Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Tigers edged by Bulldogs  (Read 594 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Media articles & stats: Tigers edged by Bulldogs
« on: April 08, 2023, 09:37:02 PM »
Tigers edged by Bulldogs

By Ben Somerford
AFL Media
8 April 2023 8:00pm


RICHMOND                       2.4   10.7    10.11  12.12 (84)
WESTERN BULLDOGS       6.3    8.5     9.11    12.17 (89)

GOALS
Richmond: Bolton 3, Lynch 2, Ryan, Cumberland, Clarke, Hopper, Ralphsmith, Martin, Taranto
Western Bulldogs: Naughton 3, Liberatore 2, English 2, Lobb, Daniel, Macrae, Hannan, McComb

BEST
Richmond: Baker, Martin, Pickett, Vlastuin, Bolton, Rioli
Western Bulldogs: Dale, Bontempelli, Naughton, Treloar, Bruce, Liberatore

INJURIES
Richmond: Graham (hamstring)
Western Bulldogs: Keath (concussion), Crozier (back)

SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Trent Cotchin (replaced Jack Graham in second quarter)
Western Bulldogs: Mitch Hannan (replaced Alex Keath in first quarter)

Crowd: 56,449 at the MCG

-----------------------------------------------------------------

An eight-goal second term wasn't enough to secure the win for Richmond against the Western Bulldogs on a wet Saturday evening at the MCG, who fought until the end but went down by five points.

The Dogs led by 29 points early in the second term before Richmond rallied with a run of seven consecutive goals to lead by 14 points at the main break, only for Luke Beveridge's side to get the game back on their terms to win 12.17 (89) to 12.12 (84).

Richmond was kept to only two goals, both late, in a wet second half while the Dogs booted three fourth-quarter goals to pull away, leaving the Tigers with only one win from four games in 2023.

Tigers supporters were left to lament two Dogs fourth-quarter goals that came directly from dubious free-kicks, to Aaron Naughton and Robbie McComb.

Shai Bolton's snap with 33 seconds left cut the margin to one kick, but the Dogs hung on, dominating inside 50s (16-6) and clearances (15-6) in the final term.

Richmond persisted with its run-and-gun style throughout the contest despite the conditions. The Tigers' style fuelled their eight-goal second term but it also led to turnovers, particularly with poor kicking efficiency early.

The uber-composed Bailey Dale was outstanding off half-back with 30 disposals for a game-high 625m gained, while Dogs skipper Marcus Bontempelli led from the front with 25 touches including 17 contested possessions and 12 tackles.

Naughton booted three goals for the Dogs, while Tigers livewire Bolton managed three for Richmond along with two goal assists.

Daniel Rioli (29 disposals), Tim Taranto (27) and Liam Baker (25) were all busy for the Tigers, while Dustin Martin neared his brilliant best with 23 touches (15 contested) along with one goal and a equal game-high 10 score involvements.

Bontempelli also had a game-high 11 clearances, including six in the first term, as the Dogs raced ahead with Tom Liberatore busy early too with two majors.

The Dogs went 29 points up after Tim English's opportunistic soccered goal but Richmond responded with devastating offensive football, piling on seven unanswered goals before half-time, including two from Bolton who also set up another for Jacob Hopper.

Conditions worsened after the long break, with a collective 1.10 kicked in the third term, before substitute Mitch Hannan redeemed himself for an earlier glaring miss with a brilliant snap from the pocket to put the Dogs up early in the last.

Goals from Naughton and McComb opened up a 13-point buffer, with the Dogs holding on despite Tim Taranto and Bolton pegging the margin back late.

Dogs win battle of styles
This game was a clash of styles, with Richmond's willingness to move the ball without fear apparent, while the Dogs were dominant around the contest, particularly when the game was up for grabs. Bontempelli and Liberatore were outstanding, having 10 clearances between them in the first term. While Richmond had more disposals (392-363) the Dogs won clearances (43-25) which converted into an inside-50 dominance (64-47) and that ultimately told. Bontempelli (11), Adam Treloar (10) and Liberatore (eight) were the three leading clearance players for the game.

