| 2nd
Semi Final |
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V |
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Port Adelaide
12.11 (83) |
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Sydney
6.8 (44) |
A flu-ridden Warren Tredrea took full advantage
of the absence of suspended Essendon star Dustin Fletcher
to inspire Port Adelaide to a much-needed finals victory
at AAMI Stadium on Saturday night.
The minor premiers avoided the humiliation
of going out in ‘straight sets’ in recording
only their second finals victory in eight attempts with
a 12.11 (83) to 6.8
(44) win over the Bombers in wet and windy conditions.
It was the second successive year the
Power has knocked the Bombers out of the finals at the
semi-final stage and
sets up a blockbuster preliminary final against Port’s
biggest Victorian rivals in Collingwood at the MCG next Saturday.
And while that game looms as a far tougher proposition in
front of an expected 80,000 pro-Magpie crowd, the Power will
certainly travel to Melbourne with renewed confidence after
throwing off its finals under-achieving tag this weekend
in impressive style.
The Power showed few signs of the nervousness
and poor decision-making and skill level which marred last
week’s shock qualifying
final loss at home to Sydney.
In fact from the moment Michael Wilson kicked a miracle
goal from the boundary line after just three minutes, there
only ever appeared one winner in this game as Port led from
start to finish.
But it was Tredrea – in doubt all week due to a bad
case of the flu which prevented him from training on Wednesday
and Friday – who was the difference between the sides.
With Fletcher out yet again due to suspension, as he was
for this corresponding game last year, the Bombers simply
had no-one capable of matching the Port powerhouse.
It was left to the undersized and outclassed Mark Bolton
to man up Tredrea and after he had been thrashed for three
quarters, Essendon coach Kevin Sheedy sent Danny Jacobs onto
Tredrea but the damage was done as the Power led by five
goals at the last change.
Tredrea not only kicked three goals but set up others with
his ability to mark the ball at half-forward and then quickly
kick into space to enable players such as Shane Burgoyne
to run into open goals.
And on a night when any possession was
hard to come by as continual rain showers left AAMI Stadium
saturated, Tredrea’s
constant ability to create a contest enabled the ball to
continually come to ground level, where the Power dominated.
It was the best finals performance seen
from Tredrea, who was one of many Power stars to play below
his best not only
last week but also during Port’s disappointing 2001
and 2002 finals campaigns.
However Tredrea was not the only Port player, who struggled
last week, to bounce back in spectacular style against the
Bombers.
The Burgoyne brothers – Peter and Shane – were
virtually unsighted against the Swans but had nine possessions
between them in the opening quarter alone as well as eventually
combining for three goals.
And at the other end Port full-back Darryl Wakelin could
hardly have produced a more contrasting performance from
last week.
After having had six goals kicked on
him by Sydney powerhouse Barry Hall in the qualifying final,
Wakelin dominated Essendon’s
Matthew Lloyd to such an extent that the AFL’s leading
goalkicker this season started the final quarter on the bench.
And Port also dominated in the ruck through Dean Brogan
and Brendon Lade, another area in which it was thrashed in
against Sydney due to the dominance of Adam Goodes.
With Lloyd struggling and Essendon skipper
James Hird restricted to just 12 possessions by Port tagger
Stuart Cochrane – a
late replacement for Roger James – Essendon’s
attack simply disintegrated.
And even worse for the thousands of Bombers
fans who made the trip over was the sight of former Bombers
Damien Hardwick
and Gavin Wanganeen continually repelling the ball out of
Essendon’s attack.
Wanganeen was at his courageous best
after overcoming an early and heavy knock from Dean Rioli,
who along with Scott
Lucas, was one of the Bombers’ few good players.
However in the end the Bombers once again
paid a heavy price for the lack of discipline from their
best defender with
Fletcher’s absence – for the second successive
season in semi-final week - really proving costly.
And as for Port, well the true test of its premiership credentials
will come next week in what will be only its second ever
final at the MCG.
And it may be then that the true implications
of that loss to Sydney – which cost them home advantage for next
week’s final – are revealed to Mark Williams’ side.
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