Author Topic: Media articles and stats - Tigers cop heavy defeat  (Read 4221 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles and stats - Tigers cop heavy defeat
« on: May 06, 2007, 11:05:37 PM »
Tigers cop heavy defeat
richmondfc.com.au

RICHMOND has gone down to the Cats by 157 points at Telstra Dome.

The Cats won 35.12 (222) to 9.11 (65), the margin the equal 11th-highest in league history and their total the equal eighth-highest in 111 years.

Geelong's total fell just 17 points short of the highest score in league history, when the Cats of 1992 kicked 37.17 (239) against Brisbane.

The defeat handed Richmond officially their darkest day in history, as it surpassed the 141-point loss the Tigers suffered at the hands of North Melbourne in 1990.

Geelong's score was the club's second-highest overall, and their highest score against Richmond.

After week in which their attitude was questioned, the Cats came out snarling. The Tigers were blown away from the opening bounce, barely entering their forward 50 in the first 10 minutes of the game.

The Cats booted the first seven goals of the game to race to a 43-0 lead in 20 minutes, before Richmond youngster Matthew White goaled.

By the end of the first term, the lead was out to 55 points and the match effectively gone.

One of the few bright spots for the Tigers was youngster Nathan Foley, who regularly provided a contest at the stoppages and collected 28 touches to continue his strong start to the year.

Up forward, Matthew Richardson fought hard, often against multiple opponents, to finish with two goals. He could have finished with four or five had he kicked more accurately. Cleve Hughes booted three goals, including two in the third term.

Brett Deledio had a dislocated finger straightened on-field midway through the third term.

After only kicking five goals in the first three quarters, the Tigers showed some fight to kick three of the first four goals in the final term, including two to Shane Tuck from free kicks.

But, as they had all day, the Cats had all the answers and ended up extending their three-quarter-time lead by the final siren.

Best for the Cats were onballers Gary Ablett (32 possessions, three goals) and Jimmy Bartel (24 disposals).


GEELONG 10.2 20.6 29.9 35.12 (222)

RICHMOND 1.1 2.7 5.9 9.11 (65)

Goals
Geelong: P Chapman 4 A Mackie 4 N Ablett 4 T Hawkins 4 G Ablett 3 T Varcoe 3 C Ling 3 S Johnson 2 C Mooney 2 B Ottens C Enright D Johnson J Selwood J Bartel K Tenace.Richmond: C Hughes 3 M Richardson 2 S Tuck 2 M White K Pettifer.

Best
Geelong: G Ablett P Chapman S Johnson N Ablett C Enright M Blake M Scarlett J Kelly.
Richmond: N Foley A Raines K Pettifer.

Injuries
Geelong: P Chapman (hamstring soreness) D Johnson (cut head).
Richmond: T Simmonds (ankle) J Schulz (corked thigh) R Tambling (shoulder).Reports
A Mackie (Geelong) reported by field umpire K Nicholls for wrestling K Pettifer (Richmond) in the second quarter, K Pettifer (Richmond) reported by field umpire K Nicholls for wrestling A Mackie (Geelong) in the second quarter.

Umpires: M Avon H Kennedy K Nicholls.

Official crowd: 34,584 at Telstra Dome.

http://www.richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=42683

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers cop heavy defeat
« Reply #1 on: May 06, 2007, 11:20:18 PM »
Team stats

Kicks:        168 - 233
Handballs:   91 - 150
Disposals:  259 - 383
Marks:         85 - 121
Hitouts:       30 - 46
Tackles:       51 - 49
Frees:          21 - 22