Cotchin managed as sub
Richmond's decision to manage veterans Trent Cotchin and Jack Riewoldt raised a few eyebrows when selection news came out on Thursday. Despite being managed, Cotchin started as sub and came on in the second term when Jack Graham pinged his hamstring. The former skipper had minimal influence, with 11 touches for the game, as well as three kicks and three tackles. Richmond may have been regretting their decision to leave out Riewoldt when fellow key forward Tom Lynch mysteriously spent almost 10 minutes off the field in the second quarter, but he re-emerged to play the game out with no apparent issue.

Tigers' stunning second-quarter blitz
Richmond may have lost, but its second-quarter blitz felt like a warning to opposition sides of its offensive weapons if the Tigers can get their whole game functioning at once. The Tigers went from a 29-point deficit to having the lead in barely 15 minutes, piling on goals at will. Coach Damien Hardwick will be left to rue why they couldn't play that way for four quarters, but they persisted with their handball-happy style (having 174-124 handballs for the game) but it often fell down, not helped by the rain. Richmond encountered similar troubles in the rain last week against Collingwood, too.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/898718/determined-dogs-claw-to-victory-after-resurgent-tigers-turnaround

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles & stats: Tigers edged by Bulldogs
« Reply #1 on: April 08, 2023, 09:59:44 PM »
Bulldogs show resolve to beat Tigers in thriller, as Lynch faces scrutiny after collision

Andrew Wu
The Age
April 8, 2023 — 7.34pm


The Western Bulldogs are on the rise after overcoming a horror collapse, injuries, and a last-gasp challenge from Richmond to hold on in a thriller, in a result that is set to have repercussions for the Tigers.

Spearhead Tom Lynch is staring at suspension after a clash with Alex Keath, which left the defender concussed early in the Bulldogs’ five-point heart-stopper at the MCG.

Leading by 29 points in the second term, the Dogs gave up seven goals in 15 minutes approaching half-time but showed tremendous resolve to recover after the long break.

Despite not capitalising on their territorial control, the Dogs built an invaluable buffer in the final term then held on during a white-knuckle final few minutes when goals to Tim Taranto and Shai Bolton drew the Tigers within a kick.

Bolton’s goal left the Dogs with 33 seconds to defend their lead, a task they were able to achieve after a crucial, though far from textbook, clearance by Marcus Bontempelli.

Lynch will come under the scrutiny of the match review officer after collecting Keath in a marking contest in the first quarter. Dazed from the collision, Keath took a while to get to his feet and left the field moments later to undergo a concussion test, which he failed.

Hayden Crozier gingerly got to his feet after a nasty collision.

Given Carlton forward Harry McKay was given a one-game ban for a clash where North Melbourne’s Harry Sheezel was not injured, Lynch can expect to miss multiple matches if he is cited.

Except for their second-quarter collapse, the Dogs were tenacious and hard at it in the wet. They turned their clearance domination into territory but struggled to convert.

They were excellent in the first 45 minutes, when Tom Liberatore and Bontempelli were on top in the middle. Operating in confined spaces, Liberatore was his side’s heartbeat, his influence extending beyond the centre square. His ferocious tackle on Liam Baker, who dared take him on after sharking a crumb, delivered a goal — his second — which highlighted the Dogs’ greater endeavour.

The Tigers fumbled and overused the ball in the greasy conditions. A kick to handball ratio of one to one would not have been their plan, but was the product of the Dogs’ fierce pressure.

The match changed complexion dramatically midway through the second term. The wet did not suit Samson Ryan, a surprise inclusion for Jack Riewoldt, but, outnumbered, he hit a contest hard, spilling the ball for Bolton to pounce and kick a classic small forward’s goal.

The Tigers turned the clock back to their glory years, except it was a combination of their old and new who excited.

Noah Cumberland, a deserved inclusion in the 22, kicked a stirring goal from long range after out-marking Josh Bruce, finishing a play which started from a clearance in defence.

Dustin Martin was electric, explosive at ground level and not afraid to land kicks on a handkerchief in the corridor. His goal on the stroke of half-time drew a roar from the yellow-and-black faithful that could have been heard on Swan Street.

