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Showdown (AFL)
Adelaide-Port Adelaide derby in Australian rules football
Adelaide-Port Adelaide derby in Australian rules football
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| image | Variety Showdown Trophy (2025 Adelaide vs. Port Adelaide).jpg | |
| caption | Variety Showdown Trophy in 2025 | |
| team1 | ||
| team1logo | Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg | |
| team2 | ||
| team2logo | Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg | |
| title | Showdown | |
| total | 58 | |
| series | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg | 15px]] 30 wins |
| [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg | 15px]] 28 wins | |
| city or region | Adelaide, South Australia | |
| firstmeeting | 20 April 1997 | |
| (Adelaide 72–83 Port Adelaide) | ||
| mostrecent | 26 July 2025 | |
| (Port Adelaide 35–133 Adelaide) | ||
| nextmeeting | 1 May 2026 | |
| trophy | Variety Showdown Shield | |
| stadiums | Football Park (1997–2013) | |
| Adelaide Oval (2014–present) | ||
| largestvictory | (98 points) | |
| 26 July 2025 | ||
| longeststreak | (7 wins) | |
| 6 August 2000 - 8 May 2004 | ||
| currentstreak | (2) | |
| 10 May 2025 - present |
(Adelaide 72–83 Port Adelaide) (Port Adelaide 35–133 Adelaide) Adelaide Oval (2014–present) 26 July 2025 6 August 2000 - 8 May 2004 10 May 2025 - present
The Showdown is the Australian rules football derby played by the two Australian Football League (AFL) teams from South Australia, the Adelaide and Port Adelaide football clubs. The first AFL premiership fixture between the two clubs took place on 20 April 1997.
The South Australian Brewing Company, makers of West End Beers, were the first sponsors of the game and decided that the "Showdown" would be an appropriate name as a promotional opportunity for games between these two clubs, since it was the first time two South Australian teams had played against each other in the AFL.
The rivalry between Adelaide and Port Adelaide is often considered the best, and most bitter, in the Australian Football League with Malcolm Blight, Australian Football Hall of Fame Legend, stating in 2009 that "there is no doubt it is the greatest rivalry in football." The head-to-head count between the two clubs only include AFL premiership matches.
Background
The Showdown's intense rivalry can be traced back to Port Adelaide's pre-existing rivalries within the SANFL, particularly Norwood.
Just as the more faithful amongst the tribes of the East feel it incumbent on them to pay a periodical visit to Mecca, so do lovers of the king of winter games feel it almost an essential duty on their part to journey to the Adelaide Oval on the Queen's Accession Day, in sunshine or rain, to witness a trial of strength between those great and old rivals the Port Adelaide and Norwood clubs.
The Norwood–Port Adelaide rivalry began in 1878 when the two clubs first played one another; however, it was not until 1882 that the Norwood–Port Adelaide rivalry grew bitter. That year Port Adelaide's first win over Norwood, held at Adelaide Oval, was controversially overruled by the league, with a follow-up game overshadowed by a misunderstanding at the gate which almost prevented Norwood players accessing the venue.
After Federation, coinciding with the time that Port Adelaide was becoming the dominant force in the SANFL, the notion of '''Port Adelaide against The Rest''' became a key theme for football in the state. This notion was reinforced by a game between Port Adelaide and a composite state side at the end of 1914 after Port Adelaide had completed a perfect season winning both the state premiership and the Champions of Australia for the fourth time.
| Venue: Jubilee Oval |
|---|
In the match between Port Adelaide and the composite state side some of South Australia's best players took part including Magarey Medallists Tom Leahy (North Adelaide), Frank Barry (South Adelaide) and Dave Low (West Torrens). Whilst South Australia started the game well and entered the quarter time break with the lead, Port Adelaide's system and fitness overwhelmed South Australia kicking 6 goals 5 behinds to nothing in the last quarter to win the game by 58 points.
During the 1960s, West Adelaide legend Doug Thomas was quoted as saying that "If I was left to choose sides between Port Adelaide or the Soviet Union, I would join the communists from Russia every time."
The Showdown rivalry also significantly draws upon the bitter, winner take all, competition for the two South Australian licences to join the AFL in the 1980s and early 1990s.
First South Australian AFL licence
In 1982 the SANFL approached the VFL in regards to entering two sides, Port Adelaide and longtime major rival , in the Victorian league. This action was also taken by WAFL club East Perth in 1980. All approaches were ignored by the VFL at the time with the reason given by Jack Hamilton being that the VFL clubs thought that one or two SANFL teams would end up being too strong later admitting that they also wanted to continue to poach the states best players, which would soon include Craig Bradley and Stephen Kernahan in 1986. 1982 also saw the first instance of the VFL expanding beyond Melbourne and Geelong with the South Melbourne Football Club being relocated to Sydney. The Port Adelaide Football Club's annual report from late 1982 showed that the failure of the attempts made by South Australian and West Australian clubs to enter the VFL significantly impacted the club's understanding of its future. From this point Port Adelaide restructured the club in regards to economics, public relations and on-field performance for an attempt to enter the league in 1990. There was genuine feeling that failure to do this would result in the club ceasing to exist in the future. In 1985 Port Adelaide registered itself as a national football club. Sentiment at this time amongst the direction of Australian rules football in South Australia was succinctly encapsulated by a Michael Robinson article in the 1985 Football Times Yearbook that previewed the SANFL's upcoming season. In that article Robinson wrote about the disappointment of the equal gate sharing of match takings enforced by the SANFL for the upcoming season with the stronger South Australian clubs propping up ailing clubs such as Woodville.
The following year the SANFL registered the name "Adelaide Football Club" in 1986 but ended up deciding against entering a team into the VFL. In 1986 Norwood Football Club made an independent approach to the VFL with entry into the league discussed in great detail but these discussions ultimately failed to materialise. In 1987 the West Coast Eagles and Brisbane Bears were admitted to the Victorian Football League leaving South Australia as the only mainland state without representation in the VFL.
By 1989 seven out of ten SANFL clubs were recording losses and the combined income of the SANFL and WAFL had dropped to 40% of that of the VFL. The 1989 Port Adelaide annual report and November newsletter contrasted with the outlook of other SANFL and WAFL clubs. After its demolition of in the 1989 SANFL Grand Final holding its opposition to a single goal, the club claimed a profit in the annual report and hinted at its intentions the following year in the club newsletter by saying Port Adelaide was "far better than their nearest rival in the SANFL". Top Right: An injunction was won in the Supreme Court of South Australia preventing Port Adelaide from continuing its discussions with the AFL after 12 August 1990. Bottom: Cartoon by Michael Atchison for the Adelaide Advertiser on 1 August 1990 equating the tensions between the SANFL and Port Adelaide over the latter's attempt to join the AFL with the then concurrent Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.}} During early 1990 the SANFL had decided to wait three years before making any further decision. Frustrated with lack of progress, Port Adelaide were having secret negotiations in the town of Quorn for entry in 1991. A practice match organised by Port Adelaide and on 25 February at Football Park attracted at over 30,000 spectators and illustrated the potential of a South Australian side in the newly renamed national competition. Around the same time AFL was also seeking Norwood to join the national competition in 1990. However Norwood would eventually side with the SANFL after seeing the media reaction to Port Adelaide's attempts.
When the knowledge of Port Adelaide Football Club's negotiations to gain an AFL licence were made public, the other SANFL clubs saw it as an act of treachery. Subsequently, the SANFL clubs, led by Glenelg and Norwood, urged Justice Olssen to make an injunction against the bid, which he agreed to. The SANFL promptly created a composite team to beat Port Adelaide's bid. The Adelaide Football Club gained what was very close to being Port Adelaide's licence to the AFL and began playing in 1991. The new Adelaide club would adopt the name "the Crows" after the states inhabitants often used the nickname "Crow-eaters". During this time the SANFL began suing people involved with Port Adelaide, including people volunteering in unpaid positions, with the AFL quickly stepping in to guarantee the protection of the club and associated people. In 2014 during an interview with the Adelaide Advertiser, Ross Oakley revealed that "In desperation to force (the SANFL's) hand...we began dealing directly with two powerhouse clubs of the SANFL, Norwood and Port Adelaide...we were changing the league's name to AFL – and we could not go without a team from Adelaide."
| Venue: Football Park | Crowd: 50,589 |
|---|
The front runners for the coaching job at the newly created club were both involved in the last SANFL game played in South Australia before the advent of a local AFL team, the 1990 SANFL Grand Final. In that game Port Adelaide, coached by John Cahill defeated Glenelg, coached by Graham Cornes, by 15 points. Graham Cornes ended up being selected to coach Adelaide for the 1991 AFL season. Cornes compiled a club list of the best players from South Australia, with few originating from other states, in what was almost a state side in the first year. Chris McDermott, captain of Glenelg in the 1990 SANFL Grand Final, was designated as the Crows inaugural captain. Despite Port Adelaide being SANFL premiers in 1990, only 5 players from the team became part of the Adelaide squad of 52. Those players being Bruce Abernethy, Simon Tregenza, David Brown, Darren Smith and Scott Hodges, with the last three joining Port Adelaide's inaugural AFL squad in 1997.
