Port Adelaide 2016

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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby stan » Fri Nov 13, 2015 12:38 pm

Honestly we can call Brayshaw a **** head all we want but he has done a good job turning North around.

As for Eddie, I wouldnt mind him being our president. Maybe a knob but very successful.

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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Booney » Fri Nov 13, 2015 12:51 pm

stan wrote:Honestly we can call Brayshaw a **** head all we want but he has done a good job turning North around.

As for Eddie, I wouldnt mind him being our president. Maybe a knob but very successful.

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Excellent, I will then.

Brayshaw is a **** head. :D
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Mr Beefy » Fri Nov 13, 2015 1:17 pm

Stumps wrote:
PatowalongaPirate wrote:
Stumps wrote:
Booney wrote:Port set to post a profit for 2015. Good news, another step forward off field for a club doing lots of things right off field and in the community.

Well done KT, Kochie and co.[/quote

Kochie successfully juggling two careers. would have been some speculation at the time of appointment from people who weren't in the know I dare say


Being club president is a voluntary role and cannot be considered a career as such. Koch is no different to Brayshaw or Maguire.


I am aware of this

I'm sure he would get a handy honorarium...
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Spargo » Fri Nov 13, 2015 5:00 pm

Booney wrote:
PatowalongaPirate wrote:Being club president is a voluntary role and cannot be considered a career as such. Koch is no different to Brayshaw or Maguire.


Whilst some, perhaps many, will dispute this, he's similar to Eddie in many ways, but completely different to Brayshaw. You see, Brayshaw, is a complete **** head.

Lol
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Booney » Mon Nov 16, 2015 9:28 am

Spargo wrote:
Booney wrote:
PatowalongaPirate wrote:Being club president is a voluntary role and cannot be considered a career as such. Koch is no different to Brayshaw or Maguire.


Whilst some, perhaps many, will dispute this, he's similar to Eddie in many ways, but completely different to Brayshaw. You see, Brayshaw, is a complete **** head.

Lol


He is painful when commentating the cricket, snapping at the heels of those who made it beyond Sheffield Shield, or were good at Shield level and when he's talking football he's like the little dog running around behind the big dog in the old cartoons.

He's a massive **** head. He might have done well for your club, but he's still a massive **** head.
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Stumps » Mon Nov 16, 2015 11:02 am

Agree, I am not a fan but to say he wasnt good at shield level a bit harsh. 5000 runs @ 42 with 10 hundreds in a very good era of shield cricket...... he could seriously play
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Magellan » Mon Nov 16, 2015 11:43 am

Brayshaw, Koch, and McGuire are all card-carrying wankers in their own unique way. In terms of annoyingness, there's not a cigarette paper between them.

Having said that, each has been a fantastic ambassador, particularly in harnessing an existing media presence to improve their club's profile.
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Rising Power » Tue Nov 17, 2015 3:15 pm

Stumps wrote:Agree, I am not a fan but to say he wasnt good at shield level a bit harsh. 5000 runs @ 42 with 10 hundreds in a very good era of shield cricket...... he could seriously play

And he basically won the Shield for us with two very important innings in the final. Still a bit of a dick though :P
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Booney » Mon Nov 23, 2015 11:33 am

Tom Clurey took out Port's 3km time trial this morning, the first session with the full group back on deck.
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby valleys07 » Tue Nov 24, 2015 10:17 pm

Riley Bonner- AFL Draft 2015: Pick 37 Port Adelaide

Date of Birth: 7/3/1997

Height: 191cm

Weight: 79kg

Club: West Adelaide/Goodwood Saints

Position: Running defender

Plays like: Grant Birchall

Honours: 2015 AFL U18 All Australian


There’s a very good reason why West Adelaide’s Riley Bonner has likened himself to Hawthorn defender Grant Birchall.

The Bloods’ backman not only has a penetrating left-foot kick like Birchall, he can slice through opposition zones with precise accuracy by foot.

Speaking on SANFL Radio, Bonner admits his kicking skills are certainly a strong part of his game as evidenced by how calmly he controlled the majority of the kick-ins for this year’s McDonald’s SA Under-18 team.