Individual stats

Code: [Select]
Player   Kicks     Handballs     Marks     Frees       Tackles     Score   
  1 2 3 4 T 1 2 3 4 T 1 2 3 4 T For Ag   G B
RICHMOND
FOLEY,Nathan 0 5 4 3 12 4 6 4 2 16 1 0 1 1 3 0 3 8 0 1
TUCK,Shane 1 4 4 4 13 2 2 3 1 8 2 2 0 1 5 3 1 6 2 1
PETTIFER,Kayne 5 8 2 3 18 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 2 1 6 3 1 2 1 1
RAINES,Andrew 6 4 2 2 14 1 0 1 3 5 3 0 0 1 4 1 3 2 0 0
BOWDEN,Joel 3 4 2 2 11 3 1 3 1 8 2 3 0 0 5 1 0 1 0 0
HUGHES,Cleve 2 4 5 1 12 0 2 0 0 2 2 2 3 1 8 2 0 0 3 3
JOHNSON,Kane 1 3 2 2 8 0 2 3 1 6 0 3 1 0 4 0 3 2 0 0
RICHARDSON,Matthew 2 5 2 3 12 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 1 3 7 4 1 0 2 2
POLAK,Graham 4 2 3 0 9 0 1 1 2 4 4 2 2 0 8 0 1 1 0 0
WHITE,Matt 2 0 2 5 9 2 0 1 0 3 1 0 2 2 5 0 1 4 1 0
NEWMAN,Chris 3 3 0 2 8 0 2 1 1 4 1 1 0 1 3 0 1 5 0 1
MOORE,Kelvin 3 1 0 2 6 2 1 3 0 6 2 1 1 1 5 2 1 2 0 0
KING,Jake 1 3 2 1 7 1 1 1 1 4 0 1 1 0 2 2 1 0 0 1
OAKLEY-NICHOLLS,Jarrad 3 0 3 3 9 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 3 3 9 0 2 1 0 0
MCGUANE,Luke 1 1 1 2 5 2 1 2 0 5 1 1 1 1 4 0 0 3 0 0
MEYER,Danny 3 1 1 0 5 0 1 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0
HYDE,Chris 0 1 1 1 3 0 3 0 1 4 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 4 0 0
TAMBLING,Richard 1 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0
DELEDIO,Brett 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 2 5 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 1 0 0
JACKSON,Daniel 1 1 2 0 4 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 4 0 0
SIMMONDS,Troy 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0
SCHULZ,Jay 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 Rushed  1
TOTAL 42 50 39 37 168 20 25 28 18 91 26 22 20 17 85 21 23 51 9 11

HITOUTS: 30
50m PENALTIES: 3
GOALS: Free 5; Play 1; Mark 3
DISTANCE OF GOALS: 0-15m 1; 15-30m 1; 30-40m 1; 40+m 6

Top 5's

Ranking points

G.Ablett        170
Milburn         163
Ottens          141
Mackie          134
Chapman      126

Contested possessions

Foley            13
Bartel           10
J.Bowden      10
Tuck             10

G.Ablett          9

Uncontested possessions

G.Ablett         22
Corey             20
Enright           20
Milburn           19
Mackie            17

Effective Kicks

G.Ablett          14
Enright           14
Corey             12
S.Johnson       12
Pettifer            12

Inside 50

G.Ablett        7
Foley            6
Tuck             6

Corey           5
S.Johnson     5

Rebound 50

Enright        5
J.Bowden     5
Corey           4
White           4
Raines          4
« Last Edit: May 07, 2007, 04:03:27 AM by one-eyed »

Offline torch

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers cop heavy defeat
« Reply #2 on: May 06, 2007, 11:23:57 PM »
157 points ... biggest losing margin in Richmond Football Club History !

congrats Terry Wallace % Kane Johnson ... (not really Terry's fault) ...

but GREAT culture you have brought to our club !

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Cats annihilate pitiful Tigers
« Reply #3 on: May 06, 2007, 11:25:40 PM »
Cats annihilate pitiful Tigers
06 May 2007   Herald-Sun

 GEELONG posted one of the biggest thrashings in VFL-AFL history tonight, destroying Richmond by 157 points at Telstra Dome.

In a remarkable blitz of sustained high scoring, the Cats booted 10 goals in the first quarter, 10 in the second, nine in the third and six in the last.

They won 35.12 (222) to 9.11 (65), the margin being the equal 11th highest in league history and their total the equal eighth highest in 111 years.

Geelong's total fell only 17 points short of the highest score in league history when the Cats kicked 37.17 (239) against Brisbane in 1992.

The defeat handed Richmond officially its darkest day in history, as it surpassed the 141-point loss the Tigers suffered at the hands of North Melbourne in 1990.

Geelong's score was the club's second highest overall and its highest score against Richmond.

The Cats booted the first seven goals of the game to race to a 43-0 lead in 20 minutes before Richmond youngster Matthew White goaled to alleviate Tiger fears they might not score.

There were no such fears for Geelong, which led by 107 points at the main break.

The Cats kept piling on goals until three-quarter time - their score of 29.9 (183) at the last change was the highest at that moment of a game - until they had a comparatively quiet last quarter.

Today's thrashing was the first time a team had broken the 200-point barrier since North Melbourne booted 30.24 (204) against Fitzroy in Round 22, 1995.

Geelong had 15 individual goalkickers. Paul Chapman, Nathan Ablett, Tom Hawkins and Andrew Mackie all booted four, while Travis Varcoe, Gary Ablett and Cameron Ling all booted three.

Gary Ablett was too fleet-footed and clever for the Tigers and was best afield, but that honour could have gone to brother Nathan, Chapman, ruckman Mark Blake or fullback Matthew Scarlett.

Gary Ablett's performance rekindled memories of the days when his father, Gary Sr, used to delight in embarrassing Richmond, and the Cats' scoring rate was similar to the club's performances in the late 1980s.

Just as remarkably, Geelong's performance came only a week after the Cats were humbled by the Kangaroos at Skilled Stadium.

Richmond has endured some dark days in the past two decades, but this must rank highly given the Tigers were so easily brushed away in the first quarter.

Skill errors and missed tackles were continual lowlights for Richmond in the first half before disinterest appeared to set in during the third quarter.

AAP

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21682222%255E20322,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Cats just a whisker off record
« Reply #4 on: May 07, 2007, 04:05:35 AM »
Cats just a whisker off record
Lyall Johnson | May 7, 2007
The Age

GEELONG went close to creating AFL history last night, scoring a massive 35.12 (222) to narrowly miss setting a record for the highest score in a VFL/AFL match.

The Cats were as sensational as the Tigers were deplorable as they came within 17 points of equalling the highest score of 37.17 (239) they set in round seven, 1992 when they smashed Brisbane at Carrara.

The Bears that night scored 11.9 (75), Richmond last night could manage only 9.11 (65).

Instead, Geelong had to settle for equal eighth on the all-time list, ironically equal to Richmond's 34.18 (222) set against St Kilda in 1980.

Last night Geelong also went within a whisker of equalling the record for the number of individual goal kickers in a match, with 15 Cats joining the party with majors. The record is 16.

The only Cats not to get on the goal-kicking list were James Kelly, Mark Blake, Matthew Scarlett, Joel Corey, Matthew Egan, Darren Milburn and David Wojcinski.

And surprisingly, no Geelong player kicked a massive bag of goals, Andrew Mackie, Tom Hawkins, Paul Chapman and Nathan Ablett all top scored with four apiece.

At one stage Geelong looked like setting a record for the highest winning margin of all time, which stands at 190 points, when it led by 145 points late in the third term.

But the Tigers managed to almost hold their own in the last quarter to score four goals to the Cats' six.

The 157-point thumping was easily the highest margin by which the Cats had beaten the Tigers, the previous being a 134-point belting in the Gary Ablett-era of 1989.

However, the margin was the equal 11th biggest in VFL/AFL history alongside Hawthorn's demolition of Fitzroy in 1991.

And if that was not enough trauma for Richmond, Jay Schulz spent much of the match on the bench with a corked thigh.

Richard Tambling was on and off the ground with a shoulder injury, after he looked to have dislocated it early in the match, and Troy Simmonds was not sighted after half-time.

Geelong was not unscathed either with Chapman hurting a hamstring and Kelly receiving treatment on his back.

Egan received a corked thigh and David Johnson a cut to his head after a spectacular mid-air collision with Scarlett.

The catastrophic loss sent Richmond to the bottom of the ladder despite Melbourne's loss to Port Adelaide.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/cats-just-a-whisker-off-record/2007/05/06/1178390141447.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Abletts continue tormenting Richmond
« Reply #5 on: May 07, 2007, 04:09:52 AM »
 :-\

Abletts continue tormenting Richmond
The Age
May 7, 2007 - 12:20AM

The Ablett clan must have some beef with Richmond.

Geelong's Gary and Nathan Ablett rejoiced in continuing a fine family tradition by ganging up on the Tigers in an extraordinary display of scoring, not seen in the AFL for over a decade.

The Ablett brothers helped the Cats post a monstrous 35.12 (222) to 9.11 (65) win over the hapless Richmond at Telstra Dome in one of the 12 greatest landslides in the VFL/AFL's 111-year history.

