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2017 Carlton Football Club season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carlton Football Club
2017 season
PresidentMark LoGiudice
CoachBrendon Bolton
Captain(s)Marc Murphy
Home groundMelbourne Cricket Ground
(Training and administrative: Ikon Park)
AFL season16th (6–16)
AFL Women's4th (3–3–1)
John Nicholls MedalMarc Murphy
Leading goalkickerLevi Casboult (34)
Club membership50,326

The 2017 Carlton Football Club season was the Carlton Football Club's 154th season of competition.

It was the club's men's team's 121st season as a member of the Australian Football League. The team finished sixteenth out of eighteen teams in the 2017 AFL season with a win–loss record of 6–16.

The season saw the inauguration of the club's women's team, which contested its first season as a member of the AFL Women's competition. The team finished fourth out of eight teams in the 2017 AFL Women's season with a 3–3–1 record from seven games.

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Transcription

Club summary

The 2017 AFL season was the 121st season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it was also the 121st season contested by the Carlton Football Club. 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. Carlton's primary home ground continued to be the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with the club playing six home matches there and five at Etihad Stadium; traditional home ground Ikon Park continued to serve as the training and administrative base.

The club also fielded its women's team in the inaugural season of the AFL Women's competition, running in February and March. Carlton was one of four Victorian clubs granted a license in June 2016 for the eight-team competition.[1] Ikon Park served as the home ground for women's matches.

The club's membership was 50,326, a 0.3% increase on the 2016 season.[2] Car manufacturer Hyundai continued as one of the club's two major sponsorship partners in 2017, having been a major sponsor continuously since 2008.[3] The club's second major sponsorship partner at the beginning of the season was job seekers' services provider CareerOne, which was in the final year of a three-year deal; however, the company withdrew from the sponsorship during May after cash flow difficulties related to a federal government audit of one of its clients.[4] In late May, the club signed airline Virgin Australia, which was already in a secondary level sponsorship deal with the club, as the replacement for CareerOne, with the Virgin logo replacing the CareerOne logo on the team's guernseys from Round 10 onwards.[5] The club posted a $700,000 profit for the year, its first profit since the 2013 season.[6]

Senior personnel

Mark LoGiudice continued as club president, a role he had held since June 2014.[7] Marc Murphy continued in the role of captain for the fifth season; Kade Simpson remained vice-captain. There was one change to the club's seven-man leadership group, with Dennis Armfield elevated to the group to fill the position left by the retirement of Andrew Walker, and Ed Curnow, Bryce Gibbs, Patrick Cripps and Sam Docherty holding their places.[8] Former Western Bulldogs women's exhibition series senior coach Damien Keeping joined the club as the coach of the women's team.[9]

Squad for 2017

The following is Carlton's squad for the 2017 season.

Statistics are correct as of end of 2017 season. Flags represent the state of origin, i.e. the state in which the player played his Under-18s football.

