Official AFL Website of the Port Adelaide Football Club

More from Telstra

Australia's best network.

Base MC Graphic
2022 Toyota AFL Premiership
Yartapuulti v Hawthorn
Round 2 • Saturday 26 March 2022 • 8:40 AM (UTC)
56 7.14
Full Time
120 19.6
Hawks Won By 64
Adelaide Oval,  Adelaide  • Kaurna

Match Timeline

Hover timeline to view key events

The Match Timeline Explained
Match Timeline The Match Timeline shows which team is in the lead at any point in the game. The further the blue line is on one team's side, the more they're winning by. You can see how many points a team is ahead (or behind) by using the numbers on either side.
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)
-.- (-)

Match Feed

Live Interchange Bench

Loading…

No interchange bench data available

There is currently no interchange bench data available for this match

Quarter Breakdown

The latest score breakdowns

--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-
--.-

Match Feed

Live Interchange Bench

Loading…

No interchange bench data available

There is currently no interchange bench data available for this match

Recent Encounters

The last 3 meetings between the teams...

Loading…

No Recent Encounters Available

There are currently no recent encounters available for this match

Form Guide

Find out how each teams season is shaping up!

Loading…

No recent form available

There is currently no recent form available for this match
Click for More

Line-Ups

The latest team changes…

Click For More

Team Head-to-Head Stats

How the teams performed

    Loading…

    No Team Stats Available

    There are currently no Stats available for this Match
    Click For More

    Match Leaders

    Who performed the best this match

    Official Club App

    The Official app of the Port Adelaide Football Club is your one stop shop for all things Port Adelaide! Available to download for FREE on Apple and Android devices.

    {}

    Today's Must Read

    Must Watch

    {}
    {}

    Match Preview: Port Adelaide vs Hawthorn

    Port Adelaide has one job to do at Adelaide Oval on Saturday night - win, to get the first points of a new season, to repay the faith of those at the city ground and to honour its greatest player.

    Port Adelaide will be looking to get their season off the mark with a win against Hawthorn. Image: AFL Photos.

    IF at first you don't succeed, try, try again. A week after seeking the perfect start to the AFL home-and-away season, Port Adelaide tries again to claim the success it deserved but was harshly denied against Brisbane.

    With the same spirit shown at the Gabba, more on the scoreboard, less work for club doctor Mark Fisher (who would be bulk billing) ... and Port Adelaide will be back on the winners' list, starting this season's 12-game program at Adelaide Oval with victory against Hawthorn.

    And, most importantly, there will be the appropriate finish to the second public tribute to club great Russell Ebert after his State funeral at Alberton Oval in November.

    Port Adelaide returns to Adelaide Oval six months after the disastrous home preliminary final against the Western Bulldogs ended with questions - and dismay - about the efforts of the players in a game that ended before it began.

    Their intent certainly was not to be questioned from the 11-point loss to Brisbane at the Gabba on Saturday night. A team that does not want to be defined by the 2021 preliminary final result put up a strong response to start changing the narrative on Port Adelaide.

    "We all understand who we want to be - we want Port Adelaide to be a good football team," senior coach Ken Hinkley says. "We know what defines a good football team by the way it plays.

    "We want to be that football club that is really consistent. We have gone some way to creating that. But we still have a bit to do.

    "Last week was a really good example of what we expect. This game is tough, it is hard and it is brutal. You don't always get to win. But you must have a way about you that lets you hold your head up.

    "If we can play like that consistently, we will be okay."

    09:45

    SECOND CHANCE

    "Eager, determined, hard working."

    Port Adelaide development coach Tyson Goldsack, who has worked with the defensive group at Alberton, could not have been more enthusiastic of how Sam Skinner has forced his way back to AFL football - and into the line-up this weekend.

    Skinner - 24, 198cm, 98kg - gets his second chance in the AFL after playing just three games in his four seasons (2017-2020) at Brisbane where his opportunities were limited by the need to have three rounds of reconstructive knee surgery.

    Skinner enters the Port Adelaide defence to partner captain Tom Jonas and the "miracle man of the week" Trent McKenzie, who has overcome all concerns from a hyperextended left knee, in the key defensive roles. His work during the pre-season underlines how Skinner has earned his selection on merit more so than necessity from the absence of All-Australian Aliir Aliir (ankle) and Tom Clurey (knee).

