War of words
Moments after the siren sounded on Port Adelaide’s thrilling semi-final win over Hawthorn, Power coach Ken Hinkley indulged in an incredible, extended verbal tirade with Hawthorn captain James Sicily.
Sicily was being consoled by Hawks teammates after his late miss cost his side a possible victory when he was the beneficiary of some unwanted feedback from Hinkley.
Hinkley told Channel Seven his outburst was directed at Jack Ginnivan for his post on Instagram about seeing Brodie Grundy in two weeks.
Television commentator and Hawks legend Luke Hodge described Hinkley’s behaviour as “pretty poor form from a coach”.
Hinkley bristled during his Thursday morning press conference at Alberton when questioned by reporters whether he would be coaching for his career on Friday night.
The pressure seemed to show when Hinkley, instead of celebrating the win with his players, chose to engage in a long, unfriendly, eye-balling chat with the beaten Hawks.
Port staved off Hawthorn’s spirited fightback and book a berth in next weekend’s preliminary final against Sydney.
Luckless forward Todd Marshall suffered another head knock in his return from concussion and eventually subbed out, before gun midfielder Jason Horne-Francis hobbled off late in the match, seemingly suffering from cramp.
Thrilling finish
Port survived a mid-match rally and a titanic late challenge to stave off Hawthorn in a semi-final classic at a heaving Adelaide Oval.
The Hawks’ brave assault at a come-from-behind victory came after coach Sam Mitchell switched some magnets in the fourth quarter, notably switching James Sicily into attack.
Sicily has won the Hawks many games in defence - but he showed he is also no slouch in attack, joining livewire Nick Watson in giving Port’s defenders fits.
After the Power stretched their advantage to 18 points, Sicily jagged one back with a smart hook in space from a forward stoppage - his snap adjudged to have barely beaten Boak’s spoiling fingertips.
The skipper followed it up with his second major in quick succession before being involved in the chain that led to Jack Ginnivan’s snap, which trimmed Port’s fourth-quarter buffer to five points.
Sicily had a chance to put his side in front but his set shot with 63 seconds left slammed into the post.
The Hawks fashioned a flurry of repeat entries at the death.
Massimo D’Ambrosio’s hurried snap was swallowed by Esava Ratugolea, before Jai Newcombe’s last-ditch kick was smothered in the last nanosecond by Darcy Byrne-Jones, whose last-second soccer goal miracle broke Hawthorn hearts the previous time the teams played at Adelaide Oval.
September royalty
Burgoynes and finals - they go together like cheese and wine.
Playing on the biggest stage of his young football life to date, 21-year-old Jase Burgoyne arguably played the best game of his life.
One of the competition’s most promising young wingmen, Burgoyne started in defence and his composure across half-back was a key reason behind Hawthorn’s early struggles.
Burgoyne’s only real blemish was an unlucky free kick conceded, which he followed by copping a 50-metre penalty for dissent, which allowed Dylan Moore to goal during the Hawks’ second-term surge.
Burgoyne snapped truly from 35 metres out after a magic pass by Willie Rioli midway through the fourth quarter as the Power threatened to take control.
Burgoyne’s dad Peter was a member of the Power’s 2004 premiership side, while legendary uncle Shaun played in four AFL flags.