Senior List[10]
No. State Player Age AFL Debut Recruited from Career (to end 2016) 2017 Player Statistics
Gms Gls Gms Gls B D K HB M T HO
1 Victoria (state) Jack Silvagni 19 2016 Oakleigh (U18) 8 7 20 19 17 201 144 57 90 51 0
3 Victoria (state) Marc Murphy (c) 29 2006 Oakleigh (U18) 214 157 22 11 9 656 390 266 127 86 0
4 South Australia Bryce Gibbs (lg) 27 2007 Glenelg 209 120 22 17 13 590 362 228 114 129 0
5 Western Australia Sam Petrevski-Seton 18 2017 Claremont 20 10 7 28 168 112 65 95 0
6 Victoria (state) Kade Simpson (vc) 32 2003 Eastern (U18) 264 127 22 4 3 529 377 152 162 59 0
7 Victoria (state) Dylan Buckley 23 2013 Northern (U18) 38 16 1 0 0 8 5 3 0 1 0
8 Victoria (state) Matthew Kreuzer 27 2008 Northern (U18) 140 72 21 12 12 321 206 115 69 107 665
9 Western Australia Patrick Cripps (lg) 21 2014 East Fremantle 44 16 15 7 4 374 168 206 65 90 0
10 Victoria (state) Harry McKay 19 2017 Gippsland (U18) 2 3 2 15 11 4 7 1 0
11 Victoria (state) Sam Kerridge 23 2012 Bendigo (U18), Adelaide 48 29 11 2 2 238 120 118 55 48 0
12 Western Australia Blaine Boekhorst 23 2015 Swan Districts 18 8 7 7 1 116 77 39 31 21 0
13 Victoria (state) Jed Lamb 24 2013 Gippsland (U18), Sydney, GWS 37 30 11 6 10 141 110 31 51 28 0
14 Tasmania Liam Jones 25 2010 North Hobart, Western Bulldogs 83 84 12 0 0 135 95 40 56 34 0
15 Victoria (state) Sam Docherty (lg) 23 2013 Gippsland (U18), Brisbane Lions 70 11 22 3 3 613 460 153 199 7 0
16 Victoria (state) Billie Smedts 24 2012 Geelong (U18), Geelong 38 19 9 1 3 91 44 47 20 32 0
17 New South Wales Sam Rowe 29 2013 Murray (U18), Sydney, Norwood 73 15 9 1 0 80 44 36 24 13 0
18 Victoria (state) Kristian Jaksch 22 2013 Oakleigh (U18), GWS 14 3 0
19 Victoria (state) Liam Sumner 23 2012 Sandringham (U18), GWS 28 17 4 2 1 27 17 10 7 6 0
20 Victoria (state) Lachie Plowman 22 2013 Calder (U18), GWS 39 1 21 0 1 301 178 123 111 42 0
22 Victoria (state) Caleb Marchbank 20 2015 Murray (U18), GWS 7 0 16 0 1 248 184 64 102 40 0
23 Victoria (state) Jacob Weitering 19 2016 Dandenong (U18) 20 2 22 7 3 301 198 103 122 28 0
24 Western Australia Rhys Palmer 27 2008 East Fremantle, Fremantle, GWS 122 95 1 0 0 12 6 6 4 2 0
25 Western Australia Zac Fisher 18 2017 Perth 17 4 4 197 93 104 22 50 0
26 New South Wales Harrison Macreadie 18 2017 Henty 8 0 0 61 35 26 17 19 0
27 Western Australia Dennis Armfield (lg) 30 2008 Swan Districts 140 73 5 2 1 55 37 18 25 11 0
28 Victoria (state) David Cuningham 19 2016 Oakleigh (U18) 3 8 6 1 103 63 40 27 34 0
29 Victoria (state) Cameron Polson 18 2017 Sandringham (U18) 1 0 1 11 3 8 0 2 0
30 Victoria (state) Charlie Curnow 19 2016 Geelong (U18) 6 5 21 20 12 297 207 90 119 61 6
31 Victoria (state) Tom Williamson 18 2017 North Ballarat (U18) 15 1 3 182 116 66 51 35 0
32 Victoria (state) Nicholas Graham 22 2013 Gippsland (U18) 28 7 10 3 4 182 116 66 51 47 0
33 Western Australia Jarrod Pickett 20 2017 South Fremantle, GWS 10 6 5 91 56 35 20 21 0
34 Tasmania Andrew Phillips 25 2012 Lauderdale, GWS 30 11 1 0 0 5 3 2 1 3 29
35 Victoria (state) Ed Curnow (lg) 27 2011 Geelong (U18), Adelaide, Box Hill 109 16 13 6 3 282 156 126 51 66 0
36 Victoria (state) Pat Kerr 18 Oakleigh (U18) 0
37 South Australia Daniel Gorringe 24 2011 Norwood, Gold Coast 26 11 0
38 Republic of Ireland Ciarán Byrne 22 2015 Louth GAA 12 3 0 0 39 21 18 13 2 0
39 Victoria (state) Dale Thomas 29 2006 Gippsland (U18), Collingwood 200 141 18 8 7 315 196 119 103 31 0
41 Victoria (state) Levi Casboult 26 2012 Dandenong (U18) 72 71 22 34 18 220 144 76 120 39 157
43 Western Australia Simon White 28 2010 Subiaco 76 12 11 0 0 142 97 45 56 21 0
46 South Australia Matthew Wright 27 2011 North Adelaide, Adelaide 116 85 22 30 12 357 236 121 96 64 0
Rookie List[10]
No. State Player Age AFL Debut Recruited from Career (to end 2016) 2017 Player Statistics
Gms Gls Gms Gls B D K HB M T HO
21 Republic of Ireland Ciarán Sheehan 26 2014 Cork GAA 4 2 0 0 19 11 8 5 2 0
40 Western Australia Jesse Glass-McCasker 19 Swan Districts 0
42 South Australia Kym LeBois 18 North Adelaide 0
44 Victoria (state) Alex Silvagni 29 2010 Casey, Fremantle 53 10 7 0 0 73 45 28 31 33 0
45 Victoria (state) Andrew Gallucci 22 Calder (U18), Williamstown 0
48 United States Matt Korcheck 25 Arizona 0
Senior coaching panel[11]
State Coach Coaching position Carlton Coaching debut Former clubs as coach
Tasmania Brendon Bolton Senior Coach 2016 North Hobart (s), Tasmania (VFL) (s), Clarence (s), Box Hill (s), Hawthorn (a)
Victoria (state) John Barker Assistant coach (Stoppages) 2011 St Kilda (a), Hawthorn (a)
South Australia Neil Craig Director of Coaching, Development and Performance 2016 Norwood (s), Adelaide (s), Melbourne (cs), Essendon (m)
Victoria (state) Tim Clarke Assistant coach (Midfield) 2016 Richmond (a), Coburg (s), Richmond reserves (s)
Victoria (state) Shane Watson Assistant coach (Forward-line) 2016 Lower Plenty (s), Sandringham (U18) (a), Eastern (U18) (s), North Melbourne (a)
Victoria (state) Dale Amos Assistant coach (Back-line) 2016 South Barwon (s), Geelong (a), Geelong reserves (s)
Victoria (state) Matthew Capuano Development coach 2009
Victoria (state) Josh Fraser Development coach, Northern Blues senior coach 2016 Gold Coast reserves (s)
  • For players: (c) denotes captain, (vc) denotes vice-captain, (dvc) denotes deputy vice-captain, (lg) denotes leadership group.
  • For coaches: (s) denotes senior coach, (cs) denotes caretaker senior coach, (a) denotes assistant coach, (d) denotes development coach, (m) denotes managerial or administrative role in a football or coaching department