Gary, 22, and Nathan, 21, collected a combined 47 disposals, 11 marks and seven goals to crush the Tigers on the scoreboard and did so in the same style their famous father did a generation ago.

Gary Ablett senior took delight in single-handedly destroying Richmond, as he booted hauls of 10 goals or more four times against the yellow and black, which included one bag of 14 in 1989.

Where Gary senior largely did the damage by himself, Nathan and his brother had teammates more than willing to make misery for Richmond defenders, as Paul Chapman, Tom Hawkins and Andrew Mackie also booted four each.

Geelong's total fell just 17 points short of the highest score in league history, when the Cats of 1992, which included Ablett senior, kicked 37.17 (239) against Brisbane.

The whopping total, which included 20 goals and a 107-point margin at halftime, also condemned Richmond to their heaviest defeat and made for the first time a team had scored over 200 points in the AFL since round 22 of 1995, when North Melbourne booted 30.24 (204) against Fitzroy.

Geelong coach Mark Thompson said he was never conscious of how close his side was to breaking the all-time scoring record, as he is more intent on his players performing well consistently.

But Nathan Ablett could not hide his smile when reminded of how his dad and his peers liked belting Richmond.

"Everything just went right for us, getting it out of the centre and kicking forward and hitting targets," he said.

"My dad played well against Richmond in the past ... (but) he didn't talk about it too much really.

"Hopefully I was going to experience it for myself a couple of times.

"It's always good to have a big win, you can come into the change rooms after the game and everyone's happy, but you've got to look forward to next week and be a bit more consistent."

http://news.realfooty.com.au/abletts-continue-tormenting-richmond/20072407-bce.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Ablett all class in massacre
« Reply #6 on: May 07, 2007, 04:12:34 AM »
 Ablett all class in massacre
07 May 2007   Herald-Sun
Scott Gullan

All that is required to give a summary of this match is: Geelong wins the ball out of the centre, Geelong goes forward, Geelong player marks and Geelong kicks a goal.

Just insert whatever Cats player's name you like in that sequence because they were all in on the massacre.

To narrow down the farce, the opening 18 minutes of the first quarter is a good snapshot of what went on at Telstra Dome last night.

At the one-minute mark Daniel Jackson sent the Tigers into their forward 50m. The next time the football passed that number painted on the turf in blue paint was at the 17-minute mark, courtesy of Danny Meyer. Extraordinary.

It's probably a record, but given so many other ones went last night, it was lost in the 35-goal avalanche.

During this time the Cats kicked five goals, which they doubled by quarter-time.

And so the trend was set.

The stats sheet was laughable. Geelong had 383 possessions, 123 more than the Tigers, took 36 more marks and had 47 scoring shots to 20.

When a side wins by 157 points it's usually hard to pinpoint who is best on ground.

But this was Gary Ablett's night.

Not that this should come as a surprise to Tiger fans, as his father spent his career terrorising the boys from Punt Rd.

This wasn't Ablett the goalsneak on show, it was Ablett the midfielder.

After slowly building up his minutes in the middle of the ground over recent seasons, little Gazza cut the Tigers to shreds.

He finished with 32 disposals, six marks, six clearances, seven inside 50s and three goals.

Ablett had plenty of mates seeing a truckload of the footy. Joel Corey had his best game for the year, and Andrew Mackie kicked four goals from a half-back flank.

Cameron Ling destroyed young Tiger Brett Deledio, Jimmy Bartel continued his brilliant form, and Nathan Ablett kicked four goals to again show he is a super talent.

The much-vaunted forward structure that had gone AWOL over the past fortnight was back in the groove.

Cameron Mooney (two goals) presented brilliantly. Steve Johnson (two goals) returned in great style. Travis Varcoe buzzed around for three goals, and the great white hope Tom Hawkins came off the bench and kicked four goals in the second half.

And that's not forgetting Paul Chapman, who kicked four goals in the first half before a sore hammy saw him sit out the rest of the match.

There were plenty of great moments to savour. None more sweeter for Cats fans than at the 12-minute mark of the third quarter, when G. Ablett cleared the ball from the centre bounce, ran to the edge of the square and delivered a rocket pass that hit Hawkins, who was leading at top pace up the middle of the ground, on the chest.

As for Richmond, well, what do you say?

