2015 Carlton Football Club season

Carlton Football Club
2015 season
President Mark LoGiudice
Coach Mick Malthouse (Rds 1–8)
John Barker (Rds 9–23)
Captain(s) Marc Murphy
Home ground Melbourne Cricket Ground
(Training and administrative: Ikon Park)
AFL season 18th (4–18)
John Nicholls Medal Patrick Cripps
Leading goalkicker Andrejs Everitt
Club membership 47,305

The 2015 AFL season was the 119th season in the Australian Football League contested by the Carlton Football Club. A very poor season for the club, which was disrupted by the sacking after only eight rounds of third-year coach Mick Malthouse, Carlton finished last on the ladder with a record of 4–18.

Club summary

The 2015 AFL season was the 119th season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it was also the 119th season contested by the Carlton Football Club. Carlton's primary home ground for games was the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with the club hosting six matches at the venue and five at Etihad Stadium – a small change from the previous season, when the club had played six games at Etihad Stadium and five at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.[1] Traditional home ground at Princes Park (which was renamed from Visy Park to Ikon Park from the start of the year under a two-year naming rights deal with Ikon Services Australia)[2] continued to serve as the training and administrative base. Carlton continued its alignment with the Northern Blues in the Victorian Football League, allowing Carlton-listed players to play with the Northern Blues when not selected in AFL matches.

Following an online vote of members, the club changed the font of the CFC monogram on the front of its playing guernsey. The new monogram, more traditional in style, featured block-style letters and no gaps at the intersections between letters; it matched the design which had been used between 1927 and 1997, and which had thrice been worn as a heritage guernsey during the 2014 season.[3]

The club's membership for the 2015 season was 47,305, a 0.4% reduction from the 2014 membership of 47,485; it was Carlton's second consecutive reduction in membership, and the club was one of only three clubs to suffer a drop in membership in the 2015 season.[4] The club made a net operating loss of $2,700,000 for the season.[5]

Senior Personnel

Mark LoGiudice continued as club president, a role he has held since June 2014.[6] Mick Malthouse began the season as senior coach, with his coaching panel unchanged from 2014; following his Malthouse dismissal on 26 May, backline assistant coach John Barker stepped in as caretaker.[7]

Marc Murphy continued into his third season as club captain, as part of a five-man leadership group, a reduction from the seven-man group which led the team in 2014. Bryce Gibbs, Lachlan Henderson and Michael Jamison remained in the group from 2014 – Gibbs and Jamison were named vice-captains[2] – and Sam Rowe was elevated to the group. Leaving the group were Andrew Carrazzo and Kade Simpson, who both stepped down from the group after serving in it for many years, and Brock McLean, who was delisted.[8]

Squad for 2015

Flags represent the state of origin, i.e. the state in which the player played his Under-18s football.

