MEASURE yourself against the best.
Port Adelaide certainly will be doing such during the next month when it has a four-game block that replicates every AFL team's wish in September - a solid month of rising challenges. It starts for Port Adelaide against AFL premier Melbourne at Traeger Park in Alice Springs.
This game - followed by clashes with Geelong, Collingwood and Richmond - will have Port Adelaide measured against the best in the AFL today and the best of recent seasons.
It is time to see how Port Adelaide (currently 12th, 8-8) stacks up.
Or, as Martin Luther King said (without a sporting context): "The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."
Port Adelaide has had no moment of comfort since falling to a worst-ever start of 0-5. But it has responded with an 8-3 record in the past 11 weeks (the equivalent of half a regulation home-and-away season).
By contrast, Melbourne started with a 10-0 defence of its hard-earned AFL premiership. It has a 2-4 win-loss record since that flying start with losses to fellow top-eight teams: Fremantle, Sydney, Collingwood and last week to Geelong at Kardinia Park.
The script has certainly changed since Port Adelaide and Melbourne last met for Thursday night football at Adelaide Oval in round 4.
"They are a completely different side - and they are playing a completely different style to when we met them earlier in the year. A very fast style of footy, a very exciting brand of footy. And their good players are playing some really strong footy. They are going to test us in a whole range of different areas."
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin on Port Adelaide
Key differences for the rematch are:
RUCK: Port Adelaide is compelled (by the setback to lead ruckman Scott Lycett) to persist with the Jeremy Finlayson-Charlie Dixon combination against Melbourne's imposing ruck pair of Max Gawn and Luke Jackson.Dixon was missing last time out, having spent the opening 10 rounds of the season out dealing with an ankle injury. Lycett dislocated his shoulder in that game and has not played at AFL level since.
MIDFIELD: Port Adelaide last time ended up with Brownlow Medallist Ollie Wines subbed out after quarter time and in hospital having had a heart scare. This time is also has Connor Rozee in the starting rotations - after he was working in attack (to cover the holes created by the loss through injury of Robbie Gray, Orazio Fantasia and Charlie Dixon).
Melbourne is without Clayton Oliver (fractured thumb), but still has the challenging trio of Christian Petracca, Jack Viney and James Harmes.
Does Oliver's absence settle the debate on which Melbourne midfielder - say Petracca - becomes the focus of Port Adelaide minder Willem Drew?
"Willem has done different jobs through the year ... but it won't be just Drew v Petracca (that settles the midfield battle)," Port Adelaide football chief Chris Davies said. "It will be a group (Ollie Wines, Travis Boak, Connor Rozee and Karl Amon from Port Adelaide) versus a group.
"Drew has done fantastic run-with roles. But we are also keen to see him continue to break and spread which he has done well during the past couple of weeks."
DEFENCE: Against the Demons in Round 4, Port Adelaide was without All-Australian Aliir Aliir. Reliable backman Trent McKenzie also missed, having had knee surgery and Tom Clurey was rushed back, potentially a week earlier than he would have liked following his own knee procedure.
ATTACK: Much was made of how Port Adelaide tried to work utility Sam Mayes - rather than key forward Todd Marshall - against Melbourne key defender Steven May at Adelaide Oval in round 4. Now, it is a very different Todd Marshall leading the Port Adelaide attack with Mitch Georgiades, Robbie Gray, Sam Powell-Pepper and the midfielders such as Zak Butters who rotate through the zone.
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin has picked up the theme of his team being measured in the lead-up to Sunday's clash with Port Adelaide at Traeger Park in Alice Springs. Smarting from the loss to new AFL leader Geelong, Goodwin is striving to get his premiership team to respond.
"The challenge is right before us as a footy club," Goodwin said this week. "We have a lot of work to do; a lot of improvement ... the challenge is right before our playing group and our football department."
Port Adelaide has been in this space for 12 weeks now.
Port Adelaide's eagerness for the challenge of being measured against the AFL's premiership team is impressive during Ken Hinkley's time at Alberton: WON 9, LOST 4.
Since 2013, Port Adelaide's record against the defending AFL premier is:
2013 - BEAT Sydney by 18 points at Football Park
2014 - BEAT Hawthorn by 14 points at Adelaide Oval
LOST to Hawthorn by three points at the MCG (preliminary final)
2015 - BEAT Hawthorn by eight points at Adelaide Oval
BEAT Hawthorn by 22 points at the Docklands
2016 - LOST to HAWTHORN by 22 points at Adelaide Oval
2017 - BEAT the Western Bulldogs by 17 points at Ballarat
2018 - BEAT Richmond by 14 points at Adelaide Oval
2019 - BEAT West Coast by 42 points at Perth Stadium
2020 - BEAT Richmond by 21 points at Adelaide Oval
LOST to Richmond by six points at Adelaide Oval (preliminary final)
2021 - BEAT Richmond by two points at Adelaide Oval
2022 - LOST to Melbourne by 32 points at Adelaide Oval
LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION
PORT ADELAIDE has a 3-8 win-loss record against Melbourne at the MCG. It is 3-0 in Port Adelaide's favour at Traeger Park, Alice Springs - the "home away from home" for Melbourne this weekend.
