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2022 Toyota AFL Premiership
Port Adelaide v Sydney Swans
Round 14 •
82 12.10
Full Time
59 8.11
Power Won By 23
Adelaide Oval,  Adelaide  • Kaurna

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    Match Preview: Port Adelaide vs Sydney

    Port Adelaide needs wins - at least another seven - to extend its season to the AFL top-eight finals. Winning against Sydney is a well-known task for Ken Hinkley's crew.

    Key forward Charlie Dixon and his fellow tall forwards will need to be at their best in order to put scoreboard pressure on a fast-paced Swans outfit. Image: AFL Photos.

    PORT ADELAIDE has the longest current winning streak against Sydney: Five consecutive triumphs since 2017 - starting with back-to-back victories at the SCG followed by three in a row at Adelaide Oval.

    Next best against a team admired across the AFL for being tough to beat, tough in its approach to contested, one-on-one football and superbly consistent in its work? Streaks of one by Brisbane, Carlton, Gold Coast, St Kilda and the Western Bulldogs.

    "We have a great record against Sydney ... and, hopefully, we maintain that record against them," says Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley.

    Extending the run to a club record six would say plenty of 12th-ranked Port Adelaide stepping up to the challenge of competing against the AFL's flagbearer on contested football. It also would address the most-pressing issue that Port Adelaide needs to get its win-loss count in the black during the second half of the home-and-away series if it is to play in September.

    Port Adelaide returns to Adelaide Oval for the first time since May 29 when it closed the first half of the 2022 campaign with a 16-point win against Essendon. It is 5-7 today, three wins outside the AFL top eight (with a game in hand) - and needing at least seven wins from 10 games to advance to its third consecutive top-eight AFL finals series. Percentage (currently 103) also needs to be healthier considering there could be a massive jam in the race to eighth position at the end of the home-and-away series.

    Sydney coach John Longmire is not underestimating Port Adelaide.

    "Since Round 6 they’re five (wins) and two (losses)," Longmire said. "Their ability to be able to stop the opposition scoring, they’re the No.1 team in the competition at it. Their record really from that Round 6 moment onwards has been very good so we’ve looked at that and can see they’re doing a lot of things right." 

    Port Adelaide's defence, one of the stingiest in the competition, will be looking to shut down Sydney's strong scoring threats. Image: AFL Photos.

    OLD AND NEW

    NTUA will end with a former Port Adelaide ruckman staring at a new Port Adelaide ruckman for the first centre bounce of this game that starts at 1.15pm.

    In the red corner for Sydney will be 202-centimetre Peter Ladhams who played 32 AFL matches in three seasons for Port Adelaide before being traded at the end of last season.

    In the teal corner for Port Adelaide will be 203-centimetre East Fremantle recruit Brynn Teakle wearing the No. 27 jumper just two weeks after being called from the WAFL in the AFL mid-season rookie draft.

    Sydney could not call up Tom Hickey (turf toe) to support Ladhams.

    Port Adelaide has key forwards Charlie Dixon, Jeremy Finlayson and Todd Marshall - plus half-forward Sam Powell-Pepper - ready to be the support act for 22-year-old Teakle.

    Acutely aware of Port Adelaide's need to score more - and have more scoring options against a team noted for its defensive strengths - Hinkley is wary of the need to have his forwards working around the goalsquare rather than the centre square. Last week, against Richmond, Finlayson and Dixon delivered as a ruck duo to ensure Port Adelaide won the centre clearances on the MCG.

    But the combined scoring of Finlayson and Dixon was 2.1 in a game decided by 12 points, against Port Adelaide.

    "Brynn Teakle's selection allows us to play our forwards (Finlayson and Dixon) as dangerous players as much as we possibly can and score. We are trying to increase our scoring capacity with the players who are available to us at the moment."

    02:16

    This challenge is tougher by the absence of specialist forward Robbie Gray (knee) and former captain Travis Boak (COVID protocols) while goalsneak Orazio Fantasia remains on the comeback from a quad injury.

    And Ladhams?

    "(Playing against your former team) is an event most players want to get out of the way and move on," Hinkley notes. "Some play well ... some don't. He is an opposition player now ..."

    STYLE COUNCIL

    SYDNEY has changed from the team that built is reputation on one-on-one contests and dour defence - and had AFL boss Andrew Demetriou in 2005 describing to-be premiership coach Paul Roos' gameplan as boring.

    Port Adelaide is trying to find the scoring edge that made it the AFL's best team for forward-half play.