Senior List[9]
No. State Player Age AFL Debut Recruited from Career (to end 2014) 2015 Player Statistics
Gms Gls Gms Gls B D K HB M T HO
1 Victoria (Australia) Andrew Walker 28 2004 Bendigo (U18) 179 118 12 12 6 163 106 57 48 22 1
2 South Australia Troy Menzel 20 2013 Central District 26 34 14 13 7 130 87 43 46 24
3 Victoria (Australia) Marc Murphy (c) 27 2006 Oakleigh (U18) 185 143 19 7 6 510 291 219 79 65 1
4 South Australia Bryce Gibbs (vc) 25 2007 Glenelg 177 98 10 4 5 209 112 97 21 54 7
5 Victoria (Australia) Chris Judd 31 2002 Sandringham (U18), West Coast 271 224 8 4 2 148 76 72 20 21
6 Victoria (Australia) Kade Simpson 30 2003 Eastern (U18) 222 121 20 3 1 460 285 175 118 42 1
7 Victoria (Australia) Dylan Buckley 21 2013 Northern (U18) 8 2 18 5 5 258 152 106 65 38
8 Victoria (Australia) Matthew Kreuzer 25 2008 Northern (U18) 106 56 13 9 5 166 91 75 40 55 276
9 Western Australia Patrick Cripps 19 2014 East Fremantle 3 20 6 13 471 158 313 64 98 39
10 Victoria (Australia) Matthew Watson 22 2011 Calder (U18) 19 6 4 4 2 32 23 9 18 8 1
11 Victoria (Australia) Robert Warnock 27 2007 Sandringham (U18), Fremantle 86 17 2 18 8 10 1 3 56
12 Western Australia Blaine Boekhorst 21 2015 Swan Districts 11 5 9 138 76 62 24 26
13 Western Australia Chris Yarran 24 2009 Swan Districts 105 87 14 3 2 223 182 41 68 33
14 Tasmania Liam Jones 23 2010 North Hobart, Western Bulldogs 66 68 9 7 9 65 46 19 31 18
15 Victoria (Australia) Sam Docherty 21 2013 Gippsland (U18), Brisbane Lions 29 8 19 2 2 401 260 141 116 40 1
16 Victoria (Australia) Dillon Viojo-Rainbow 18 Western (U18)
17 New South Wales Sam Rowe (lg) 27 2013 Murray (U18), Sydney, Norwood 31 11 20 2 211 125 86 79 43 28
18 Victoria (Australia) Kristian Jaksch 20 2013 Oakleigh (U18), GWS 7 2 6 1 2 62 39 23 26 8
19 South Australia Cameron Giles 19 Woodville-West Torrens
20 Victoria (Australia) Nick Holman 19 2014 Murray (U18) 1 8 75 31 44 15 31
22 Australian Capital Territory Jason Tutt 23 2011 Ainslie, Western Bulldogs 26 22 13 4 5 218 128 90 55 35
23 Victoria (Australia) Lachlan Henderson (lg) 26 2007 Geelong (U18), Brisbane 101 88 16 16 10 189 134 55 96 24 2
24 New South Wales Mark Whiley 22 2012 Murray (U18), GWS 12 2 8 1 2 95 46 49 17 33 19
25 Western Australia Clem Smith 18 2015 Perth 7 55 24 31 11 9
26 Victoria (Australia) Jayden Foster 19 Calder (U18)
27 Western Australia Dennis Armfield 28 2008 Swan Districts 113 44 12 13 10 145 88 57 25 36
28 Queensland Tom Bell 23 2012 Morningside 29 19 22 17 14 465 295 170 97 87 16
31 Victoria (Australia) Matthew Dick 20 2015 Calder (U18), Sydney 6 2 70 40 30 20 12
32 Victoria (Australia) Nicholas Graham 20 2013 Gippsland (U18) 10 2 6 3 1 104 51 53 15 29
33 Victoria (Australia) Andrejs Everitt 25 2007 Dandenong (U18), Western Bulldogs, Sydney 96 45 22 31 20 334 225 109 132 30 16
35 Victoria (Australia) Ed Curnow 25 2011 Geelong (U18), Adelaide, Box Hill 66 11 22 3 478 216 262 75 98
39 Victoria (Australia) Dale Thomas 27 2006 Gippsland (U18), Collingwood 177 133 5 2 2 70 42 28 20 6
40 Victoria (Australia) Michael Jamison (vc) 28 2007 North Ballarat (U18, VFL) 131 2 14 132 74 58 56 15 3
41 Victoria (Australia) Levi Casboult 24 2012 Dandenong (U18) 36 29 16 24 12 150 100 50 83 15 86
42 Republic of Ireland Zach Tuohy 25 2011 Laois GAA 76 25 22 9 3 414 239 175 107 24
43 Western Australia Simon White 26 2010 Subiaco 45 9 14 1 1 156 93 63 42 26 7
44 Victoria (Australia) Andrew Carrazzo 31 2004 Oakleigh (U18), Geelong 178 47 16 1 3 365 128 237 40 63
46 Western Australia David Ellard 25 2008 Swan Districts 53 33 10 4 3 102 55 47 24 32
Rookie List[9]
No. State Player Age AFL Debut Recruited from Career (to end 2014) 2015 Player Statistics
Gms Gls Gms Gls B D K HB M T HO
21 Republic of Ireland Ciarán Sheehan 24 2014 Cork GAA 4
29 Victoria (Australia) Billy Gowers 18 Oakleigh (U18)
30 Western Australia Blaine Johnson 19 2014 South Fremantle 5 1 2 1 15 5 10 3 5
34 Western Australia Brad Walsh 18 2015 Peel Thunder 3 1 19 6 13 2 5
36 South Australia Cameron Wood 27 2005 West Adelaide, Brisbane Lions, Collingwood, Williamstown 70 23 18 5 3 108 108 72 33 34 319
37 Queensland Tom Fields 22 2015 Labrador, South Adelaide 2 21 16 5 5 8
38 Republic of Ireland Ciarán Byrne 20 2015 Louth GAA 1 9 5 4 1 1
47 Victoria (Australia) Fraser Russell 22 Geelong (U18), Deakin (athletics)
Senior coaching panel[10]
State Coach Coaching position Carlton Coaching debut Former clubs as coach
Victoria (Australia) Mick Malthouse Senior Coach (Rounds 1–8) 2013 Footscray (s), West Coast (s), Collingwood (s)
Victoria (Australia) John Barker Assistant Coach (Back-line)
Caretaker coach (Rounds 9–23)
2011 St Kilda (a), Hawthorn (a)
Western Australia Robert Wiley Director of Coaching and Development 2013 Perth (s), West Coast (a), Western Australia U16s (s)
Western Australia Dean Laidley Assistant Coach (Midfield) 2014 Collingwood (a), North Melbourne (s), Port Adelaide (a), St Kilda (a)
Tasmania Brad Green Assistant Coach (Forward-line) 2013
Victoria (Australia) Matthew Capuano Development Coach 2009
Queensland Michael Osborne Development Coach 2013
Victoria (Australia) Luke Webster Development Coach, Northern Blues senior coach 2011