One player who caught the eye of many was youngster Matthew White. But that was because of his Asafa Powell impersonations when sprinting off the ground to the interchange bench.

Captain Kane Johnson started the game on the bench, which says a lot about where he's at.

One interesting stat at quarter-time was the zero possessions to Deledio, Jay Schulz and Chris Hyde, who had all started on the ground.

Joel Bowden's kick-out from full back straight to Mooney - who then handballed to Varcoe for a goal early in the third quarter - was the blooper of the match although his teammate Jarrad Oakley-Nicholls put in a contender when after spending plenty of time over a set shot from 50m he also didn't manage to get it over the man on the mark.

Once again Matthew Richardson looked like he tried his heart out and he was forced to spend most of the second half in the ruck because of an injury to Troy Simmonds. Youngster Cleve Hughes kicking three goals could be classed as a positive but we're stretching it.

Really, the entire three hours was a waste of time because it doesn't tell us anything we didn't already know. The Cats are very good flat track bullies who are yet to do anything vaguely similar against a good team - next Sunday against West Coast at Skilled Stadium will reveal more - while Richmond have yet to win a game because they're no good.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21683231%255E19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers cop heavy defeat
« Reply #7 on: May 07, 2007, 04:16:52 AM »

Angry Tiger: A Richmond supporter vents his frustration during the club's thrashing to Geelong at Telstra Dome.

Gaspar out just in time
07 May 2007   Herald-Sun
Mark Stevens

YOU can bet Darren Gaspar is glad he made his retirement effective immediately.

Richmond has had some dark times since 1982. Just two finals series, countless floggings.

But Gaspar at least had the comfort of witnessing the bleakest of them all from the safe side of the fence.

It was worse than the day Jason Dunstall kicked 17 out at Waverley in '92. That was only 79 points.

And worse than Round 1 last year, when Bulldog Ryan Griffen accused the Tigers of giving up. At least they were within reach at halftime before it blew out to 115 points.

This was 157 points. Yes, 157. More than the previous worst Tigers spanking - 141 points against the Kangaroos in 1990.

Geelong threatened to record a history-making hat-trick of 10-goal quarters. The Cats went 10, 10, nine and six.

For some bizarre reason, the time clock didn't appear on the video board until four minutes in. The Tigers were soon wishing time had been frozen.

It was all over so quickly. After 20 minutes, the scoreboard read 7.1 (43) to 0.0 (0). After 17 minutes, the Tigers only had one forward 50 entry.

The security guys in green-coats feared the worst, milling around the Richmond race at half-time and full-time.

But there was no real fury. No spitting, like the spray Danny Frawley copped on that infamous night.

Right now, there is a sense of resignation and deflation about the Tiger army.

Coach Terry Wallace has pledged to play the kids - and it is clear they now know there is more pain to come.

Richmond's next two games are at AAMI Stadium - against Port Adelaide and Adelaide. A double road-trip that looked bad at the start of the year, but now looks horrific.

Wallace has a knack of getting teams up after shellackings. The Tigers lost by 100-plus three times last year and were a different outfit the following week.

But this is the toughest challenge of Wallace's career - Bulldogs included.

Richmond, after at least being a worthy opponent in its first five games, was non-competitive. It seemed like Coburg v Geelong.

Nathan Foley had 28 touches, again leading the way for the Tigers with his attack on the ball.

The only other thing to cheer about for Tigers fans was the speed of Matthew White.

White actually received loud cheers for the intensity of his sprints to the bench. He was going so quick at one stage, he almost skidded into the pine.

By late in the first term, Matthew Richardson was in defence plugging holes. There was a sense of hopelessness.

But at least Richardson, who must have been burning inside, kept putting in.

It was one of those nights where everything that could go wrong did.

Brett Deledio had just six touches and was given a touch-up by Cameron Ling. Richard Tambling, the other great young hope, was rendered useless by a sore shoulder.

The usually safe Joel Bowden kicked into Cam Mooney standing on the mark after a behind and paid the ultimate, embarrassing price.

Bowden also lost his cool, giving away a 50m to Mooney and another goal. Hey, he's only human. Imagine playing full-back at 188cm on a night like that.

An All-Australian named Gaspar may have provided handy back-up.

But Wallace has made it clear it's time for the kids. And they were taught a brutal lesson.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21683136%255E19742,00.html