Adelaide
> Port Adelaide?!
Before last week’s ‘Showdown’
the suggestion that Adelaide could be better than their cross-town rivals Port
Adelaide might have been met with some derision. The Power after all are
sitting second on the AFL ladder, had a club record thirteen-match winning
streak in the middle of the season, and just fell short of beating league
leaders Collingwood the week before. The Crows meanwhile had won less than half
of their games and, despite falling just short themselves in beating top four
side Melbourne on the road, were ‘languishing’ in thirteenth spot on the
ladder.
Adelaide however comfortably
beat Port Adelaide by 47 points. The Crows are still well behind the Power on
the ladder, but they did leapfrog them in the rankings, which have rated them
higher than their actual AFL ladder position for several weeks now. What’s the
deal?
Well, although Port Adelaide
has won five more games than Adelaide this season, that has been on the back of
several narrow wins for the Power, and several narrow losses for the Crows.
Port have won five games by less than ten points, against Sydney, St. Kilda,
Essendon twice, and Melbourne. In contrast Adelaide have lost to Melbourne, and
Collingwood twice, by less than a goal. Adelaide’s average winning margin is 48
points and their average losing margin is just 18 points (see table below),
while Port’s average winning margin is just 25 points and their average losing
margin is 40 points.
The result is Adelaide’s
points for compared with points against (i.e. percentage) is actually better
than Port Adelaide’s, at a fairly impressive 116 compared with 110. That is
boosted by a massive 122 point win by the Crows against bottom team West Coast,
but even taking that out the two teams have been similar in terms of their net
margins (see table above).
A good sign for Port Adelaide being a top side is they have a great inside 50 ratio, getting the ball into their forward area 15 per cent more than their opponents, while the Crows are about even on this measure. But Adelaide have been more effective in scoring when they get the ball inside 50, averaging 1.78 points per inside 50, to the Power’s 1.59. And so it played out on the weekend, with Adelaide having only one more inside 50 than Port Adelaide, but kicking seven more goals.
Port Adelaide are of course in the more enviable ladder position, nestled in the top four, while Adelaide have a large battle on their hands just to make it to the finals. But the difference between the two sides is probably not nearly as large as the ladder suggests, and quite encouraging for the Crows.
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