Author Topic: Media Articles and Stats: Tigers draw with Dogs  (Read 7237 times)


Offline one-eyed

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Big scores all round, but main goal elusive (The Age)
« Reply #16 on: April 21, 2008, 04:44:42 AM »
Big scores all round, but main goal elusive
Len Johnson | April 21, 2008 | The Age

A GAME in search of a matchwinner ultimately found none as the Western Bulldogs and Richmond played out a thrilling draw yesterday afternoon.

For a long time, it seemed the Bulldogs must find the form that had taken them to four straight victories. They may well have, had they kicked better around goal in the first half. The main offender was Scott Welsh. Recruited from Adelaide to score goals, he kicked five behinds in the most comprehensive display of the yips since Bernhard Langer.

Then it seemed Richmond had won the game in the final term — twice, in fact: first when it bolted 25 points clear when Nathan Brown goaled and Shane Edwards added a behind eight minutes into the final term, and again when successive goals to Jack Riewoldt and Trent Simmonds (following a desperate gather and handball from Mitch Morton) gave it a 19-point break with less than five minutes play left.

As it had been all afternoon, however, no one was able to step up and grab this game by the scruff of the neck. There were many good players, few who did not contribute, but no one emerged capable of winning it by his own effort. Indeed, harsh as it may seem, Richmond probably started to lose it when Jake King, seeing nothing on in front of him, stepped backwards across the goal line to concede a rushed behind. That made the difference three straight goals and, three straight kicks later, the Western Bulldogs had got out of it with a draw, the first time they have gone undefeated through the first five games since 1946.

It would be way too harsh to blame King in any way. He had been one of the Tigers showing the way as they outran and out-bounced the supposed masters of run-and-carry in the competition for most of the afternoon. Yet here he was, not willing to run and, just as importantly, with no teammate willing to run for him. Perhaps the hard game on the big Subiaco ground last week did draw some sting from Richmond's run in the end.

From there, Daniel Cross kicked a goal with less than three minutes to play. Then Robert Murphy came out to meet the ball at centre half-forward, couldn't gather the mark but regained it at ground level, weaved through a pack and guided the ball through off the outside of his right boot and it was a goal the difference with two minutes to play.

Again, the Bulldogs pressed forward. The ball was punted forward to a pack 25 metres from goal. Fifth in line, Brian Lake rose to take the mark, the only reason he was in the contest at all because he had followed Matthew Richardson down the ground. The drama was not done. Lake injured himself on landing, falling over an opponent, and could not take his kick. The Bulldogs pushed Lindsay Gilbee forward (and someone, somewhere, probably was pushing Welsh away).

The Richmond defenders wanted none of this and the field umpire closest to the spot pointed to Will Minson. Minson came forward, kicked accurately, bellowed encouragement to his teammates and the Doggies had got out of jail with an unlikely draw. Still there was potential drama. The game restarted with 14 seconds left on the clock, Jay Schulz won a free kick for a high tackle and while the ball was in the air towards Bulldog-turned-Tiger Brown, the siren sounded, mercifully saving the umpire from having to adjudicate whether Dale Morris had chopped his arms in the marking contest to which both players were already committed.

As with all draws, both teams had things to bemoan and others for which to be thankful. The Bulldogs' use of the ball around goals early in the game was woeful. They had 14 shots for goal in the first term, for only four goals and led by eight points at the end of it. When Brad Johnson got two goals in as many minutes at the start of the second term, they led by 20 points and looked as if they should take control.

Richmond waited a longer time for its winning chance. The Tigers still trailed by eight points at half-time, still with eight fewer scoring shots and nine fewer inside 50s. From there, however, they ran their way back into the game, faltering only when they could have run away with it. The positives, however, were the contributions from the likes of Matt White, Riewoldt, Edwards and Kelvin Moore. From being Richo-centric when it comes to scoring options, they also had no fewer than 11 goalkickers. Maybe things are getting better at Punt Road.

The Bulldogs had even more scoring options, with 14 goalkickers. Minson and Gilbee got three each, Johnson two, 11 others one.

With so many goalkickers, the surprise was that neither team could find the winning goal.

Age's BEST:
Western Bulldogs: Boyd, Akermanis, Lake, Cross, Cooney, Hahn.
Richmond: Johnson, Richardson, Deledio, Foley, Tambling, Schulz.

