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AAP
AAP
Steve Larkin

Hinkley expects to continue as Port coach next year

Ken Hinkley expects to fulfil his contract to coach Port Adelaide in 2025. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS)

Ken Hinkley expects to serve his contract to coach Port Adelaide next year regardless of the result of his club's semi-final against Hawthorn.

Hinkley is contracted until the end of next season but will exit the finals with consecutive defeats for a second-straight season should Port lose on Friday night.

"I'm not going to be a smart ass here in any way, shape or form but I'm contracted," Hinkley told reporters on Thursday.

"That is what the board have told me all the way through.

"They have shown me great support the entire journey. I trust that that will always be the same."

Hinkley replied to speculation he would face the axe or step down should the Power lose: "That's uneducated. It's not the facts.

"I get why the conversation keeps coming up, but the reality is I'm preparing this week to help our team find a way of getting into a prelim final.

"That has got too much riding on it for me to spend any time in those other places you want me to go. I just won't go there."

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Port lost defender Ryan Burton (calf) and axed Jed McEntee, with Todd Marshall and Josh Sinn summoned for the knockout Adelaide Oval final.

The Hawks replaced Sam Frost, who has a foot stress fracture, with Jai Serong.

Hinkley, in his 12th season at Port, will coach the South Australian club for a 273rd time on Friday night, equalling Mark Williams's record as the Power's longest-serving coach.

"Those sort of things, in some ways remarkable that I got to this point," he said.

"But the reality is I reflect on those things after your career. And hopefully there's a lot more to go."

The 57-year-old holds the unwanted record of coaching the most games in VFL/AFL history without reaching a grand final.

And the Power have lost their past five finals, including a horror 84-point defeat to Geelong in last Thursday night's qualifying final.

Asked if this was the biggest week in his tenure, Hinkley said: "That is not stuff that we spend time on.

"We know exactly what we're doing internally and the direction that we're going and what we're trying to achieve.

"We don't need to get distracted by anything other than this week's performance."

Hinkley said he and his players had rapidly moved on from their qualifying final flop - the club's second biggest finals defeat behind only their 119-point loss to the Cats in the 2007 grand final.

"If you don't have a contest level that's at a required level, you're going to get yourself in trouble and then everything else can fall down really quickly," he said.

"We all have a view on what was wrong. We know we got it really badly wrong last week and the team we played against smashed us."

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