DOGS FORWARDS
The four towers in attack were worth a try — even if they were not on the field at the same time — but it’s clear the Dogs are better with the more traditional set-up of two keys, in Aaron Naughton and Jamarra Ugle-Hagan, and a third, Rory Lobb, who can play ruck. Naughton was again prominent, attacking the contest with aggression, and Ugle-Hagan lifted in the second half. Lobb still has work to do but played an improved game. Despite booting 2.2 in the wet in the VFL, son of a gun Sam Darcy may have to bide his time in the seconds.

BEST
Richmond: Baker, Rioli, Martin, Bolton, Pickett.
Western Bulldogs: Liberatore, English, Bontempelli, Dale, Naughton, Johannisen.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/bulldogs-show-resolve-to-beat-tigers-in-thriller-20230408-p5cz18.html

FooffooValve

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Re: Media articles & stats: Tigers edged by Bulldogs
« Reply #2 on: April 08, 2023, 10:01:30 PM »
Lol, Baker. Give me a spell.

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Undermanned Dogs bite back after brutal Tigers’ ‘avalanche’: 3-2-1

Catherine Healey
Fox Sports
April 8th, 2023 7:34 pm


The Western Bulldogs have survived a second-term Richmond “avalanche” to claim a thrilling five-point win at a wet MCG on Saturday.

The Dogs reclaimed the lead early in the last term and didn’t look back as they ran home 12.17 (89) to 12.12 (84) victors - despite playing a man down for more than a quarter.

Alex Keath was concussed in the first quarter after a heavy bump from Tiger Tom Lynch that is sure to draw attention from the Match Review, before Hayden Crozier was ruled out with a back issue from a bout of friendly fire in the slippery conditions.

It was Aaron Naughton the hero for the Dogs with a game-high three goals.

Richmond managed just four goals in three quarters of footy, after their eight-goal second quarter blitz saw the Dogs head into half time disappointed and under fire from skipper Marcus Bontempelli.

But they responded in the second half to claim their first back-to-back wins of the season.

QUARTER BY QUARTER MATCH REPORT

Despite the wet conditions, it was big Tiger Tom Lynch who impressed early.

He followed up a ground ball, leading to a Shai Bolton shot on goal, before laying a heavy tackle on star Dog Marcus Bontempelli that was rewarded.

Bontempelli was too slow trying to clear from defensive 50 when Lynch pounced.

He converted his set shot to give Richmond the early lead.

“That’s an excellent tackle and an even better finish,” commentator Nathan Buckley said.

But the Bulldogs fired back with three straight goals.

Despite the wet conditions, it was Rory Lobb with a quick snap and then Tim English who converted from a set shot to reclaim the lead for the Bulldogs.

“The ball handling has been clean … conditions not there for clean handling but they’ve been effective both sides,” Buckley praised.

Caleb Daniel made the most of a big Bontempelli block to add the Dogs’ third before Tom Liberatore caught Liam Baker and converted from the resulting free kick.

“The Tigers are kicking at 48 per cent efficiency … just not being able to hit targets well enough,” Buckley lamented.

Down the other end, it was Lynch keeping the Tigers within striking distance as he kicked their only other goal for the quarter.

A costly Jack Graham mistake, where he overran the mark and coughed up a 50m penalty, ensured the Dogs skipped clear again.

Liberatore added his second for the quarter to push the margin out to 23 points at the first change.

The only sour note for the Dogs was the concussion to defender Alex Keath, who came from the ground late in the quarter.

Keath was collected by Lynch in a marking contest before being subbed out of the clash for Mitch Hannan.

“You get in a contest with Tom Lynch, opposition players tend to get up a bit sore,” Buckley said.

The Tigers’ woes only got worse in the second term when Lynch limped from the field early in the quarter.

The key big man, playing a lone hand in attack without the rested Jack Riewoldt, pulled up lame and went straight down to the rooms.

“(Samson) Ryan just doesn’t draw the ball the same. That’s the difference between an experienced player who’s been around for 10 years and a three-gamer,” Buckley lamented.

But while Lynch was able to return, Jack Graham then headed to the bench with a left hamstring issue - and was subbed out.

