performer at centre half-back. The Tigers also rotated Brett Deledio and Richard Tambling more through the midfield.

"Up until this stage, we've fiddled around with the side a little bit through necessity with the rucks out of the team. We just wanted to try to get a structure in place that said: 'Hey, that's where we're going; that's where we're marching forward to'. "

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/richmond-fury-at-umpiring/2007/04/28/1177460044249.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers pay price for lapses
« Reply #11 on: April 29, 2007, 04:33:35 AM »
Gutsy Tigers pay price for lapses
29 April 2007   Sunday Herald Sun
David Reed

THERE were times yesterday at the MCG when the West Coast machine looked vulnerable - or at least very rusty.

The Tigers were bursting in numbers through the middle of the ground, had kicked six consecutive goals and the reigning premiers were getting smashed in their pet areas - contested possessions, hard and loose ball gets - and even being outmarked 44-13 by a boisterous home team in the opening term.

By early in the second term the Richmond lead had ballooned out to 21 points and the unthinkable was on the cards.

But the Eagle machine is hard to beat. Especially when you are on the wrong side of a 29-13 free kick count (not that the umpires had much influence) and when every time West Coast was challenged it had answers on every line.

It was at those critical moments that West Coast's superiority shone and where a couple of the younger Tigers were found out.

Two of the most glaring turning points weren't major mistakes on face value, but came when Richmond drew close midway through the final quarter.

Nathan Foley and Jarrad Oakley-Nicholls chose options they would probably revisit.

Teenager Oakley-Nicholls took a mark on the 50m arc with his side five points down, yet went for the top of the square instead of going for goal.

His kick was shanked left and allowed the Eagles not only to rebound, but precision kicking from Rowan Jones saw Ashley Hansen mark and goal.

Foley's blooper came when he had options everywhere, but chose to go to Matthew Richardson in a 50/50 contest deep in the pocket.

Richo gave away a free kick and that moment was wasted as well.

West Coast was again led by another dominant performance from Daniel Kerr. He notched another win in his one-on-one competition with Chris Judd to be the best player in the competition.

The feisty pocket dynamo easily outshone his captain yesterday with his ability to win the hard ball and his consistent superb delivery.

West Coast took only 22 seconds to notch the opening goal of the match after winning the centre clearance and bustling the ball forward pack style.

Rowan Jones was the man on the end of the chain and a couple of minutes later David Wirrpanda, recast as a forward this year, belted through another.

The signs were ominous, but the Richmond's rejigged team fought back. Terry Wallace pulled some surprise rotations and with Matthew Richardson having a run on the ball.

It was left to livewire Richard Tambling who kicked four consecutive goals in a sizzling first term.

But his contribution was merely a reflection of Richmond's all-out attack at the contest, some clever coaching moves and some bold running through the corridor. Daniel Jackson added another goal in the shadows of quarter-time to give Tiger fans hope. The worry was always how long they could keep it up, especially with the Eagles having control of the clearances.

Yet Cleve Hughes took an early contested mark and kicked the first goal of the second term to extend the lead to 21 points.

But from there the machine clicked into gear. And the biggest unit of all, Quinten Lynch, was on the end of the assembly line.

Lynch didn't get on the scoreboard until midway through the second term as he found Darren Gaspar tough going, but he quickly found his range once he got his hand on the ball.

By midway through the third term Lynch had four goals and the Eagles had turned the 21-point deficit into a four-goal lead.

In stark contrast was Jay Schulz's effort at the other end of the field - the big Tiger muffed all four set shots for the day. The Tigers went into the last quarter three goals down, but hit back, at one stage cutting the margin to only four points.

But that was when the premiers showed their mettle.

Cool heads and brilliant kicking under pressure from Ashley Hansen, Wirrpanda and Rowan Jones killed off the Tiger hopes.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21638504%255E19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Trying times for Richmond
« Reply #12 on: April 29, 2007, 04:35:18 AM »
Trying times for Richmond
29 April 2007   Sunday Herald Sun
Scot Palmer

BY 2011 Matthew Richardson probably will own a string of five-star restaurants, Nathan Brown may have an expansive property portfolio and Troy Simmonds could have his own reptile park.

Richmond, by then, will have painstakingly rebuilt its team and turned over up to 90 per cent of its list.

If Terry Wallace is in charge, you can bet he will still be upbeat and looking for new horizons for his new-age, new-look Tigers.

But a better bet would be that West Coast will have completed their restructuring, too, adding to their hard-edged play, and will probably keep their growing sequence of wins over Richmond intact.

The Tigers, yesterday, did all it could to turn around the record of six straight losses to the reigning champs, employing clever experimentation, raising its intensity and taking on the Eagles man-on-man.

Dogged persistence got the Tigers to within four points of a major upset in the last quarter. But, again, costly turnovers put paid to a win, which could have put Richmond's season back on track. And it would have caused the Eagles some anxiety, knowing they won't be back to the MCG until the finals.

No side so far has shown it can rival West Coast's supremacy

The Eagles are a super team full of super players. Two - Adam Selwood and Daniel Kerr - who have been in the media spotlight for the wrong reasons, showed their class.

Selwood put the brakes on Richard Tambling and the tank-like Kerr, ended the match with a 94 per cent efficiency rating.

Wallace was well aware how much his side had to lift to compete yesterday, and his early switches of Richardson to on the ball produced new, effective forward targets.

But when the Eagles put the pedal down and big Dean Cox began to hit his targets in the centre, the game swung around.

Richmond fans were enthused by their side's performance but horrified by the 29-13 free kick count against the Tigers.

Richmond could argue harsh treatment. However, there were no excuses for many of their clangers and basic skill errors.

One glaring black spot was when the Tigers were roaring and a mere five points down. Richardson led to the boundary line as a decoy only to find the ball heading his way.

He had little chance to mark and an opportunity for the Tigers to snatch a lead again was lost.

Richmond, though, may have laid the foundations yesterday for a new-look forward line featuring Cleve Hughes at centre half-forward and Jay Schulz in the goal square.

No doubt Wallace and his staff will be mulling over how a normally accurate kicker like Schulz skewed four behinds from close range.

The misses and unforced errors, at the end of the day, must have had the 27,326 fans - most of them Tigers supporters - heading home shaking their heads in disbelief.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21638507%255E19742,00.html

Offline julzqld

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #13 on: April 29, 2007, 10:26:10 AM »
when will tuck  petts tivs and gas be "rested"
When the coach says so and not before.

Moi

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Re: Media articles and stats - Gutsy Tigers fall to West Coast
« Reply #14 on: April 29, 2007, 10:34:15 AM »
Wouldn't that be total disposals divided by the number of goals lol  :wallywink. Agree we played more direct footy today  :thumbsup.
Oops hahaha!