Neil Craig says he understands the high expectations Adelaide's members and supporters have for next month's finals, but he warns that the Crows are still developing."A lot of that (expectation) would be dictated by our (second) position on the premiership table, so the natural reaction is to say everything's hunky dory, but it's not," Craig said on Friday after his players had completed their preparations for Saturday night's showdown against Port Adelaide at AAMI Stadium."We haven't been tested yet in the finals, our forward-line entry needs a lot of work to be done, and just our ability to play together as a team for a long period and to be exposed to a whole range of situations, you don't get that until …"Let's look at the team we're playing. Port have had that for the last four years and been able to stand up to it. We're a long way away from that, and only time will tell. The picture we have in our head is that it won't happen in six to 12 months, it'll take longer than that."If you look at the Brisbane Lions, their ability to play in four grand finals and win three of those as a non-Victorian club, you just start to realise how unbelieveable that is. It probably puts them as the best team ever."Port have been up there for four years, and they've won 16-17 games a year, year after year. That's success, that is success. We as a club have got to understand how good 'good' is, and we're nowhere near that sort of category. Time will tell."Craig said the Crows were expecting 'finals-type footy' against Port, and the dewy conditions would help ensure it was 'tough, hard footy - in close, exciting'.And when asked whether the Crows would try to play to their strengths rather than look for any Port weaknesses, he said: "We tend to back ourselves in, but that's not being stupid. We're very much aware of what their strengths are and as long as it doesn't disrupt the way we want to play we'll look at that."But we like to think the sort of game we're trying to develop at the moment doesn't require huge change to handle a lot of things."Not surprisingly, Craig named centre half-forward Ken McGregor, centre half-back Nathan Bock and full back Ben Rutten as Adelaide's the three options to stand Pot centre half-forward Warren Tredrea."Any one of those three would be our first port of call, and hopefully we don't have to go much further than that," he said. "Nathan has done some good jobs and it's a possibility he'll do it. He stood Warren last year, last game, and Nathan would say he didn't do that well, but you don't throw that out the door because of one situation."It'll be about the best balance and best distribution of the back six. (Nathan) Bassett could end up on him, you never know."Craig said he thought Port utility Byron Pickett was 'unlucky' to receive a two-match suspension this week."Not that I sat there and analysed it," he said. "I saw it live then I saw one replay, and I thought he was unlucky."