Are we making enough fuss about Port Adelaide?

By Cameron Rose / Expert

Even though they’re the current darlings of the AFL scene, are we making a big enough deal about Port Adelaide?

While right now they are indeed a Power to be reckoned with, it’s less than 40 matches since they plumbed Melbourne Football Club depths of ineptitude and irrelevance.

This was when they got thumped by Greater Western Sydney in the new club’s debut year, when the Giants were barely managing eight or nine goals a game.

Over the weekend, the Power were able to absorb the stern test of pressure that Fremantle provided, before unleashing with a patented final-quarter burst. Port’s ability to step it up and ‘Let it Go’ would do any fan of the song from Disney’s Frozen proud.

Two weeks back, it was Geelong that couldn’t stand the heat in the Power kitchen, or should that be the furnace that Adelaide Oval is becoming. A renaming to become Port Adelaide Oval would be fitting. Right now, the Crows aren’t fit to wash Port’s laundry in those rooms.

As for travel, Port have already won in three states outside South Australia. Their only loss was by a mere seven points, to a North Melbourne side that was in form at the time, when Port somehow gave up a significant third-quarter lead. Don’t expect that to happen again too soon.

When Port were at their lowest ebb under Matthew Primus, the majority of football fans would have answered in the affirmative if asked whether they thought the Power should fold, and no longer be part of the AFL. Neutral fans who love their footy had taken to booking dentist appointments during Port games so there was no way they could stumble across one with an accidental flick of the remote.

When it comes to identifying the key person in this rags-to-riches story, the candidates are president David Koch, coach Ken Hinkley, high performance manager and fitness and conditioning guru Darren Burgess and captain Travis Boak.

Among the many things Koch brought with him, a high profile, boundless enthusiasm and business savvy were no doubt the keys.

Hinkley brings a refreshing simplicity to the game that many of his coaching brethren would do well to embrace. Are Port playing attractive football because they’re winning, or are they winning because they’re playing attractive football? The latter I think.

Burgess has obviously been able to maximise the fitness potential of his playing group, which led Ken Hinkley to provide the defining football quote of the season so far, in his press conference after their Round 1 demolition of Carlton.

“If you come and play Port Adelaide, you’re going to run, and you’re going to have to run really hard for four quarters,” he said.

“Teams know they’re going to play against hard-running Port Adelaide. We’re going to make it a tough day.”

Travis Boak has led the playing list, inspiring everyone from youngsters like Chad Wingard and Ollie Wines to old hands like Jay Schulz and Kane Cornes.

Yet all of Koch, Hinkley, Burgess and Boak would admit, there has been no one person responsible for such an amazing turnaround in the club’s fortunes. Nor would any of them take the credit. This is the essence of team culture.

There’s barely been a player who has run out in a Port jumper over the last 15 months who hasn’t been in career-best form, with many seeming to reach new peaks on a weekly basis.

Port’s season thus far can be summed up by two players – Matt White and Kane Mitchell.

In eight years at Richmond, White was never able to kick more than 11 goals in a season, yet he already has 13 from eight games in 2014, and is also averaging career-high disposals.

Players are going to get better in the Port environment.

Kane Mitchell started as a substitute eight times in 2013, and was only able to crack it for his first game against Fremantle. Talk about stepping up – twenty disposals, five marks, eight tackles and finishing off his work with two goals to boot.

When a player can come from outside the best 22 to have this sort of impact against opposition like Fremantle it shows the depth is there, matched by desire. The hunger of every player will stay high – firstly so they can keep winning, but secondly because they know their spot will be taken by someone waiting in the wings.

Port Adelaide play with the three key elements we all want from our football team, and they are the definition of simplicity itself – they run hard both ways, they are tough and they are skilful.

Port have brought the joy back to football with their exhilarating playing style, especially when in front of their home fans, who have been a force of nature themselves.

Long may it continue, and deep may the Power go into September.

The Crowd Says:

2014-05-16T09:25:59+00:00

Radelaide

Guest


You do it very well though, I enjoy reading what you write.

2014-05-16T08:11:37+00:00

Radelaide

Guest


Take Brad Ebert as an example his father is brother to Russell (Magpies greatest ever player, 4 time Magarey medalist) who also played a season with North Melbourne and his Mother is sister to Andrew Obst who was a premiership Port Magpies player who also played 150 games for Melbourne Dees and her uncles and grandfather were Port Magpie champions, I challenge anyone to find someone with greater footy blood.

2014-05-14T08:08:44+00:00

Penster

Guest


Sorry - 13 and 10th. Mobile app.

2014-05-14T01:26:55+00:00

Cameron

Guest


You mean AAMiI Stadium Graham, AAMI Park is in Melbourne and doesn't host AFL. AAMI Stadium is bad

2014-05-14T00:51:38+00:00

Port of Singapore

Guest


Hear, hear! Port have done a fantastic job of focusing first on rebuilding a strong club culture with an exciting style of play, and the results have followed. Off field, they have been equally busy, doing work with the community (like the Power to End Hunger campaign) and it shows in both the resurgence of the fan base, the positive media coverage and in the humility of the players who know they are part of something special. Hats off to the team of leaders at the club who've all worked on this, including Keith Thomas, the CEO who put this turnaround in motion.

2014-05-13T23:30:36+00:00

Bayman

Guest


Samuel, To be honest I never think about doing these things as articles. I just pick up on a point someone made and start writing............

AUTHOR

2014-05-13T22:54:08+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Yeah, the poor old Saints are willing enough, and were a great story getting those early wins this season, but some of the skills are eye-watering, and not in a good way! Some of the youth looks promising though - I like the look of Acres, and Dunstan is already an important on-baller, and will no doubt learn so much from Hayes, whose mantle he's going to have to take over.

AUTHOR

2014-05-13T22:52:26+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


I think it's always a fascinating argument, as to whether a team can actually play above themselves, or is it just playing to a capacity that can't be sustained. Did Richmond play above themselves last year when at their best, or is it that they're not good enough to sustain it month after month, let alone year after year? I'd love to see Port in this form come August and September.

AUTHOR

2014-05-13T22:48:04+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


I daresay my favourite match of last year was Port coming from behind to defeat West Coast on a Saturday night. What an amazing game, the atmosphere was electric. I can only imagine how it would have been if taking place at (Port) Adelaide Oval.

2014-05-13T15:35:02+00:00

Samuel Gates

Roar Pro


I'm from NSW and I'm loving watching how Port are playing at the moment. They've already conquered some very tough opponents too, notably Geelong and Fremantle.

2014-05-13T15:29:50+00:00

Samuel Gates

Roar Pro


Fascinating post, Bayman. You should submit something like that as an article if you like. As a guy who has mostly grown up in NSW I would love to gain a better understanding of great clubs in traditional Australian Football heartlands.

2014-05-13T15:15:26+00:00

Samuel Gates

Roar Pro


Good point, Bayman. There's certainly something special about a club that can quickly produce a winning culture.

2014-05-13T15:10:47+00:00

Samuel Gates

Roar Pro


To be honest, I think a lot of players and fans often exaggerate the idea of a home ground advantage. Sure, having a big home crowd cheering you on can be nice, but when it comes down to playing it is simply two teams competing on another oval. I think players can often get too caught up in the psychological battle of competing at an away venue. My local 1st grade footy team have actually won all our away games this season but have lost all our home games.

2014-05-13T14:28:00+00:00

Michael

Roar Rookie


Not only are those glasses of yours rose-tinted, but it seems you need to get the prescription on them checked. Mitchell is ranked #10 on this list, not #5.

2014-05-13T12:11:22+00:00

Ian Montgomery

Roar Pro


"Port Adelaide play with the three key elements we all want from our football team, and they are the definition of simplicity itself – they run hard both ways, they are tough and they are skilful" As a Saints fan with the promise of a Port Adelaide style revival under Richo they seem to be lacking two of the 3 simple elements mentioned above - can't run both ways and have the skills of a VFL side! Ken Hinley has to take a massive amount of credit, whether you have a decent playing list or not getting a team to take on board and embrace the coaches message from day one and turn around the clubs fortune straight away takes some serious man management - imagine how the Blues may have been travelling had Hinkley been appointed there!!

2014-05-13T09:10:38+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


Every club thinks they have depth, the only ones who *know* they have depth are the ones who have had injury issues and played their depth at AFL level. History is strewn with players that set the world on fire at SANFL/VFL/NEAFL etc level and failed at AFL level. A game here and there by a single player at a time isn't a true test of depth. Depth is asking several 2nd and even 3rd tier players to step up and help the team win for 4, 5, 7, 10 weeks at a time. Any player can hide in a fit and firing side and look good, its when the depth players have to rise and lift themselves that their true merits are found.

2014-05-13T09:07:44+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


Great post Bayman

2014-05-13T09:02:56+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


Can you name anyone in Port's SANFL side? I can and we've got as much depth as any of the aforementioned teams, it's more likely people's ignorance when it comes to Port's 2nd tier players makes people think there's no depth

2014-05-13T08:59:00+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


You can't actually be serious can you? AAMI was a dump

2014-05-13T08:53:16+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


Ahhh, Newton, Clurey , Mitchell, Sam Grey, Paul Stewart, yeah right no depth, all these blokes have played and performed well.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar