Author Topic: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points  (Read 6084 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
8:10 PM Sun 8 July, 2007
By Luke Holmesby,
richmondfc.com.au

A VALIANT Richmond fell to the Kangaroos by 25 points in their round 14 clash at Telstra Dome on Sunday evening.

The Tigers managed 11.13 (79) to the Kangaroos’ 14.20 (104), and battled the game out when the Roos threatened to blow them away in the third term.

Richmon will rue numerous goalscoring opportunities missed throughout the evening.



Matthew Richardson, Shane Tuck and Greg Tivendale were the best for the yellow and black.

Richardson was in top form early on and finished the day with four goals, 12 marks and 22 possessions.

Nathan Brown was quiet but will be better for the run in just his third game of the year.

Jake King and Bowden once again combined well in the backline, thwarting the Kangaroos’ scoring opportunities and setting up the forward thrusts in the first half.

The Kangaroos had the run of it early, kicking the first three goals as the Tigers struggled find their rhythm.

In-form midfielder Nathan Foley was paid the ultimate compliment by the Kangaroos with Brady Rawlings tagging him.

Foley rose to the challenge and worked hard for 19 disposals, breaking even with Rawlings who is widely regarded as one of the best run-with players in the competition.

In just his second game, Jack Riewoldt was initially faced with Kangaroo veteran Glenn Archer. While the youngster did not have a huge influence on the match, the experience gained is invaluable.

Riewoldt had a hand in Richmond’s first goal when he chipped the ball to Richard Tambling, who ran on and kicked the goal at the 21-minute mark of the first term.

Tivendale provided plenty of drive from the wing early on but faded after the first term.

Defenders Will Thursfield, Graham Polak and Joel Bowden shared the unenviable job on in-form Kangaroo Drew Petrie.

Petrie was quiet in the first half before hitting his stride in the third quarter.

It was an even tussle at the start of the second term, but three quick goals to the Tigers from Richardson, Tivendale and Adam Pattison shifted the momentum Richmond’s way before the Kangaroos kicked back.

At the main break the Kangaroos led by seven points.

The Kangaroos came out firing third term, putting on five quick goals to get the jump on Richmond. A poor period of play for Richmond was capped off with a hand injury ending Brett Deledio’s day.

The Tigers’ first goal of the quarter came 19 minutes in when Richardson marked strongly in the goal square and kicked his third goal of the day. Kayne Pettifer followed it up with another goal soon after to bring the margin back to 26 points.

Cameron Howat found his spark in the third term, with several exciting dashes along the wing.

Shane Tuck began to find his share of the football, as did captain Kane Johnson.

Pettifer booted two impressive goals in the final quarter but it was too little too late.

Next week Richmond takes on Hawthorn at the MCG.

KANGAROOS  4.4  6.6  11.12  14.20 (104)
RICHMOND   1.1  5.5   8.9   11.13  (79)

Goals: Kangaroos: D Petrie 6 C Jones 3 S McMahon 2 D Wells J Sinclair L Brown. Richmond: M Richardson 4 K Pettifer 3 A Pattison R Tambling G Tivendale C Howat.

Best: Kangaroos: B Harvey D Petrie S Grant H McIntosh D Pratt J Smith C Jones B Rawlings. Richmond: M Richardson C Howat S Edwards D Jackson.

Umpires: M Stevic D Sully M Ellis.

Crowd: 33,583 at Telstra Dome.

http://richmondfc.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/6301/Default.aspx?newsId=46847

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #1 on: July 08, 2007, 09:22:58 PM »
Matthew Richardson, Shane Tuck and Greg Tivendale were the best for the yellow and black.
What game was this bloke watching :rollin

Offline Fishfinger

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #2 on: July 08, 2007, 09:24:55 PM »
I think he meant first half.  ;)
Didn't put Tuck or Tiv in the bests at the end of the article.


It's 50 of one and half a dozen of the other - Don Scott

Passionfruit

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #3 on: July 08, 2007, 09:27:10 PM »
Matthew Richardson, Shane Tuck and Greg Tivendale were the best for the yellow and black.
What game was this bloke watching :rollin

And they dont serve grog in the press area either :rollin

Offline bluey_21

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #4 on: July 08, 2007, 09:28:59 PM »
lol at North Melbourne supporters

Some idiot on Bigfooty said there was nothing in Lids injury but whinges that Harris copped a hit below his eye  ::)

Offline Fishfinger

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #5 on: July 08, 2007, 09:30:01 PM »
Be interesting to see the stats.
According to SEN Kane Johnson had 22 possessions - no clangers.
It's 50 of one and half a dozen of the other - Don Scott

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #6 on: July 08, 2007, 09:32:46 PM »
Be interesting to see the stats.
According to SEN Kane Johnson had 22 possessions - no clangers.