Playing list changes

The following summarises all player changes between the conclusion of the 2014 season and the conclusion of the 2015 season.

In

Player Previous Club League via
Victoria (Australia) Fraser Russell Deakin Athletic Club Athletics Victoria Signed as a Category B rookie late in the 2014 season; as a formality, he was drafted in the AFL Rookie Draft, fourth round (No. 58 overall)[11]
Victoria (Australia) Kristian Jaksch[12] Greater Western Sydney AFL AFL Trade Period, with Mark Whiley and a second-round draft pick (No. 19 overall), in exchange for a first-round draft pick (No. 7 overall)
New South Wales Mark Whiley[12] Greater Western Sydney AFL AFL Trade Period, with Kristian Jaksch and a second-round draft pick (No. 19 overall), in exchange for a first-round draft pick (No. 7 overall)
Tasmania Liam Jones[13] Western Bulldogs AFL AFL Trade Period, in exchange for a third-round draft pick (No. 46 overall)
Victoria (Australia) Matthew Dick[14] Sydney AFL Signed as a delisted free agent
Western Australia Blaine Boekhorst Swan Districts WAFL AFL National Draft, first round (No. 19 overall)[15]
Victoria (Australia) Dillon Viojo-Rainbow Western (U18) TAC Cup AFL National Draft, second round (No. 28 overall)[16]
Western Australia Clem Smith Perth WAFL AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 60 overall)[17]
Victoria (Australia) Jayden Foster Calder (U18) TAC Cup AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 63 overall)[18]
Australian Capital Territory Jason Tutt Western Bulldogs AFL AFL Pre-season Draft, first round (No. 2 overall)[11]
Victoria (Australia) Billy Gowers Oakleigh (U18) TAC Cup AFL Rookie Draft, first round (No. 6 overall)[11]
Western Australia Brad Walsh Peel Thunder WAFL AFL Rookie Draft, second round (No. 24 overall)[11]
Queensland Tom Fields South Adelaide SANFL AFL Rookie Draft, third round (No. 41 overall)[11]