TALKING POINT
GOALS to Jack Riewoldt and Troy Simmonds put the Tigers 19 points clear. Then, at the other end, Jake King stepped across the line to concede a point. With nothing on, it was the obvious thing to do, but it ultimately allowed the Dogs to get away with a draw.

THE UPSHOT
 IT'S still sorting-out time, but five games in, the Bulldogs don't look quite as impressive and the Tigers maybe have more roar than most of us thought.

HOT AND COLD
SHANE Edwards dropped a sitter on the eastern side of the ground, allowing the Bulldogs to sweep the ball forward to Scott Welsh. Next contest, same spot, he marked in front of Tim Callan, got a 50-metre penalty and booted the Tigers' third goal.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/rfmatchreport/big-scores-all-round-no-main-goal/2008/04/20/1208629737251.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Resurgent Tigers can draw upon positives (The Age)
« Reply #17 on: April 21, 2008, 04:47:34 AM »
Resurgent Tigers can draw upon positives
Rohan Connolly | April 21, 2008

TERRY Wallace could have gone with a grim-faced "we blew it" line after Richmond's four-goal lead evaporated into a nail-biting draw with the Western Bulldogs at Telstra Dome yesterday.

Fortunately, the Tigers' coach isn't a sourpuss, but is a reasonably astute amateur psychologist. Of course, two match points instead of what looked a certain four minutes earlier felt temporarily like a loss. But in big-picture terms, this was still very much a major victory.

There was plenty of scepticism about the Tigers' big win at Subiaco last week against Fremantle, and rightly so. Too many times, we've seen Richmond pull off a surprise victory, only to back it up with more of the dross we've become used to.

No matter how impressive was that win over in the West, it had to be followed up with at worst an ultra-competitive performance against one of the AFL's three unbeaten sides for the Tigers to start clawing back some credibility. Against the Dogs, it was.

Yes, Richmond probably should have held on to what was a four-goal lead with 14 minutes of the final term elapsed. No, Jake King probably shouldn't have conceded a rushed behind 27½ minutes in to make a 19-point margin into three straight kicks. Yes, the Tigers could have done a little more to close down the Bulldogs' run as Daniel Cross, Robert Murphy and finally Will Minson goaled to tie the scores.

But this was another terrific performance by Terry Wallace's team. Significantly, for a second week in a row, it was one founded upon run and attack, rather than that cliched old "Tiger tough, eat 'em alive" sort of stuff that has been the predominant theme of most of their relatively scarce victories these past couple of decades.

You wouldn't have given two bob last year for Richmond's chances of matching the running machine that is the Western Bulldogs, perhaps not even a few weeks ago. But something really seems to have clicked with these players, and it's about more than the now well-documented move of Matthew Richardson to a wing.

The Tigers took on the Dockers on the spaces of Subiaco last Sunday. Yesterday, they aggressively pursued victory again with a fast and flowing running game, underscored by the stats for running bounces: 42 to the Tigers, only 12 for the Bulldogs.

Much scorn has been heaped upon the Tigers' recruiting, but there will be a lot less of that should the pattern of the past fortnight continue, for it was the younger Richmond types who helped set the tone.

Matt White was a livewire, full of pace and daring. His running goal in the second term and cool-headed pass to Nathan Brown for another in the final quarter typical of his game. Shane Edwards looked dangerous and contributed 2.2, Jack Riewoldt booted three goals and presented a genuine forward-line threat, likewise Mitch Morton, who kicked two and whose dive into a pack and handball out to Troy Simmonds created what should have been this game's winning goal.

Richard Tambling has copped a caning as the most visible face of Richmond's recent drafting, but he impressed for a second week in a row, while the less spectacular looking likes of Kelvin Moore and Will Thursfield in defence are continuing to improve.

Three-and-a-half wins from five games, eighth spot on the ladder: it's a far healthier prognosis than even the most optimistic Tiger folk would have been bargaining on a few weeks back. And light years from the certain wooden spoon many of us were predicting back in March.

There's a pretty tough road to negotiate over the next three weeks — Hawthorn, St Kilda and Geelong — but on current form, the Tigers won't be a pushover in any of those engagements. And if the Tigers jag an unlikely win, we will have to completely revise what seemed this season's most predictable plot.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/tigers-can-draw-upon-positives/2008/04/20/1208629737287.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers bold, then go cold (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #18 on: April 21, 2008, 04:53:08 AM »
Tigers bold, then go cold
Michael Horan | April 21, 2008 12:00am

HE WHO dares wins.