Playing list changes

The following summarises all player changes which have occurred since the conclusion of the 2016 season. Unless otherwise noted, draft picks refer to selections in the 2016 AFL draft.

Two high-profile players requested trades away from Carlton in the lead-up to the trade period: Zach Tuohy and Bryce Gibbs. Gibbs was two years into a five-year contract, but sought a return to Adelaide for family reasons, nominating the Adelaide Crows as his preferred destination.[12] Tuohy, out of contract but not a free agent, nominated Geelong as his preferred destination.[13] Carlton was also linked to young out-of-contract Greater Western Sydney defender Caleb Marchbank, who was seeking to return to his home state Victoria and nominated Carlton as his preferred destination.[14] In the end, deals were secured for Tuohy and Marchbank, but Carlton and Adelaide could not come to an agreement on a trade for Gibbs and he remained on the Carlton list.

In

Player Former Club League via
Victoria (state) Billie Smedts Geelong AFL AFL Trade Period, along with a fourth-round draft pick (provisionally No. 63) and Geelong's first-round draft pick in the 2017 National Draft, in exchange for Zach Tuohy and Carlton's second-round draft pick in the 2017 National Draft.[15]
Victoria (state) Caleb Marchbank Greater Western Sydney AFL AFL Trade Period, along with GWS' second-round draft pick in the 2017 National Draft, in exchange for third- and fourth-round draft picks (provisionally No. 45 and 58) and Geelong's first-round draft pick in the 2017 National Draft.[16]
Western Australia Jarrod Pickett Greater Western Sydney AFL
Western Australia Rhys Palmer Greater Western Sydney AFL AFL Trade Period, in exchange for an eighth-round draft pick (provisionally No. 135).[17]
Western Australia Sam Petrevski-Seton Claremont WAFL AFL National Draft, first round (No. 6 overall).[18]
Western Australia Zac Fisher Perth WAFL AFL National Draft, second round (No. 27 overall).[19]
New South Wales Harrison Macreadie Henty Hume FL AFL National Draft, third round (No. 47 overall). Eligible as a Greater Western Sydney academy selection but Carlton's bid was not matched by GWS.[20]
Victoria (state) Cameron Polson Sandringham Dragons TAC Cup AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 59 overall).[21]
Victoria (state) Tom Williamson North Ballarat Rebels TAC Cup AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 61 overall).[22]
Victoria (state) Pat Kerr Oakleigh Chargers TAC Cup AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 65 overall).[23]
South Australia Kym LeBois North Adelaide SANFL AFL Rookie Draft, first round (No. 5 overall).[24]
Victoria (state) Alex Silvagni Fremantle AFL AFL Rookie Draft, second round (No. 23 overall).[25]