After enjoying a consistent AFL National Championships campaign which resulted in All-Australian selection, the 18-year-old is now focused on joining several of his Croweater team-mates in the Bloods’ league team.

Measuring in at 191cm and 79kg, Bonner is the son of former Sturt player Derek Bonner and reveals he is studying at university to be a Physical Education teacher.

Originally from the Goodwood Saints, Bonner has formed a close relationship with McDonald’s SA Under-18 vice-captain Aaron Francis.

So close in fact, they devised their own set play from the kick-ins during last year’s successful Macca’s Cup finals campaign.

Bonner is one of 12 South Australians invited to this year’s AFL Combine in October, with the silky-skilled defender most looking forward to the Matthew Lloyd kicking test.

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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby valleys07 » Tue Nov 24, 2015 10:35 pm

Pick 45- Port Adelaide:

Name: Aidyn Johnson

Position: Midfielder

DOB: 31/10/1997

Height: 184cm

Weight: 75kg

Current club: Bendigo Pioneers

Draft range: 25-rookie

Pub summary: Athletic midfielder who is hard to place in this draft, held back by injury.

Strengths

Athleticism
Leap
Ball use
Hits the scoreboard
Weaknesses

Injury interrupted year
Not especially versatile
Overall

Aidyn Johnson is one of the more interesting draft prospects available to clubs this year. Injuries have made it really difficult to draw a solid form line and complete picture of his game. For example, it's hard to know how he performs in clearance work or as a forward.

Johnson's athleticism and ball use allow him to break open games and he is great at getting into position for the handball receive. He is arguably one of, if not the best wingman in this year’s draft pool, however, injuries have made it hard for him to demonstrate an ability to play other roles within a side.

The main concern when it comes to Johnson’s game is how he will perform if he isn’t being fed the ball but we feel this won’t be an issue once he adds a bit more size to his frame.

The range of where Aidyn could get drafted is pretty wide. We see Johnson as a third round draft pick but some good testing at the combine could change his standing. If your club picks him up with a late pick they’ve likely got a great deal.

Read more at http://www.zerohanger.com/2015-afl-draf ... g0fwCZs.99

http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/video/ ... highlights
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Booney » Wed Nov 25, 2015 8:24 am

I think Bonner was expected to go before our picks, so happy with that one and he's a local lad who supports the club. He and his family must be thrilled to keep him here at the club he supports.

Johnson looks an interesting pick, a bit of a smokey with his injury record.

Either way, no pressure on these lads, unlike their top 10 draftee counter parts. I think much could be said for going at 32 or 47.
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby stan » Wed Nov 25, 2015 6:21 pm

Booney wrote:I think Bonner was expected to go before our picks, so happy with that one and he's a local lad who supports the club. He and his family must be thrilled to keep him here at the club he supports.

Johnson looks an interesting pick, a bit of a smokey with his injury record.

Either way, no pressure on these lads, unlike their top 10 draftee counter parts. I think much could be said for going at 32 or 47.


I thought Bonner was going to go around 25 to be honest. I think Port have done well, but I wonder why he slipped back?
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Jim05 » Wed Nov 25, 2015 6:56 pm

stan wrote:
Booney wrote:I think Bonner was expected to go before our picks, so happy with that one and he's a local lad who supports the club. He and his family must be thrilled to keep him here at the club he supports.

Johnson looks an interesting pick, a bit of a smokey with his injury record.

Either way, no pressure on these lads, unlike their top 10 draftee counter parts. I think much could be said for going at 32 or 47.


I thought Bonner was going to go around 25 to be honest. I think Port have done well, but I wonder why he slipped back?

Not sure how much truth to it but there was talk a week or so ago that he was a flight risk. I know we were very keen on him but cooled over the last few days
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby whufc » Wed Nov 25, 2015 9:06 pm

Booney wrote:I think Bonner was expected to go before our picks, so happy with that one and he's a local lad who supports the club. He and his family must be thrilled to keep him here at the club he supports.

Johnson looks an interesting pick, a bit of a smokey with his injury record.