It is an adage that Richmond honoured at Telstra Dome yesterday, then forgot five minutes too early.

The Tigers, seeking two successive wins for the first time since late in the 2006 season, backed themselves to the hilt and all but accounted for the unbeaten Western Bulldogs until late in the final term, when they abandoned their boldness and tried to save the game instead of winning it.

Richmond led by as much as 25 points in the final quarter and still held sway by 19 points in red time before the Bulldogs snatched a dramatic draw when Will Minson goaled with 14sec left in the game.

For so long the brave Tigers made the running and looked primed to make the Dogs pay for some shameful first-term wastage that returned 4.10 to 4.2.

Richmond ran the lines and took its opponents on to match the Dogs and then threaten to break them.

By game's end they had recorded 42 running bounces to 12 - Jake King had 17 by himself - while cohorts Nathan Foley, Richard Tambling, Brett Deledio and skipper Kane Johnson kept the Tiger tempo at a premium.

The heavily favoured Bulldogs, chasing a fifth straight win, appeared to have things going to script, despite early inaccuracy when they slipped out to a 20-point lead four minutes into the second term.

Given the Dogs had generated 16 scoring shots to six to that point, there was not a lot to suggest what was to follow.

Nine minutes later the Tigers were in front after they kicked four answered goals through a method to which they stayed faithful until those fateful closing minutes.

Nathan Brown cashed in on a Foley dash through the middle when he converted from 40m.

Two minutes later a loping, bouncing run down the wing set up a Chris Hyde goal from 20m. Another Foley dash created a Matt White goal to make it three forward 50s for three goals before Brown put the Tigers in front for the first time 18 minutes into the term.

No matter what the Bulldogs did, they couldn't shake Richmond from that point.

An eight-point lead at the long interval disappeared quickly in the third term, and after a quarter-hour arm wrestle, the sheer energy of the Tigers started to make the Bulldogs ragged.

Six scoring shots to just one to close the third gave Richmond a two-goal buffer at the final change.

When Matthew Richardson - who was again outstanding in his multi-functional roles up forward, down back and around the ground - marked and converted just 57sec into the last quarter, an upset was in the offing.

By eight minutes in, the difference was 25 points. One more and the Dogs were gone.

Instead, the Bulldogs rattled on three in four minutes to again put the game in the balance.

But when Richmond responded through Jack Riewoldt and Troy Simmonds in the space of three minutes, it again appeared they had weathered the onslaught.

Funny things happen in football. When King stepped back off the last line of defence to surrender a behind instead of attempting to clear, it symbolised why a victory became a bitter-tasting draw.

With the ball trapped inside 50, Daniel Cross booted an angled goal, and from the centre clearance the Dogs swept forward to allow Robert Murphy to kick truly from 20m.

The difference was suddenly just six points with 2:04 left to play.

With 37sec left, Brian Lake latched on to a long bomb into attack 45m from goal.

Clutching his leg and unable to take his kick, the Bulldogs tried hard to get the ball into the deadly accurate Lindsay Gilbee's hands, but the umpire ordered Will Minson to take the kick.

He nailed it, and the scores were locked at 130 apiece.

The Bulldogs had dodged a bullet. Richmond shot itself in the foot.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,23571170-19742,00.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media Articles and Stats: Tigers draw with Dogs
« Reply #19 on: April 21, 2008, 04:57:53 AM »
Mike Sheahan's view of the game ...

The Western Bulldogs also are unbeaten after pinching a draw against Richmond yesterday, but seem a considerable distance behind the top two [Geelong and Hawthorn].

It was a steal; the Tigers led by four goals late in the game.

The Bulldogs will be relieved with a draw from where they were; the Tigers will be disappointed, but the signs were promising again.

Richard Tambling continues to work hard and grow in confidence, while youngsters Jack Riewoldt, Matt White, Will Thursfield and Shane Edwards all showed encouraging signs.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,23570981-19742,00.html

Offline wayne

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Re: Big scores all round, but main goal elusive (The Age)
« Reply #20 on: April 21, 2008, 08:12:08 AM »
...and again when successive goals to Jack Riewoldt and Trent Simmonds (following a desperate gather and handball from Mitch Morton) gave it a 19-point break with less than five minutes play left.

Troy's brother maybe.....  :lol
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