Author Topic: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82  (Read 8656 times)

Offline one-eyed

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On April 12, 1982, over 90,000 fans packed the MCG to witness the top two unbeaten sides after two rounds battle it out on Easter Monday.

New coach Francis Bourke had Richmond off to a great start with two wins over North and Fitzroy while the Bombers in Sheedy's second season in charge had knocked off reigning premiers Carlton the week before at VFL Park.

After an even first three quarters of high scoring footy, the more experienced and battle hardened Tigers gave the baby bombers a lesson in big game footy with a unrelenting 10 goal blitz in the final quarter to run out 62-point winners.

Score

Richmond         4.7     12.14     15.18      25.22-172       
Essendon          6.3      12.9       14.13     16.14-110

Goals: Wiley 7, Bartlett 4, Taylor 3, Weightman 2, Roach 2, Wood 2, Rioli 2, Egan, Cloke, Landy.

Bests: Wiley (BOG), Keane, Jess, Wood, Raines, Bartlett.

Umpires: Sawers and Smith

Crowd: 90, 564 at the MCG.


Teams

Richmond

B:     Malthouse        Strachan          Martello (hamstring - replaced by Sutton)
HB:   Landy               Jess                 Keane
C:      Egan                Raines             Welsh
HF:   Rioli                  Cloke             Bartlett
F:      Taylor               Roach             Wiley
R:      Dunne              Smith             Rowlings
Int:    Weightman, Wood

Emerg: Mount, Sarah, Sutton

In: Roach
Out: Mugavin (inj)

Essendon

B:     Clarke             T.Daniher          Duckworth
HB:  Stoneham          Crow                Carey
C:     Euctice             Neagle              Hawker
HF:  Thomson        Van Der Haar     Watson
F:     S.Madden          Foulds              Otway
R:    J.Madden          Copping          Buhagiar
Int:   Walsh, Fowler

In: Thomson, Walsh
Out: Andrews (suspended), Heard (inj).

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #1 on: February 14, 2008, 07:00:36 PM »
front page of the Sun

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #2 on: February 14, 2008, 07:02:37 PM »
TIGERS IN A THILLER
Frontpage, The Sun, Tuesday April 13, 1982.

RICHMOND and Essendon drew a bumper 90,564 crowd to the Melbourne Cricket Ground yesterday for the battle of the VFL heavyweights.

In perfect football conditions the Tigers won by 62 points and the big crowd paid a record homeand-away gate of $240,755.

One of the highlights of the day was the battle between two of Richmond’s favourite sons, Francis Bourke and Kevin Sheedy.   

It was the first time they had met as opposing coaches, with the first round going to Bourke and his Tigers.

The crowd was the fourth highest to watch a home-and-away match.

The record of 99,346 was set in Queens Birthday split round when Melbourne beat Collingwood at the MCG in 1958.

The Easter split-round matches attracted 213,199, failing to break the 1961 record by about 6000, but this weekend's gate of $486,652 was a record.

Although Richmond is unbeaten after three big wins over Fitzroy, North Melbourne and the Dons, Hawthorn is on top of the VFL ladder after its crushing 143-point win over Footscray yesterday.

Sheedy who is renowned for his competitiveness and dislike of losing, ordered a unique punishment for his players last night.

He made sure every player attended the traditional after-match entertainment at the old Richmond ground so they would "suffer and cop it sweet."

For Bourke, the win has established Richmond as the team to beat in the competition.

"It is best to win against opponents we respect,” he said. "Essendon is one side we have to get over to make the finals and we beat a side which is highly-fancied and highly-rated."

The MCG match was marred by brawls between mobs of drunken youths in the outer. The trouble started in Bay 22 in the third quarter, and continued into the last term.

A spectator, Mr James Mano, said the brawls involved youths of about 13 to 17.

"They were drinking beer and just looking for fights,” he said.

"The police couldn't do anything. These kids just kept on coming over the top of them."

Police later charged two men and a woman with having been drunk and disorderly. But police detained "Quite a few more" at the ground until after the match.

Two youths, about 16, were knocked unconscious after they were hit by a train as it approached Richmond station.

Police said the two were standing on the lip of the platform and were hit by the train's extenal mirror about 4.45 p.m. They fell back onto the platform.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #3 on: February 14, 2008, 07:04:53 PM »

Moi in her younger days lol   //   Jimmy Jess

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #4 on: February 14, 2008, 07:06:07 PM »
DONS PAY THE PRICE
By Peter Simunovich
The Sun, Tuesday April 13, 1982

ESSENDON coach Kevin Sheedy used a new form of punishment to penalize his players after their 62-point loss to Richmond at the MCG yesterday.

The former Tiger champion ordered players to attend the traditional after-match drinks at Punt Rd, when most of them wanted to walk out of the MCG and go home.

"I want them to go over to Richmond to suffer and cop it sweet," he said after the game.

It must have been bad enough for the Dons to be humiliated in the last quarter before 90,564 people, who paid a record home and away gate of $240,755.40.

But it was Sheedy's way of teaching players that it is far more pleasant to attend the function as winners than losers. And tonight the team will go through the agony of watching a replay of the game when mistakes will be pointed out to them.

