Crows stage comeback
Adelaide has recorded an impressive 20-point win over Hawthorn in their AAMI Stadium clash on Saturday night
ADELAIDE has staged a stunning second-half comeback to record a gutsy 20-point win over Hawthorn at AAMI Stadium on Saturday night.
The Hawks led by five goals midway through the second quarter and threatened to run away with the game until emerging stars Patrick Dangerfield and Taylor Walker ignited the Crows in the third term.
Walker slotted three goals and Dangerfield two, as the home side piled on seven majors to Hawthorn's three to take an unlikely three-point lead into the final break.
Chance Bateman put the visitors back in front with the opening goal of the last term, but Dangerfield responded with a miraculous shot from the boundary line and a goal to Nathan van Berlo sealed the 16.9 (105) to 12.13 (85) win.
Adelaide looked incapable of winning the game in the first half.
Hawthorn's pressure was relentless and the home side appeared rattled, committing basic skill errors and struggling to clear the ball out of defence.
The Crows had few winners and were forced to introduce substitute Brodie Smith into the contest in the opening 10 minutes, after Jason Porplyzia injured his troublesome shoulder in a tackle.
However, it was the home side that finished full of running.
Brent Reilly, Bernie Vince, Andy Otten, Rory Sloane and Shaun McKernan joined Walker and Dangerfield in starting the resurgence and Adelaide found the confidence and spirit it had been lacking in the opening half.
The Hawks kept coming, but the Crows, buoyed by a vocal home crowd, celebrated the 20-year anniversary of their first-ever game with another victory over the brown and gold.
Influential players
Taylor Walker had just four possessions to half time but with the help of Dangerfield turned the game in Adelaide's favour in the third term, kicking three goals. He only had one touch in the final term- a kick to register his fourth major.
What it means
The Crows can head into the bye next weekend full of confidence, knowing their best football is good enough to match it with a team widely tipped to reach the top four this season.
Dream Team highlight
Adelaide utility Scott Stevens was a shock high-scorer, racking up 125 points for his 27 possessions and 13 marks across half-back. Shaun McKernan also showed he could be a handy investment, scoring 83 points in only his second AFL game.
The next four
Adelaide: bye, Fremantle (AAMI), Port Adelaide (AAMI), Carlton (ETIHAD)
What the coach said
Neil Craig (Adelaide)
"We made some slight changes on the night with our forward line and our ball movement, but in the end our persistence skill - and it is a skill - for such a young group… they need to remember that they've showed their cards now. With the way the defence is in the game at the moment we all need to be careful that we don't expect to play open, free-flowing football for the whole game. It's going to break open more in the second half in general terms."
Key match-up
Lance Franklin v Phil Davis
If Buddy had kicked straight it might have been a different story, but Davis walked away from the contest having at least broken even with the Hawthorn star. Franklin finished with two goals, but hurt his side by giving away five free kicks. Davis didn't follow Franklin up the ground, but still notched up 25 touches and showed courage to come back on after being cleaned up by Bateman.
Winning move
Dangerfield was forced to play almost exclusively as a forward when Porplyzia was subbed off, but his move into the midfield in the third term was pivotal. The young tyro picked up 10 possessions and kicked two goals to set up the stirring win.
Aesthetics
In contrast to Friday night's clash between Geelong and St Kilda, no one could complain about the visual appearance of this game. The Crows were scrappy early, but the second half was everything you could want in a game - high-scoring, free-flowing and above all, exciting.
Adelaide 1.3 4.5 11.7 16.9 (105)
Hawthorn 3.2 7.6 10.10 12.13 (85)
GOALS
Adelaide: Walker 4, Dangerfield 3, Henderson, Knights, Van Berlo 2, Vince, Porplyzia, McKernan
Hawthorn: Burgoyne 3, Franklin, Roughead, Young 2, Bateman, Osborne, Savage
BEST
Adelaide: Dangerfield, Stevens, Walker, Reilly, Davis, Van Berlo
Hawthorn: Mitchell, Burgoyne, Young, Rioli
INJURIES
Adelaide: Jason Porplyzia (shoulder)
Hawthorn: none
Reports: Nil
Umpires: Ryan, Meredith, Wenn
Official crowd: 42,536 at AAMI Stadium
The views in this article are those of the author and not necessarily of the club