Tigers, Eagles prepare for 'Clash of the May Titans'

By Samuel Ord / Roar Guru

Fewer things in the sporting world are quite as enjoyable as a top of the table clash and fans of the Australian Football League have exactly that to look forward to come the weekend.

Ladder leaders and reigning premiers Richmond will take on the second-placed West Coast Eagles on Sunday at Optus Stadium.

With eight rounds of the season done and dusted it’s been one of the most even campaigns I can recall.

Richmond and West Coast are the clear stars, both with seven wins and a stunning percentage – 149.5 and 134.0 respectively.

Following the early bolters are six teams all sitting on five wins with the difference between eighth and third pure percentage. It’s great to see.

The winner of this match may well be dubbed the premiership favourites and heading into the encounter neither side has wavered much in form – West Coast is on a run of seven wins in a row and Richmond six.

Recent clashes between the pair belong to West Coast.

Last season, in what I felt was one of the matches of the season, Richmond defeated West Coast by 11 points in Round 3 at the MCG.

Played out in the wet it was a furious fight for early momentum and an indicator that Richmond refused to accept moral victories any more.

West Coast crushed Richmond in 2016, defeating them by 68 points in Round 4, and did the job easily in Round 12 2015 – winning by 20.

Both sides also carry respectable injury lists – while West Coast’s is certainly longer in length.

Richmond are missing premiership trio Shaun Grigg, Daniel Rioli and Dion Prestia – however all expected to be available within the next three weeks at a maximum and beyond that the Tigers stunning run free of injuries has continued from 2016.

For West Coast injuries to Luke Shuey, Liam Ryan and Dom Sheed are all a hassle – however the 22 the Eagles are capable of putting out on the park in the absence of the trio eclipses that concern.

At this stage in the game I’m envisioning a West Coast win.

Jack Darling of the Eagles (Photo by Daniel Carson/AFL Media/Getty Images)

The obvious factor is travel, with Richmond never having played at Optus Stadium a concern along with the journey to Western Australia itself.

The biggest issue I sense on the horizon for the Tigers is the side’s most recent win against North Melbourne.

Richmond buried North Melbourne at Etihad Stadium, getting over the line by ten points late in the piece as a result of goals to captain Trent Cotchin and small forward Dan Butler – while at the other end the Kangaroos’ key forward Ben Brown missed twice and threw away the chance at a win.

The contest was an absolute bruiser with the Tigers laying 81 tackles to North Melbourne’s 69.

As a consequence of the relentless pressure more than 150 turnovers were committed between both sides.

That tackle count was Richmond’s highest for the season, eclipsing three over totals above sizeable totals (70 – Round 1, 71 – Round 2, 78 – Round 6).

It was the kind of contest that certain players thrive in – one of the them was North Melbourne’s Ben Cunnington, setting the AFL record for contested possessions (32) and the other was Richmond’s Cotchin – setting the contest on fire in the absence of Dustin Martin.

Oh – Dustin Martin. Martin copped a heavy tag from North Melbourne’s Ben Jacobs and while it was a stunning duel between the pair it was also pretty hard to watch.

Dustin Martin of the Tigers (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images)

Jacobs held, pinned and casual struck Martin around the ground at the majority of the contests they shared together (and did a great job of limiting his impact on the match) and as a result I’m sure that Martin would’ve been forced to put plenty of extra recovery time during the week and will be still feeling it come the weekend.

West Coast on the other hand will be riding in red hot after a 25-point win against fellow top four fancies Greater Western Sydney.

While they did have to travel to get the win, West Coast had no problem weaving it together – rarely looking in doubt all day.

If there’s one factor that may swing it for the Tigers it will be the the variety inside the forward 50.

Richmond, the competition’s strongest offensive side, has six footballers with more than ten goals – Jack Reiwoldt (19), Josh Caddy (16), Jason Castagna (14), Dustin Martin (13), Jacob Townsend (10) and Kane Lambert (10).

Regular small forward Dan Butler (8) and Jack Higgins (8) aren’t too far behind either.

West Coast has just four with more than 10 – Jack Darling (22), Mark LeCras (15), Josh Kennedy (15) and Jake Waterman (10).

If Richmond’s star defensive trio of Alex Rance, David Astbury and Dylan Grimes can put a lock on at least half of these forward, while at the other end Richmond’s unpredictable attack on the goals is able to strike multiple times, then the Tigers have a chance late in the piece.

Early accuracy will be a must too – Richmond can’t afford to find itself at 2.5 or 3.7 at any stage unless a dramatically different West Coast outfit arrives on the day and manages to relent in pressure.

In the big picture recent history is in West Coast’s favour too.

In Round 6 of the 2017 season Adelaide and Richmond went head-to-head at Adelaide Oval – both undefeated at the time with five wins each.

Adelaide defeated Richmond by 76 points on the day, booting a 21 goals and 14 behinds (140 points).

However if an early season loss to another premiership contender is an important step in the journey towards a premiership for this yellow and black unit – I’m sure Tigers fans will happily cop another one.

