- Banned
- #1
sometimes this guys loses the plot but i think he's on the money here
http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,22469178-23211,00.html
Arrogant Power worthy of boos
SPRING will finish off what the winter threw up. Geelong and Port Adelaide, first and second after the minor round, will play off for the premiership in Saturday's grand final.
You ought to barrack for Geelong. It would be a cheer for sportsmanship.
Port Adelaide outclassed the Kangaroos in football terms only in their preliminary final on Saturday.
The manner of Port's victory was arrogant and contemptible. Captain Warren Tredrea hooked a clever goal in the third quarter then stopped and bowed to the Port fans. It was inappropriate and a sign of disrespect for Port's opposition, but it represented the mood of his team and his audience.
Chad Cornes would later do a goose-stepping jig to celebrate a simple goal. It lacked grace, but it was more over-exuberance than disdain for the beaten Roos.
Nonetheless, it ignited the drooling crowd who lurched into a Mexican wave. It is believed coach Mark Williams admonished both players, but it was Williams who grabbed his tie and dragged it up like a noose in a boorish gesture after the 2004 grand final win.
Tredrea would say later that he had been a dill by bowing, but sportsmanship is an instinctive quality. It is knowing how to act and what to say when the contest is at its hottest, not when you have caught your breath and cooled down with a drink.
If you have not been born and bred a Port Adelaide fan, then you could do worse than support Geelong on Saturday. For all its business trappings, Australian football remains a sport and should be played in that manner.
Competing ruthlessly does not mean playing without dignity. The fact that Port players helped form a guard of honour for the retired Glenn Archer was a genuine gesture but also reinforced their earlier conceit.
Port's victory has assured the AFL will get a competitive final. The premiership is suddenly no gimme. Port displayed a convincing mix of speed, skill and experience against the Roos. Balance that against Geelong's erratic performance against Collingwood on Friday night, and it suggests the Cats' first premiership since 1963 will be hard-earned.
Given that Geelong considers all its players will get over the little niggles from the five-point win over Collingwood, the only problem for the Cats is the position of second ruck. Mark Blake had four disposals against a ruck opposition that had been devastated by his team-mate Brad Ottens. Every time Blake replaced Ottens it seemed to coincide with a Collingwood charge.
While Geelong committed to Blake towards the end of the season, it might still be that Steven King is a better, more experienced option. The former captain was critical to Geelong's success in yesterday's VFL final against Coburg.
Collingwood was both clever and relentless against Geelong. Mick Malthouse gave the players a plan to deprive Geelong of the corridor and they were relentless in their zeal to implement it.
The Cats were forced wide and the ball-carriers had little peace because of the intensity of Collingwood's tackling.
Magpies president Eddie McGuire will no doubt wonder what his side could achieve if Chris Judd joined the Pies midfield. As they stand now, they are less than a kick from a grand final.
Port will provide two vastly different story lines in grand final week. David Rodan was released by Richmond at the end of last season and picked up by Port with the last pick of the draft. He will play in a grand final, and the side that gave him away won just three games for the year.
The career of Michael Wilson, 30, has been hobbled twice by knee reconstructions. On Saturday he shredded his achilles. He is a patched-up man as it is and he might now retire. His strength and his defensive skills would have been invaluable against Geelong. His story is a sad one.
The Kangaroos have played in four finals under Dean Laidley. Three times they have been slaughtered. They lost to Port by 87 points in 2005 and this series lost to Geelong by 106 points and Port by 87 points again. The one win was against Hawthorn - by 33 points - in this season's semis.
Rather than discredit the coach, it underlines his ability. Laidley has lifted a very ordinary list of players to an elite level. Because they have few very good players, it is a level that the Kangaroos find impossible to compete at with any authority. The Hawthorn win says as much about the Hawks' immaturity and lack of versatility as it does the depth of talent at Arden Street.
Laidley is yet to re-sign with the Kangaroos. It should be a formality for both coach and club. But the club will forever struggle when it is not enough just to be grim and aggressive.
The Kangaroos need an injection of talent. For the moment, it is an ordinary team in an elite four weeks of the season.
Friday night's preliminary final at the MCG was played before 98,002 people. It was regarded as one of the finest finals and unlikely to be matched by the grand final. After Port's performance on Saturday that might not be the case. Far from it. Just don't barrack for Port.
http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,22469178-23211,00.html