its more about how he is a freeloading passenger as oposed to inspiring - which is what the job calls for

Offline one-eyed

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Stats - Tigers vs Roos
« Reply #7 on: July 08, 2007, 09:43:06 PM »
Team Stats

Kicks:        196 - 208
Handballs: 141 - 146
Disposals:  337 - 354
Marks:       100 - 118
Hitouts:       25 - 31
Tackles:       45 - 51
Frees:          14 - 11

Clangers:   24 - 7  ::)
Errors:       45 - 38
Inside 50s: 50 - 56
1st poss:    33 - 31
Clearances: 30 - 28

Goals from kick-ins: 3 - 1
Goals from stoppages: 2 - 5

Individual Stats

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

TUCK,Shane                1 6 3 2 12 2 2 6 1 11 2 2 0 0 4 0 4 3 0 0
RICHARDSON,Matthew 5 4 5 4 18 1 2 1 0 4 3 3 4 2 12 2 0 0 4 3
JOHNSON,Kane            3 2 4 2 11 0 3 5 3 11 1 1 3 1 6 1 0 6 0 1
NEWMAN,Chris             5 2 3 6 16 1 0 4 0 5 3 0 2 1 6 1 1 0 0 0
BOWDEN,Joel               2 3 2 4 11 0 6 2 1 9 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0
RAINES,Andrew           2 4 3 2 11 0 4 4 1 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
JACKSON,Daniel          1 6 3 3 13 3 1 2 0 6 2 2 1 2 7 1 0 1 0 0
FOLEY,Nathan              5 0 5 1 11 0 4 3 1 8 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 6 0 0
TIVENDALE,Greg          5 3 1 0 9 4 4 1 1 10 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 2 1 0
TAMBLING,Richard       3 3 1 3 10 1 3 1 3 8 1 2 0 4 7 0 0 2 1 1
KING,Jake                   3 3 2 1 9 2 5 0 2 9 2 3 0 1 6 2 0 3 0 0
HOWAT,Cameron         2 0 7 2 11 0 0 2 3 5 0 0 4 2 6 0 0 2 1 1
POLAK,Graham            3 2 1 2 8 1 4 0 1 6 2 2 1 3 8 1 0 0 0 1
PATTISON,Adam          3 1 0 2 6 2 3 0 3 8 3 0 0 3 6 1 0 3 1 0
BROWN,Nathan G.       3 1 2 2 8 1 0 1 1 3 1 0 3 1 5 0 1 2 0 1
DELEDIO,Brett             0 2 1 0 3 4 3 1 0 8 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 0
PETTIFER,Kayne          2 4 1 3 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 1 1 7 0 0 3 3 0
EDWARDS,Shane         0 2 1 1 4 0 3 2 1 6 0 2 1 0 3 0 0 4 0 1
SIMMONDS,Troy          2 0 1 0 3 0 3 3 1 7 1 0 1 1 3 1 0 1 0 0
RIEWOLDT,Jack           2 2 0 1 5 1 1 0 0 2 2 2 0 1 5 0 1 2 0 1
THURSFIELD,Will         1 1 0 2 4 1 1 0 1 3 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 3 0 0
WHITE,Matt                1 0 1 1 3 1 1 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
 Rushed  3
TOTAL 54 51 47 44 196 25 53 38 25 141 29 24 22 25 100 14 11 45 11 13
 
50m PENALTIES: 0
GOALS: Free 1; Play 4; Mark 6
DISTANCE OF GOALS: 0-15m 3; 15-30m 1; 30-40m 2; 40+m 5

Top 5's

Contested possessions

Tuck         11
Grant         9
Richo         9
Foley         8
Deledio      7


Uncontested possessions

Harvey       25
Rawlings    21
Grant         20
Johnson     19
Sinclair      17

Effective Kicks

Grant        14
Sinclair     14
Newman   13
Harvey      12
Jones        12

Inside 50s

Howat         7
Grant          6
Sinclair       6
Harvey        6
Rawlings     5

Rebound 50s

J.Bowden     6
Newman      5
Tuck            4
King            4

Harvey         3

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #8 on: July 08, 2007, 09:46:59 PM »
Be interesting to see the stats.
According to SEN Kane Johnson had 22 possessions - no clangers.

16 effective possessions, 6 ineffective for Sugar

24 clangers to 7 according to SEN with Bowden 5, Tuck 4, Patto 3 contributing to half of them.

Here's the realfooty stats that contains error stats for each player.
http://stats.realfooty.com.au/

Offline one-eyed

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Petrie kicks six as Kangaroos win
08 July 2007   Herald Sun

 THE Kangaroos continue to push for the top four after tonight's 25-point win over Richmond at Telstra Dome.

Drew Petrie followed up last week's seven-goal haul with another six as the Roos won 14.20 (104) to 11.13 (79).