    In 2019, Sydney averaged 78 points - and conceded 79, albeit in a season of rare failure with an 8-14 win-loss record. Today, Sydney scores at a 93-point average and is still tight in defence conceding 78 points on average.

    "One thing with your game plan," says Sydney assistant coach Dean Cox, "is you want to make sure you can do all three phases (defence, midfield and attack) well. You need to attack to be able to defend behind it.

    "We still want to be a team that is hard to score against. Part of that is, how fast do you want to go with the ball, are you more composed, you have to take what the opposition give you but you need to make sure you are doing it in a manner that you can set up behind the ball as well."

    11:25

    The opposite has unfolded at Port Adelaide.

    In 2019, Port Adelaide averaged 82 points; this is a club-low (in AFL matches) of 74 today. Defence is still sound with 71 points being conceded compared with 78 in 2019.

    "We do need to put some scoreboard pressure on, particularly against a side like Sydney which is a great attacking side and have been really strong defensively," says Hinkley. "Your balance has to be right both ways."

    The lead-up to the match has revealed a mutual admiration between the Harbor City and Alberton.

    "They are a pretty good team - and club," said Hinkley. "They are the club I always seem to talk about that I like a lot in the way the club is run. You understand why they are such a great organisation.

    "And we understand the challenge they will place upon us this week. It is a challenge we are more than capable of overcoming.

    "They look like a pretty good team at their best, but everyone does at their best. We are going to be searching for those chinks in their armour. We have a good understanding of how they like to play. Hopefully, we can maximise our ability to play the game at our level."

    Cox admires the Port Adelaide that delivered league-best forward-half pressure to dominate the inside-50 count.

    "The best team in the competition (for defence by attack) has been Port Adelaide - and they are trying to get back to that," Cox said. "It worked well for so long by their ability to get the ball in their front half and set up to get repeat (forward-50) entries."

    Sam Powell-Pepper has provided Port Adelaide with a scoring spark this season, kicking 12 goals on the year. Image: AFL Photos.

    BAROMETER

    EVERYONE now measures Port Adelaide on contested football, even if it has become a simplified barometer looking solely at contested possession (rather than including the contests that do not make it to the Champion Data statistics).

    In the five consecutive wins Port Adelaide has had against Sydney, the barometer has read -

    Round 15, last year (Port Adelaide won by 10 points) - 154-148 in Port Adelaide's favour.

    Round 14, 2020 (Port Adelaide by 26 points) - 140-117 in Port Adelaide's favour.

    Round 21, 2019 (Port Adelaide by 47 points) - 154-149 in Port Adelaide's favour.

    Round 2, 2018 (Port Adelaide by 23 points) - 175-164 in Sydney's favour.

    Round 1, 2017 (Port Adelaide by 28 points) - 161-139 in Port Adelaide's favour.

    STRANGE THING

    HINKLEY last week gave his thoughts on how to restructure the lopsided AFL fixture. If AFL executive Travis Auld picks up the telephone for more consultation, there might be reason to ask why the league fixture has become like a broken record in placing Port Adelaide-Sydney matches.

    From 2015-2018, all four clashes between the two clubs were at the SCG.

    Since 2019, every match has been at Adelaide Oval with today's encounter making it four in a row.

    BUDDY FACTOR

    HE'S back ... from suspension, refreshed and still posing a major threat as a power forward at the age of 35. Lance Franklin will play his 19th match against Port Adelaide (against whom he has a 9-9 win-loss record spread across Hawthorn and Sydney).

    Franklin has kicked 60.39 (out of a career 1023.711) against Port Adelaide.

    Franklin kicked 4.2 in the last Port Adelaide-Sydney match played at Adelaide Oval in round 15 last season. Tom Clurey and former Sydney defender Aliir Aliir - along with captain Tom Jonas - will not be short of massive tasks in dealing with Franklin and the other tall options in the Sydney attack that includes first-round draftee Logan McDonald and Sam Reid.

    Neutralising forward Lance Franklin will be a crucial task for Port Adelaide's defenders. Image: AFL Photos.

    BY THE NUMBERS

    IF Sydney carries the reputation (with Geelong) of being the AFL's most-competitive and consistent team, let the numbers from the past five seasons count:

    HOME-AND-AWAY - Sydney, 50-45; Port Adelaide, 59-36.

    FINALS - Sydney, 1-3; Port Adelaide, 2-2.

