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2025 Toyota AFL Premiership
Richmond v West Coast Eagles
Round 9 •
81 11.15
Full Time
79 11.13
Tigers Won By 2
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    Desperation v confidence: Who wins cellar-dweller battle?

    Sarah Black and Nathan Schmook dissect a bottom-of-the-ladder battle with big ramifications

    Rhyan Mansell (left) and Jake Waterman. Pictures: AFL Photos

    IT'S THE battle of the cellar-dwellers on Sunday afternoon, when 16th-placed Richmond takes on 18th-placed West Coast at the MCG. 

    While the Tigers already have two wins on the board, the majority of their performances have been lacklustre, and Sunday's clash presents the perfect opportunity for the Eagles to notch their first wins of the season.

    On the flip-side, the Tigers' two wins have been massive scalps, plus still boasts several premiership players with plenty of experience.

    Despite the low ladder positions of the two teams, the contest shapes as an intriguing one - AFL.com.au's Sarah Black and Nathan Schmook outline their reasoning why each team can win.

    01:08

    WHY RICHMOND CAN WIN

    Richmond already has two wins in the book, which will help with confidence if the four points are still on the line late in the game.

    Skipper Toby Nankervis loves to throw his weight around against weaker or less experienced opponents, and has a record of putting on the superhero cape and dragging his side over the line.

    West Coast ruck Matt Flynn has struggled in recent weeks, conceding 47 hitouts and 35 disposals against Max Gawn, while the round one clash against Gold Coast saw Jarrod Witts record an astonishing 68 hitouts to Flynn's 13.

    Tim Taranto, Jacob Hopper and Kamdyn McIntosh will take on old Tiger friends in Liam Baker and Jack Graham, while Tim Kelly is a familiar foe.

    Jack Graham and Kamdyn McIntosh celebrate after the Grand Final between Richmond and Geelong at The Gabba, October 24, 2020. Picture: Getty Images

    The engine room has been one of West Coast's biggest concerns this year. While the Tigers aren't much better – sitting 17th to the Eagles' 18th – there's still a significant 5.6 average clearance gap between the pair.

    But Andrew McQualter has mixed up the dynamic in recent weeks, rolling Brady Hough, Eliljah Hewett and even Tyler Brockman through, and the slower Tigers will have to keep an eye on their speed.

    Key back Jeremy McGovern will miss with concussion in a huge loss to the Eagles' piecemeal backline which currently features usual key forward Oscar Allen and SSP signing Sandy Brock.

    While Tom Lynch is no longer at the peak of his powers, his marking still poses a significant threat and he often draws multiple opponents – lowering the eyes entering 50 and finding the loose smalls could be a winning formula.

    00:27

    Richmond has been at its most threatening this year when it has played a high-octane game, switching lanes quickly and moving the ball by hand, rather than long kicks down the line.

    The tackling pressure can be contagious, and plays to the strengths of Rhyan Mansell, Seth Campbell, Maurice Rioli and Steely Green.

    Nick Vlastuin thrives on slow loopy balls into an opposition's forward line, and with Allen in defence, the Eagles don't have an experienced key forward, with the 191cm Jake Waterman the most dangerous.

    Nick Vlastuin during the round five match between West Coast and Richmond at Optus Stadium, April 14, 2024. Picture: AFL Photos

    WHY WEST COAST CAN WIN

    There should be a level of desperation for the Eagles this week as they chase their first win of the season and a maiden triumph for coach Andrew McQualter in blue and gold.

    That alone won't get it done, however, and backing West Coast requires a level of faith that it will combine together this week the different elements of its game that have improved at various stages.

    The first of those is forward-half intercepts, which had improved significantly leading into the Melbourne loss.

    While ranking bottom four for all of inside 50s, marks inside 50, and tackles inside 50, the Eagles average more in those indicators than the Tigers and have experienced players like Jake Waterman, Liam Ryan and Jamie Cripps who can capitalise if field position and supply is in their favour.

    01:46

    West Coast's biggest issue has been in the midfield, where rucks Matt Flynn and Bailey Williams have traded places through the year based on form. Williams had an improved game in the WAFL and may give the Eagles an extra ground-level presence if selected.

    McQualter has also experimented heavily in the centre square through a poor run of midfield games, testing young players and redeploying small forwards. Regulars like Tim Kelly and Harley Reid have been in and out of the centre square.

    Is this the week that the coach settles his engine room and puts the heat on his most proven onballers to deliver? On paper, there is a midfield at West Coast that can spearhead a win this week. It needs to play to its potential though.

    If the experimentation continues, Tyler Brockman had five clearances in the second half last week and has the fast feet to trouble slower opponents. Likewise Elijah Hewett, who is in excellent form both in the middle and when pushing forward, kicking three goals against the Demons.

    00:56

    Perhaps most encouraging for the Eagles is the backline match-ups, with Seth Campbell (12 goals) leading the Tigers' goalkicking and dual premiership key forward Tom Lynch (nine) presenting as the most dangerous tall. 

    The Eagles have an ideal match-up for Campbell in defender Brady Hough if they hold him out of the midfield, while Oscar Allen has taken to his new role in defence well, with Reuben Ginbey playing an assertive brand and supporting teammates in the air.

    A desperate Eagles team has the potential to win this week if individuals play to their potential, with a sprinkle of IP from Liam Baker, Jack Graham and McQualter himself also set to help.

    Yellow and Brown: Youngster's heroics see Tigers deny Eagles

    Richmond has held on against West Coast to win by two points at the MCG

    Tom Brown celebrates a goal during round nine, 2025. Picture: AFL Photos/Getty Images

    A GOAL-SAVING tackle by Richmond defender Tom Brown has secured his side’s two-point win in a tight contest against West Coast on Sunday afternoon.