Kangaroos onballer Brent Harvey was best afield with a game-high 32 disposals.

Matthew Richardson led the Tigers with four goals, although his bad miss just before the final siren summed up his team's night.

Richmond also lost young star Brett Deledio with a suspected broken thumb.

The win left the Roos equal second with West Coast, Hawthorn and Collingwood on nine wins apiece, although the Kangaroos are fifth on percentage.

Richmond kicked the first goal of the last term to keep the contest alive, reducing the deficit to 14 points.

But an accurate snap from Scott McMahon and Petrie's fifth took the Kangaroos out to a 28-point lead.

After a final two-goal challenge from Richmond, Petrie's last goal at 20 minutes sealed the win.

Two many key Richmond players were down tonight in a tough, grinding contest and the Kangaroos dealt with every Tigers challenge.

A five-goal burst at the start of the third term took the Kangaroos to a 36-point lead at 15 minutes, the biggest of the game. Petrie kicked three of his goals during the surge.

Compounding Richmond's problems, Deledio suffered his broken thumb early in the third term. Deledio left the field in agony immediately after Shannon Grant went to soccer the ball and collected his hand.

But Richmond rallied with the last three goals of the term, with the third thanks to a brilliant pick-up and shot on the run from Cameron Howat.

After looking gone midway through the quarter, the Tigers trailed by only 21 points at three-quarter time.

The Kangaroos had the initiative for much of the night, kicking the first three goals of the game and leading by 27 points early in the second term.

Richmond had plenty of the ball, but was far too indecisive and had little system going into attack.

Just when the Roos looked set to take control, they failed to build their lead and it left the door open for the Tigers.

Richardson was given a free on the wing midway through the second term and then gained a 50m penalty at the expense of opponent Michael Firrito.

Richardson goaled and this sparked a three-goal run from Richmond, reducing the margin to four points.

A superb snap gave Corey Jones his second goal and a badly-needed settler for the Kangaroos, who led by seven points at the main break.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,22039080%255E20322,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Two many key Richmond players were down tonight .....
Are you sure they don't serve grog in the press area Jack  :lol

Offline one-eyed

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Honest Kangaroos too good for not quite the Tigers of old (The Age)
« Reply #11 on: July 09, 2007, 04:35:42 AM »
Honest Kangaroos too good for not quite the Tigers of old
Lyall Johnson | July 9, 2007 | The Age

IF THERE were any references to the 1970s last night, about the best you could say was that result more reflected the Kangaroos of 1975 than it did Richmond of any year in that decade.

The Tigers of the 70s were one of the most dominant teams of the modern era and there is no disrespect in saying that the Tigers of today, while no doubt tryers, are a shadow of their forebears — even with the yellow shorts they sported for the heritage round.

Back in 1975, the Kangaroos were a team of champions who won their first ever flag and went on to do it again two years later.

Glenn Archer notwithstanding, this Kangaroos unit contains no Blight, Briedis, Schimmelbusch, Wade or Greig. But they keep winning, and last night at Telstra Dome disposed of Richmond by a comfortable 25 points to register their ninth win of the season.

The Kangaroos led all night and in essence won the game in the first quarter when they kicked four goals to one. For the rest of the match, even as the Tigers were playing catch up. Even when the Tigers surged, the Roos held their nerve.

The match was never a tidy affair, and for periods lacked any great intensity as the sides ran off each other without pressure. Both teams took a while to find their feet, and despite controlling much of the early play Richmond just watched on as the Kangaroos kicked the first three goals.

It was a case of the Tigers appearing good when they had the ball, their genuine pace a factor, but average without it. It was as if they had forgotten the meaning of the term "man up".

The Kangaroos couldn't believe their luck, the freedom allowing Brent Harvey and Shannon Grant cut a swathe through the midfield and send the ball racing into the forward line where Corey Jones and Scott McMahon made good their chances.

The signs were ominous when the in form Drew Petrie got in on the act early in the second quarter to make the difference 27 points as the Kangaroos continued to exploit Richmond's lack of defensive pressure.

But it was at this time that that the tempo of the game finally lifted as the Tigers ran harder and sat closer to their opponents. Two in a row to Matthew Richardson followed by majors to Greg Tivendale and Richard Tambling had Richmond only four points behind and looking good. Although that was as close as the Tigers would get.

All too often Richmond managed to let itself down when it counted and its inability to capitalise because of poor decisions and ball use saw the Roos' Jones snap a major to ease the squeeze.

Turnovers can kill any team. But when for a team like Richmond — which needs to make everything count to be competitive — not being able to hit easy targets and making poor decisions even without pressure is a recipe for disaster.

Harvey, as coach Dean Laidley noted after the match, has taken his game to a new level, and in the third term he snagged 13 possessions, much of them through hard running.