     

    QUOTE OF THE WEEK

    I love this club. The culture here just makes you want to do anything to help the team

    - Greater Western Sydney recruit Jeremy Finlayson

     

    BIRD SEED

    (the little stuff that counts most)

    Where: Adelaide Oval

    When: Saturday, June 18, 2022

    Time: 1.15pm (SA time)

    Last time: Port Adelaide 12.9 (81) d Sydney 10.11 (71) at Adelaide Oval in round 15, June 26 last year.

    Overall: Port Adelaide 12, Sydney 20.

    Past five games (most recent first): W W W W W

    Scoring average: Port Adelaide 80, Sydney 91.

    Tightest winning margin - Port Adelaide by two points (94-92) at the SCG in round 15, July 14, 2002; Sydney by four points (98-94) at the SCG in round 13, June 14, 2014.

    Biggest winning margin - Port Adelaide by 72 points (132-60) at Football Park in round 12, June 13, 2004; Sydney by 67 points (100-33) at the SCG in round 20, August 6, 2016.

    By venues - Adelaide Oval (3-2), Football Park (4-7), SCG (5-11).

    By States - South Australia (7-9), New South Wales (5-11).

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    Match report: Port claim top eight scalp

    Port Adelaide has claimed a top-eight scalp - and earned more credibility as a top-eight contender. But the win against Sydney is tinged with concerning injuries.

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    IN a year when so many have put a question mark against Port Adelaide's merit as a top-eight contender, Ken Hinkley's crew has responded with an exclamation mark.

    Port Adelaide's 23-point win against much-admired top-eight resident Sydney at Adelaide Oval on Saturday afternoon makes a strong statement on what could unfold in the next nine weeks of the AFL home-and-away season.

    Port Adelaide remains on a tightrope, probably needing another six wins from those nine games. But, as Hinkley has recently noted, if "the competition is not sold on Port Adelaide", this assertive win will make many pundits hold an open mind on what could still unfold from Alberton during the next two months.

    Port Adelaide advances to 6-7 and extends its winning streak against Sydney to six. By the live ladder on the final siren, Port Adelaide remained 12th but the gap to the top eight was reduced to two wins.

    00:27

    The significant notes from this round 14 clash are:

    KEY forward Todd Marshall continuing his stand-out season with a game-high score of 4.2.

    FELLOW key forward Jeremy Finlayson showing how he can ably adapt and persist when asked to lead the Port Adelaide ruck.

    BROWNLOW Medallist and vice-captain Ollie Wines accepting the challenge to prove this Port Adelaide group can maintain standards in the absence of long-time warriors Travis Boak and Robbie Gray. He finished with a game-high 33 disposals.

    AND more carnage on the injury front with novice ruckman Brynn Teakle (collarbone) having his AFL debut cut short and prime midfielder Zak Butters (knee).

    Under the greatest pressure - by the reality of the premiership ladder, costly injuries and Sydney's strong start - Port Adelaide found its trademark game to repeatedly pin Sydney within Port Adelaide's forward half of the field. The turnover rate burnt Sydney (and even frustrated some of its key players) while Port Adelaide opened the third term with a six-goal charge (without conceding a score) to build a commanding 42-point lead at the start of time-on.

    From time-on of the first term - when Sydney led 3.1 to 0.2 - Port Adelaide dominated the scoring rush with 12.6 to 3.9 to have a 34-point lead at three quarter-time. At this point, the game was held strongly in Port Adelaide's hands ... and not slipping while the team's defensive systems were so firmly in place.

    Port Adelaide's resilience was tested by two major injury blows at the start of the second term - each significantly influencing the team's power at stoppages.

    Port Adelaide's newest player, mid-season rookie draftee Brynn Teakle, did not get even an hour on the field for his AFL debut. The East Fremantle recruit was out of action in the 14th minute of the second term with a left-collarbone injury, the result of his strong bump on Sydney midfielder Justin McInerney.

    Less than 10 minutes earlier, midfielder Zak Butters - Port Adelaide's best player to this point - had limped off with a concerning left-knee injury after having his legs tangled and twisted in a tackle. His injury activated wingman Xavier Duursma from the medical substute's chair.

    00:42

    Teakle started in the ruck facing former Port Adelaide ruckman-forward Peter Ladhams at the first centre bounce that was decided on a free kick (in Sydney's favour) off the ruck contest. His first moment on the statistic sheets was for the highlight reel - a strong mark in front of the old scoreboard to intercept a Sydney attempt to load up on inside-50s during the first term.

