For the first time in the new season, Port Adelaide takes on a fellow 2023 AFL top-eight finalist to gauge its standing, especially in one important on-field division.
Melbourne’s midfield is the finest in the AFL, according to Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley, in a league that is filled with statistics and ratings.
The talented Melbourne engine, led by the finest ruckman in the league, Max Gawn, will provide Hinkley with the best information regarding the revamp of his Port Adelaide midfield in Saturday night’s thrilling match at Adelaide Oval.
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“Great midfields going at each other,” said Hinkley of the billboard battle that could be the most decisive in the match-up of two 2023 finalists seeking to establish their top-four credentials in a new season.
“Melbourne has to be close, I would have thought, to the best group of mids together. Look at their quality … Petracca, Oliver, Viney (in his 250th), Sparrow, Max Gawn and Pickett goes in there. It is a pretty formidable group we are up against.
“I am looking forward to seeing the growth of our group. Ollie Wines back in good form taking on those challenges himself. Ivan Soldo (leading the ruck against Gawn). Our captain (Connor Rozee) and vice-captain (Zak Butters) are really important to us. We still have Jason Horne-Francis out of our team.
“We are looking forward to this real challenge. It is a massive challenge.”
THE MILESTONE
Just one week after praising former captain Travis Boak for his 350th milestone game, Hinkley was forced to draw parallels between Todd Marshall’s 100th match and its relevance today.
“How big was Trav’s effort to get to 350 … and I am not sure you could have many more challenges than Todd has faced,” Hinkley said. “To reach 100 games is remarkable. I do reflect on it being very similar to what Travis’ milestone was last week.
“It is one story I am really proud of.
“I am incredibly pleased for Todd, but it is just part of his journey. We all had great confidence in what Todd’s ability was going to produce at AFL level. He is starting to become the player we all want him to be. And we still expect his next 100 will be even better again.
“But I am really proud of Todd considering the challenges he has faced. Not many people have had to face the challenges he has (such as losing both parents in a six-month span).”
SELECTION
Port Adelaide has maintained the majority of its new lineup for the third week running. Defensive forward Jed McEntee is back on the Round 1 roster this week after recovering from a concussion.
Hinkley describes McEntee
“as very important to us in the way he plays”.
“With Sam Powell-Pepper (suspended) out of the side as well, we understand Jed is a pressure player in our front half,” Hinkley said. “Darcy Byrne-Jones soldiered a fair bit of it last week with Francis Evans’ support. All our forwards are required to do that sort of stuff, but Jed comes in to add a real edge to our pressure.”
“It is certainly helpful; it does not hurt to keep them together,” Hinkley said of the stability at selection. “It does mean we have been lucky thus far with injury … it helps us.”
OPPO WATCH
After finally putting an end to its goal-scoring slump in its last two games, Melbourne becomes the first of the 2023 top-eight finalists to play Port Adelaide in the new campaign.
The classic Victorian club has been in the news nonstop this summer and for the past week, so it is arriving at Adelaide Oval.
“Melbourne has been spoken about a lot over the summer with some of their challenges, but we all have our challenges,” Hinkley said. “This game makes it hard to play against them whenever. They are a formidable team; they have been a top-four team for a long period of time. That is the respect we have for them.
“We, as a team, don’t go to that spot of the competition being better or worse from one week to the other,” Hinkley added. “We go to the same spot every week. We prepare for the best of every team. And if the best of every team turns up, you must be able to match it or you will not get the result you want.”
Max Gawn
Max Gawn, a ruckman and captain for Melbourne, has given Port Adelaide match-winning challenges for ten years. Additionally, he has received some inventive strategies from the Port Adelaide coaching staff in addition to harsh criticism for the Melbourne players’ previous lack of support for Gawn.
“We try to lessen the strength of every team – and Max is a great player, probably the best ruckman in the competition,” said Hinkley. “We do our best to limit what he can do to the game.
“But that applies to so many Melbourne players. They have so much talent in that side.
“There is a bit more made of that stuff (with Gawn) than is real. We try to stop Max Gawn as much as we can from influencing a game.”
HINKLEY’S DECLARATION
Hinkley declared he will respect the AFL-AFL Player Association policy on illicit drugs rather than publicly debate its merit.
“I work within that policy,” he said. “I don’t have a view I am prepared to share either way. I work within the boundaries of that policy.”