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Round
4 |
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V |
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Carlton
12.12 (84) |
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Port Adelaide
17.12 (114) |
Port Adelaide has reminded the competition that
it is still a force to be reckoned with, dispatching Carlton
by 30 points at Optus Oval.
After scores were level at half-time, the Power
blitzed the Blues in the third quarter, booting eight goals
to two, running out winners 17.12 (114) to 12.12 (84).
Despite missing their three premium players
– Matthew Primus, Warren Tredrea and Josh Francou –
plus several others from their best side due to injury, Port
Adelaide treated the crowd to a terrific display of running
football after half-time.
Nick Stevens was outstanding all day in the
midfield for the Power, covering many kilometres in amassing
36 possessions for the afternoon. He was as clear a best on
ground that one would ever see.
Former captain Gavin Wanganeen was another great
contributor, providing excellent drive off the half-back line.
He was one of the main reasons why Port Adelaide took control
of the game in the third quarter, setting off for numerous
runs down the ground.
Wanganeen kicked the goal of the day 12 minutes
into the third quarter, when he received the ball from Stevens
at half-back, dished it off and kept running, to then receive
the ball again on his attacking 50, from where he slotted
it home.
Goals to Shaun Burgoyne, Brendon Lade and Peter
Burgoyne followed, as the Power shot out to a 32-point lead.
Brendan Fevola - who presented himself as a
target all day, but was inaccurate with 2.4 - booted Carlton’s
first major for the term at the 21 minute mark, but Wanganeen
set up an immediate reply for Peter Burgoyne, with a two-bounce
dash down the ground.
Carlton offered little resistance in the second
half – in stark contrast to their first, which was very
encouraging.
It was a terrific early struggle, with nothing
separating the sides at the long break – both level
on 6.6 (42).
The Port Adelaide backline was under enormous
pressure, as Carlton continued to deliver the ball long and
direct into its forward 50.
Adrian Hickmott finished the work in attack
with two first quarter goals, but full-forward Fevola was
wasteful with some costly misses.
The Power, by contrast, had to work much harder
for their early goals. Shaun Burgoyne provided a handful for
Luke Livingston, booting two majors in the opening quarter,
but older brother Peter was inaccurate with three second term
behinds.
Matthew Lappin was solid across wing and half-back
in the first half, but like many of his teammates, faded in
the second.
The recruitment of veteran defender Mick Martyn
proved to be an early fizzer for the Blues. The 34 year-old
turned the ball over on several occasions and spent significant
periods on the bench, in his first game for the club since
crossing from the Kangaroos.
And star playmaker Anthony Koutoufides had little
impact on the match, particularly after corking his thigh
late in the second quarter.
The Blues face coach Denis Pagan’s former
side, the Kangaroos, at Telstra Dome next Saturday night,
while Port Adelaide looks primed for its showdown with Adelaide
at AAMI Stadium on the same evening.
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