Out

Player New Club League via
South Australia Nick Duigan[19] Towns[20] Greater Northern FL Removed from the list following his retirement in December 2013
Victoria (Australia) Heath Scotland[21] Doncaster[22] Eastern FL Removed from the list following his retirement in May 2014
Western Australia Josh Bootsma[23] Peel Thunder[24] WAFL Removed from the list following his sacking in June 2014
Victoria (Australia) Andrew McInnes[25] Norwood[26] SANFL Delisted after the season
Victoria (Australia) Tom Temay[25] Delisted after the season
Victoria (Australia) Jaryd Cachia[25] Richmond reserves[27] VFL Delisted from the rookie list after the season
South Australia Luke Reynolds[25] Port Adelaide reserves[28] SANFL Delisted from the rookie list after the season
Victoria (Australia) Jarrad Waite[29] North Melbourne AFL Signed as an unrestricted free agent
Western Australia Jeff Garlett[30] Melbourne AFL AFL Trade Period, with a fifth-round draft pick (No. 83 overall), in exchange for fourth-round and a higher fifth-round draft pick (No. 61 and 79 overall)
Western Australia Kane Lucas[31] West Coast AFL Delisted after the Trade Period; later recruited by West Coast in the rookie draft.
Victoria (Australia) Brock McLean[31] Aberfeldie[32] EDFL Delisted after the Trade Period
Tasmania Mitch Robinson[31] Brisbane Lions[33] AFL Delisted after the Trade Period; signed by Brisbane Lions as a free agent

List management

Player Change
National draft[29] Carlton received no free agency compensation draft picks, as the loss of Jarrad Waite was not deemed sufficient to justify one
Australian Capital Territory Jason Tutt[34] Resigned from the Western Bulldogs on 7 November and received permission to train with Carlton.
Guernsey number changes Patrick Cripps (No. 16 to No. 9)
Ciarán Sheehan (No. 47 to No. 21)
Blaine Johnson (No. 45 to No. 30)
Ciarán Byrne (No. 48 to No. 38)
Victoria (Australia) Chris Judd[35] Judd retired from playing on 9 June 2015, following an anterior cruciate ligament injury suffered in Round 10.

Season summary

Pre-season matches

The club's three scheduled pre-season matches were played as part of the 2015 NAB Challenge series.

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance
Home Away Result
1 Friday, 27 February (4:10 pm) West Coast 1.9.15 (78) 2.4.5 (47) Lost by 31 points[36] Rushton Park, Mandurah (A) 10,000 (approx.)
2 Sunday, 15 March (4:40 pm) Collingwood 1.7.13 (64) 1.9.8 (71) Won by 7 points[37] Queen Elizabeth Oval, Bendigo (A) 9,542
3 Sunday, 22 March (4:10 pm) Geelong 2.10.14 (92) 0.17.9 (111) Lost by 19 points[38] Etihad Stadium (H) 10,631
Source:[39]

Home and away season

Carlton performed very poorly in the early part of the home-and-away season. The club fell to last place after Round 7, won one of its first eight games – against defending wooden spooner St Kilda in Round 4 – and lost four games by more than ten goals. The turndown in form placed significant pressure on Carlton's off-field organisation. The club had engaged in optimistic preseason marketing, which included Mick Malthouse telling the media that "it’s very, very difficult to see where we’re going to lose a game";[40] but after only the second round, a 69-point loss against West Coast, Steven Trigg and Mark LoGiudice publicly declared that the club was in a phase of rebuilding. The following weeks were characterised by poor performances and low crowds,[41] which resulted in speculation about Malthouse's coaching future with the club. Early in the season, LoGiudice guaranteed that Malthouse would retain his job until the end of the season,[42][43] but on May 25, he announced a revised position that Malthouse's tenure would be reviewed during the Round 11 bye week.[44] The following morning, Malthouse gave an interview on SEN 1116 in which he was openly critical of the club's administration: he blamed the club's poor performances in part on the psychological effect of Trigg's and LoGiudice's talk of rebuilding; he said he believed LoGiudice's administration had never intended to retain him as coach even before the season began; and he made allegations that Adelaide, during Carlton CEO Steven Trigg's tenure there, had illegally signed a contract with Eddie Betts eighteen months before he became an eligible free agent (Betts had transferred from Carlton to Adelaide at the end of 2013 as a restricted free agent, and the AFL dismissed Malthouse's allegations). Consequently, Malthouse was dismissed that afternoon.[7]

Backline assistant coach John Barker was installed as caretaker coach for the remainder of the season.[7] The club's performances improved over the following six weeks, with two wins and two close losses, but the end of the season was little better than the start, and Carlton won only one of its last ten matches, finishing last on percentage. It was Carlton's first last place finish since 2006, and the fourth in the club's VFL/AFL history.