Either way, no pressure on these lads, unlike their top 10 draftee counter parts. I think much could be said for going at 32 or 47.


Im sure each lad puts the some amount of pressure on themselves regardless of what pick they are taken at.
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby valleys07 » Thu Nov 26, 2015 12:05 pm

Welcome Charlie Dixon

For Charlie Dixon, the cultural and geographical distance from the Gold Coast to Port Adelaide was just one part of the long journey he has travelled from those dark days earlier this year, when he wondered whether he was up for football after all.

The game that had come so naturally to the Suns' first player was proving every bit as demanding as his early mentor and Gold Coast assistant Ken Hinkley had warned, and the extracurricular issues Guy McKenna and others had cautioned him about threatened to spiral out of control.

Implicated in the Karmichael Hunt scandal and believing the matter could go further for him, Dixon says now: "I was struggling with some stuff and I wondered ... I don't know if this is for me."

There were several turning points that led him to recommit mentally and that took Dixon and his beloved Staffordshire terrier Otis across the country, but one was when his form improved and football went from being a burden to an escape. And his attitude improved. Then there was the advice of his family, the call from Hinkley and the realisation he would be better away from the Gold Coast.

"I already knew what Kenny would bring to the table," said Dixon. "I knew the impact Ken would have on my game. At the Gold Coast he was the one who'd really ride me and who'd keep me accountable. That was something I needed."

Hinkley's relationship with Dixon during the Gold Coast's formative years cannot be underplayed in his eventual decision the to quit the club. Several weeks before the end of the home and away season, the Port coach flew to Queensland for the pivotal meeting that would see Dixon make the emotional transition from the fledgling club that signed him as its first player.

That meeting, one Monday in August, was at the home of the player's manager Peter Blucher – also Hinkley's manager – and included Power football lieutenant Chris Davies. The influence of Port captain Travis Boak was present too when he called in during the talks and spoke to the player about how important a role he could be expected to play at his new club.

In the week leading up to Gold Coast's last game – after a bruising round-22 encounter against Port that saw Dixon in the thick of a wild scuffle with a group of players including Matthew Lobbe – he told the Suns of his decision.

"It was definitely the hardest thing I've had to do," said Dixon. "Growing up with those boys ... playing TAC Cup and then the VFL and over five years in the AFL, it would have been an awesome thing to win a flag with those boys.

"I spoke to the family and we talked about starting afresh, getting out of the Gold Coast and heading to South Australia for a fresh start."

As Hinkley said to Dixon: "We're not going to be the only ones who hold you to account. It's the whole community now." And yet there remains a strong view that Dixon, despite all the above, might have stayed had all parties known Harley Bennell would also leave.

At the time the decision was made, the club was still publicly standing behind Bennell. Certainly all agreed the two young men should not remain together at the Suns.

"I know I made some mistakes on the Gold Coast," said Dixon, whose new stated resolutions are conservative and simple: to fit into the team and get the best out of himself, and thrive on the added scrutiny.

Port did not want this story to dwell on Gold Coast's annus horribilis but Dixon did remain steadfast on the issue of alcohol bans and the specific ban he broke, which proved a major embarrassment for him. He was struggling to sleep, he said, and enjoyed a drink or two on the eve of each game after realising it cured his wakefulness and worry.

But Dixon's stress was compounded when he was exposed and suspended after the Launceston incident, when he and teammate Jack Martin were caught after an unpaid bar bill emerged.

As he said, he was struggling with a number of off-field issues and fearing, according to friends, a potential police probe that never eventuated, and "for me, a couple of beers helped me sleep, took the edge off it". Although he subscribed to the ban at the time, Dixon now says of it: "You're setting me up to fail."

"There's so many different people in a football club, different personalities ... for me it took the edge off it," he said.

To put a finger on where it went wrong at the Suns, the player himself traces things back to those early years when he believed raw talent, size and his well-known competitive aggression would be enough to get him through. What he also boasted was a notoriously cavalier attitude to detail – Dixon was known to turn up at times in bare feet, a hot head and an unreliable body.