    With fewer than 30 seconds remaining and the Tigers up by two points, Eagles youngster Tom Gross ran inside 50 looking to launch a shot on goal, but Brown executed the perfect tackle to stop Gross in his tracks and ensure the Tigers won their third match of the season.

    TIGERS v EAGLES Full match coverage and stats

    It was a see-sawing affair all game with the lead changing 15 times throughout. Neither side was able to break free, but two behinds in the last ten minutes to Tom Lynch and Kane McAuliffe put the home side in front to win 11.15 (81) to West Coast’s 11.13 (79) on Mother’s Day in front of a crowd of 29,539 at the MCG.

    Both sides entered the game making late changes before the opening bounce. For West Coast, captain Oscar Allen was withdrawn with knee soreness, as was the Tigers’ defender Jayden Short. Allen was replaced by Harry Edwards, whilst Short’s absence created a spot for James Tresize who started as the Tigers’ sub.

    04:18

    The Tigers started strongly, kicking the first three goals of the game through experienced duo Lynch and Taranto as well as young forward Seth Campbell. In contrast, West Coast’s experienced players, former Blue Matt Owies, former Tiger Jack Graham and premiership player Jamie Cripps all missed gettable shots at the other end.

    Richmond coach Adem Yze would have been pulling his hair out when the Eagles kicked their first two goals 90 seconds out from the quarter-time siren. After controlling the majority of the quarter, the Tigers let West Coast back in the contest when the Eagles kicked goals through Cripps and winger Jayden Hunt to keep their team within reach.

    The Eagles came out in the second quarter in the same manner they finished the first, kicking two further goals to make it four unanswered majors for the away team and shifting the momentum the Eagles’ way.

    Richmond fans would have been relieved when first-gamer Thomas Sims took a strong contested mark and converted for his first AFL goal to break the Eagles run. Sims, who is a carbon-copy of Tom Lynch, was called up for his first game after joining Richmond with pick No.28 in last year’s draft.

    00:42

    It was goal-for-goal with the lead changing several times before the main break with Richmond heading into halftime with a meagre one-point lead.

    The pressure lifted in the second half, slowing scoring for both teams. Former No.1 draft pick Harley Reid copped a big hit when he was bumped after releasing a kick, but the youngster shook off the Eagles medical staff and remained on the ground.

    Crafty veteran forward Cripps kicked his third to put the Eagles in front, but the Eagles missed their next three opportunities allowing the Tigers to stay in the game.

    09:24

    Two late goals to Richmond, one through Rhyan Mansell and one from skipper Toby Nankervis gave the Tigers back the lead at the three-quarter-time break. Nankervis, who looked to be playing sore after copping a knock earlier in the quarter, made no mistake, kicking a captain’s goal to put his side back in front to set the game up for a big final term.

    The Tigers’ lead was short-lived as Harley Reid opened scoring for the final term with a superb goal on the run from outside 50. But as Reid often does, an outstanding patch of play is often followed by a brain fade, as it was when he then gave away a 50 metre free kick after knocking the ball out of Hugo Ralphsmith’s hands after he took a mark, gifting the Tigers a goal.

    00:54

    Scores were level with five minutes remaining, when Lynch took a huge pack mark at the top of the goal square, but the veteran went back and missed the simple shot, but though he kicked a point, it importantly put his side in front. McAuliffe added a second point, to put the Tigers two points up with less than three minutes remaining.

    It looked as though the Eagles were going to break the hearts of the home crowd when Gross ran towards goal from 50, but the Brown tackle led to cheers from the grandstands when he saved the day and got his side over the line.

    00:34

    Tiger and Eagle late outs
    There was plenty happening before the ball had even been bounced on Sunday afternoon with both sides making very late changes. For West Coast, captain Oscar Allen was withdrawn from the side at the final moment with knee soreness. Allen was replaced in the side by key defender Harry Edwards who spent the afternoon lining up on Tom Lynch. For the Tigers, Jayden Short was taken from the side also with knee soreness. Short was replaced in the side by James Trezise, who was named as the sub, pushing the original sub Kane McAuliffe onto the ground.

    08:15

    Sims like the young Tiger is ready to go
    Tiger debutant Thomas Sims looks right at home at the top level. The 18-year-old actually looks so much at home that you could be forgiven to think there were two Tom Lynches on the field. Both blonde-haired forwards are 199cm and provided marking options inside forward 50. The two worked well together, often hitting each other inside fifty. Sims finished the day with a goal and two marks and six disposals, whilst Lynch’s experience outclassed the Eagles kicking two goals, whilst also having 17 disposals and taking six marks.

    ALL THE HIGHLIGHTS

    RICHMOND         3.4   7.7    10.9    11.15 (81)
    WEST COAST       2.3   7.6    9.11    11.13 (79) 

    GOALS
    Richmond: Lynch 2, Campbell 2, Mansell 2, Taranto, Sims, Brown, Nankervis, Raphsmith
    West Coast: Cripps 3, Owies 2, Williams 2, Hunt, Waterman, Brockman, H. Reid

    BEST
    Richmond: Taranto, Lynch, Hopper, Nankervis, McIntosh, Banks
    West Coast: Baker, Hunt, Ryan, H. Reid, Graham

    INJURIES
    Richmond: Nil
    West Coast: Nil

    LATE CHANGES
    Richmond: Jayden Short (knee) replaced in selected side by James Trezise.
    West Coast: Oscar Allen (knee) replaced in selected side by Harry Edwards

    SUBSTITUTES
    Richmond: James Trezise (replaced Thomson Dow in the fourth quarter)
    West Coast: Tom Gross (replaced Archer Reid in the fourth quarter)

    Crowd: 29,539 at the MCG

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