Tempers flare but Saints laugh last against Port; Giants demolish Tigers, Cats do a job on Eagles


St Kilda held its nerve to close out Gather Round with a gritty, season-shaping win over Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, resisting a furious late surge to hand Ross Lyon a crucial result and avoid a 1–4 start.

The Saints were the better side for much of the night but were forced to withstand a wave of Port momentum after the home side slammed on four of the last five goals of the third term.

Pumped and proud: Mattaes Phillipou celebrates a goal.AFL Photos

What had been a controlled performance suddenly turned into a scrap, the margin slashed to single digits at the final change as the Adelaide Oval crowd found its voice.

Zak Butters was at the centre of it all, dragging Port forward with relentless energy and class, while giving away cheap 50 metre penalties and getting reported for abusive language at the same time.

Amid all the drama, St Kilda refused to fold.

Instead, Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera delivered the defining performance. The classy playmaker gathered 27 disposals and kicked two goals in a display that underlined his rising influence — and carried extra edge given he could have been wearing Port colours had he chosen to leave last year. On a night where composure was everything, Wanganeen-Milera had it in spades.

St Kilda’s response in the final term was measured. When Port surged, the Saints answered. When the game threatened to break, they steadied behind the ball and controlled territory just enough to keep the Power at arm’s length.

Port had its chances, but repeated entries were repelled by a disciplined St Kilda defence that refused to give an inch in the closing stages.

In contrast, Port Adelaide and its superstar Butters showed a rare ill-disciplined side.

Zak Butters wrestles with Nasiah Wanganeen-MileraGetty Images

Butters was told by umpire Nick Foot that he had been reported for abusive language after giving away a 50 metre penalty while Mitch Owens was lining up for goal.

“I’d love to know what the language that I said, because I went up to him after the game to have a chat and he said he didn’t want to speak to me,” Butters told Seven after the game.

Lyon admitted post-match his side still has clear areas to fix, particularly around the contest.

“Tonight was like the third quarter… we could have been better, particularly the first quarter, like contest and pressure, clearance work,” Lyon said.

“They really got right on top around the contest and ground ball… it was like minus-four. In those conditions, I just thought that was really fundamental.”

The Saints coach was pleased with his side’s ability to fight, even if the performance wasn’t complete.

“I like that element of the psychology of the team, that we’re putting everything out there,” he said.

“There’s no excuses… in some ways it’s easier to come from behind, because if you fall short you’re more devastated when you’re in front and you lose.”

Lyon also highlighted the emotional resilience within his group, pointing to the story Jack Higgins, who has overcome significant personal adversity to return to the level and play his 150th game.

“When you hear the story… brain surgery… and then coming back and playing how he does, it’s pretty special,” Lyon said.

Jack Higgins celebrates his milestone with his family.AFL Photos via Getty Images

There were other contributors, too. Callum Wilkie stood tall in defence, while the Saints’ midfield, despite being beaten at times around the ball, found enough key moments late to wrestle back control.

Ultimately, it was a win built on resilience as much as polish — and one that keeps St Kilda’s season alive after a shaky opening month.

For Lyon, the focus is already shifting.

“I don’t live in emotion. I just live in a weekly cycle, try and improve,” he said.

St Kilda may still be a work in progress, but on Sunday night, they showed they have the fight to stay in the contest — both within games and across their season.