Out

Player New Club League via
Victoria (state) Andrew Walker West Preston Lakeside[26] Northern FL Retired[27]
Victoria (state) Michael Jamison Retired[28]
South Australia Cameron Wood Avondale Heights[29] Essendon District FL Retired from the rookie list[30]
Victoria (state) Matthew Dick Macedon[31] Riddell District FL Delisted prior to the trade period[30]
Victoria (state) Jayden Foster Footscray reserves[32] VFL Delisted prior to the trade period[30]
Western Australia Clem Smith Perth[33] WAFL Delisted prior to the trade period[34]
Republic of Ireland Zach Tuohy Geelong AFL AFL Trade Period, along with the club's second-round draft pick in the 2017 National Draft, in exchange for Billie Smedts, a fourth-round draft pick (provisionally No. 63) and Geelong's first-round draft pick in the 2017 National Draft.[15]
Victoria (state) Andrejs Everitt Somerville[35] MPNFL Delisted following the trade period[36]
Australian Capital Territory Jason Tutt De La Salle[37] VAFA Delisted following the trade period[36]
Victoria (state) Dillon Viojo-Rainbow Port Melbourne[38] VFL Delisted following the trade period[36]
New South Wales Mark Whiley Yarrawonga[39] O&MFL Delisted following the trade period[36]
Victoria (state) Billy Gowers Footscray reserves[32] VFL Delisted from the rookie list following the trade period[36]

List management

Player Change
National draft Carlton traded Greater Western Sydney's second-round pick in the 2017 National Draft (which was obtained in the trade for Caleb Marchbank and Jarrod Pickett) to Hawthorn in exchange for a third-round draft pick and two fourth-round draft picks (provisionally No. 48, 66 and 70).
Republic of Ireland Ciarán Byrne Elevated from the rookie list to the senior list.[40]
Victoria (state) Andrew Gallucci Initially delisted from the rookie list following the trade period, but received permission to continue training with the club after being delisted,[36] and was redrafted in the third round of the rookie draft (No. 39 overall).
Republic of Ireland Ciarán Sheehan Initially delisted from the rookie list following the trade period, but received permission to continue training with the club after being delisted,[40] and was then re-added to the rookie list as an out-of-draft selection.[24]
Victoria (state) Billy Gowers Received permission to continue training with the club after being delisted, but was not re-drafted.[36]
New South Wales Will Setterfield Greater Western Sydney Academy Player. Carlton bid on Setterfield in the AFL National Draft in the first round (pick No. 5 overall); GWS then matched Carlton's bid and recruited Setterfield with its next two selections (No. 15 and 37).[41]
Guernsey number changes Jack Silvagni (No. 2 to No. 1)
Jesse Glass-McCasker (No. 47 to No. 40)

Season summary

Practice matches

The club played three practice matches as part of the JLT Community Series.

Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance
Home Away Result
Saturday, 25 February (2:05 pm) Melbourne 0.17.14 (116) 0.9.8 (62) Lost by 54 points[42] Casey Fields (A) 7,256
Saturday, 4 March (2:05 pm) St Kilda 0.4.6 (30) 0.18.14 (122) Lost by 92 points[43] Ikon Park (H) 15,485
Friday, 10 March (5:40 pm) Fremantle 2.12.14 (104) 0.12.11 (83) Lost by 21 points[44] Domain Stadium (A) 6,639

Home and away season

The club entered the season continuing to rebuild its playing list under a youth policy, and thus despite having won seven games in 2016, the club was expected to fare poorly, with about half of all pundits across the major newspapers and media outlets predicting the club would finish last.[45][46] The club eventually finished with a 6–16 record, one fewer win than in 2016, to finish sixteenth, one win and percentage ahead of wooden spooners Brisbane Lions.

