Round
22
SHOWDOWN XIV |
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V |
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Port Adelaide
14.10 (94) |
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Adelaide
12.6 (78) |
Port Adelaide booked a home first qualifying
final berth with Sydney and denied Adelaide a double chance
by winning the 14th Showdown at AAMI Stadium on Sunday.
Port outscored the Crows against a strong breeze
in the last quarter to win 14.10 (94) to 12.6 (78) - its seventh
straight victory against its arch hometown rival.
It leaves Adelaide playing the West Coast Eagles
in a cut-throat final, and based on its tame last-quarter
effort, the Crows can hardly feel confident.
Port won without Warren Tredrea playing a significant
role, and Adelaide lost without Andrew McLeod having a positive
influence. Port won because of its persistence and winning
the tight contests, and Adelaide lost dues to its inability
to get its free-flowing game going.
Adelaide was unchanged, but Port was forced
to omit Roger James (groin) and Chad Cornes (ankle), and replaced
them with experienced campaigners Che Cockatoo-Collins and
Adam Kingsley.
Among the match-ups were Adelaide’s Nigel Smart on Tredrea,
Kris Massie, who struggled against Byron Pickett, Wayne Carey
against Darryl Wakelin, and Robert Shirley on Shaun Burgoyne.
The field umpires made it obvious they would
not tolerate the game getting out of hand by awarding early
frees, with the Crows picking up six within the first eight
minutes, and two of them resulting in goals, to Scott Welsh
and Graham Johncock.
Port had first use of the strong southerly breeze,
but took almost 14 minutes to score, a goal from Pickett courtesy
of hard work from Cockatoo-Collins. Within 30 seconds Brett
Montgomery also goaled, and a minute later Jarrad Schofield
goaled too.
Port had taken control, and finished the term
with goals to Shaun Burgoyne, and Gavin Wanganeen from a free.
The Crows added only one score, when Ronnie Burns hit the
post. Many of their forward thrusts went astray, as Port’s
defence remained steadfast.
Adelaide started the second term with a goal
from another justified free to Johncock, and soon after kicked
his third, and Adelaide’s fourth. The lead was finally
wrestled when Carey marked and goaled, and Brett Burton followed
it with a magnificent goal from 55 metres.
Adelaide’s momentum was temporarily stopped
with a goal from Adam Kingsley at the 15-minute mark, and
it proved to be Port’s only goal for the term. It missed
three set shots, plus Nick Stevens missed an easy chance straight
in front on the run from 30 metres.
Adelaide battled well, and with goals from Tyson
Edwards, and a gem from deep in the left pocket from Matthew
Bode, it led by nine points at half-time.
The Crows were prepared to attack mainly through
handballing, but Port relied on kicking, and the disposals
were almost even for the half. The big difference was Port
had 51 marks to 22, and many of them were uncontested.
Mark Ricciuto was outstanding for Adelaide,
while Schofield was terrific for Port. Smart was doing a quality
job on Tredrea, while Kane Cornes had restricted Adelaide’s
ace, Andrew McLeod, to only seven disposals. The key to the
game seemed to hinge on these respective stars breaking the
shackles. But neither did in the third term.
Port worked hard to take a 10-point lead into
the last change, and it didn’t appear enough with the
use of the breeze. Stuart Dew kicked two of the four term
goals, and Burgoyne and Stevens kicked the others. Adelaide’s
only goal came from Bode, one of its best.
Pickett had 11 disposals in the first term,
but his 12th did not come until midway through the third.
But he certainly came to the fore in the last term as he set
up the first goal to Montgomery, and kicked the next two.
It proved to be a winning burst.
Port kicked 4.2 against the wind to Adelaide’s
3.2. The Crows had their chances, but were denied success.
A telling statistic was 98 marks to 51, with Port using most
to set up quality play.
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