Richmond captain Trent Cotchin has expressed his frustration at the elimination final slipped away from his team so easily in the first quarter.

The Tigers conceded 14 goals to three in the first half, eventually going down by 57 points.

"You get frustrated. You want to do something to change that," he said.

"The reality is one person is not going to make a big difference.

"We just had to go back to doing what we knew works best for us but unfortunately we couldn't sustain it for long enough periods in the game to turn the momentum back our way."

As for the Tigers' season, Cotchin said they would "head back to the drawing board" after falling in an elimination final for the second consecutive season.

While he conceded it was a "mighty effort" to recover from a 3-10 status midway through the year to win nine in a row and make the finals, the Tigers simply had to get better.

"It's going to be a tough summer. A bitter pill to swallow again but we'll learn from it," he said.  

"As we've spoken about all year it's just about driving those behaviours and standards that you can't afford to let slip at any stage whether that's just resting on your laurels.

"We just need to keep pushing forward and hopefully guys jump on board and we become a stronger and better side."

Cotchin and coach Damien Hardwick also defended Richmond's decision to kick to the Northern End at Adelaide Oval.

Cotchin's call was criticised by many commentators, but the Tigers' skipper believed it didn't give away a significant advantage.

"I think if you looked up it looked like it was going the other way but it was pretty swirly out there so I didn’t feel there was a tremendous advantage," Cotchin said.

"I think it was more about the way we played in the first quarter that resulted in their [eight] goals, which is nearly how much we've averaged against us for the whole game over the last three months."

Hardwick said they had dubbed the conditions as blustery at both ends and refused to contribute the decision to how the game panned out.

"At the end of the day, the wind has got nothing to do with putting your head over the ball and not winning hard contests," Hardwick said.

"You get your opportunity with the wind the next quarter - the reality is we just didn't play well enough from the start."

Port coach Ken Hinkley, who naturally has more experience at Adelaide's new home of football than the Tigers, conceded the Power didn't know what they would have done had the toss gone in their favour.

"In the box we weren't sure … it felt like the breeze was affecting both ends to be fair," Hinkley said.

"Travis [Boak] asked me two or three times 'which way are we going to kick?' and we weren't absolutely, 100 per cent sure ourselves.

"They looked bad at the end but … Trent Cotchin didn't make a horrendous mistake or anything, it was just a pretty tough decision to make."