As in 2016, the club was stronger in the first half of the year than the second, sitting with win–loss records of 3–4 after Round 7 and 4–7 after Round 13, before winning only one of its final ten games. The club's win–loss formline when compared to its opponents' finishing position was unusually erratic, with the club finishing:

  • 2–6 against the top six. This included upset wins against Greater Western Sydney and Sydney and a 12-point loss to minor premiers Adelaide, as well as its four heaviest losses
  • 3–6 against teams ranked seventh to thirteenth, with no losing margin heavier than four goals against those teams
  • 1–4 against the other four teams in the bottom five, with three of the four losses heavier than four goals and the only win coming against Gold Coast

Carlton was usually able to keep close in its games, and led at least ten minutes into the final quarter in eight of its sixteen losses.[47]

As in 2016, the team's strength was built on its defence, with the club continuing to build its backline with the recruitment of Caleb Marchbank from Greater Western Sydney, the conversion of Liam Jones from a fringe key forward to a dominant key defender, and the continued growth of rebounder Sam Docherty, who was selected in the All-Australian team. Its biggest weakness was its inability to score, and the club was the lowest-scoring in the league (having been second-lowest in 2016 behind suspension-affected Essendon) and failed to score 100 points in any game for the first time since 1917.

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance Ladder
position
Home Away Result
1 Thursday, 23 March (7:25 pm) Richmond 14.5 (89) 20.12 (132) Lost by 43 points[48] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 73,137 16th
2 Sunday, 2 April (3:20 pm) Melbourne 13.8 (86) 9.10 (64) Lost by 22 points[49] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 46,727 16th
3 Sunday, 9 April (3:20 pm) Essendon 7.15 (57) 6.6 (42) Won by 15 points[50] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 48,022 14th
4 Saturday, 15 April (7:25 pm) Gold Coast 12.10 (82) 17.6 (108) Lost by 26 points[51] Etihad Stadium (H) 24,968 14th
5 Friday, 21 April (7:20 pm) Port Adelaide 20.17 (137) 6.11 (47) Lost by 90 points[52] Adelaide Oval (A) 43,120 16th
6 Saturday, 29 April (2:10 pm) Sydney 15.7 (97) 11.12 (78) Won by 19 points[53] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 32,678 14th
7 Saturday, 6 May (2:10 pm) Collingwood 8.8 (56) 12.7 (79) Won by 23 points[54] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 70,279 13th
8 Saturday, 13 May (2:10 pm) St Kilda 12.13 (85) 10.6 (66) Lost by 19 points[55] Etihad Stadium (A) 38,014 13th
9 Sunday, 21 May (2:40 pm) Fremantle 13.8 (86) 7.9 (51) Lost by 35 points[56] Domain Stadium (A) 30,313 16th
10 Sunday, 28 May (3:20 pm) North Melbourne 15.6 (96) 17.11 (113) Lost by 17 points[57] Etihad Stadium (H) 32,802 17th
11 Bye 17th
12 Sunday, 11 June (3:20 pm) GWS 10.11 (71) 9.16 (70) Won by 1 point[58] Etihad Stadium (H) 23,194 16th
13 Saturday, 17 June (7:25 pm) Gold Coast 11.7 (73) 12.11 (83) Won by 10 points[59] Metricon Stadium (A) 11,936 15th
14 Sunday, 25 June (3:20 pm) Richmond 11.18 (84) 8.10 (58) Lost by 26 points[60] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 64,448 15th
15 Saturday, 1 June (2:10 pm) Adelaide 12.5 (77) 13.11 (89) Lost by 12 points[61] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 33,433 16th
16 Sunday, 9 July (3:20 pm) Melbourne 12.10 (82) 14.6 (90) Lost by 8 points[62] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 47,266 16th
17 Sunday, 16 July (3:20 pm) Western Bulldogs 9.8 (62) 12.10 (82) Lost by 20 points[63] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 35,157 16th
18 Sunday, 23 July (4:40 pm) Brisbane Lions 17.10 (112) 11.16 (82) Lost by 30 points[64] The Gabba (A) 18,847 16th
19 Saturday, 29 July (7:25 pm) Geelong 8.10 (58) 18.15 (123) Lost by 65 points[65] Etihad Stadium (H) 35,460 17th
20 Saturday, 5 August (2:10 pm) Essendon 11.18 (84) 11.10 (76) Lost by 8 points[66] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 58,562 17th
21 Saturday, 12 August (5:40 pm) West Coast 15.10 (100) 12.11 (83) Lost by 17 points[67] Domain Stadium (A) 30,491 17th
22 Saturday, 19 August (7:25 pm) Hawthorn 12.5 (77) 10.10 (70) Won by 7 points[68] Etihad Stadium (H) 35,799 15th
23 Saturday, 26 August (4:35 pm) Sydney 21.12 (138) 8.9 (57) Lost by 81 points[69] Sydney Cricket Ground (A) 38,965 16th