In 1992 Port Adelaide played a young Adelaide side in a pre-season match at Football Park on February 1 in what was the first meeting between the two clubs.
Second South Australian AFL licence

The admission of Adelaide to the AFL had a devastating impact on the league's attendances with the SANFL recording a 45% drop between 1990 and 1993. Port Adelaide defied this trend of falling SANFL attendances recording an increase of 13% from 1990 to 1993.
In 1994 the AFL announced that South Australia would receive a licence for a second team based in the state. The major bids competing with Port Adelaide this time around were from merger club proposals in Norwood-Sturt, and Glenelg-South. On 15 June the SANFL handed down a report recommending the second license go to a team formed from the amalgamation of two clubs.
On 16 June it was reported in The Age by Stephen Linnell that "the League's preference was for a single, established club to join the league". The final tenders were submitted to the SANFL on 14 September 1994 including Port Adelaide's second application, Norwood–Sturt's merged club bid with the remaining application coming from Woodville–West Torrens.
On 2 October Port Adelaide won the 1994 SANFL Grand Final, its fifth in seven years. On 13 December Port Adelaide won the tender for the second SA license over its various state rivals; however, it was prevented from entering the competition before 1996 as stipulated in the Adelaide license agreement. In 1995 after an SANFL game at Football Park the Adelaide Crows began carrying out a training session which was interrupted by a large horde of Port Adelaide supporters chanting "We're coming to get you". Adelaide coach Robert Shaw was the only Adelaide official to confront the horde. In 1996 Port Adelaide was left to wait again as a vacancy was required in the league.
It was announced on 27 October 1995 that Port Adelaide would be participating in the 1997 AFL season, one season later than initially planned and seven years after the club's first failed bid in 1990.
Other contributing factors to rivalry
Along with the circumstances of the two clubs entries into the national competition are numerous other factors that fuel the rivalry.
Lingering resentment

]] Many supporters of traditionally strong South Australian clubs other than Port Adelaide, such as Norwood, Sturt, Glenelg and North Adelaide, were left frustrated that Port Adelaide were the only SANFL club to make the transition to the AFL.
Player recruitment
Due to the inherent nature of being the only two South Australian clubs in the competition, when a player seeks to move to the state both clubs often vigorously compete for the players signature. This also applies during the AFL draft when both clubs will jostle for position to gain local talent. Two notable examples of this characteristic were the bidding wars between the two clubs for Steven Motlop and Jordan Dawson. Both players in their first Showdown appearances, Motlop for Port Adelaide after leaving Geelong and Dawson for Adelaide after leaving Sydney, kicked match winning goals for their new clubs.
Guernsey issues
In 2005 for the AFL's Heritage Round, Adelaide decided to wear an iteration of the South Australian state guernsey, with the 'AFC' monogram instead of the 'SA' monogram, which was originally worn in 1930. During the same match Port Adelaide were blocked by the AFL from wearing the club's Prison Bar guernsey.
In February 2014, Adelaide announced that they would wear the South Australian state guernsey in the first Showdown at Adelaide Oval. This left Port Adelaide fans particularly aggrieved as many of their greats had worn the South Australia guernsey in the past. Port Adelaide released a statement at the time saying that the state guernsey was "a symbol of South Australian football unification, not division". Others commented that it would be misappropriation to use a State guernsey for a club based competition with players who came from interstate being forced to wear a symbol of South Australia.
Shortly after unveiling the guernsey, Adelaide were denied permission to wear it by the SANFL. Port Adelaide meanwhile were granted permission by the AFL to wear their traditional "Prison Bar" guernsey for the only Showdown in 2020, as part of the club's 150th anniversary celebrations. The club requested it wear the guernsey in all future matches between the teams, which was rejected by Collingwood and the AFL. The club negotiated an agreement with Collingwood to return the guernsey for the 2023 home Showdown match; an agreement which has since been extended to include all future home showdown matches in both the AFL and AFL Women's competitions.
Notable matches
Round 4, 1997
The build up to the inaugural Showdown was described by Malcolm Blight as being akin to a Grand Final. Having won their first match in the AFL against Geelong the week before, a pumped up Port jumped the Crows in the first half and managed to hold on in the final quarter as the Crows mounted a comeback. Port Adelaide eventually defeated Adelaide by 11 points. The game notably also featured a fight between Port's Scott Cummings and Adelaide's Rod Jameson. {{cquote
2: Rintoul
1: Standfield, Vardy
2: Breuer, Downsborough
1: Burgoyne, Francou, Wilson
Brownlow Votes
Round 5, 2002
The round 5, 2002 Showdown was the second time in a row Port Adelaide had won by 8 points. After the game about six players from both sides coincidentally came across each other at the Ramsgate Hotel in Henley Beach. During the match Josh Carr had been tagging Mark Ricciuto holding him to only 6 kicks (for comparison Ricciuto averaged 13 over his career). When the groups of players met at the Ramsgate Hotel, the two aforementioned players started an argument, and with the assistance of alcohol, a brawl between the two groups broke out. No one was badly injured. The publicity of this incident resulted in consecutive Showdown crowds in excess of 50,000 at Football Park. John Reid, former head of Adelaide Football Operations, was required (like his Port Adelaide counterpart) by the AFL to provide his players with a formal lecture regarding how the incident was unacceptable which upon completion he famously quipped "And I hope you won the fight!”. (7:10pm) 1: Bickley, Bode, Goodwin, Stenglein 2: Burgoyne, Wanganeen 1: Cockatoo-Collins, Guerra, James, Kingsley, Lade, Poulton, Tredrea Brownlow Votes
Round 7, 2004
Showdown XV is memorable for the magnitude of the upset that Adelaide pulled off and the fact that it ended Port Adelaide's 7 game winning streak in Showdowns. At the start of the game Port Adelaide had won 5 of its first 6 games whilst Adelaide had only managed one. The gambling markets had Adelaide at $5 to win the match, the longest odds offered in any Showdown at the time. Port Adelaide entered the first break with a 6-point lead but Adelaide coach Gary Ayres gave his side a spray and subsequently ran away with the game to cause arguably the biggest upset in Showdown history. 2: Ebert 1: Burgoyne, Cassisi, Cornes, Brogan 3: Carey, McGregor 2: Jericho 1: Edwards, Welsh, Bock, Massie, Stenglein Brownlow Votes
2005 semi-final
In the 2005 AFL Finals Series, Adelaide and Port Adelaide met in a semi-final, the first time, and thus far only time in their history they had played against each other in a finals game. The stakes of a showdown had never been higher and South Australia experienced an unprecedented high anticipation to the game in the week leading up to the match. The match was known in the buildup as "The Ultimate Showdown". The first half of the game was an intense, defensive contest with the Crows leading 4.7 (31) to 3.6 (24) at the main break. Tempers almost boiled over in the second quarter after Adelaide ruckman Rhett Biglands was stretchered from the ground after a Byron Pickett shirtfront. However Biglands would return in the second half and the incident would eventually be deemed legal. After half time, Adelaide thrashed Port Adelaide outscoring them by 76 points cruising home for an 83-point win, ending Port Adelaide's season. This remains as the only final played between the two sides and the only final the two would ever play at Football Park. 2005 was also the only time one of the clubs had defeated the other side in 3 Showdowns in the same AFL season. 3: Goodwin, Perrie 2: McGregor 1: Hentschel, Edwards, McLeod, Ricciuto, Rutten, Shirley
Round 3, 2008
Showdown 24 is often cited as the most physical meeting of the two clubs. Prior to Showdown 24 Port Adelaide had lost their two opening games of the 2008 AFL season and, coupled with their disastrous 2007 AFL Grand Final, Mark Williams demanded throughout the week at training leading up to the game that his players bring tough and physical brand of football to their next match. Early in the game, and a sign of things to come, Matt Thomas knocked out Nathan Bassett. Not long after Luke Jericho was bruised after a heavy collision with Port Adelaide ruckman Dean Brogan. In the last quarter Adelaide had four injured players on the bench resulting in Port Adelaide gaining all the momentum, kicking the last three goals of the match, with Daniel Motlop bringing the margin to 6 points with two minutes remaining. Despite this Adelaide managed to just hold on, despite losing a significant number of players, and limp to the siren for a win. The final 6-point margin was, at the time, the smallest in Showdown history and the result evened the ledger for the first time since 2000. 2: Vince, Goodwin 1: Edwards, McLeod, Burton, Griffin 2: C. Cornes 1: Motlop, Rodan, Boak, Brogan Brownlow Votes
Round 19, 2013
In 2013 Port Adelaide beat Adelaide in the final Showdown to be played at Football Park. The game was also memorable for Port Adelaide's late final quarter charge, coming back from 20 points in the last 6 minutes of the game. This included a goal by Angus Monfries from outside 50 that landed just in front of the Port Adelaide's point line, bounced at right angles and went through for a goal. Chad Wingard kicked his fifth goal in the last 28 seconds to hand Port Adelaide the lead and win. Port Adelaide winning this match meant the club had won the first, last and most Showdowns played at Football Park.{{cquote|"Monfries has kicked a goal, unbelievable! That makes up for Robbie Gray in the first quarter...It's gone at right angles, right angles Tim!