The Crowd Says:

2018-05-17T13:59:51+00:00

Michael Pallaris

Roar Rookie


Eagles to win in a thriller.

2018-05-16T02:50:10+00:00

Jungle Jim

Guest


Agree, been waiting to see this guy, while others have been wheeled out(and impressed) bUt AhChee was the player type we needed last season. He set himself a high bar initially but he just slotted in like a cog in the proverbial machine. He has the grunt factor, pace, can kick a goal and has a supersonic hand pass - the Hurn of handballs!? Hope to see him get a regular gig.

2018-05-16T02:40:46+00:00

Jungle Jim

Guest


Joe B = Spot on!!!

2018-05-16T02:39:05+00:00

Jungle Jim

Guest


Kaniel = such worn out old cliches, you need to get out more -chardonnay really? you can do better than that!...and Big Four Sticks = clearly you haven't watched any recent Eagles games? There's pumped up passion and then there's reality! Once again same old tired cliches from posters who aren't abreast of current football, but locked in their own team world.

2018-05-15T13:42:04+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Guest


The big difference between Rance and McGovern is that Gov marks,Rance spoils. Crumbing those spoils will have a direct influence on forward movement. Also,WC have superior stoppage clearance to the Tigers, Rance hits over the boundary,not a good idea The Eagles have twice Richmond's number of hitouts, where Nankervis gives up 3 frees a week and Lycett and Naitanui get 4 frees a week between them West Coast by four or five goals

2018-05-15T13:30:59+00:00

J.T. Delacroix

Guest


Lamby, who skis uphill?

2018-05-15T12:54:40+00:00

Tom

Guest


How are they downhill skiers? 3-0 interstate this season plus they’ve actually beaten some of last years finalists something that can’t be said for the tigers, I believe you got a 36 point lesson from Adelaide in the one game you played interstate

2018-05-15T10:07:31+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Hopefully not a terry Wallace five year plan for tigers fans sake :D

2018-05-15T10:02:17+00:00

Philby

Guest


North's team is hardly a 'young rebuilding team'. They played defending premiers Tigers at the weekend, with North averaging 107 games per player and Richmond 97 games per player. Perhaps Tigers are rebuilding!!

2018-05-15T09:58:30+00:00

Philby

Guest


Too true, Slane.

2018-05-15T09:56:17+00:00

Philby

Guest


You guys have weird ideas about us Victorians. If Eagles won in either of those ways, you'd have all the supporters of Carlton, Collingwood, Essendon and supporters of most other Victorian clubs chortling into their beer. They won't though. Tigers by 5 goals.

2018-05-15T09:49:56+00:00

Philby

Guest


...and what's your point?

2018-05-15T09:24:02+00:00

Joe B

Guest


Nah... I would like to see a dubious free kick, then a 50m penalty with a set shot for goal after the siren for a one point win. I want to hear all of Victoria whining for a week!

2018-05-15T09:13:10+00:00

Joe B

Guest


If WC beat Tigers at Perth Stadium by 20+ the media will probably call WC flat track bullies, and if the Tigers beat WC at the MCG, the media will say WC can't win away from home.

2018-05-15T09:10:33+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


DTM- what I've found is were other sides have tried to adopt similar gameplan to tigers our boys worked on their fitness levels because imo that is what separates Richmond from other sides.

2018-05-15T08:28:08+00:00

DTM

Guest


I keep hearing about this luck that Richmond have had with injuries. I think this is disrespectful to the medical and coaching staff at Richmond. Managing sore and injured players is a difficult task and Richmond have simply done it better than most for the last few years. The forecast is for 25 degrees on Sunday but it will feel hotter in the middle at Optus. West Coast are getting some key players back but are likely to still be without Shuey. As a long term WCE member, I am surprised and pleased that we are near the top but there is a long way to go in the season and I would take a finish in the top 4. I think Richmond is the better team but suspect after North softened them up last week, the travel and the heat will take it's toll on Sunday. Still, if I was a betting man, my money would be on Richmond to go back to back.

2018-05-15T07:36:20+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Enjoy it mate, haven't been this pumped for a h & a game for a few years.

2018-05-15T07:35:14+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Long range forecast says it will be low -mid 20s and sunny, how we go with caddy will be interesting, will yeo run with him everywhere or will Sheppard take him when he goes fwd, who will rance go with because jk did a superb job dragging Davis away from Darling that if he goes to jk similar tactic will be used.

2018-05-15T07:05:00+00:00

The Ghost

Guest


As a South Australian resident, I hear all this anti Richmond codswallop day in day out. Adelaide and Port are both front runners, who are only good on their own terms. The MCG is the home of football, whereas Adelaide oval is not. Until Adelaide win at the Gee, I cannot respect them. 1998 is a long time ago Lamby. Eat 'em alive Tigers!

2018-05-15T06:37:17+00:00

Kaniel Outis

Guest


I would to see Richmond beat these downhill skiers, and watch Julie Bishop (who attends interstate games on our money), Gina Rinehart, Colin Barnett, and Twiggy Forest cry into their Chardonnay.

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