    Fellow defender and team leader Darcy Byrne-Jones gave a clear insight on what Port Adelaide fans can expect from Skinner saying: "Sam is a big man and aggressive in the air. He has had to tone down some of his aggression at training so that the guys don't get hurt. That is the kind of player he is. If he does come into the team, the Hawthorn forwards would be pretty nervous standing under him with high balls, that is for sure."

    Sam Skinner comes into the side to make his Port Adelaide debut following an impressive pre-season showing. Image: AFL Photos.

    SECOND NEW FACE

    Josh Sinn, draft pick No. 12 in the 2021 AFL national draft, was close to selection for the season-opener. He gets his AFL start on Saturday night, becoming the second new face in AFL ranks for Port Adelaide in 2022.

    Sinn follows Jackson Mead, who remains in the line-up as the medical substitute.

    Noted for his accurate left-foot kick, Sinn begins his AFL story with the Port Adelaide coaching panel knowing the 19-year-old will not be unsettled should his personal assignment be changed by the team's need to cover injuries or to adapt to a tactical challenge from Hawthorn.

    "We are really excited by what Josh will bring - he can play inside, he can play outside, he can play both ends of the ground. He does bring great flexibility," Hinkley said.

    01:28

    SECOND EFFORT

    Actually, it is the fourth time this season that Port Adelaide has had to work to an attack without All-Australian key forward Charlie Dixon (ankle) - but the second time in AFL home-and-away football that the go-to men in attack are the new combination of rising star Mitch Georgiades, Todd Marshall and Greater Western Sydney recruit Jeremy Finlayson.

    After delivering two goals of the team's 10 against Brisbane, this group is challenged to rediscover the synergy that delivered half the team score against Adelaide in the summer Showdown at Richmond Oval.

    Forwards coach Nathan Bassett has challenged his forwards to focus on their second efforts saying: "It is much about their consistency at the contest - and their follow-up (work). (Against Brisbane) it was not so much about their aerial contests. It was more about the opportunities missed - and the lack of follow-up when the ball was on the ground."

    Jeremy Finlayson competes for the ball in Port Adelaide's Round 1 match up with the Brisbane Lions. Image: AFL Photos.

    SECOND OPPONENT

    Hawthorn is at the start of a new era. After 17 seasons of working to former Port Adelaide assistant coach Alastair Clarkson's successful program, the Hawthorn players now take direction from Brownlow Medallist and former captain Sam Mitchell.

    "They are quite brave and aggressive with the ball," notes Hinkley from the small sample of Hawthorn games under Mitchell's watch. "They reflect what Sam was as a player. He certainly would encourage his players to play - and I hear it in their speak - with freedom. He's letting them play ...

    "They are already well drilled. Their defence and offence is not too far apart.Their game is not favouring one (theme) more than another. They have brought in two good players (experienced pair, captain and ruckman Ben McEvoy and sharpshooter Luke Breust); they are a strong, hard, tough footy team. So it will be a battle for us.

    "It will be challenging ... and in this competition, where you are looking to win, the opposition always creates a problem. We need to concentrate on what we do well."

    How does Hawthorn play under Mitchell? The statisticians at Champion Data last week - in Hawthorn's 20-point win against North Melbourne - noted that the ball movement from defence went via the MCG boundary 63 per cent of the time. Adelaide Oval does have a different profile than the G, however.

    The refit at Hawthorn is noted by Mitchell picking the rawest line-up (with average experience of 69 AFL matches) fielded by the club since round 7, 2010.

    SECOND SALUTE

    Tuesday, November 16 last year at Alberton Oval - the memories of Russell Ebert's life made for an emotional farewell to Port Adelaide's greatest player.

    Saturday night at Adelaide Oval - 54 years after Ebert started his club-record career of 392 senior games - needs to be remembered as the night Port Adelaide honoured its greatest son with its football.

    03:00

    "We want to show great respect to Russell and his family," said Hinkley. "Our players won't miss (understanding the significance of the night)."

    Ebert wore No. 7 at the start - before honouring club tradition by donning the No. 1 guernsey as captain from 1974-1978 - and was back in the No. 7 in his return from North Melbourne in 1980. Wingman Xavier Duursma will step out of the No. 7 jumper on Saturday night to wear No. 50.

    All that is left to achieve is making Adelaide Oval a seventh heaven on Saturday night.