The engineers have measured Traeger Park at 175 metres long and 135 metres wide. So, it is a little longer than Adelaide Oval (167 metres) and a bit wider (124). It also is longer than the MCG (173 metres) but not as wide as the cricket ground (148 metres).
There have been seven AFL games played at Traeger Park since 2014 - all as Melbourne home games.
Port Adelaide has scored well against the backdrop of MacDonnell Ranges at Alice Springs, averaging 110 points in the three matches that were played before Melbourne had the Steven May-Jake Lever combination in defence.
From the last Melbourne-Port Adelaide game played at Traeger Park - in round 10, 2016 - Port Adelaide has Karl Amon, Travis Boak, Darcy Byrne-Jones, Charlie Dixon, Robbie Gray and Ollie Wines returning to Alice Springs.
DEFENCE RULES
EVERYONE knows how Melbourne invites opponents into its trap with key defenders Steven May and Jake Lever eager to take intercept marks - a theme that has tested midfielders in how they approach the attacking 50-metre arc.
"There is a healthy balance (between putting speed on the ball movement to catch the Melbourne defence out of shape - and working with slower, more measured entries inside the forward-50 arc)," says Port Adelaide midfielder Connor Rozee.
"You just can't go crazy from the start of the game and think everything is going to be perfect all the way through. There are times when we will take the game on and go quick - when they don't have extra defenders behind the ball. But we also cannot bomb it down there when (ruckman) Max Gawn and Lever are sitting there.
"There is a healthy balance. Hopefully, we can find that."
It is now more than six years since any Port Adelaide team has broken the watershed 100-point barrier against Melbourne (121 points in round 10, 2016 in the clubs' last meeting at Traeger Park, Alice Springs). Since then, Port Adelaide has had scores of 54 points (in the rematch at Adelaide Oval in 2016), 75, 87, 83, 55 and 36 (with no goal before half-time in the most recent game at Adelaide Oval in round 4).
But Melbourne's ability to crack the ton against Port Adelaide goes back even further - to that first AFL game at the old Adelaide Oval in 2011 when Port Adelaide avoided the wooden spoon despite conceding 15.14 (104) to Melbourne.
Since then, Melbourne has been held to scores ranging from 32 points at the Gabba in the shortened games of 2020 to 94 points at Adelaide Oval in round 21, 2016.
BAROMETER NUMBERS
PORT ADELAIDE'S scouts did not need to report the key themes at Melbourne training this week - the agenda was obvious from the AFL premier's fall to Geelong at Kardinia Park last week.
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin put it all on the table saying: "There's no question we got a good touch-up in stoppage and clearance and we ended up having to deal with a lot of territory loss."
The statistical comparison between the teams on the key "barometer" figures reveals:
CONTESTED BALL: Melbourne has an impressive appetite for the contest with a 145 average on contested possession (Port Adelaide is 137).
CLEARANCES: Port Adelaide has - for all the ruck changes during the season - won more clearances than Melbourne this season with a 37.8 average compared to the Petracca-Oliver-Viney numbers of 36.6.
INSIDE-50s: Melbourne averages 57 entries to its forward arc. Port Adelaide is at 52.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
"Todd is an outstanding character. Not only on the field ... he is our most selfless player. When everyone was having a go at him, there were so many edits (of the match vision) that we would go through to see Todd was helping someone else to make them a better player - even when he was not playing so good.
"Todd has been so good - and he is one of our most-loved characters because of that selfless approach to his team-mates. I am really happy to see him doing well. The whole club is right behind him and it is nice to see some positive comments about him finally. He deserves it. He works really hard and is a great, loveable guy."
Connor Rozee on Todd Marshall
BIRD SEED
(the little stuff that counts most)
Where: Traeger Park, Alice Springs
When: Sunday, July 17, 2022
Time: 2.50pm (SA time)
Last time: Port Adelaide 4.12 (36) l Melbourne 10.8 (68) at Adelaide Oval, round 4, April 7 this year
Overall: Port Adelaide 22, Melbourne 15
Past five games (most recent first): L L W W W
Scoring average: Port Adelaide 92, Melbourne 82
Tightest margin - Port Adelaide by three points (72-69) at Adelaide Oval, round 18, July 20, 2014; Melbourne by one point (111-110) at Marrrara Oval, Darwin, round 9, May 22, 2010.
Biggest margin - Port Adelaide by 89 points (163-74) at Football Park, round 17, July 29, 2007; Melbourne by 53 points (124-71) at the MCG, round 4, April 17, 2004.
By venues - Adelaide Oval (3-3); Football Park (11-2); MCG (3-8); Marrara Oval, Darwin (1-2); Traeger Park, Alice Springs (3-0); Gabba (1-0).
By States and territories - SA: 14-5; Victoria: 3-8; Northern Territory: 4-2; Queensland: 1-0.