Ken Hinkley
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Cain Corns and Ken Hinkley together.
Hello, dear Cain.
All I'm going to do is stay out of the way today.
I'm in it, Tom Morris, to find out whether Kenny's glare forces Kane to take a short step at any stage.
Let's get into it.
We'll come back through the events of Port Adelaide and the Bulldogs as we go.
But we started the Gabba.
At halftime, it felt like the Voss era would probably end Sunday or Monday.
For all that the Blues had been through, there was no pressure.
It was a wretched night to lose your clearance game entirely.
And they looked at the mercy of the Lions that it was going to be such a big number that it might just become impossible to absorb.
And then by reverse engineering, if you think about if they played their first half of the second half, our conversation would be exactly the same as it has been all year.
Instead, they play their first half as their second half and they get meritorious points for the fight, which was highly commendable.
It was highly admirable, Kenny.
How do we make sense of what transpired last night?
So the answer might be in what comes next.
What does the second half lead to?
Because coming out of the St Kilda game, that felt like rock bottom, and then they played the first half like they were at rock bottom.
So Michael Voss gave the slightest hint in his press conference that he was very forceful at halftime, and it was probably the last time that he got to be that, Kenny.
If he couldn't rouse a response with that, it was probably over, wasn't it?