Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley spoke to the media after the game, here’s some of what he said...
Q: What was the most demanding for your players and where did they respond best?
A: Both teams were having a good crack. It was tough conditions, as everyone witnessed, with the amount of rain coming down earlier in the night, and that made it a really strong game, and our boys and the Dogs were at it all night and they were going pretty hard. We both had turns at different moments. Luckily enough for us at the end of the game we were really strong and tough around the footy and it swung the game back our way.
Q: It finally did rain.
A: It did. A lot, yeah.
Q: Where did you feel you had to make an adjustment because of that?
A: We just had to stay in the contest for long parts of the night and you were never going to do it easy. A couple of moments were going to be big, and balls that were marked by some people at courageous times, and finished their work. That was pretty important.
Q: What changes from three weeks ago where they disappear for 20 minutes when the game is on the line, to two weeks in a row now, fighting it out to get a result?
A: Disappear? This team doesn’t disappear. AFL footy is bloody tough. If people think they disappear, that’s unfair. That’s my point, sorry.
Q: What’s different between what happened in...
A: They keep going. They try to keep going in every game they are in. I get frustrated sometimes when you attack the team - no-one goes out there to, in your words, to try and disappear. They try and hang in as long as they can and sometimes it is tough in this game.
Q: In five weeks, you’re 3-2, after what’s been widely acknowledged as a tough start to the year, does it set you up for a good shot at the next block of the season?
A: No, because every game is different. Every contest. You have to turn up every week as best you can. I don’t think every team is going to do that for 23 rounds and then some. You have to give yourself a chance and what we have done now is give ourselves a chance to stay in the comp longer than we were last year. It is significant for us we got to this stage 3-2. I’m proud of the team.
Q: Things didn’t fall Todd Marshall’s way for the first three quarters and then he had a great 10 minutes. What was the message to him?
A: It is a message to every player. You cannot have a great game but have a great moment or two. Todd had a couple of great moments. He hung in there.
Q: Eleven touches and four or five clearances for Jason Horne-Francis in the last quarter. Vision captured you going to him at the siren. What was your message about?
A: It is same as Todd or any young player out there who had challenges. Jason Horne-Francis is 19. Some part of it annoys me about the way people treat him. It’s annoying me. He is never going to play four quarters every week. He is 19-year-old. If you were treating my 19-year-old son the way some people have treated him, I would be embarrassed by my performance if I was those people. I think it is unfair. The kid made a courageous decision to come home. Let the kid play footy. He is 19.
Q: Is that the booing?
A: I’m talking about lots of things. I’m talking about people who write stories and talk stories every week and I’m talking about the treatment they gave him at times tonight, without making a big deal of it. He is trying, he is giving it he is best. He is 19. Stop treating him like he is 28 and treat him with respect. People who put pressure on kids in this game need to have a good hard look at themselves.
Q: Has he been affected by it?
A: No, great credit to him. He just wants to play great footy. He is happy being home. Good on him.
Q: Byrne-Jones when he place forward...
A: He added desperation to the front half. Especially in conditions like tonight. I think it is really important that he adds that. McEntee, Sam Powell-Pepper, there is more than one or two of them down there. It makes it harder to escape. That helps us.
Q: Does that free him up in his approach to the footy as well. Is it a different sort of approach...
A: I suppose it probably is a little bit, because he is starting from an attacking position more than a defensive position. Same result. He gives great effort. If you give great effort, usually you end up OK.