    Teakle's cruel exit - after building up five disposals, two score involvements and nine hit-outs, three to advantage - forced ruck duties to again be shared by key forwards Charlie Dixon and Jeremy Finlayson with Finlayson again in the lead role. The presence of four tall forwards - Dixon, Finlayson, Marshall and Mitch Georgiades - became an invaluable insurance policy.

    00:34

    Finlayson's follow-up work in ruck is his emerging strength. From the first centre bounce of the third term, Finlayson's second effort loaded up midfielder Connor Rozee for a running kick to the goalsquare where Dixon roved the ball for his first goal of the match.

    While Port Adelaide was shuffling its ruck unit, Sydney was paying dearly for the lack of discipline from Ladhams who conceded two free kicks - for hits on Lachie Jones and Ollie Wines, both off the ball - with each moment setting up converted set shots at goal.

    Port Adelaide's resistance against mounting pressure was best summed up by the desperate defence of captain Tom Jonas entering time-on of the second term. It was a symbolic play in the spirit of "never, ever" giving up at Port Adelaide. Caught behind two Sydney forwards running onto Lance Franklin's pass from outside 50, Jonas moved past Isaac Heeney to mow down Will Hayward creating a turnover quickly turned into a rushed behind rather than a goal that would have levelled the scores at 6.3 apiece.

    Jonas's desperate play also was true to the nature of a draining and demanding contest in which the on-field pressure translated to the scoreboard through the last 15 minutes of the second term when neither Port Adelaide nor Sydney could score a goal, even when Marshall, Georgiades and Franklin were presented with seemingly basic set shots. The last 10 scores of the term were all behinds - three from Port Adelaide, seven from Sydney - to put the half-time margin at four points in Port Adelaide's favour.

    The key match-ups in the Port Adelaide defence were as expected: Allir Aliir against his former Sydney team-mate Lance Franklin and Tom Clurey on Logan McDonald. This key duo in the Port Adelaide defence conceded just one goal to Franklin- and would pay tribute to the "team defence" system that dramatically changed the script after Sydney opened with forward-50 dominance.

    It was a fascinating opening - and an energetic first quarter loaded with pressure on a combined count of 26 tackles putting a measure on the heat in the contest. Sydney took 18 minutes to build the first significant lead of 17 points. Port Adelaide needed 10 minutes to wipe out this gap and create its own reassuring lead at quarter-time.

    02:39

    Sydney won the territory battle early by dominating the inside-50 count and finding many marking opportunities on these forward sorties. All of Sydney's first four attempts to score were from set shots - three from marks inside-50, the other from a free kick in a marking contest.

    Port Adelaide won the opening quarter by eight points, however - even if it had to wait until 19:35 had been played for its first goal: An opportunist moment for Butters after the Sydney defence was put under immense pressure at ground level.

    Another Sydney error in deep defence loaded up key forward Todd Marshall for the second goal. Intense pressure on the Sydney defenders gave midfielder Connor Rozee the right to take the play-on advantage from a free kick to score the third. Marshall scored from a set shot on the siren to complete Port Adelaide's four-goal burst in nine minutes and 50 seconds.

    That 10-minute swing in momentum was notable for Port Adelaide swinging the count on mark inside-50 to its favour - 7-3, 6-0 in this 10-minute patch - to narrow the inside-50 differential to two (11-9 in Sydney's favour).

    Butters was the dominant Port Adelaide player of the opening quarter (nine touches) - and the first casualty with a left knee injury after having his legs caught up in a tackle from Sydney rival Harry Cunningham five minutes into the second term.

    Again, rather than collapse under the pain of bad luck, this Port Adelaide team found the resilience to find some of its best football of the season. And it finished its work with an exclamation mark.

    PORT ADELAIDE v SYDNEY

    PORT ADELAIDE    4.3   6.6   12.8   12.10 (82)

    SYDNEY                  3.1   5.8    6.10     8.11 (59)

    BEST - Port Adelaide: Wines, Marshall, Rozee, Bonner, Finlayson, Burton, Amon, Aliir.

    GOALS - Port Adelaide: Marshall 4, Dixon 2, Bonner, Burton, Butters, Houston, Powell-Pepper, Rozee.

    INJURY - Zak Butters (left knee), Brynn Teakle (left collarbone).

    MEDICAL SUBSTITUTE: Xavier Duursma activated in the second term for Butters.

    CROWD: 30,455 at Adelaide Oval.

    NEXT: Gold Coast at Adelaide Oval, Sunday 3.40pm

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