As his first senior coach, McKenna told him: "You're good on the football field – that's fine. What you need to worry about is everything else."

And Hinkley? "I was no good for Charlie early ... well not no good, but really blunt. I told him, 'You've got no idea where you're going but they're going to come after you and they're going to smack you.' It was minimal effort and raw talent with him. He laughed at first."

Having played his hand early by stating Dixon was worth a first-round draft pick – the Power eventually also traded next year's second-round pick in the Dixon deal – Hinkley is blunt regarding his expectations of the 201-centimetre forward/ruckman, who is expected to remain close to goal with Jay Schulz alongside him.

"We've given up what is definitely a fair price for Charlie and probably a little more than we would have liked," said Hinkley.

"We've told him that Port Adelaide won't accept poor behaviour and we know he's got what it takes to be good. Charlie's attitude to detail as a young person was not spectacular. As the Suns' first signing he probably thought it might come a bit easier."

Dixon agrees he failed for too long to take in those early warnings.

"Kenny would tell me, 'You don't know what it's like in the AFL,' but I didn't really take it on board. It took me so long to have an impact on games ... It didn't really hit me." Hinkley was initially worried that Dixon had chosen to live alone when he moved to Adelaide – albeit with his dog – but Dixon said he preferred it that way and had realised as much during this past tumultuous year.

He is also single after a couple of intense relationships and a recently publicised friendship with former Hi-5 singer Lauren Brant and stressed he plans to remain living alone. But he has rented a four-bedroom house to fit in visiting family, notably his parents Gordon and Helen, a close relative of Ricky Quade, along with recently married big brother Jesse – for whom he was best man – and younger sister and former housemate Mollie.

Dixon spent his last night on the Gold Coast having dinner with his first host family, who have gone through their own trials. Dixon had the surreal feeling it would be the last day of his old life.

The next day he took a snapshot of his boarding pass – Otis safely deposited in his container for the flight – and put the picture on Facebook along with a message about starting a new life. He was quickly educated about the difference of a football town when he was greeted by a full media contingent at Adelaide Airport.

Last week, breakfasting with Otis at a roadside cafe, several drivers passed by and tooted, one calling: "Welcome to Adelaide."

"They're always going to be on your back," said Dixon, who agreed this, at present, was not a bad thing, and who lay awake fretting until after midnight last Sunday at the prospect of his first three-kilometre time trial.

At Gold Coast he had only done two-kilometre trials, and in fact Dixon has never completed a strong pre-season. Already Port's high-performance boss Darren Burgess has set him rehabilitative exercises for his problematic ankles, and although the club's competitive obsession barred Fairfax from detailing it, his time trial went all right. Hinkley is more effusive regarding his new recruit's early form on the track, along with Dixon's uncompromising demeanour in the heat of battle. "He wheels onto his left and kicks like a right-footer," said the coach with a smile.

"One thing I know about Charlie is that when he's played his first five minutes with us, they'll know he's their teammate. They'll love having him as their teammate and they'll know he's there for keeps.

"And he'll pick them up at times and drag them along with him."
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby Booney » Thu Nov 26, 2015 12:48 pm

Great read and it clearly, without saying it, confirms some of the rumours noted on here and other forums. His close affinity with Bennell, continual "off field" matters to deal with, it's no wonder he and those close to him felt a move away from the "strip" would be a good thing for him.

Let us, Port fans anyway, hope he gets in the right shape off field to make the impact we hope he can and does on field.
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby woodublieve12 » Wed Dec 02, 2015 7:26 pm

This is excellent. Great work by the lads...

I wonder if anyone is offended though

https://www.facebook.com/PortAdelaideFC ... 023508882/
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby whufc » Thu Dec 03, 2015 4:40 am

Is it a traditional war cry??
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Re: Port Adelaide 2016

Postby woodublieve12 » Thu Dec 03, 2015 8:04 am

whufc wrote:Is it a traditional war cry??

I don't think so.. Regardless if it is or not it's irrelevant. Good on them, almost identical to what Goodes did. But since Goodes didn't do this, it's ok (so it should be)
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