With such a dominant midfielder, it's no surprise that the Kangaroos played their best football and blew the game open with five unanswered goals, three of them off the boot of Petrie. He was assisted by Brady Rawlings, Jess Sinclair and Daniel Wells; who also continues to improve into a quality player.

But as they have done for most of the year, Richmond fought back with three straight goals to go to the last change with a slight chance, 21 points in arrears.

When Kayne Pettifer goaled early there seemed a chance of a tight finish but McMahon's answer less than a minute later put paid to that.

Petrie again showed he is the forward find of the season. He ended last night with six, his final effort sealing the result and giving him the impressive figures of 13 goals straight in the past two weeks.

BEST
Kangaroos: Harvey, Petrie, Grant, McMahon, Sinclair, McIntosh.
Richmond: Richardson, Howat, Edwards, Jackson.

http://realfooty.com.au/news/rfmatchreport/honest-kangaroos-too-good/2007/07/08/1183833346189.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles and stats - Laidley having the last laugh (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #12 on: July 09, 2007, 04:38:41 AM »
Laidley having the last laugh
09 July 2007   Herald Sun
Mark Stevens

KANGAROOS coach Dean Laidley is always quick to notice the non-believers among the tipsters, and he may have had a quiet chuckle again this week.

Going in, the Roos had won eight of the past 10. Richmond had one win from 13.

Yet there was a popular view that this was the old-fashioned "danger game" of the round.

The doubters were everywhere, raising the same fears.

Surely there would be a letdown after Glenn Archer's big day. There was no way Drew Petrie could kick another bag. Are the Kangas that good anyway?

How wrong could the cynics be?

The Roos never reached the heights of that electrifying first quarter against the Bulldogs, but this was about as regulation as a 25-point win gets.

Sure, there was a scare here, and a fright there, but there was never really any danger.

The Roos were not headed, setting the tone by kicking the first three goals of the game. So much for not coming to play for Archer's 301st.

Richmond kicked three goals in four minutes to draw within four points 17 minutes into the second term, but lacked the poise and polish to make it really interesting.

Shane Edwards and Jack Riewoldt missed chances late in the second to keep the Tigers in touch at the long break, and they paid a painful price early in the third.

The Roos kicked the first five goals of the third term in a 17-minute burst and, at one stage, had a 37-point lead.

Full credit to the Tigers for refusing to roll over. Inspired by the workrate of Matthew Richardson, they even edged to within 14 points early in the last term.

But, in reality, it was nothing but a big tease for the long-suffering Tigers fans. Close, but not good enough. Again.

It was fitting that Petrie delivered the killer blow with a set shot eight minutes into the final term.

Petrie, who kicked seven against the Dogs last week, now has 13 in two matches after adding another six. And that's 13.0, if you don't mind.

The key forward later said he felt pressure going into the game, going as far as trying to mirror his preparation for the Archer game.

Whatever he did worked.

It wasn't as spectacular as the six-goals-in-a-quarter explosion against the Dogs, but so often his safe hands were on the end of pinpoint passes from teammates.

The Kangaroos have become a reliable, well-organised unit. Some may refuse to put them in the elite class, but their ball-use and decision-making is pushing in to the top flight.

Richmond is last because too often it has players making the wrong decisions.

Shane Tuck did it at least twice, turning it over by foot as teammates surged forward.

Even the ultra-reliable Joel Bowden threw in five clanger kicks from 11 kicks.

The kick clanger tally at the end of the game said plenty. The Tigers committed 24; the Kangaroos only seven.

With Nathan Foley shut down by Brady Rawlings and Brett Deledio off early in the third term with a broken hand, the Tigers sadly lacked class through the middle.

Roo Brent Harvey, in career-best form, had 32 possessions and ran tagger Daniel Jackson into submission.

Corey Jones, one of the most underrated players in the competition, kicked three and was always dangerous.

And the Kangas have found a player in 21-year-old former rookie Scott McMahon, who kicked two goals and had 18 disposals. He looks like he has been playing for five years, not five games.

Daniel Pratt did the job on Nathan Brown, Adam Simpson was dogged around the stoppages, and Shannon Grant won plenty of it and should have kicked at least four goals.

Again, Tiger veteran Richardson was deserving of special praise in a losing side.

There were the usual mistakes - including a simple miss in the last minute - but he finished with 4.3 and unselfishly gave opportunities to others.

Richardson took 12 marks, including three contested. By the end, he was out of gas.

But without the support of others, not even a rampant Richo could create enough danger to get Laidley and the Roos hopping.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,22040148%255E19771,00.html

Offline julzqld

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Re: Media articles and stats - Tigers fall to Kangaroos by 25 points
« Reply #13 on: July 09, 2007, 08:51:21 AM »
I bet Laidley is having last laugh.  This is what happens when you get an assistant coach to make bold predictions - comes back at ya.  In future, the club should only say what is completely necessary and stop making fools out of themselves.