Sheedy was bitterly disappointed that Richmond swamped the Dons in the last quarter kicking 10.4 to 2.1 in the finals type atmosphere.

"I prepare sides to win, it was chance to win a big atmosphere football match. When was the last time Essendon played before a crowd of 90,000?," he asked.
 
For Sheedy's former teammate and unbeaten Richmond coach Francis Bourke, the win has cemented the Tigers as the most powerful combination in the VFL so far this season even though Hawthorn has not yet lost a game and is on top of the ladder.

Richmond has beaten Fitzroy, North Melbourne and Essendon while the Hawks have victories over St Kilda, Geelong and Footscray. Hawthorn will face its real test next Saturday against reigning premier Carlton at Princes Park.

While Bourke is not getting carried away with yesterday's win, the 11 other VFL coaches must be beginning to
wonder how the Tigers can be beaten after the way they swept aside Essendon.

Sheedy was obviously impressed with his old side's performance and said: "When Mark Lee gets in it will be a perfect line-up.

However Bourke sees it differently. He claimed the Tigers would improve even more with Bruce Tempany, Steve Mount, Paul Sarah, Andy Preston and Alan Martello putting pressure on yesterday’s combination.

Bourke was more interested in yesterday's crushing win because he now knows his team can handle big-match pressure and atmosphere. He described the win as: "It is best to win against opponents we respect. Essendon is one side we have to get over to make the finals and we beat a side which is highly fancied and highly rated."

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #5 on: February 14, 2008, 07:09:17 PM »

Roachy about to outmark Terry Daniher   //   Rainesy snr      //

ps. apologies about the quality. Crappy printer

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #6 on: February 14, 2008, 07:11:18 PM »
RICHMOND ‘MOSSIES’ RUIN DONS
By Lou Richards with Greg Baum
The Sun, Tuesday April 13, 1982

ESSENDON was overrun by Richmond’s mosquito fleet and nosedived to its first defeat of the season at the MCG yesterday.

The tiny Tigers led by Robert Wiley, Dale Weightman, Geoff Raines and that remarkable man, Kevin Bartlett, shredded Essendon's defence in the second half.
   
Their onslaught cleared the path for Richmond to kick 10 goals to two in the final quarter, and romp away to a 62-point win.

Until then, it had been a great game, with little separating the two teams.   
But I felt that just before three-quartertime, the Tigers were starting to wear down the Bombers, who were looking tired.

Raines, who had been reasonably quiet in the first half, dominated after the break, providing his
team with that extra sting, which enabled the Tigers finally to take over the game.

I was rather amazed that Neville Fields was taken from the ground, because he had contained Raines until then.

Essendon's Justin Madden dominated the centre bounces, with 47 knockouts to 17, but they were to no avail.

The Richmond little men successfully sharked so many of the big Bomber's taps that the centre of the MCG resembled Byron Bay!
   
Carlton boasts of its talented small men, but if they are any better than
Richmond's, I'm a monkey's uncle (No smart re-marks, if you don't mind).

Wiley had 27 kicks and seven handballs, and capped off a great game with seven goals, Weightman had seven kicks and 19 handpasses, all perfectly delivered, as usual.

And it was Barry Rowlings who kept the Tigers in the game in the first half with his determined play.

But it was the old bloke, Kevin "Hungry" Bartlett, who amazed me, again. Playing his 365th game, he kicked four fine goals and seemed to move quicker than ever.

I wish I could get hold of whatever pills he is taking and I'll bet some of those foot-weary Essendon defenders do, too.   

Bartlett often left them clutching at the air or gazing at each other in wonderment as he whisked the ball away from under their noses.

When a team wins as convincingly as Richmond did yesterday, it's the forwards who cop all the praise.

But Tiger defenders, Mervyn Keane, Jim Jess, Mick Malthouse and Greg Strachan can take bow too, without any embarrassment.

They were superb. They did not allow high-flying Bombers Paul Van Der Haar, Crow and Simon Madden anywhere near the ball, and used their bodies to perfection to prevent their opponents from getting a run for the big marks.

The Bombers were disorganised, up forward all day, and it was only the tireless efforts of Glen
Hawker, Tim Watson and Wayne Otway that kept them afloat in attack.

But on Richmond's forward line, David Cloke was dominant, using his bulk and strength to mark cleverly or tap the ball on to his Tiger cubs.

There was little doubt that Essendon missed the imposing presence of Ron Andrews, particularly when the real pressure was applied late in the third quarter and throughout the final terms.

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #7 on: February 14, 2008, 07:14:07 PM »


KB celebrates in the third quarter after one of his four goals

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Memorable Moment #13: Tigers 10 goal final quarter blitz over Dons in '82
« Reply #8 on: February 17, 2008, 08:19:10 PM »
When was the last time Essendon played before a crowd of 90,000?," Sheedy asked.
 
Should show this to all those arrogant Bomber fans who now claim they've always drawn massive crowds. It just proves how much Sheedy transformed that club and how with some consistent success a big 4 club can rise massively off-field from obscurity.
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd