Author Topic: Media articles & stats: Tigers survive a massive scare from comeback Crows  (Read 820 times)

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Tigers survive a massive scare from comeback Crows

After a dominant first half Richmond was forced to fight against an energised Adelaide outfit

By Lee Gaskin
afl.com.au
25 March 2023


ADELAIDE                 1.3      3.6      8.14    10.16 (76)
RICHMOND               4.1      11.3    12.4    17.6 (108)

GOALS
Adelaide: Fogarty 3, Rachele 2, Rankine 2, Walker 2, Thilthorpe
Richmond: Ryan 3, Lynch 3, Riewoldt 2, Broad, Baker, Hopper, Graham, Short, Martin, Mansell, Cotchin, Bolton

BEST
Adelaide: Laird, Dawson, Sholl, Rachele, Soligo, Murray
Richmond: Taranto, Rioli, Prestia, Baker, Hopper, Balta

INJURIES
Adelaide: Parnell (head knock)
Richmond: Nil

SUBSTITUTES
Adelaide: Riley Thilthorpe (replaced Patrick Parnell in first quarter)
Richmond: Rhyan Mansell (replaced Dustin Martin in fourth quarter)

Crowd: 38,492 at Adelaide Oval

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RICHMOND has withstood an unbelievable Adelaide fightback as the Tigers claimed their first win of the season in an epic see-sawing encounter on Saturday.

After trailing by as much as 45 points, the Crows flipped the script to close within one point in the last quarter.

But three goals in as many minutes to Rhyan Mansell, Trent Cotchin and second-gamer Samson Ryan ensured the Tigers left Adelaide Oval with the four premiership points, getting home by 32 points – 17.6 (108) to 10.16 (76).

Gun recruits Tim Taranto (28 disposals) and Jacob Hopper (23 touches) were both outstanding for the Tigers, showing whey the ex-Greater Western Sydney duo were handed lucrative seven-year contracts.

Ryan and Tom Lynch were handfuls for the Crows defence, booting three goals each, but the Tigers shared the love with 12 individual goalkickers.

Crows ball magnet Rory Laird bounced back after a quiet opening round performance with a game-high 38 disposals, while youngsters Lachlan Sholl, Josh Rachele and Jake Soligo were instrumental in the turnaround.

Apart from Darcy Fogarty’s goal in the opening minute, it was all the Tigers in the first half.

They booted nine straight goals on their way to taking a stranglehold on the game, leading 11.3 (69) to 3.6 (24) at halftime.

Any of the 38,492 fans in attendance who left the ground would have been regretting it as the Crows launched a massive resurgence.

They completely dominated the third quarter, kicking five goals to one on the back of a 24-7 inside 50 count to bring the margin back to a manageable 14 points at three-quarter time.

Goals to Taylor Walker and Fogarty narrowed the gap to a solitary point, but that’s as close as the Crows would get.

The Tigers booted the final five goals of the game to win their first match of the 2023 season after last week’s draw against Carlton.

Tigers defender Nathan Broad is likely to be in trouble with the Match Review Committee after a sickening sling tackle on Crows defender Patrick Parnell in the opening quarter that ruled Parnell out of the rest of the game.

Broad faces nervous wait

Parnell was left seeing stars after being on the wrong end of a heavy sling tackle from Broad midway through the first quarter. Parnell remained on the ground for a couple of minutes before he was assisted down the player’s race with the help of Crows trainers. He played no more part in the game with Thilthorpe taking his place. Broad is likely to face scrutiny from the match review officer for the dangerous tackle.

Mistakes cost Crows dearly

The Crows conceded six straight goals when Rory Laird went inside the forward 50 to set up a quality chance in the second quarter. However, Laird’s disposal resulted in a turnover and the Tigers made them pay, going the length of the ground with Jacob Hopper finishing off the play. The Tigers went bang, bang straight out of the centre bounce leading to Jack Riewoldt’s second of the game. Just like that, the Tigers led by 41 points and the game was effectively over.

Giant Tigers recruit makes his mark

Last week, it was Tim Taranto who turned in a starring performance in his Richmond debut. This week, his former Greater Western Sydney Giants teammate Jacob Hopper was outstanding for his new club. Hopper was a dominant force in the first half of the game when the Tigers burst out to a 45-point lead. The inclusion of Taranto and Hopper has allowed the Tigers to deploy experienced heads Dustin Martin and Trent Cotchin forward of the ball. It’s a great luxury to have.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/888220/tigers-survive-a-massive-scare-from-comeback-crows

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Richmond put a Crows miracle to bed (Age)
« Reply #1 on: March 26, 2023, 12:38:29 AM »
Richmond put a Crows miracle to bed

By Steve Barrett
The Age
March 25, 2023 — 10.03pm


Richmond’s first-half ascendancy in the clinches - they ranked 14th in the competition for clearances in 2023 - on the back of a similar strong showing in that department in their opening-night draw against Carlton, suggests prosperous times ahead for the Tigers’ revamped engine room.

And that’s with Martin and Trent Cotchin, both in the conversation for Richmond’s greatest-ever midfielder, having rarely attended a centre bounce across the season’s opening fortnight.

The long-term, off-season addition of prized recruits Hopper and Tim Taranto has transformed Richmond’s on-ball muscle, virtually overnight.

“I thought Hopper was huge and Taranto grew into the game as well,” Hardwick said. “Dion [Prestia] is just a wonderful player and I thought [ruckman] Toby [Nankervis] was terrific.

“We sort of haven’t had those bigger-bodied mids. If you look at the size of Tim [188cm, 87kg] and Jacob [187cm, 88kg], they’re big, strong boys. It’s something that’s been a little bit foreign to us but we’re getting better at it.”

Richmond denied Adelaide’s hard charge for miracle-making history, notching their first win of 2023 after fending off a furious second-half Crows revival.

Adelaide slashed their 45-point half-time deficit to one point at the 12-minute mark of the final quarter and had their gaze firmly affixed on conjuring their biggest come-from-behind victory.

The Tigers, with gun acquisitions Taranto and Hopper prominent and Noah Balta ascendant in the air, awoke from their prolonged slumber to put to rest Adelaide’s ferocious fightback.

Martin exited the match when Darcy Fogarty made it a one-point ballgame before Rhyan Mansell, having just substituted in, ended the Crows’ goal surge with a superb checkside finish against the grain.

Further six-pointers to Trent Cotchin, Samson Ryan, Tom Lynch and Shai Bolton added beef to the final margin.

Hopper shook off a nasty-looking ankle scare in the fourth quarter while backman Broad will certainly face scrutiny from the match review officer after his first-term sling tackle of Parnell left the Crows youngster concussed.

Fogarty goaled inside the opening minute, but the rest of the first half was played overwhelmingly on Richmond’s terms.

Their new-look engine room hummed like the Tigers of Old, leaving Adelaide gasping.

Ranked a lowly 14th in clearances last year, Richmond, as they did in their opening-night draw against Carlton, showcased their overhauled thirst for the centre-square contest.

In the Tigers’ round one draw against Carlton, Taranto filled his boots in a fine debut in the yellow-and-black.

This time it was fellow ex-Giant Hopper who proved the most influential player on the park, particularly in the opening half.

Repeatedly second to the footy, bereft of skills and discipline, unable to fashion the right match-ups and seemingly cooked physically following last Sunday’s taxing loss in the scorching Sydney heat to GWS, the Crows couldn’t have been in a greater mess at half-time.

When they walked off at three-quarter-time, though, they did so to a standing ovation.

Laird, uncharacteristically quiet last week against the Giants, stood mightily tall to lead Adelaide’s fightback.

His interior grunt work allowed the Crows’ exciting tall and small forwards to prosper.

Adelaide’s 5.8-to.1.1 third quarter sliced the deficit to 14 points but by the time they trimmed the margin to one point, as valiant as they had played across the previous 45 minutes, they had nothing left in the tank as Richmond gleefully fashioned a timely second wind.

RYAN FLYIN’

Ryan entered Saturday’s clash with one career game - back in 2021 - in which he didn’t collect a single disposal.

A strong pre-season earned the towering forward a belated recall, and he repaid that faith with an early goal - with the first possession of his AFL career.

In the closing stages of that first quarter, Ryan juggled a clever mark and goaled with the second touch of his career to extend the Tigers’ advantage.

Ryan made it three goals from three kicks when he converted in the fourth stanza to help Richmond fight off Adelaide’s ferocious charge.

RACHELE ROCKING

Livewire Josh Rachele spearheaded the Crows’ third-quarter revival with two moments of crowd-wowing brilliance.

With his first act, Rachele received a handball from Lachlan Murphy and finished truly before celebrating with a celebration reminiscent of Tim Cahill’s iconic corner flag punch-a-thon.

Moments later, Rachele wheeled around Nick Vlastuin, snapped over a lunging Liam Baker and upped the celebration ante by making a beeline for the fans in the south-eastern pocket where he delivered some hearty high-fives.

Best:

Richmond - Hopper, Taranto, Balta, Prestia, D. Rioli, Nankervis, Baker.

Adelaide - Laird, Sholl, Fogarty, Dawson, Rachele, Walker.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/richmond-tigers-put-a-crows-miracle-to-bed-open-their-winning-account-20230325-p5cv7n.html

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SCOREBOARD

RICHMOND 4.1  11.3  12.4   17.6 (108)

Adelaide     1.3    3.6  8.14   10.16 (76)

BEST

Richmond: Taranto, Hopper, Pickett, Balta, Nankervis, Broad.

Adelaide: Laird, Rachele, Sholl, Dawson, Murray, Michalanney.

GOALS

Richmond: Lynch, Ryan 3, Riewoldt 2, Martin, Baker, Crotchin, Rioli, Hopper, Bolton, Mansell, Graham, Broad.

Adelaide: Fogarty 3, Rachele, Walker, Rankine 2, Thilthorpe.

VOTES

3 Tim Taranto (Richmond)
2 Rory Laird (Adelaide)
1 Jacob Hopper (Richmond)

https://www.codesports.com.au/afl/afl-round-2-adelaide-crows-v-richmond-all-the-news-action-and-fallout-from-adelaide-oval/news-story/d16594b05e204781a0fe892a359988e1

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Funny , if you read the media reports we were lucky to win and Adelaide had the better players