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Round
12 |
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V |
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St.Kilda
7.15 (57) |
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Port Adelaide
15.9 (99) |
Port Adelaide has upstaged St Kilda at its home-away-from-home
clash in Launceston with an emphatic 42-point win, to notch
up its fifth win in succession and its fifth win in a row
against St Kilda.
The Power 15.9 (99) defeated the Saints 7.15
(57) in cool, but sunny conditions in the picturesque surroundings
at York Park in Tasmania.
Port Adelaide has now won nine of its last 10
matches, with its most recent loss coming against Melbourne
in round seven at the MCG.
The ‘visitors’ were simply too good
for St Kilda, who clearly missed the likes of Aaron Hamill,
Andrew Thompson, Max Hudghton, Justin Koschitzke, Luke Ball
and Luke Penny through injury, along with young but now senior
ruckmen Trent Knobel and Barry Brooks.
But the win also indicated how good Port Adelaide’s
depth is considering it was missing the likes of Matthew Primus,
Josh Francou, Michael Wilson, Roger James, Stewart Dew and
Matthew Bishop.
The Power proved that despite several key injuries,
the team can rise to the challenge of covering key players,
whereas the emerging Saints are still some way off from the
quality of their opponent.
However, St Kilda didn’t help itself with
poor kicking in front of goal, which was a key factor, considering
the Power only had two more scoring shots.
The Saints were also virtually playing with
21 players, after Xavier Clarke experienced tightness in his
hamstring during the pre-match warm up, which forced him to
spend the game on the bench.
The performance from Port Adelaide produced
even contributions from all 22 players, but the two standout
players were Brett Montgomery and Dean Brogan.
Montgomery was outstanding as he mopping up
across half-back and helped to set up plenty of attacks into
his side’s forward 50. The 2002 All-Australian notched
up 25 disposals and 16 grabs, with his marking a feature of
the game.
Brogan, who is one of the most improved players
in the competition, was also a fine player for the Power and
took full advantage of Saints depleted ruck stocks.
The likes of Stuart Cochrane, Josh Carr, Jarrad
Schofield, Peter Burgoyne, Nick Stevens, Shaun Burgoyne and
Gavin Wanganeen were also outstanding contributors, while
Stephen Paxman and Darryl Wakelin were terrific in defence.
Byron Pickett also chipped in with three goals and was the
leading goalkicker for the match.
And once again, St Kilda dynamos Robert Harvey
and Lenny Hayes were among the possessions, racking up 32
touches each, while Nick Riewoldt worked tirelessly and finished
the game with two goals.
The match began with Port Adelaide booting six
goals in a stunning term, as St Kilda could muster just one
major for the quarter via Riewoldt.
The Power led by 30 points at the quarter-time,
as their midfield brigade led by Carr, Schofield and Stevens
provided plenty of drive out the middle. The trio had close
to 30 touches during that period, while Carr booted two early
goals.
The Port Adelaide show looked set to continue
early after the first break, when Che Cockatoo-Collins added
his second, while Montgomery across half-back, Cochrane in
the middle and Brogan in the ruck were running amok.
However, the Power’s dominance was soon
eased when veteran midfielder Justin Peckett bobbed up with
the Saints’ second for the match at the nine-minute
mark. A further three goals were added for the term, with
St Kilda adding two late in the quarter to cut the deficit
to a 23-margin at half-time.
But the Saints had their chances to reduce the
Power’s lead even further, yet they booted five behinds
for the quarter. A Harvey miss on the run late in the term
was a crucial blow when the Saints had registered the previous
two goals.
St Kilda opened the second half in a positive
fashion when Hayes kicked truly to bring his side within 18
points. The Saints looked set to march towards a comeback
in front of their ‘home’ crowd, but the Power
with clinical precision added five consecutive goals to thwart
any hope of St Kilda win.
Warren Tredrea and P.Burgoyne posted two goals
each, while the Saints again wasted their opportunities in
front of goal, as nippy goalsneak Stephen Milne added two
posters late in the term.
With the result all but over heading into the
final quarter, both sides managed two goals each, yet it mattered
little as it was overall a disappointing day for the Saints.
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