Persevering Saint
Brownlow Medallist
From the real footy website
St Kilda's midfield too soft, Lyon says
Lyall Johnson | May 5, 2008
IT'S one of the oldest cliches in football, but games of football are almost always won, or lost, in the midfield.
And St Kilda coach Ross Lyon was honest enough after Saturday night's thrilling three-point win over Richmond to admit his side got totally smashed through the midfield and, as a result, possibly didn't deserve to win.
The Tigers, in Lyon's words, "annihilated" St Kilda in the middle of the ground (the statistics for hard-ball-gets alone were 66-28 Richmond's way). And if not for Richmond turning the ball back over to the Saints with monotonous regularity, it would have come out on top, which would have made irrelevant the 11 seconds "lost" by the timekeepers that muddied the result.
Lyon said yesterday the main worry he had with his side was that while the midfielders were performing well individually, they were yet to play well together on the same day.
"The biggest concern is our midfield," Lyons said on radio 3AW yesterday. "Games are won and lost there. Your ability to put scoreboard pressure on and help your defence is from there.
"In a real sense, bar (Nick) Dal Santo and (Robert) Harvey last night, up to half-time, we were annihilated in there. Their ruckmen spread on us and got a lot of ball and Lenny (Hayes), who's been outstanding all year, was tagged heavily and (Leigh) Montagna was tagged heavily and struggled.
"It wasn't until we put (Adam) Schneider and Xavier Clarke on the wings in the second half that we got some pace and some more ball-winning ability. And as soon as that happened, we scored five goals really quickly …
"So, to me, our biggest issue — and the numbers tell you that and the contested ball (stats) tell you that — at the minute, it's the midfield not supplying enough opportunity. They've all had good games but not collectively. Clearly, we'd like more goals from them."
It is fair to say Richmond was the better side on the night in all but two areas. For a start, the scoreboard shows it lost, Jack Riewoldt's after-the-siren kick falling short by a couple of metres.
Second, despite 70-odd more possessions than St Kilda and being ahead in nearly every statistical department, the Tigers' use of the football was so average, it cost them the game.
Stephen Milne was a star for the Saints, kicking 7.3, while Matthew Richardson was superb for the Tigers, booting five as he roved the ground for most of the night.