Despite their injury woes, it was Richmond with all the run and dare in the second term as they kicked seven straight goals.

“Richmond have turned this game around dramatically, just as the Bulldogs looked to be in complete control,” commentator Anthony Hudson said.

Without Keath down back, it was raining goals for Richmond as they piled on eight goals in the drier conditions.

“They are just unstoppable at the moment,” commentator Jason Dunstall said.

“It’s just a wave going forward.

“An avalanche of goals.

“They are powerless to stop them at the moment, the Bulldogs.

“They are just running riot.”

A goal square toe poke from Shai Bolton and a quick snap from Dustin Martin ensured the Tigers took a 14-point lead into half time, 67-53.

“This game has just been blown apart,” Hudson said.

But as the heavy rain returned for the third quarter, the goals dried up.

Richmond’s kicking efficiency dropped below 50 per cent once again in the third term due to the wet conditions.

The Dogs went a man down when Hayden Crozier copped a nasty blow to the back in a bout of friendly fire.

As Crozier slid in to the contest, Josh Bruce came in from the other direction with nowhere else to go.

Mitch Hannan missed “a gift” goal from the square late in the term as Richmond took a six-point margin into the final change.

Hannan made up for this third term blunder when he snapped truly from 20m out to give the Bulldogs the lead for the first time in more than 30 minutes.

When Aaron Naughton was edged under the footy, he cashed in to kick his third goal of the day.

“You can’t take your opponent out of the contest,” Buckley said.

Tim Taranto kept Richmond in it with his goal closing his side within nine points with 10 minutes to play.

Shai Bolton set up a thrilling final minute as the Tigers came within five points with 33 seconds to go.

But when Daniel Rioli put it out of bounds on the full in the pouring rain, Richmond’s victory hopes went with it.

THE 3-2-1... (With Jono Baruch)

3. SKIPPER STANDS TALL TO LEAD DOGS TO WIN

When the Dogs coughed up an eight-goal second term, it was Marcus Bontempelli leading his team off the field, barking instructions.

Instead of dropping their heads, Bontempelli insisted his side jog from the field to get to coach Luke Beveridge as quickly as possible, in a bid to turn their fortunes around.

Bontempelli had been his side’s best in the first half, and he simply carried on that from when the match went on the line.

He even took on Tigers’ superstar Dustin Martin and came up trumps.

“He’s up to 11 clearances for the match so he’s felling it the Bont,” Fox Footy’s Nathan Buckley praised.

“He can do anything.”

Teammate Adam Treloar paid tribute to his “inspirational skipper” post-win.

“Him in general the way he puts a lot of teammates on his back. He’s just inspirational,” he said.

“We love playing for him and love the things that he does for us.

“Not only does he win footy, he puts his body on the line, goes back with the flight.”

Bontempelli finished with 25 disposals - 17 of those contested, 11 clearances - six from the centre and 12 tackles.

2. TIGERS’ ‘AVALANCHE’ BLOWS DOGS AWAY

After being jumped in the first quarter conceding six first quarter goals, the Tigers roared back into the game in the second quarter, piling on eight second-quarter goals to take the lead into halftime.

They kicked seven goals in a 15-minute period to wrestle control in a stunning performance at a wet MCG.

“They are rolling back the years,” Tim Lane said on 3AW.

“They’re just unstoppable at the moment,” Hawthorn legend Jason Dunstall said on Fox Footy. “It’s just a wave of ball going forward.

“What a stark contrast is the foot skills from the Tigers in the first term where they were below 50 per cent, they’re (now) kicking at 80-plus in the second term.

“So all of a sudden, hitting targets, taking opportunities, finding the goals.”

Former Collingwood coach Nathan Buckley expanded on the Tigers’ increased efficiency by foot which got them back in the game.

“They were playing on at all costs but only at 48 per cent efficiency,” Buckley said.

“But then in the second quarter to get that up to 74 per cent and they started connecting with their ball use and it gave them the chance to go forward and score heavily.”

The Tigers scored more points in the first half than what they scored in two of their three opening games, largely spurred on by their young players in their front third, moving the ball.

1. TIGER CUBS ON SHOW AS ‘GENERATION NEXT’ STRUT THEIR STUFF

Richmond caused a stir when teams were named this week, with triple premiership star Trent Cotchin initially left out of the starting 23.

He wasn’t the only veteran Tiger missing as Jack Riewoldt was listed as managed for the clash against the Bulldogs, leaving a young Tigers outfit to lead the bounce-back following last week’s loss to Collingwood.

Samson Ryan (three games), Noah Cumberland (10 games), Tyler Sonsie (seven games), Judson Clarke (four games) and Tylar Young (one-game) were all named in the selected side while Hugo Ralphsmith (13 games) and Rhyan Mansell (18 games) brought the total to seven players with under 20 games’ experience for Richmond.

Cotchin was later named as the tactical sub on game day and activated before halftime due to an injury to Jack Graham.

Senior coach Damien Hardwick explained to Fox Footy pre-game the rationale behind the move to leave two of his most experienced players out of the side, citing a management plan.

“We’ve openly spoken about the fact that (our older players) won’t play every game. So there’s going to be opportunities throughout the year where we sit there and go ‘listen, we’re going to manage a certain player or two’,” Hardwick said.

“It would be nice to be more wins than losses in the column for that to happen, but the fact of the matter is, we’ve got a long-term plan in mind and we have got to make sure we are consistent with that plan and what we think is going to get Richmond their next premiership.”

Fox Footy’s Nathan Buckley asked: “How often do you play five players that have played 10 or less games in the one side?”

“And then how often does that side go on and win?” he said. “Richmond is very young and then you add (Tim) Taranto and (Jacob) Hopper together who haven’t played much with this team.”

Buckley expanded at half time, detailing how the young Tiger cubs were actively driving Richmond back into the contest after trailing at quarter time.

“Five Tigers players played less than 10 games. Seven under 20. Mansell is playing his 18th game. Sonsie and Cumberland, less than 10 games each and then to be able to go inside D50 stoppage and then go bang, bang, bang with young players, was an exceptional highlight for Tigers supporters,” he said.

“I loved that little shimmy from Tyler Sonsie before, didn’t that look classy ... When you’ve got good quality kids coming through, you’ve got to play them and give them those opportunities,” Hawthorn legend Jason Dunstall added.

https://www.foxsports.com.au/news/live-afl-scores-2023-richmond-tigers-vs-western-bulldogs-round-4-how-to-live-stream-live-updates-video-result-news-blog/news-story/646692ceed02f6c52204cd1c19b80ea0

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles & stats: Tigers edged by Bulldogs
« Reply #4 on: April 09, 2023, 05:48:14 AM »
DID TIGERS CONTRIBUTE TO OWN DEMISE?

It’s hard to believe a team can kick eight goals in a quarter and only four in the other three terms.

But that’s what the Tigers did against the Bulldogs on a waterlogged MCG on Saturday in a gripping arm wrestle that went down to the wire after Bolton’s late goal brought the margin back to under a goal.

Damien Hardwick would have been pleased with aspects of the game, yet less than impressed with others.

But as a learning curve, it will be massive for the young Tigers who went into the game with seven players who had played less than 25 games.

The Tigers found a new break-neck speed approach, taking the game on at all costs, which worked superbly in an intoxicating second term as they wrested control of the game.

But they failed to adjust accordingly when the heavens opened and heavy rain fell after half-time, meaning a more measured approach might have helped them.

These two contrasting styles between the Tigers and Dogs made for compelling viewing, but Richmond will be rueing some missed opportunities as well as some errant field kicking and overuse of handball that cost them possession on more than a few occasions.

They had 50 more handballs than their opponents, and more than 40 more than their 2023 season average before this round.

It was a bold, brash, ballistic style that will likely serve the young Tigers well deep into the future, but it hurt them when it mattered in tough conditions against the Dogs.

Life for the Tigers doesn’t get any easier with last year’s grand finalist Sydney and premiership favourite Melbourne next in line.

https://24ssports.com/early-tackle-round-4-charlie-curnow-harry-mckay-nick-daicos-brownlow-medal-richmond-in-trouble/