I haven't seen anything like that, if Pythagoras is watching, explain that!"
2: Petrenko, Wright 1: Grigg, Henderson, Brown 3: Gray, Hartlett 2: Schulz, Monfries 1: Butcher, Colquhoun Brownlow Votes
Round 2, 2014
The round 2, 2014 Showdown on 29 March 2014 saw the first Showdown played at Adelaide Oval along with the first game of Australian rules football at the venue since its extensive redevelopment. Port Adelaide led from the start, with Matthew Lobbe kicking the first goal in an Adelaide Oval Showdown but Adelaide mounted a comeback and claimed the lead briefly in the third. After the halfway mark of the third quarter, Port Adelaide ran away with the game winning by 54 points. 3: Schulz 2: Gray, Wines, White 1: Ebert, Hartlett, Boak, Butcher, Lobbe, Westhoff 3: Grigg 1: Smith, Podsiadly, Douglas, Kerridge, Johnston Brownlow Votes
Round 16, 2015
The round 16, 2015 Showdown on 19 July 2015 had added significance due to the recent death of Crows senior coach Phil Walsh, who spent ten years as an assistant in two stints with Port Adelaide, including their 2004 premiership. The game lived up to expectation, with the Crows holding on desperately in the last quarter to win by three points, the closest margin in a Showdown. The game was played in front of 54,468, the largest attendance at the venue since the 1973 SANFL Grand Final. Scott Thompson was awarded the one off Phillip Walsh Medal, presented by Walsh's daughter Quinn. 2: Lobbe, Boak 1: Monfries 2: Cameron, Lynch 1: Crouch, Laird, Henderson, Martin, Douglas, Knight, Betts, Wright, Thompson Brownlow Votes
Round 8, 2018
The round 8, 2018 Showdown held on 12 May 2018 was played at Adelaide Oval in front of a home-crowd of 50,967. Despite Adelaide leading by 21 points at half-time, Port Adelaide managed to cut Adelaide's margin back to single figures with 5 minutes left in the third quarter. Robbie Gray kicked 2 goals late (his fourth and fifth of the quarter) to give Port Adelaide the lead at three-quarter time. The final quarter was largely played in Adelaide's forward half but they could not trouble the scoreboard. With less than three minutes to go, the game looked all-but over, but that was not the case. Adelaide managed three goals in little over 2 minutes to regain the lead with 42 seconds on the clock through a Mitch McGovern set shot. One last turn would see off-season Port Adelaide recruit Steven Motlop kick the winning goal with 21 seconds left. The celebration of Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley at the conclusion of the game, where he referenced the end of the Adelaide's five Showdown win streak, garnered significant media attention. Robbie Gray claimed a third Showdown Medal for his best on ground display. He managed 6 goals (5 of which in the third quarter). 2: Wingard, Ryder 1: S.Gray, Motlop, Boak, Powell-Pepper 2: Walker, Ellis-Yolmen, McGovern 1: Atkins, Jenkins, Douglas, Seedsman, Lynch Brownlow Votes
Round 20, 2018
Showdown 45 was a tight contest for the entire game apart from the opening where the Crows kicked the first three goals of the match. Second gamer Kane Farrell kicked three goals to close out the first interval with the quarter time scores level and the margin thereafter never again reaching three goals. Late in the final quarter Ollie Wines had the opportunity to seal the game with a set shot from a tight angle but his banana kick was ineffective. Minutes after Wines shot, Josh Jenkins snapped and his score was referred to the goal review umpire to clarify whether it hit the post. The score was quickly ruled a goal by the goal review umpire despite Josh Jenkins calling his teammates to set up for a kick out. He later stated his doubt in a post game interview. Robbie Gray was awarded a record fourth Showdown Medal becoming just the third player, after Graham Johncock and Shaun Burgoyne, to win the honour coming from the losing side. After the match Port Adelaide challenged the AFL Score Review system questioning the short amount of time taken for the review (23 seconds) and the lack of camera angles available to the umpires. The AFL affirmed the decision that it was a goal.
2: Sloane 1: Walker, Betts, Murphy, Gallucci, Greenwood, Lynch, Doedee, Crouch 3: Farrell 2: Boak 1: Byrne-Jones Brownlow Votes
Round 3, 2022
Showdown 51 was the first edition of the fixture to be played on Friday night, the AFL's marquee time-slot, although this match partially overlapped with a match between Melbourne and Essendon that was played simultaneously that night and was not broadcast free-to-air nationally. Entering the match both Adelaide and Port Adelaide were winless having lost their first two games. In the lead up to the game Adelaide director Mark Ricciuto publicly noted, regarding his players, that "They can't kick, they can't handball, they can't kick a goal, they've given away free kicks, they really can't do anything worse.” Also during the lead up to the game Kane Cornes called for Todd Marshall to be dropped from Port Adelaide's AFL side. Marshall would go on to kick a career best five goals during the match. Two minutes before the game ended Travis Boak had the opportunity to push the margin to 7 points but missed his shot, registering a behind and leaving the margin at two points. In the last minute of the game a late high contact free kick was paid to Lachlan Murphy against Port Adelaide's Sam Mayes approximately 45m out from goal. Murphy was unable to take the kick and the set shot was given to Jordan Dawson meaning that a kick after the siren would be required for Adelaide to win the game. The kick looked like it was heading straight for a behind until it swung left very late, going through for a goal. Dawson's goal gave the Crows their first win after the siren since Rod Jameson kicked the winner in 1991 against Fitzroy after the siren to win the game. This was also the first time that a Showdown had been decided after the siren. Dawson – 2 Schoenberg, Sholl, Rachele, McHenry, Cook – 1 2 – Mayes, Georgiades 1 – Motlop, Drew, Lycett, Frederick Brownlow Votes
Results
Showdown Results (AFL)
The two clubs sometimes meet in preseason fixtures, such as the first meeting between the two clubs in 1992; however, these are not official Showdowns and do not contribute to the official statistics of the fixture. While the AFL draw is not a complete double round robin it is designed each year to include two Showdowns in recognition of its significance and gate drawing power. For the 2020 season only, there was only one Showdown due to the premiership season being shortened to 17 rounds due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
|- style=";background:#ccf;font-size: 110%" | | Year | Date |Timeslot | Rd | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Score | Ground | Crowd | Result/Winner |M |HRT |H2H |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 1 | 20/4 | Sun 3:10 | 4 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (1996-1998).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 11.6 (72) | 47,256 !11 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 2 | 10/8 | Sun 3:10 | 19 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 9.4 (58) | 45,498 !7 !W | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 3 |19/4 |Sun 2:10 | 4 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (1996-1998).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 8.16 (64) | 41,476 !9 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 4 | 9/8 | Sun 3:20 | 19 | [[File:AFL_Port_Adelaide_Away_50_Icon.jpg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 10.10 (70) | 46,405 !74 !W | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 5 |2/5 |Sun 2:10 | 6 | [[File:AFL_Port_Adelaide_Away_50_Icon.jpg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 12.15 (87) | 45,585 !28 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 6 | 22/8 |Sun 2:10 | 21 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (clash 1999-2005).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 9.14 (68) | 42,669 !24 !W | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 7 | 23/4 |Sun 1:40 | 7 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 13.13 (91) | 41,173 !7 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 8 | 6/8 |Sun 2:10 | 22 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 14.8 (92) | 42,659 !47 !L | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 9 | 15/4 |Sun 1:40 | 3 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 13.10 (88) | 40,296 !65 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 10 | 5/8 |Sun 1:40 | 18 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (clash 1999-2005).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 15.9 (99) | 49,846 !8 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 11 | 27/4 | Sat 7:10 | 5 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 12.10 (82) | 49,513 !8 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 12 | 18/8 |Sun 2:10 | 20 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (clash 1999-2005).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 11.10 (76) !8 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 13 | 26/4 | Sat 7:10 | 5 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 9.12 (66) !12 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 14 | 31/8 |Sun 1:10 | 22 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (clash 1999-2005).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 12.6 (78) | 48,131 !16 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 15 | 8/5 | Sat 7:10 | 7 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 13.9 (87) | 44,733 !32 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 16 | 29/8 |Sun 12:40 | 22 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide |9.6 (60) | 45,473 !25 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 17 | 10/4 |Sun 12:40 | 3 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.8 (56) | 44,807 !68 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 18 | 13/8 | Sat 7:10 | 20 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (heritage 2005).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 12.9 (81) | 45,199 !7 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 19 | 10/9 | Sat 7:00 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |5.10 (40) !83 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 20 | 6/5 | Sat 7:10 | 6 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.5 (53) | 42,723 !50 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 21 | 27/8 |Sun 12:40 | 21 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (2006-2008).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 11.15 (81) | 41,549 !14 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 22 | 14/4 | Sat 2:40 | 3 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.15 (63) | 36,959 !24 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 23 | 4/8 | Sat 7:10 | 18 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 10.5 (65) | 42,335 !8 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 24 | 6/4 | Sun 4:10 | 3 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (1997-2009).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 11.13 (79) | 45,524 !6 !W | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 25 | 20/7 | Sun 2:40 | 16 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (2006-2008).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 11.14 (80) !12 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 26 | 2/5 | Sat 7:10 | 6 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (clash 2008-2009).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 12.7 (79) | 41,558 !26 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 27 | 26/7 | Sun 4:10 | 17 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 9.8 (62) | 46,859 !70 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 28 | 1/5 | Sat 2:40 | 6 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 10.14 (74) | 40,371 !23 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 29 | 25/7 | Sun 4:10 | 17 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 9.15 (69) | 36,788 !19 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 30 | 16/4 | Sat 7:10 | 4 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 9.12 (66) | 33,143 !32 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 31 | 31/7 | Sun 4:10 | 19 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 11.13 (79) | 40,586 !32 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 32 | 29/4 | Sun 4:10 | 5 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 14.7 (91) | 41,649 !19 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 33 | 7/7 | Sat 7:10 | 15 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.10 (58) | 34,829 !58 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 34 | 14/4 | Sun 4:10 | 3 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 16.13 (109) | 40,707 !9 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 35 | 4/8 | Sun 2:50 | 19 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 15.13 (103) | 43,368 !4 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 36 | 29/3 | Sat 4:15 | 2 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 11.7 (73) !54 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 37 | 29/6 | Sun 3:40 | 15 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 10.16 (76) !23 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 38 | 3/5 | Sun 4:10 | 5 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 13.13 (91) | 49,735 !24 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 39 | 19/7 | Sun 2:50 | 16 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 17.11 (113) !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 40 | 2/4 |Sat 1:15 | 2 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 11.20 (86) !58 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 41 | 20/8 | Sat 7:10 | 22 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 14.10 (94) |49,541 !15 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |42 |8/4 | Sat 7:10 |3 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 12.11 (83) !17 !L | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |43 |6/8 | Sun 4:10 |20 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 7.4 (46) | 45,028 !84 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |44 |12/5 | Sat 4:40 |8 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 14.6 (90) ! 5 ! L | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |45 |4/8 | Sat 4:05 |20 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 14.9 (93) ! L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 87%;" |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |46 |11/5 | Sat 7:10 |8 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 9.14 (68) | 49,675 ! 20 ! W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 87%;" |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |47 |6/7 | Sat 4:05 |16 | [[File:AFL_2019_Adelaide_Indigenous_Icon.jpg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 5.14 (44) !57 !L |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 87%;" |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |48 |13/6 | Sat 7:10 |2 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide |5.5 (35) !75 !W | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 49 |8/5 | Sat 7:10 | 8 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]]Adelaide | 5.8 (38) | 43,069 !49 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |50 |7/8 | Sat 7:10 | 21 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide |7.9 (51) |14,376 !4 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |51 |1/4 | 3 |[[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |13.14 (92) |39,190 !4 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |52 |20/8 | Sat 7:00 | 23 |[[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide |7.13 (55) !56 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |53 |1/4 | Sat 7:00 | 3 |[[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |13.8 (86) |48,962 !31 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |54 |29/7 | Sat 7:10 | 20 |[[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |9.11 (65) !47 !L | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |55 |2/5 | 8 |[[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |5.18 (48) !30 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |56 | 17/8 | Sat 7:00 | 23 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide |8.10 (58) !22 !W | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |57 | 10/5 | Sat 7:40 | 9 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |12.12 (84) !5 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |58 | 26/07 | Sat 7:40 | 20 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |5.5 (35) |46,018 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |59 | 1/05 | Fri 7:40 | 8 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | | | | ! | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |60 | TBC | TBC | 16 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | | [[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | | | | ! |
Showdown Results (AFLW)
|- style=";background:#ccf;font-size: 110%" | | Year | Date |Timeslot | Rd | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Score | Ground | Crowd | Result/Winner |M |HRT |H2H |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 1 | 30/9 | 6 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 0.3 (3) | Adelaide Oval !60 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 2 | 2/9 | Sat 2:35 | 1 |[[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (women's clash).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |4.4 (28) | Norwood Oval |8,722 !30 !- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 3 | 31/8 | Sat 7:15 | 1 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide |5.5 (35) |Alberton Oval !14 !- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | 4 | 24/10 | 11 |[[File:Adelaide Football Club Colours.svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 6.9 (45) | Norwood Oval |5,434 ! 7 ! L
Showdown Results (SANFL)
|- style=";background:#ccf;font-size: 110%" | | Year | Date |Timeslot | Rd | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Score | Ground | Crowd | Result/Winner |M |HRT |H2H |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |1 | 5/4 | Sun 2:10 | 5 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 13.9 (87) | Clare Oval !45 !W |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |2 | 26/7 | Sat 2:10 | 14 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 7.12 (54) | Alberton Oval !52 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |3 | 17/5 | Sat 2:10 | 7 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 15.9 (99) | Balaklava Oval | 2,034 !35 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |4 | 28/6 | Sat 2:10 | 11 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 10.9 (69) | Alberton Oval | 4,864 !20 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |5 | 2/4 | Sun 1:40 | 2 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 10.14 (74) | Mannum Oval | 2,323 !30 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |6 | 31/7 | Sat 2:10 | 18 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 12.7 (79) | Alberton Oval | 2,289 !25 !- | |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |7 | 29/4 | Sun 1:10 | 4 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 8.11 (59) | Woodville Oval | 1,348 !31 !W |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |8 | 8/7 | Sat 2:40 | 12 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 8.6 (54) | 2,235 !58 !W |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |9 | 31/3 | Sat 2:40 | 1 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 4.9 (33) | 2,451 !style="background:Gold;"|95 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |10 | 15/7 | Sun 1:40 | 14 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.12 (60) | Kadina Oval | !56 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |11 | 26/7 | Sat 2:10 | 7 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 16.9 (105) | Alberton Oval !52 !W |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |12 | 13/7 | Sat 2:40 | 13 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 10.9 (69) | Port Pirie Oval | 3,460 !30 !L |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |13 | 31/8 | Sat 7:05 | [[File:Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2014-2019).png|16x16px]] Adelaide | 8.7 (55) | Adelaide Oval !30 !L |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" | |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |14 | 8/5 | Sat 4:05 | 6 | [[File:Adelaide_Football_Club_colours_(SANFL).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 10.13 (73) | 1,582 !14 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |15 | 7/8 | Sat 4:05 | 16 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 10.9 (69) | !13 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |16 | 4/1 | Sat 4:10 | 1 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.13 (61) | !62 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |17 | 20/8 | Sat 3:20 | 19 | [[File:Adelaide_Football_Club_colours_(SANFL).svg|16x16px]] Adelaide | 10.12 (72) | ! style="background:#ffffa6" |3 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |18 | 1/4 | Sat 3:10 | 1 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 6.10 (46) | !78 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |19 | 7/7 | Sun 2:10 | 15 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 2.15 (27) | !69 !- |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |20 | 2/5 | Sat 3:20 | 5 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 8.13 (61) | !42 !W | |- |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |21 | 17/8 | Sat 3:20 | 18 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 6.11 (47) | !77 !W |- style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |22 | 10/5 | Sat 3:10 | 6 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 5.13 (43) | !45 !W |-style="background:#fff;font-size: 80%;" |23 |27/7 |Sat 4:00 |15 | [[File:Port Adelaide Football Club colours (SANFL 2002-).svg|16x16px]] Port Adelaide | 12.7 (79) | !15 !W
[[Showdown Medal]]
The Showdown Medal is the medal awarded to the player adjudged best on ground in the Showdown AFL match.
