AFL Round 1 Collingwood v Port Adelaide: All the news, analysis and fallout from the MCG
Dan Houston tore his former club apart on Saturday night. Magpies coach Craig McRae reveals what the ex-Power star said in front of the playing group before his terrific display.
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Collingwood coach Craig McRae is still in awe of his side’s “cracking pick-up” Dan Houston.
Houston ran amok against Port Adelaide on Saturday night, collecting 27 damaging disposals to help his new team belt his old one to the tune of 91 points.
McRae believes all recruits bring an element of buoyancy to their new club but says Houston is a “rare talent” the Magpies are considering themselves lucky to have.
“Yeah he’s a cracking pick-up isn’t he and he nearly brought the house down with that kick from 50, he doesn’t miss those at training,” he said.
“When you have someone come to your club you have this sort of great optimism about what they’re going to bring.
“But when they’re actually in your system you go ‘whoa, he’s going to make a difference’.
“Not only does he win the ball in the air but he wins it on the ground and then uses it ridiculously well … rare talent, we’re very happy to have him.”
Houston sat out of the Opening Round after serving the final match of a suspension overhanging from last season.
McRae asked the Magpies during the week how much energy they had going into the Power and Houston’s response was telling.
“We did a little gathering as a group and we talked about what our battery levels were at,” McRae said.
“‘How’s your battery going, if you were a phone’, (some said) ‘I’m 100 per cent, 25, 50’, (we did it) just to see what the room is doing.
“Pretty much everyone was 85 plus but Dan actually said ‘I am 100 per cent charged and I have got a spare 100 per cent spare in my back pocket ready to go’.
“I am not sure if that was just because he was playing his team that he played for previously but he had energy to get the season going for him.”
Collingwood faces Western Bulldogs back at the MCG on Friday night.
THEY’RE BACK! PIES FIND THEIR PACE – AND A SHINY NEW WEAPON
Welcome back, Craig McRae’s Pies premiership blueprint.
And welcome in its shiny new weapon – Dan Houston’s right boot.
Coming off a week of heat thanks to an opening round drubbing in Sydney, Collingwood was met with a temperature nudging 30 degrees at the MCG on Saturday night and then turned the dial even higher.
The pressure was back, as the Magpies mauled a wobbly Port Adelaide from the very start and forced their style onto the game, with an added oomph off half-back thanks Houston’s much-anticipated club debut.
This was the McRae side that Pies fans fell in love with in his first two years at the club: hunting the man ferociously and then attacking direct when the ball was turned over.
Houston led the way, racking up a game-high 17 disposals in the first half as he cruised around against his old team collecting free ball at will.
The ex-Power rebounder cruised to 27 disposals and 14 kicks.
Surely, Ken Hinkley well and truly knows the weapon that Houston’s kicking presents, but the Power seemed to put little time into their old teammate, allowing him to set the tone for the Pies.
It was a serious lapse from a team that was outcoached, outworked and outmatched in an MCG ambush, starting a season of succession off on the worst foot.
If some questions were asked about Collingwood’s fitness in opening round, where does that leave a Port Adelaide that finished the night running slower than a turtle?
As the great Jason Dunstall told Fox Footy in the first quarter: “pressure is attitude based”.
If that’s right, Collingwood brought more attitude than John McEnroe, and Port Adelaide channelled Bernard Tomic’s lackadaisical effort.
In the first half, the Magpies had 20 less uncontested possessions and 22 less marks than the Power, as Port Adelaide tried to stabilise and hold on to the ball.
But Collingwood had 17 more tackles, 12 more inside-50s and walked into the rooms for the main break with a 34-point lead.
Time and time again, the black and white jumpers hurried to the contest, turned the ball over and then attacked as quickly as possible to use the open space of the forward line.
It’s a style that was put into practice over and over in summer, when the Magpies would train at normal speed before McRae blew a whistle urging them to just get the ball forward by any means, slapping and kicking the ball off the ground to get it into attack.
Nothing typified that more than in the middle of the third term, when the Pies went end-to-end from a kick-in despite not having a truly clean or effective disposal until Brody Mihocek wandered in for an easy goal.
By then it was a cakewalk.
The direct style worked wonders for a different recruit in Tim Membrey on Saturday, bobbing into space at will to kick the first three goals for his new side.
The Pies kept the hunt on all night – ending with 25 more tackles despite having 23 more disposals in the 91-point drubbing.
"Here comes Nick Daicos, cue the crowd!" â#AFLPiesPowerpic.twitter.com/8IIV9ZkRD2
— AFL (@AFL) March 15, 2025
Collingwood held firm after a 52-point drubbing against GWS last week, refusing to add any genuine speed to the side despite the pundits labelling the Magpies as too slow in opening round.
Those age-old legs of Scott Pendlebury were plonked on the bench as a sub, but his replacement Ned Long didn’t exactly add electric speed.
The will to hunt, and the laser footskills of Houston out of defence, made the Pies look like they had jumped out of an old Holden and into Oscar Piastri’s McLaren between weeks.
The Pies have found their pace.
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Originally published as AFL Round 1 Collingwood v Port Adelaide: All the news, analysis and fallout from the MCG