Team awards and records

Game records and awards
  • Round 3 – Carlton laid a total of 111 tackles against Essendon, the most tackles ever laid by the club in a single game; the record was aided by the wet weather, with such conditions always conducive to high tackling games.[70]
  • Round 3 – with scoring affected by heavy rain which fell throughout the game, Carlton's score of 7.15 (57) was its lowest winning score since Round 12, 1989, and Essendon's score of 6.6 (42) was the lowest score Carlton had conceded since Round 22, 2001.[71]
  • Round 3 – the club won the Madden Cup as winners of its rivalry game against Essendon.[72]
  • Round 7 – the club won the Peter Mac Cup as winners of its rivalry game against Collingwood.[73]
  • Round 22 – the club defeated Hawthorn for the first time since Round 6, 2005, ending a fourteen-game losing streak. It was the club's equal-longest VFL/AFL losing streak against a single opponent, matching the fourteen game losing streak against Essendon in 1897–1902.
  • The club failed to record a score of 100 or higher in any match in 2017, the first such season since the 1917 season.[74]
Other notes
  • Round 3 – the club used a once-off alternative guernsey known as the "Blueout Guernsey" against Essendon. Intended as a tribute to the suburb of Carlton, the guernsey design matched the home guernsey, except that the monogram and numbers were navy blue with a white outline, and the guernsey was finished with a subtle pattern representing bluestone.[75]
  • Round 7 – the away match against Collingwood was staged to celebrate the 125th anniversary of Collingwood's inaugural senior premiership game, played against Carlton in the 1892 VFA season.[54]

Individual awards and records

John Nicholls Medal

The Carlton Football Club Best and Fairest awards night took place on 22 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.[76]

John Nicholls Medal

The winner of the John Nicholls Medal was Marc Murphy, who polled 174 votes to beat 2016 winner Sam Docherty (169 votes) and Matthew Kreuzer (164 votes). It was Murphy's second John Nicholls Medal, having first won the medal six years earlier in 2011. Matthew Kreuzer's third placing was the best performance of this career, and he also swept the coterie group awards. Also notable was the ninth-placing of Liam Jones, who in his first season as a defender polled 84 votes from only twelve games – a votes-per-game average which would have been high enough for fourth place had been played the entire season – and the seventh- and tenth-placings of Lachie Plowman and Charlie Curnow, who reached the count's top ten for the first times in their careers.[76]

Pos.
Player
Votes
1st Marc Murphy 174
2nd Sam Docherty 169
3rd Matthew Kreuzer 164
4th Bryce Gibbs 130
5th Kade Simpson 103
6th Matthew Wright 103
7th Lachie Plowman 95
8th Patrick Cripps 92
9th Liam Jones 84
10th Charlie Curnow 81
Other awards

The following other awards were presented on John Nicholls Medal night:-[76]

  • Best First-Year Player – Sam Petrevski-Seton
  • Best Clubman – Dennis Armfield
  • Spirit of Carlton Award – Matthew Kreuzer
  • Bill Lanyon Inner Blue Ruthless Award – Matthew Kreuzer
  • Carltonians William A. Cook Award – Matthew Kreuzer
  • Hyundai MVP Award (the most valuable player as voted by fans in an online poll) – Sam Docherty and Marc Murphy

Records

Leading goalkickers

Levi Casboult was Carlton's leading goalkicker for the season with 34 goals.[79] It was Casboult's only time finishing as the club's leading goalkicker, after having been the second highest goalkicker in 2015 and 2016. 2016 leading goalkicker Matthew Wright was second.

Player Goals Behinds
Levi Casboult 34 18
Matthew Wright 30 12
Charlie Curnow 20 12
Jack Silvagni 19 17
Bryce Gibbs 17 13

Other awards

NAB AFL Rising Star

Five Carlton players were nominated for the 2017 AFL Rising Star award. This was the most ever nominated in a single season in the club, exceeding the three players nominated in 2003. Two of those players polled votes in the final count: Charlie Curnow, who was fourth with 27 votes, and Sam Petrevski-Seton, who was sixth with 3 votes.[80] The nominees were:

Representative honours

The following Carlton players were selected for representative teams during the 2017 season.