Attendances and timeslots
The Showdown has the highest average attendances of all intrastate derby matches.
In the 45 Showdowns to 2018, a total of 2,017,918 people have attended the matches: an average attendance per match of 44,893.
The record attendance in a Showdown was 53,698 in Showdown XLII (round 3, 2017, a Port Adelaide home match). The lowest attendance was 2,240 in Showdown XLVIII (round 2, 2020, a Port Adelaide home match), due to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic at the time. Showdown XXV (Round 16, 2008, a Port Adelaide home match), which drew a crowd of 31,662, is the lowest attended Showdown that was not impacted by COVID-19.
A total of 1,053,674 people have attended Adelaide's 23 home Showdowns (including the 2005 Semi Final), an average of 45,812. Their attendances have ranged from 40,296 (Showdown IX) to 51,140 (Showdown XIII).
A total of 966,484 people have attended Port Adelaide's 23 home Showdowns, an average of 42,021. Their attendances range from 2,240 (Showdown XLVIII) to 53,698 (Showdown XLII).
Minor round fixturing
Due to the length of the AFL premiership season requiring five double up matches and the commercial strength of the Showdown there have always been two Showdown's fixtured for the minor round, with the exception of 2020 which saw only one Showdown scheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Generally the gap between the two Showdown fixtures is maximised to preserve the games reverence.
| Duration between fixtures |
|---|
| Within minor round |
| Longest turnaround |
| Between seasons |
| Longest turnaround |
Highest attendances
! # ! width=45 | Crowd ! Year ! Date ! Rd ! Hosting club ! Ground |- style="background:#fff;" |42 | 8/4 | 3 | Port Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |39 | 19/7 | 16 | Port Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |57 | 10/5 | 9 | Port Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |56 | 17/8 | 23 | Port Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |55 | 2/5 | 8 | Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |13 | 26/4 | 5 | Adelaide | Football Park |- style="background:#fff;" |44 | 12/5 | 8 | Port Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |-style="background:#fff;" |40 |2/4 |2 |Adelaide |Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |47 | 6/7 | 16 | Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |37 | 29/6 | 15 | Adelaide | Adelaide Oval |- style="background:#fff;" |19 | 10/9 | Adelaide | Football Park
Club records
Highest score
Highest score in a Showdown.
Showdown (Men)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Goals | Behinds | Total | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Port Adelaide | 2001 | 3 | 23 | 15 | 153 | |||
| Adelaide | 1998 | 19 | 22 | 12 | 144 | |||
| 2016 | 2 |
Showdown (Women)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Goals | Behinds | Total | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 2022 | 6 | 8 | 15 | 63 | |||
| 2024 | 1 | 5 | 5 | 35 |
Lowest score
Lowest score for each club in all Showdowns.
Showdown (Men)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Goals | Behinds | Total | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 2020 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 35 | |||
| Port Adelaide | 2025 | 20 | 5 | 5 | 35 |
Showdown (Women)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Goals | Behinds | Total | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 6 | 0 | 3 | 3 | ||||
| 2024 | 1 | 7 | 7 | 49 |
Greatest winning margins
Greatest winning margin for each club in the Showdown.
Showdown (Men)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Winning score | Losing Score | Margin | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 2025 | 20 | 20.13 (133) | 5.5 (35) | 98 | |||
| 2020 | 2 | 17.8 (110) | 5.5 (35) | 75 |
Showdown (Women)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Winning score | Losing Score | Margin | 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 2022 | 6 | 8.15 (63) | 0.3 (3) | 60 |
Smallest winning margins
Smallest winning margin for each club in the Showdown.
Showdown (Men)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Winning score | Losing Score | Margin | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 2018 | 20 | 13.18 (96) | 14.9 (93) | 3 | |||
| 2015 | 16 | 18.8 (116) | 17.11 (113) | |||||
| Port Adelaide | 2013 | 19 | 17.5 (107) | 15.13 (103) | 4 | |||
| 2021 | 21 | 7.13 (55) | 7.9 (51) | |||||
| Updated to Showdown LIV (54). |
Showdown (Women)
| # | Club | Year | Round | Winning score | Losing Score | Margin | 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 2024 | 1 | 7.7 (49) | 5.5 (35) | 14 |
Winning streak
Showdown (Men)
| # | Club | Winning Streak | Showdowns | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Port Adelaide | 7 | 8–14 | |||
| Adelaide | 5 | 39–43 |
Showdown (Women)
| # | Club | Winning Streak | Showdowns | 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 1–3 |
Clean sweeps
Seasons when one club has won all Showdown fixtures. There was only one Showdown in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
| # | Club | Clean Sweeps | Total | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide | 20051, 2007, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2023, 2025 | 7 | |||
| Port Adelaide | 2001, 2002, 2003, 2010, 2013, 2021 | 6 | |||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
1Includes the 2005 semi-final. This is the only (as of 2020) time that either side has won all three Showdowns in the one season (including finals).
