ADELAIDE has romped to its biggest Showdown win in seven seasons after savaging a lacklustre Port Adelaide by 58 points in a devastating display at Adelaide Oval on Saturday.
The Crows kicked 13 goals to four in the first half to all but kill the contest en route to a 22.12 (144) to 11.20 (86) win.
It was a complete performance from the Crows, who dominated contested possession and then opened Port up on the outside, creating a feast for forwards Tom Lynch (six goals), Eddie Betts (five) and Josh Jenkins (four).
But the match also exposed serious concerns at Port Adelaide, which began to surface in its round one win over St Kilda.
Adelaide won the first half uncontested possession by 56, as it won the ball through its hard-working midfield, and then cut holes through Port on the outside.
Five talking points: Adelaide v Port Adelaide
Port midfielders Sam Gray, Brett Ebert and Travis Boak collected just nine opening-term disposals between them, as Adelaide dominated early possession and then gave excellent service to one of the most dangerous forward lines in the competition.
To three-quarter time Lynch, Betts, Jenkins and Taylor Walker had kicked 16 goals between them.
Betts and Jenkins kicked four opening-term goals between them as Adelaide kicked out to a 32-point quarter-time lead, but the real avalanche was yet to begin.
From the outer: How the fans saw it
Adelaide kicked six goals in six minutes to open the second quarter and led by 60 points when Jenkins kicked his third goal 11 minutes into the term.
Rory Laird had 16 first-half possessions across half-back and started many attacking forays, while Jenkins showed why he could become the most talked about out-of-contract player in South Australia this year.
Taylor Walker kicks a phenomenal goal! #AFLCrowsPower https://t.co/dGwEJgWucA
— AFL (@AFL) April 2, 2016
Port didn't have a match-up for the athletic big man as he led defenders up the ground and then beat them back to goal on numerous occasions.
Adelaide kicked 8.2 to to nil from 15 minutes into the first term to eight minutes into the second, as Port simply couldn’t get hold of the football. At half-time eight Power players had five disposals or fewer.
'We'll bounce back': Hinkley keeps faith in his side
The Crows' run of goals was only broken when debutant Dougal Howard snapped his first career goal over his head in the goalsquare late in the second term.
Port briefly stemmed some bleeding before the long break but the massacre continued during the third term as Adelaide added another six goals to three.
Lynch finished with six goals, 21 disposals and eight marks in a Showdown Medal-winning performance, while the Crows midfield shone and continued to show there is life after Dangerfield.
Eddie Betts nearly kicks goal of the year. #AFLCrowsPower https://t.co/Xh1FzfIsOM
— AFL (@AFL) April 2, 2016
Scott Thompson finished with 29 disposals, 15 of them contested, while Brad Crouch continued to work back to match fitness with 23 touches.
Robbie Gray (37 disposals) played a virtual lone hand for Port, while Aaron Young produced a handy cameo with four second-half goals.
The win was Crows coach Don Pyke's first as a senior coach on a day where almost everything went to plan. He said the evenness of the team performance was what pleased him most.
"We want to be a really well-rounded footy team and I thought the effort of our back half today was really pleasing," Pyke said.
"They're aided by the pressure that goes on the ball, so the mids … and our forwards, it starts with them.
"We came, we played the way we wanted to for large periods, we got the four points which was all we got, but next week's another challenge with Richmond in Melbourne."
Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley said his side was simply outplayed in all facets of the match.
He paid credit to the Crows but conceded his side had some issues that needed addressing.
"Their system in defence worked really effectively and we were poor at trying to challenge them," Hinkley said.
"They got the game on their terms and they played the game on their terms, not just in our forward 50, or in the middle of the ground, they got it in all three parts of the ground today.
"We had a really poor day today, there's no hiding from that.
"But we're going to come back and we'll bounce back and go back to training and we'll review the game really hard first and look at the things we got really wrong."
MEDICAL ROOM
Port Adelaide star Chad Wingard left the ground with an apparent hamstring strain which could rule him out of next Friday night's match against Essendon. But Power coach Ken Hinkley insists the decision to take him out of the game was only only precautionary: "Chad wanted to go back on the ground, but we're 10 goals down, we make a decision for the long term for the rest of the season and we did that," Hinkley said. The Crows had a clean bill of health. Crow Rory Laird received a heavy knock from Tom Jonas during the third term but returned to the ground to produce an impeccable performance.
NEXT UP
After round one all the talk was about where Adelaide would find a win, given the Crows' tough upcoming draw, but they arguably now head to Etihad Stadium as favourites to beat Richmond and improve to 2-1. Port hosts Essendon at Adelaide on Friday night in the glare of primetime in a fixture which should give them an opportunity to bounce back.
ADELAIDE 6.4 13.5 19.7 22.12 (144)
PORT ADELAIDE 1.2 4.8 7.12 11.20 (86)
GOALS
Adelaide: Lynch 6, Betts 5, Jenkins 4, Walker, McGovern 2, Laird, Brad Crouch, Milera
Port Adelaide: Young 4, Wines, Boak 2, Howard, Wingard, Robbie Gray
BEST
Adelaide: Lynch, Laird, Talia, Lever, Betts, Mackay, Thompson
Port Adelaide: Robbie Gray, Young, Hombsch, Wines, Pittard
INJURIES
Adelaide: Nil
Port Adelaide: Westhoff (dislocated finger), Wingard (hamstring)
Reports: Nil
Umpires: Donlon, Chamberlain, Wallace
Official crowd: 51,585 at Adelaide Oval