Honorific teams
  • All-Australian teamSam Docherty was named on the half-back flank in the All-Australian team. It was Docherty's first All-Australian team selection, having also been nominated in the 40-man squad in 2016, and he was the first Carlton player since 2011 to be selected in the final 22.[87] Matthew Kreuzer was also nominated in the 40-man squad.[88]
  • 22under22 teamCharlie Curnow was named at centre half-forward in the 2017 22under22 team.[89] Patrick Cripps was also nominated in the 40-man squad but was not voted into the final team.[90]
AFLPA Awards

For each of the AFLPA awards, one or three Carlton players were nominated by an internal vote of Carlton players; Marc Murphy was also nominated for the Best Captain award by default.[91] Sam Petrevski-Seton placed third for the best first-year player award.[92]

Leigh Matthews Trophy (Most Valuable Player)
Robert Rose Award (Most Courageous Player)
Best First Year Player
Other awards

Women's team

Squad

Under the competition's player recruitment regulations, each of the eight clubs was entitled to sign two marquee players. In July 2016, Carlton recruited St Kilda Sharks key position/midfielder and former Australian international soccer goalkeeper Brianna Davey and Darebin Falcons full forward Darcy Vescio as its marquee players.[94] Darebin midfielder Lauren Arnell also signed with the club as a priority signing due to her pre-existing relationship with the club as its Female Football Ambassador. The club drew most of its remaining recruits from the inaugural AFL Women's draft, with Cranbourne forward Bianca Jakobsson taken with Carlton's first round selection at No. 3 overall.[95] Arnell was made the inaugural captain of the team, with Davey and Madeline Keryk serving as vice-captains.[96]

The following is the final senior squad as announced at the start of the season. Numbers in parentheses represent games played and goals kicked for Carlton in the season. Only supplementary players who played a senior match during the season are listed.

Carlton Football Club Women's Team
Women's team senior list Supplementaries Coaching staff
  •  1 Brianna Davey (vc) (6,1)
  •  2 Katie Loynes (7,1)
  •  3 Darcy Vescio (7,14)
  •  4 Madeline Keryk (vc) (6,0)
  •  5 Kate Gillespie-Jones (7,0)
  •  6 Gabriella Pound (7,1)
  •  7 Sarah Last (3,0)
  •  8 Kate Darby (2,0)
  •  9 Rebecca Privitelli (5,1)
  •  10 Sarah Hosking (7,2)
  •  11 Jessica Hosking (0,0)
  •  12 Lauren Brazzale (7,1)
  •  13 Lauren Arnell (c) (7,2)
  •  14 Laura Attard (7,0)
  •  15 Nat Exon (5,0)
  •  16 Breann Moody (7,1)
  •  18 Tilly Lucas-Rodd (7,0)
  •  22 Isabella Ayre (6,4)
  •  23 Jessica Kennedy (4,0)
  •  25 Kate Shierlaw (6,2)
  •  26 Shae Audley (7,2)
  •  27 Alison Brown (7,0)
  •  30 Alison Downie (7,2)
  •  31 Danielle Hardiman (6,0)
  •  32 Natalie Plane (1,0)
  •  33 Hayley Trevean (1,0)
  •  35 Bianca Jakobsson (7,4)
  •  20 Tahni Nestor (3,0)
  •  27 Jordan Ivey (2,1)

Head coach



Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice-captain(s)

Updated:
Source(s): [95][97]


Season

The club played each of the other seven clubs once in the home-and-away series of the inaugural AFL Women's fixture over February and March. The main highlight of the fixture was the Round 1 match against Collingwood, which saw the two traditional men's rivals play the first match in the new competition's history. The match, for which admission was free, drew a lockout crowd of 24,568 at Ikon Park,[98] after having originally been scheduled for Collingwood's 5,000-capacity Olympic Park training oval then being transferred due to the expected crowd.[99] The team's Round 4, 5 and 6 matches against Melbourne, Fremantle and the Western Bulldogs served as curtain-raisers to the senior team's pre-season practice matches against the same clubs.

The club finished fourth out of eight on the ladder, with a final record of 3–3–1.

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance