Hold those heads high, Adelaide Crows

By Michael DiFabrizio / Expert

The prospect of the Adelaide Crows putting together a dream finals run fizzled out pretty quickly last night against Hawthorn, but what the club has achieved in the last two months will go down as quite possibly the story of the season.

It says a lot that you could name Scott Camporeale coach of the year and no one would vehemently argue against it.

It says a lot you could do the same with Taylor Walker and captain of the year – especially if you go back and listen to the reaction after Phil Walsh decided to give him the role pre-season.

That the club as a whole – players, coaches, staff – rallied to put themselves in the position of playing in the second week of finals was itself an enormous effort. Not that long ago, you couldn’t have predicted such an outcome.

It was two months ago today the footy world were feeling for the club and their cross-town rivals Port Adelaide as they walked on to Adelaide Oval for the most emotional Showdown ever played, just a week after the Crows made that tough road trip to face West Coast.

Internally, the Crows players had made a decision to move forward and, in the words of Patrick Dangerfield that week, “get back on the horse”.

“This side is good enough to be playing (finals) so it’s about us playing good football for longer, which is what Phil often talked about,” Dangerfield said during the difficult transition to putting the focus back on footy.

That day would indeed require them to play good football for longer, with both sides giving it everything and the match going down to the wire. The Crows went on to defeat Port Adelaide by three points, which can now be seen as the start of an impressive charge towards September footy.

There would be five more wins added under caretaker coach Camporeale – ranging from a Friday night defeat of the finals-bound Richmond, to a coach-ending belting of Essendon by 112 points, to an emphatic reversal of the West Coast result two weeks before finals.

After that, the Crows were finalists for the first time since 2012. Of course, not only did they make it, they won a game – which is set to provide a healthy platform to build from next season, as Camporeale alluded to in his press conference last night.

“It’s been bloody hard for everyone that’s been involved and as I said to the players after the West Coast game, it could’ve gone either way,” Camporeale said.

“They decided as a group they wanted to keep going forward and to put the performances they did to get to this position, they earned the right to play, they won a final, so (it’s) great experience for our group.

“They started a journey, there’s some great foundations in place for this footy club going forward.”

Before looking too far ahead – there will be plenty of time for that – The Advertiser chief football writer Michaelangelo Rucci is correct to say this wasn’t the season the club had planned.

“A year of celebration, the 25th anniversary of the Adelaide Football Club’s formation during the greatest shake-up in SA football, was to have been a grand party,” Rucci wrote.

“Instead, since July 3 – when coach Phil Walsh died – it has been a human endeavour against tragedy.”

If there’s an immediate positive from last night’s result, it’s that Adelaide players finally get a breather.

In the bigger picture, those most affected can take heart from the fact Phil’s legacy will live on.

His inspired choice of Walker as captain, based on a sense of on-field leadership rather than any ability to run meetings or address the media with clean-cut eloquence, is a perfect example.

One of the lasting images from this season, among the more sobering ones, will be ‘Tex’ running the length of the MCG wing in the fourth quarter of an elimination final. Rather than going for goal and eschewing the botched disposal that normally comes after such runs, he would execute a pin-point pass to a team mate visible only from the corner of his eye, setting up the goal that would prove the sealer.

It was a moment of beautiful football. That a club had to rally in unimaginable ways just to get there made it all the more beautiful.

They flew as one.

The Crowd Says:

2015-09-21T07:15:31+00:00

Lamby

Roar Rookie


They have won against West Coast and Kangaroos - 2 of the 4 Prelim finalists.

2015-09-21T07:14:22+00:00

Edgar Slosh

Roar Guru


They beat North, Richmond, West Coast, Port....they weren't gifted 2 points. They would have beaten Geelong at home easily if the tragedy didn't occur. You must be real bitter about something to spout vile negativity on here

2015-09-21T06:52:07+00:00

Edgar Slosh

Roar Guru


Dangerfield has signed a 5 year deal with Geelong and will announce it next week. Adelaide will struggle to make the finals next year without a suitable replacement

2015-09-20T13:32:43+00:00

Vocans

Guest


What kind of crystal ball are you using that says the Crows would not have beaten Geelong at AO? No one can say what the result was because it never happened; nor did the Crows plays finals simply because of those two points. I can't believe the sour grapes in many of the posts here. I speak as a Crows supporter who fully recognises the role Walsh played at the Port and elsewhere when it comes to that. Also as one who barracks for the S A Power whenever they'e not playing the Crows.

2015-09-20T02:42:25+00:00

bart

Guest


Blowouts are gunna happen, you can't park the bus, as Ross Lyon has found out, not sure how to change that.

2015-09-20T02:24:28+00:00

NeverTearUsAppart

Guest


The departure of Walshy and his death affected Port as much if not more. The easy home and away run and the 2 points gift kept them in the finals race!

2015-09-20T02:20:12+00:00

NeverTearUsAppart

Guest


What worthy team actually did the Crows beat this year to be praised? If if wasn't for the the 2 points handed to them they wouldn't even make the finals. The departure of Walshy and then his tragic death arguably affected Port as much if not more than the Crows. The crows easy home and away run to the finals explains more the AFL flawed rewarding of mediocrity than says anything about the team's true performance!

2015-09-20T02:17:45+00:00

bart

Guest


Thats just wrong, look at the stats.

2015-09-19T22:51:17+00:00

BigAl

Guest


My gripe is not that the comp itself is lopsided - as you have pointed out the premiership does get spread about. My gripe is with games, especially BIG games that are all over before quarter time - blowouts ! It is something that the rules committee could look at. I accept It would be extremely difficult: 1) To come up with a workable solution 2) To convince people that the change should come, especially those who don't like any change any where - ever !

2015-09-19T19:46:13+00:00

Mitcher

Guest


I don't get it

2015-09-19T14:29:30+00:00

Xavier Smith

Roar Rookie


After the tragedy that struck the Crows this year, it was remarkable that they made the finals at all, let alone win one. They were mentally spent by the Hawthorn game, the loss was to be expected. The awful comments on here less so.

2015-09-19T12:45:27+00:00

BigAl

Guest


yet another 'non-winner' from last nights debacle !

2015-09-19T12:33:23+00:00

BigAl

Guest


Ya reckon !!??? - to get blown away like that in a big game especially a final means NOBODY wins ( except Hawthorn here ) And even then Hawthorn would have gained more if they had won a close/ see sawing/come from behind game. It's incredibly hard to learn anything about results like this, with so much junk time scoring. I can see supporters of GF winning teams saying . . . well who gives a S#it !!!!! - but as I've said before . . . it's not a good look If it's any solace to Adelaide, their effort last night wasn't as bad as Sydney's in last years GF

2015-09-19T10:36:52+00:00

Edgar Slosh

Roar Guru


Don Pyke set to replace Camporeale who has told the board he doesn't want the job.

2015-09-19T10:36:09+00:00

Edgar Slosh

Roar Guru


It ended better than 12 other teams

2015-09-19T09:12:55+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


That just shares the top 4 around while the rest of the teams are below average.

2015-09-19T08:06:45+00:00

bart

Guest


Really ! Since the cap was introduced in 1987, each of the 16 teams (this excludes the expansion teams from the Gold Coast and Greater Western Sydney) has played in a Preliminary Final, 14 teams have played in a Grand Final, and eleven teams have won the premiership.

2015-09-19T07:01:03+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


The AFL is as lopsided as competitions that dont have salary caps

2015-09-19T07:00:21+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


Why

2015-09-19T05:44:26+00:00

Edgar Slosh

Roar Guru


*shakes head*

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