    BIRD SEED

    (the little stuff that counts most)

    Where: Adelaide Oval

    When: Saturday, March 26, 2022

    Time: 7.10pm (SA time)

    In honour of: Russell Ebert 

    Last time: Port Adelaide 13.9 (87) d Hawthorn 7.11 (53) at the Docklands, west Melbourne in round 16, July 3 last year 

    Overall: Port Adelaide 21, Hawthorn 16

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

    Scoring average: Port Adelaide 94, Hawthorn 89

    Tightest winning margin - Port Adelaide by four points (84-80) at the MCG, in round 18, August 3, 2003; Hawthorn by three points twice, (64-61) at York Park, Launceston, in round 11, June 2, 2018; (97-94) at the MCG in the preliminary final, September 20, 2014.

    Biggest winning margin - Port Adelaide by 117 points (188-71) at Football Park, in round 13, June 17, 2005; Hawthorn by 165 points (197-32) at the MCG, round 21, August 13, 2011. 

    By venues - Adelaide Oval (4-1), Football Park (8-6), MCG (4-4), Docklands (2-0), Waverley Park (1-1), York Park (2-4).

    By States - South Australia (12-7), Victoria (7-5), Tasmania (2-4).

    {}
    {}

    Match Report: Port fall short against sharpshooting Hawks

    Port Adelaide's home opener was well off script. The 10-goal loss to Hawthorn leaves much to correct in the six days leading to the Showdown.

    Brought to you by

    More

    "IF," Russell Ebert would say, "is the smallest word in football - but it means a helluva lot."

    You will hear a lot of statements starting with "if" in the post-mortems of this Port Adelaide-Hawthorn clash that unexpectedly tested the patience of everyone connected with Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval on Saturday night.

    If only ...

    The round two clash dedicated to Ebert, Port Adelaide's greatest player who died in November, ended with a shock 64-point defeat to Hawthorn that is in a refit with a new coach, Sam Mitchell.

    Port Adelaide is 0-2 for the first time since 2015 (when the season began with a similar storyline).

    The result is not befitting the memory of Ebert. So the Port Adelaide players kept in the line-up for Friday night's Showdown are compelled to respond- just as Ebert did after taking issue with his team's disastrous performance in the 1976 SANFL grand final.

    For two quarters - the first and the last - Port Adelaide did not score a goal but posted a combined 0.7 while conceding 8.4.

    If only the new-style Port Adelaide attack could have capitalised - particularly with marks inside-50 - as Hawthorn did while pin-pointing plays to the old and the new, Jack Gunston and Mitch Lewis who kicked four goals in the third term.

    Hawthorn finished with 12 marks inside-50; Port Adelaide, nine. It is the most notable statistic of the night. So is the efficiency the Hawthorn forwards put on the scoreboard.

    08:51

    Every other statistic that favoured Port Adelaide - even contested possession, won 148-140 - means nothing this time. Even the advantage on inside-50s (58-46) is meaningless because the real key performance indicator was Hawthorn's remarkable accuracy and efficiency that translated to 19.6 on the scoreboard.

    Hawthorn finished with 13 goals from 13 set shots (100 per cent conversion and efficiency), Port Adelaide again finished a match with more behinds (14) than goals (seven).

    The new combination of go-to forwards in the Port Adelaide attack - Jeremy Finlayson, Mitch Georgiades and Todd Marshall - finished with a combined score of 0.5. Hawthorn gained eight goals from Lewis (five) and Gunston (three).

    The eagerness to see All-Australian key forward Charlie Dixon restored to the Port Adelaide goalfront, after missing the opening two games while recuperating from ankle surgery, will only increase this week.

    Port Adelaide's most-effective forward was Sam Powell-Pepper, the man determined to make up for lost ground from last season. His three goals in the third term were a small highlight in a match of few memorable moments for Port Adelaide.

    Fans MG MVP: Vote for your best afield in Round 2

    If only Port Adelaide had followed up the spirit shown in the season-opener against Brisbane at the Gabba seven days earlier with some polish in their ballwork and movement to the goalfront. If only ...

    If there was hope after Port Adelaide had managed a three-goal run - from Connor Rozee,  Powell-Pepper and Steven Motlop early in the third term - to get the margin back to 20 points, it was all gone with Hawthorn's quick and assertive response. The unbroken run of four goals - two from Lewis and one each from Gunston and Josh Ward - put Hawthorn 44 points in front at time-on of the third quarter when Port Adelaide had scored just 38 (5.8).

    As a player or a coach or as a media commentator, Ebert never lost that earthy way of cutting through layers and layers of the meaningless. At half-time, the key performance indicators were all in Port Adelaide's favour. The barometer of contested possessions was up by 14 (75-61); clearances was up by nine (26-16 and 6-5 in the centre) - and Port Adelaide had the ball a significant 70 times more (221-150) than Hawthorn.

    The statistical advantages were still there at three quarter-time when Hawthorn led by 36 points. Port Adelaide was leading the disposal count by 63; clearances by 19; contested possessions by eight ... and the inside-50 counter by five. Statistics.

    "Quality not quantity," Ebert would say behind the microphone while looking at the only figures that counted, those on the scoreboard.

    02:03

    For all this dominance on the statistical sheets, the new-look Port Adelaide attack delivered to half-time just 3.6 from 25 inside-50 entries - and the defence, without the intercept power marking of All-Australian Aliir Aliir, had conceded 8.4 to allow Hawthorn to lead by 28 points. Tellingly in Aliir's absence by injury, Hawthorn could secure more marks inside-50 than Port Adelaide - and produce more goals from even the most demanding opportunities, as noted with Jack Gunston's goal from the south-east boundary late in the second term.

    By contrast, none of Port Adelaide's key forwards had a goal at half-time. Finlayson had hit a post; Georgiades had two misses. None of Finlayson, Georgiades and Marshall had a goal by full time.

    Back on the agenda will be Port Adelaide's starts - not so much slow, but without a meaningful return on the scoreboard. Hawthorn's defence certainly picked off Port Adelaide's inside-50 sorties in the first term when the home team's 0.3 scoreline was a poor return for 13 entries to the forward arc.

    The last time Port Adelaide was without a goal in the first term? May 23 last year - at the MCG with 0.1 against Collingwood. And before that on May 3, 2019 - at the Docklands in west Melbourne also against Collingwood. It was 0.3 at quarter-time then as well.

    After a run of five behinds - that included Finlayson hitting a post in the first term - the goal drought was broken in the fifth minute of the second term with an unorthodox approach from lead ruckman Scott Lycett at the northern end. He slid boots first onto a loose ball (in a way that would put him on a plane to Saudi Arabia with the Socceroos squad for this week's World Cup qualifiers).  

    Hawthorn's 17-point lead came with two 50-metre penalties to the goalfront - and a most-questionable non-call by the field umpire watching Hawthorn forward Chad Wingard push out Trent McKenzie in a marking contest before converting a set shot at goal in the 11th minute.

    Port Adelaide started both of its new players - former Brisbane key position player Sam Skinner in defence and No. 12 draftee Josh Sinn on a wing. Skinner's first AFL game since round 10, 2020 (with Brisbane) became more challenging during the second half when Port Adelaide lost fellow key defender Trent McKenzie with an ankle injury. Sinn finished his first AFL match with 11 disposals (five kicks and six handpasses).

    PORT ADELAIDE v HAWTHORN

    PORT ADELAIDE   0.3    3.6     7.10   7.14 (56)

    HAWTHORN         3.2     8.4    14.4   19.6 (120)

    BEST - Port Adelaide: Boak, Powell-Pepper, Butters, Wines, Amon.

    SCORERS - Port Adelaide: Powell-Pepper 3, Houston, Lycett, Motlop, Rozee.

    INJURY - McKenzie (ankle).

    MEDICAL SUBSTITUTE: Jackson Mead (activated in third term for McKenzie).

    CROWD: 30,267 at Adelaide Oval.

    NEXT: Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, Friday, 7.50pm.

     

    {}

    Player Stats

    See how the players are performing...

        Basic - Both Teams

        Team Stats

        See how the teams are performing…

        Disposals

        Stoppages

        Possession

        Marks

        Scoring

        Defence

        General

        Loading…
        Expand match timeline Close

        Team Line-Ups

        Match Feed

        The latest team changes....

        The Match Timeline Explained
        Match Timeline The Match Timeline shows which team is in the lead at any point in the game. The further the blue line is on one team's side, the more they're winning by. You can see how many points a team is ahead (or behind) by using the numbers on either side.
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
        Drag me!
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        -.- (-)
        Refresh Match Feed
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 ET1 ET2
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-
        --.-

        Match Feed

        Loading…
        Expand match timeline Close

        Match News, Videos and Photos

        Loading…