Brownlow Votes
| # | Club | Total votes | Unique Players | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Port Adelaide | 176 votes | 40 | |||
| Adelaide | 166 votes | 40 | |||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
Player records
Games played
| Showdown appearances (Men) | # | Player | Club | Showdowns | 1 | 2 | 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| align = center | direction = | width = | image1 = Travis_Boak,_Port_Adelaide,_Showdown_53.jpg | width1 = | footer = Travis Boak has played the most Showdowns (33) of any player. | |||
| Travis Boak | Port Adelaide | 33 | ||||||
| Kane Cornes | Port Adelaide | 27 | ||||||
| Andrew McLeod | Adelaide | 27 | ||||||
| Taylor Walker | 25 | |||||||
| Justin Westhoff | 25 | |||||||
| Scott Thompson | 25 | |||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Showdown appearances (Women) | # | Player | Club | Showdowns | 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 players | 3 | ||||
| Ashleigh Woodland | & | ||||
| Sarah Goodwin | & | ||||
| 8 players | |||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Goalkickers
Most goals kicked in one Showdown
| Most goals in one Showdown (Men) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Goals | 1 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tony Modra | Adelaide | 1997 R4 | 7 | ||||
| Peter Vardy | Adelaide | 1998 R19 | 7 | ||||
| Warren Tredrea | Port Adelaide | 2004 R7 | 7 | ||||
| Taylor Walker | Adelaide | 2023 R20 | 7 | ||||
| Gavin Wanganeen | Port Adelaide | 2001 R3 | 6 | ||||
| Taylor Walker | Adelaide | 2012 R5 | 6 | ||||
| Ricky Henderson | Adelaide | 2012 R15 | 6 | ||||
| Tom Lynch | Adelaide | 2016 R2 | 6 | ||||
| Robbie Gray | Port Adelaide | 2018 R8 | 6 | ||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most goals in one Showdown (Women) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Goals | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chelsea Randall | 2022 | 3 | |||||
| Yvonne Bonner | 2023 | 2 | |||||
| Ashleigh Woodland | 2023 | 2 | |||||
| Jessica Allan | 2024 | 2 | |||||
| Eloise Jones | 2024 | 2 | |||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Most Showdown career goals
| Most career Showdown goals (Men) | # | Player | Club | Goals | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taylor Walker | Adelaide | 56 | 25 | |||||||
| Robbie Gray | Port Adelaide | 40 | 22 | |||||||
| Eddie Betts | Adelaide | 35 | 12 | |||||||
| Justin Westhoff | Port Adelaide | 32 | 25 | |||||||
| Warren Tredrea | Port Adelaide | 30 | 23 | |||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most career Showdown goals (Women) | # | Player | Club | Goals | Games | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ashleigh Woodland | & | 4 | 3 | ||||
| Chelsea Randall | 3 | 3 | |||||
| Eloise Jones | 3 | 3 | |||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Career Brownlow votes
| # | Player | Club | Votes | Games | 1 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Josh Francou | Port Adelaide | 14 | 15 | |||||
| Travis Boak | Port Adelaide | 14 | 28 | |||||
| Robbie Gray | Port Adelaide | 12 | 22 | |||||
| Mark Ricciuto | Adelaide | 11 | 18 | |||||
| Gavin Wanganeen | Port Adelaide | 10 | 17 | |||||
| Andrew McLeod | Adelaide | 10 | 27 | |||||
| Patrick Dangerfield | Adelaide | 10 | 13 | |||||
| Sam Jacobs | Adelaide | 10 | 15 | |||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| # | Player | Club | Votes | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebony Marinoff | 6 | 3 | ||||||
| Anne Hatchard | 5 | 3 | ||||||
| Niamh Kelly | 3 | 2 | ||||||
| Chelsea Randall | 3 | 3 | ||||||
| Jessica Allan | 1 | 2 | ||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Disposals
Most career Showdown disposals
| Most career Showdown disposals (Men) | # | Player | Club | Disposals | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Travis Boak | Port Adelaide | 745 | 33 | |||||||
| Scott Thompson | Adelaide | 614 | 25 | |||||||
| Kane Cornes | Port Adelaide | 580 | 27 | |||||||
| Rory Laird | Adelaide | 559 | 22 | |||||||
| Ollie Wines | Port Adelaide | 552 | 22 | |||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most career Showdown disposals (Women) | # | Player | Club | Disposals | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebony Marinoff | Adelaide | 85 | 3 | |||||||
| Anne Hatchard | Adelaide | 75 | 3 | |||||||
| Chelsea Randall | Adelaide | 56 | 3 | |||||||
| Madison Newman | Adelaide | 42 | 3 | |||||||
| Erin Phillips | Port Adelaide | 36 | 2 | |||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Most disposals in one Showdown
| Most disposals in one Showdown (Men) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Disposals | 1 | 2 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zak Butters | Port Adelaide | 2024 R23 | 42 | ||||||
| Mark Ricciuto | Adelaide | 2000 R7 | 41 | ||||||
| Peter Burgoyne | Port Adelaide | 2008 R3 | 41 | ||||||
| Tom Rockliff | Port Adelaide | 2019 R8 | 41 | ||||||
| Simon Goodwin | Adelaide | 2007 R18 | 39 | ||||||
| Patrick Dangerfield | Adelaide | 2012 R5 | 39 | ||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most disposals in one Showdown (Women) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Disposals | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebony Marinoff | 2023 | 32 | ||||||||
| Anne Hatchard | 2023 | 30 | ||||||||
| Ebony Marinoff | 2024 | 29 | ||||||||
| Niamh Kelly | 2023 | 28 | ||||||||
| Chelsea Randall | Adelaide | 2022 | 27 | |||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Hitouts
Most career Showdown hitouts
| # | Player | Club | Hitouts | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sam Jacobs | Adelaide | 536 | 15 | ||||||
| Reilly O'Brien | Adelaide | 482 | 13 | ||||||
| Brendon Lade | Port Adelaide | 347 | 22 | ||||||
| Matthew Lobbe | Port Adelaide | 288 | 11 | ||||||
| Dean Brogan | Port Adelaide | 253 | 16 | ||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| # | Player | Club | Hitouts | Games | 1 | 2 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jessica Allan | 42 | 2 | ||||||
| Montana McKinnon | 33 | 2 | ||||||
| Matilda Scholz | 33 | 2 | ||||||
| Olivia Levicki | 31 | 3 | ||||||
| Caitlin Gould | 12 | 2 | ||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Most Hitouts in one Showdown
| Most Hitouts in one Showdown (Men) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Hitouts | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sam Jacobs | Adelaide | 2012 R15 | 61 | |||||||
| Sam Jacobs | Adelaide | 2015 R16 | 51 | |||||||
| Reilly O'Brien | Adelaide | 2022 R23 | 50 | |||||||
| Paddy Ryder | Port Adelaide | 2017 R3 | 48 | |||||||
| Reilly O'Brien | Adelaide | 2022 R3 | 45 | |||||||
| Jordon Sweet | 2024 R23 | 45 | ||||||||
| Reilly O'Brien | Adelaide | 2025 R20 | 45 | |||||||
| Jordon Sweet | 2025 R20 | 45 | ||||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most Hitouts in one Showdown (Women) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Hitouts | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jessica Allan | 2024 | 30 | ||||||||
| Montana McKinnon | 2022 | 21 | ||||||||
| Olivia Levicki | 2024 | 20 | ||||||||
| Matilda Scholz | 2024 | 19 | ||||||||
| Matilda Scholz | 2023 | 14 | ||||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Clearances
Most career Showdown clearances
| Most career Showdown clearances (Men) | # | Player | Club | Clearances | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Travis Boak | Port Adelaide | 141 | 33 | |||||||
| Ollie Wines | Port Adelaide | 127 | 22 | |||||||
| Scott Thompson | Adelaide | 124 | 25 | |||||||
| Robbie Gray | Port Adelaide | 100 | 22 | |||||||
| Matt Crouch | Adelaide | 88 | 14 | |||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most career Showdown clearances (Women) | # | Player | Club | Clearances | Games | 1 | 2 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebony Marinoff | Adelaide | 17 | 3 | |||||
| Chelsea Randall | Adelaide | 9 | 3 | |||||
| Jessica Allan | 9 | 2 | ||||||
| Anne Hatchard | 9 | 3 | ||||||
| Teah Charlton | Adelaide | 8 | 2 | |||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Most clearances in a Showdown
| Most clearances in one Showdown (Men) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Clearances | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patrick Dangerfield | Adelaide | 2015 R5 | 14 | ||||
| Josh Francou | Port Adelaide | 1999 R21 | 13 | ||||
| Patrick Dangerfield | Adelaide | 2015 R16 | 13 | ||||
| Scott Thompson | Adelaide | 2015 R16 | 13 | ||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most clearances in one Showdown (Women) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Clearances | 1 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebony Marinoff | 2023 | 7 | |||||
| Chelsea Randall | 2022 | 7 | |||||
| Jessica Allan | 2024 | 7 | |||||
| Danielle Ponter | 2024 | 7 | |||||
| Niamh Kelly | 2023 | 6 | |||||
| Sachi Syme | 2024 | 6 | |||||
| Updated to Showdown III (3). |
Contested possessions
Most career Showdown contested possessions
| Most career Showdown contested possessions (Men) | # | Player | Club | Contested | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| possessions | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||||
| Travis Boak | Port Adelaide | 324 | 33 | |||||||
| Scott Thompson | Adelaide | 267 | 25 | |||||||
| Ollie Wines | Port Adelaide | 263 | 22 | |||||||
| Robbie Gray | Port Adelaide | 228 | 22 | |||||||
| Rory Laird | Adelaide | 227 | 22 | |||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most career Showdown contested possessions (Women) | # | Player | Club | Contested | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| possessions | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||||
| Ebony Marinoff | 40 | 3 | ||||||||
| Anne Hatchard | 38 | 3 | ||||||||
| Chelsea Randall | 27 | 3 | ||||||||
| Abbey Dowrick | 26 | 3 | ||||||||
| Erin Phillips | 18 | 2 | ||||||||
| Updated to Showdown III (3). |
Most contested possessions in one Showdown
| Most contested possessions in one Showdown (Men) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Contested | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| possessions | 1 | 2 | 3 | |||||
| Rory Sloane | Adelaide | 2017 R3 | 24 | |||||
| Tom Rockliff | Port Adelaide | 2019 R8 | 23 | |||||
| Robbie Gray | Port Adelaide | 2016 R2 | 22 | |||||
| Scott Thompson | Adelaide | 2015 R16 | 22 | |||||
| Patrick Dangerfield | Adelaide | 2014 R15 | 22 | |||||
| Last update from Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most contested possessions in one Showdown (Women) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Contested | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| possessions | 1 | 2 | 4 | |||||
| Anne Hatchard | 2022 | 15 | ||||||
| Ebony Marinoff | 2024 | 15 | ||||||
| Chelsea Randall | 2022 | 14 | ||||||
| Anne Hatchard | 2023 | 13 | ||||||
| Gemma Houghton | 2023 | 13 | ||||||
| Ebony Marinoff | 2023 | 13 | ||||||
| Sachi Syme | 2024 | 13 | ||||||
| Last update from Showdown III (3). |
Contested Marks
Most career Showdown contested marks
| Most career Showdown contested marks (Men) | # | Player | Club | Contested | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marks | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | ||||
| Chad Cornes | Port Adelaide | 42 | 24 | ||||||
| Warren Tredrea | Port Adelaide | 36 | 23 | ||||||
| Taylor Walker | Adelaide | 35 | 24 | ||||||
| Justin Westhoff | Port Adelaide | 32 | 25 | ||||||
| Charlie Dixon | Port Adelaide | 32 | 14 | ||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most career Showdown contested marks (Women) | # | Player | Club | Contested | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marks | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| Anne Hatchard | 7 | 3 | ||||||
| Chelsea Randall | 4 | 2 | ||||||
| Gemma Houghton | 3 | 2 | ||||||
| Matilda Scholz | 2 | 2 | ||||||
| Chelsea Biddell | 3 | 3 | ||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Most contested marks in one Showdown
| # | Player | Club | Fixture | Contested | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marks | 1 | 5 | ||||
| Chad Cornes | Port Adelaide | 2004 R7 | 6 | |||
| Kurt Tippett | Adelaide | 2011 R4 | 6 | |||
| Justin Westhoff | Port Adelaide | 2011 R4 | 6 | |||
| Charlie Dixon | 2023 R20 | 6 | ||||
| Trent Henschel | Adelaide | 2005 SF | 5 | |||
| Taylor Walker | Adelaide | 2017 R20 | 5 | |||
| Aliir Aliir | Port Adelaide | 2021 R21 | 5 | |||
| Riley Thilthorpe | Adelaide | 2022 R23 | 5 | |||
| Riley Thilthorpe | 2025 R9 | 5 | ||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| # | Player | Club | Fixture | Contested | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marks | 1 | 2 | ||||
| Anne Hatchard | 2022 | 6 | ||||
| Chelsea Randall | 2022 | 2 | ||||
| Chelsea Randall | 2023 | 2 | ||||
| Chelsea Biddell | 2023 | 2 | ||||
| Matilda Scholz | 2023 | 2 | ||||
| Gemma Houghton | 2023 | 2 | ||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Tackles
Most career Showdown tackles
| Most career Showdown tackles (Men) | # | Player | Club | Tackles | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scott Thompson | Adelaide | 141 | 25 | |||||||
| Travis Boak | Port Adelaide | 140 | 33 | |||||||
| Ollie Wines | Port Adelaide | 114 | 22 | |||||||
| Rory Sloane | Adelaide | 110 | 20 | |||||||
| Domenic Cassisi | Port Adelaide | 109 | 20 | |||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most career Showdown tackles (Women) | # | Player | Club | Tackles | Games | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebony Marinoff | 22 | 3 | ||||||||
| Abbey Dowrick | 20 | 3 | ||||||||
| Anne Hatchard | 19 | 3 | ||||||||
| Justine Mules-Robinson | 17 | 3 | ||||||||
| Teah Charlton | 12 | 2 | ||||||||
| Abbie Ballard | 12 | 2 | ||||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Most tackles in one Showdown
| Most tackles in one Showdown (Men) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Tackles | 1 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domenic Cassisi | Port Adelaide | 2008 R16 | 13 | ||||
| Hugh Greenwood | Adelaide | 2017 R20 | 13 | ||||
| Rory Sloane | Adelaide | 2019 R8 | 13 | ||||
| Rory Laird | Adelaide | 2023 R20 | 13 | ||||
| Domenic Cassisi | Port Adelaide | 2010 R17 | 12 | ||||
| Hugh Greenwood | Adelaide | 2018 R8 | 12 | ||||
| James Peatling | 2025 R9 | 12 | |||||
| Alex Neal-Bullen | 2025 R20 | 12 | |||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Most tackles in one Showdown (Women) | # | Player | Club | Fixture | Tackles | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anne Hatchard | 2024 | 12 | |||||||
| Ebony Marinoff | 2022 | 11 | |||||||
| Ebony Marinoff | 2024 | 19 | |||||||
| Jacqui Yorston | 2022 | 8 | |||||||
| Abbey Dowrick | 2023 | 8 | |||||||
| Justine Mules | 2023 | 8 | |||||||
| Eloise Jones | 2024 | 8 | |||||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Player winning record
Showdown players ranked by win percentage (minimum 10 Showdowns).
| # | Player | Club | Win | Loss | Win % | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Josh Carr | Port Adelaide | 10 | 0 | 100.0 | |||||
| Jarrad Schofield | Port Adelaide | 8 | 2 | 80.0 | |||||
| Matt Crouch | Adelaide | 10 | 4 | 71.4 | |||||
| Wayne Milera | 7 | 3 | 70.0 | ||||||
| Nick Stevens | Port Adelaide | 7 | 3 | 70.0 | |||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
Coaching records
Showdown coaches are ranked by total wins followed by win percentage.
Showdown coaching record
| Showdown coaching record (Men) | # | Coach | Club | Win | Loss | Win % | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 13 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| align = center | direction = | width = | image1 = Matthew Nicks, Ade vs. GWS 2022 (52396645580) (cropped).jpg | width1 = 126 | alt1 = | caption1 = | image2 = | width2 = | alt2 = | caption2 = | footer = Current coach Matthew Nicks | ||||||
| Mark Williams | Port Adelaide | 13 | 11 | 54.2 | |||||||||||||
| Ken Hinkley | Port Adelaide | 11 | 15 | 42.3 | |||||||||||||
| Neil Craig | Adelaide | 8 | 7 | 53.3 | |||||||||||||
| Matthew Nicks | Adelaide | 7 | 5 | 58.3 | |||||||||||||
| Don Pyke | Adelaide | 6 | 2 | 75.0 | |||||||||||||
| Malcolm Blight | Adelaide | 3 | 3 | 50.0 | |||||||||||||
| Brenton Sanderson | |||||||||||||||||
| John Cahill | Port Adelaide | 2 | 2 | 50.0 | |||||||||||||
| Matthew Primus | Port Adelaide | 2 | 3 | 40.0 | |||||||||||||
| Gary Ayres | Adelaide | 2 | 7 | 22.2 | |||||||||||||
| Scott Camporeale | Adelaide | 1 | 0 | 100 | |||||||||||||
| Mark Bickley | |||||||||||||||||
| Phil Walsh | Adelaide | 0 | 1 | 0.0 | |||||||||||||
| Updated to Showdown LVIII (58). |
| Showdown coaching record (Women) | # | Coach | Club | Win | Loss | Win % | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| {{multiple image | align = center | direction = | width = | image1 = Matthew Clarke 2019.1.jpg | width1 = 107 | alt1 = | caption1 = | image2 = Lauren Arnell, Adelaide Oval, 2022 September 30.jpg |
| Matthew Clarke | Adelaide | 3 | 0 | 100 | ||||
| Lauren Arnell | Port Adelaide | 0 | 3 | 0.0 | ||||
| Updated to AFLW Showdown III (3). |
Naming rights sponsors
Since the first Showdown in 1997 the fixture has always had a naming rights sponsor.
West End ''(1997 - 2007)''
The first naming rights sponsor was the South Australian Brewing Company (SABC) who utilised the fixture to promote West End Draught. SABC was responsible for the coining of the 'Showdown' name for the rivalry.
Balfours ''(2008 - 2017)''
Balfours, a South Australian wholesale bakery, became the naming rights sponsor for the Showdown in 2008. As part of their efforts in promoting the game Balfours began, and continue, to produce donuts in the colors of the two competing teams.
Variety ''(2018 - )''
Variety, a charity for disadvantaged children, became the current naming rights sponsor for the Showdown in 2018.
Spin offs
Cricket

Two Showdowns have taken place as Twenty20 cricket matches doubling as charity fundraisers for bushfire relief. In 2009, the two clubs played at Football Park what was dubbed as SA Footy's Bushfire Bash For Cash. In the aftermath of the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season which severely impacted Kangaroo Island and parts of the Adelaide Hills, the two clubs played another such game, this time at Adelaide Oval. Dubbed the Bushfire T20 Showdown, it also included members of the Adelaide Strikers of the Big Bash League participating including Australian internationals Alex Carey, who was also previously W. Sydney's TAC Cup captain, and Strikers captain Travis Head. The game proved a success with 34,219 spectators collectively raising $1,015,239 by the end of the match for the South Australian Bushfire Appeal. Seven Network broadcast the match with commentators including James Brayshaw, Greg Blewett, Mark Soderstrom and Jason Gillespie. |score-team1-inns1 = 231/7 (20 overs) |runs-team1-inns1 = Travis Boak 44 (23) |wickets-team1-inns1 = Hamish Hartlett 2/9 (2 overs) |score-team2-inns1 = 217/8 (20 overs) |runs-team2-inns1 = Tom Lynch 38 (24) |wickets-team2-inns1 = Rashid Khan 2/11 (3 overs)
Slowdown
Main article: West End Slowdown
A charity spin off of the Showdown also included an annual 'Slowdown' that raised money for various charities. Slowdown's often featured retired Adelaide, Port Adelaide and SANFL players along with local celebrities.
Notes
References
References
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- 'FOOTBALL.', ''The Advertiser'' (Adelaide), 21 June 1893, p. 7., viewed 22 Nov 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article25656343
- (18 July 1882). "FOOTBALL.". [[Port Adelaide News]].
- 'FOOTBALL.', ''Port Adelaide News'', 18 July 1882, p. 4., viewed 13 May 2019, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/195868765
- (17 October 1914). "FOOTBALL.". Observer.
- "Official AFL Website of the Port Adelaide Football Club".
- Abernethy, Bruce. (1997). "From Port to a Power". Wakefield Press.
- "Fight On East Perth - Applying to Join VFL".
- Oakley, Ross. (2014). "The Phoenix Rises". Slattery Media Group.
- 'Port Adelaide Football Club Inc. Annual Report and Balance Sheet Season 1982', p. 11
- Robinson, Michael. (1985). "Yet another season of advancing backwards". Ashley Hornsey.
- "Revisiting the South Australian license saga of 1991". The Roar.
- "Port Adelaide Football Club..."one must ask does the 'Big V' want the game to go national"". Australian Football.
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- Weber, Bruce. (1989). "Magpie News". Port Adelaide Football Club.
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- "Port Adelaide from SANFL to AFL". ABC: Stateline South Australia.
- Fishburn, Chris. (April 1990). "Keeping Score '90". Magpie News.
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- "Fight to break South Australian impasse on VFL involved far more than Port Adelaide {{!".
- George Fiacchi, 1990 SANFL Grand Final - Port Adelaide vs. Glenelg, Channel 9
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- Jeff Reynolds, ''Australian Football'', May 2016.
- Rucci, Michaelangelo. (14 December 1994). "Premiers SA's Second Team". The Advertiser (Adelaide).
- Rucci, Michelangelo. (29 May 1996). "What makes Port Adelaide different from the Crows?". The Advertiser (Adelaide).
- Ashton, Norman. (2018). "Destiny". Wakefield Press.
- (17 August 2002). "Port, the team the rest of Adelaide loves to hate - The Age". The Age.
- (6 February 2014). "Dear Port fans: you just don't get it - InDaily". InDaily.
- (17 August 2002). "Port, the team the rest of Adelaide loves to hate - The Age". The Age.
- (2022-04-04). "Touch Of The Fumbles: Curveball".
- "Adelaide Heritage - Footy Jumpers".
- "Statement: State Guernsey - portadelaidefc.com.au". portadelaidefc.com.au.
- Kernahan, Stephen. (7 February 2017). "SANFL forces Adelaide Crows to abandon 'State of Origin' Adelaide Oval Showdown guernsey". The Advertiser.
- Fjeldstad, Jesper. (7 February 2017). "Showdown 1 recall". Herald Sun.
- (7 February 2014). "SANFL forces Adelaide Crows to abandon 'State of Origin' Adelaide Oval Showdown guernsey". The Advertiser.
- (15 August 2019). "Port Adelaide to wear traditional prison bars outfit twice in 2020". Wide World of Sports.
- (4 June 2020). "David Koch hits back at Eddie McGuire over Power's prison bar guernsey push". ABC News.
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- (10 February 2024). "Two years in the making and costing $25 million, Port Adelaide is now calling its new state of the art football facility home. And it's not only the Power players that will benefit, the local community also winners. @VickiJSchwarz #9News". [[Twitter]].
- Jamie Anderson. (30 June 2024). "AFLW team to wear Prison Bars in inaugural Alberton Showdown". Port Adelaide FC.
- "Onward to Victory".
- "Footy Park Flashbacks #3: Showdown I, Port Adelaide v Adelaide Crows 1997 – portadelaidefc.com.au".
- Cometti, Dennis. (6 April 2017). "Showdown 1 recall". Port Adelaide Football Club.
- (2002-04-30). "Bit of biffo as rivals show they're 'human'".
- "AFL Tables – Adelaide v Port Adelaide – Sat, 27-Apr-2002 7:10 PM (7:40 PM) – Match Stats".
- (14 August 2002). "'Henley beach' two attracts the footbrawl faithful – realfooty.com.au".
- (2021-08-02). "The final Showdown countdown".
- Rucci, Michaelangelo. (17 July 2015). "delaide Crows face biggest Showdown challenge since 2004". The Advertiser.
- "The Finals Showdown - AFC.com.au". afc.com.au.
- (2005-09-12). "Pickett off the hook for Biglands bump". ABC News.
- Cornes, Chad. (9 May 2018). "Chad Cornes' top 5 Showdowns: #5".
- (2008-04-06). "Crows hang on in Showdown thriller". ABC News.
- [http://www.afl.com.au/news/2013-08-04/powers-showdown-miracle Power Showdown Miracle]
- "Showdown 36 welcomes AFL back to Adelaide Oval - ABC (None) - Australian Broadcasting Corporation".
- "Phil Walsh - a proud 'football lifer' - AFC.com.au". afc.com.au.
- Homfray, Reece. (19 July 2015). "Terrific Scott Thompson 'honoured' by Phillip Walsh Medal win in Showdown 39". The Advertiser.
- (2018-05-12). "Live AFL Round 8, Port Adelaide v Adelaide Crows in Showdown 44, live scores, live stream, updates, video, live blog". Fox Sports.
- (2018-05-14). "Touch Of The Fumbles: A Gray day".
- (2021-08-09). "Power challenges AFL score review system".
- "The Wrap Up: Adelaide steals Showdown in controversial finish".
- (2022-03-30). "'Pretty embarrassing': Adelaide roasted by club director for 'shocking' skills in wild spray".
- "Power assistant calls out forward's "unacceptable efforts"".
- Barrett, Steve. (2022-04-01). "'Not really how I wanted to kick it': Crow Dawson's after-siren goal breaks Port hearts".
- (16 March 2020). "Season cut to 17 games, call delayed on R1 start".
- Insufficient data
- SANFL Showdowns have been played as [[Curtain raiser. curtain raisers]] to AFL Showdowns since 2021, thus attendance has not been recorded.
- Rucci, Michelangelo. (6 September 2016). "The decade of silence between Crows and Power at trade talks could be finally broken by Hamish Hartlett".
- Rucci, Michelangelo. (7 May 2019). "From Football Park to Adelaide Oval, the Showdown has become a derby with very South Australian habits". The Advertiser.
- Malyniak, Alyna. (27 March 2014). "Balfours Donuts A Sweet Kick Off To Showdown XXXVI". glamadelaide.com.au.
- (15 July 2021). "The top 50 Showdown moments — selected by Rooch and Fumbles". indaily.com.au.
- [https://www.afc.com.au/news/81319/crows-v-power-in-bushfire-bash ''Crows v Power in Bushfire Bash''] Adelaide Football Club
- (2020-02-02). "T20 Showdown raises huge amount for bushfire relief".
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