Across the season, Carlton had a record of 3–3 in six matches against other clubs in the bottom six, all of whom won seven or fewer games for the season. Against all other clubs, Carlton's record was 1–15, the sole win coming against 9th-placed Port Adelaide.

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance Ladder
position
Home Away Result
1 Thursday, 2 April (7:20 pm) Richmond 11.12 (78) 15.15 (105) Lost by 27 points[45] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 83,493 16th
2 Friday, 10 April (6:10 pm) West Coast 20.11 (131) 9.8 (62) Lost by 69 points[46] Domain Stadium (A) 34,588 16th
3 Saturday, 18 April (1:45 pm) Essendon 11.18 (84) 16.9 (105) Lost by 21 points[47] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 54,854 17th
4 Saturday, 25 April (1:10 pm) St Kilda 12.9 (81) 18.13 (121) Won by 40 points[48] Westpac Stadium, Wellington (A) 12,125 14th
5 Friday, 1 May (7:50 pm) Collingwood 6.9 (45) 18.12 (120) Lost by 75 points[49] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 71,759 17th
6 Sunday, 10 May (3:20 pm) Brisbane Lions 11.9 (75) 12.12 (84) Lost by 9 points[50] Etihad Stadium (H) 20,273 17th
7 Saturday, 16 May (4:35 pm) GWS 9.3 (57) 19.21 (135) Lost by 78 points[51] Etihad Stadium (H) 16,676 18th
8 Friday, 22 May (7:50 pm) Geelong 22.8 (140) 9.9 (63) Lost by 77 points[52] Etihad Stadium (A) 32,032 18th
9 Friday, 29 May (7:50 pm) Sydney 19.8 (122) 9.8 (62) Lost by 60 points[53] Sydney Cricket Ground (A) 32,105 18th
10 Saturday, 6 June (1:40 pm) Adelaide 14.6 (90) 14.15 (99) Lost by 9 points[54] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 32,035 17th
11 Bye 18th
12 Saturday, 20 June (1:40 pm) Port Adelaide 17.8 (110) 16.10 (106) Won by 4 points[55] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 27,693 16th
13 Sunday, 28 June (3:20 pm) Gold Coast 14.19 (103) 9.15 (69) Won by 34 points[56] Etihad Stadium (H) 30,207 16th
14 Saturday, 4 July (7:30 pm) Western Bulldogs 9.10 (64) 7.11 (53) Lost by 11 points[57] Etihad Stadium (A) 31,445 16th
15 Friday, 10 July (7:50 pm) Richmond 10.11 (71) 5.11 (41) Lost by 30 points[58] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 52,564 16th
16 Saturday, 18 July (5:40 pm) Fremantle 13.17 (95) 8.5 (53) Lost by 42 points[59] Domain Stadium (A) 33,581 16th
17 Friday, 24 July (7:50 pm) Hawthorn 4.11 (35) 27.11 (173) Lost by 138 points[60] Etihad Stadium (H) 26,815 16th
18 Saturday, 1 August (7:20 pm) North Melbourne 8.6 (54) 18.10 (118) Lost by 64 points[61] Etihad Stadium (H) 25,251 16th
19 Saturday, 8 August (1:45 pm) Collingwood 16.9 (105) 13.9 (87) Lost by 18 points[62] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 48,133 17th
20 Saturday, 15 August (7:20 pm) Brisbane Lions 20.11 (131) 9.13 (67) Lost by 64 points[63] Gabba (A) 17,744 18th
21 Sunday, 23 August (3:20 pm) Melbourne 12.6 (78) 7.13 (55) Won by 23 points[64] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 33,962 17th
22 Saturday, 29 August (1:45 pm) GWS 20.12 (132) 7.9 (51) Lost by 81 points[65] Spotless Stadium (A) 9,538 17th
23 Saturday, 5 September (4:40 pm) Hawthorn 17.11 (113) 8.8 (56) Lost by 57 points[66] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 33,182 18th

Ladder

2015 AFL Ladder
Team P W L D PF PA % Pts
1 Fremantle 22 17 5 0 1857 1564 118.7 68
2 West Coast 22 16 5 1 2330 1572 148.2 66
3 Hawthorn (P) 22 16 6 0 2452 1548 158.4 64
4 Sydney 22 16 6 0 2006 1578 127.1 64
5 Richmond 22 15 7 0 1930 1568 123.1 60
6 Western Bulldogs 22 14 8 0 2101 1825 115.1 56
7 Adelaide 21 13 8 0 2107 1821 115.7 541
8 North Melbourne 22 13 9 0 2062 1937 106.5 52
9 Port Adelaide 22 12 10 0 2002 1874 106.8 48
10 Geelong 21 11 9 1 1853 1833 101.1 481
11 Greater Western Sydney 22 11 11 0 1872 1891 99.0 44
12 Collingwood 22 10 12 0 1972 1856 106.3 40
13 Melbourne 22 7 15 0 1573 2044 77.0 28
14 St Kilda 22 6 15 1 1695 2162 78.4 26
15 Essendon 22 6 16 0 1580 2134 74.0 24
16 Gold Coast 22 4 17 1 1633 2240 72.9 18
17 Brisbane Lions 22 4 18 0 1557 2306 67.5 16
18 Carlton 22 4 18 0 1525 2354 64.8 16
Key: P = Played, W = Won, L = Lost, D = Drawn, PF = Points for, PA = Points against
1The round 14 match between Adelaide and Geelong was cancelled due to the death of Adelaide coach Phil Walsh, and both teams were awarded two premiership points each.

Team awards and records

Match records
Other

Individual awards and records

John Nicholls Medal

The Carlton Football Club Best and Fairest awards night took place on 17 September. The John Nicholls Medal, for the best and fairest player of the club, as well as several other awards, were presented on the night.[70]

John Nicholls Medal

The winner of the John Nicholls Medal was Patrick Cripps, who polled 68 votes to narrowly beat captain Marc Murphy (67 votes) and Zach Tuohy (64 votes). It was Cripps' first John Nicholls Medal in only his second season, having played only three senior games before the start of the season. At age 20 years 6 months, Cripps was the second-youngest winner of the Carlton best and fairest behind only John Nicholls who won aged 20 years 1 month in 1959.

Pos.
Player
Votes
1st Patrick Cripps 68
2nd Marc Murphy 67
3rd Zach Tuohy 64
4th Tom Bell 57
Ed Curnow
6th Sam Docherty 48
7th Kade Simpson 45
8th Andrejs Everitt 37
9th Simon White 35
10th Andrew Carrazzo 23
Other awards

The following other awards were presented on John Nicholls Medal night:-[70]

Leading Goalkickers

Andrejs Everitt was Carlton's leading goalkicker for the season, with 31 goals.[71] It was the first time Everitt had won Carlton's goalkicking.

Player Goals Behinds
Andrejs Everitt 31 20
Levi Casboult 24 12
Tom Bell 17 14
Lachlan Henderson 16 10
Dennis Armfield 13 10

Other awards

NAB AFL Rising Star

Patrick Cripps was nominated for 2015 NAB AFL Rising Star award after his Round 4 performance against St Kilda.[72] He was the favourite to win the award, but was ultimately voted to second place.[73]

Honorific teams
Miscellaneous

Player and coach records

Northern Blues

The Carlton Football Club had a full affiliation with the Northern Blues during the 2015 season. It was the thirteenth season of the clubs' affiliation, which had been in place since 2003. Carlton senior- and rookie-listed players who were not selected to play in the Carlton team were eligible to play for either the Northern Blues seniors or reserves team in the Victorian Football League. The club's nine home matches were split three ways, with three matches at the VFL club's traditional home ground Preston City Oval, four matches at Carlton's traditional home ground Ikon Park, and two matches played as curtain-raisers to Carlton AFL matches at Etihad Stadium.[79] The Northern Blues finished 14th out of 15 in the VFL with a record of 4–14.[80] Carlton's Brad Walsh won the Laurie Hill Trophy as Northern's best and fairest.[81]

References

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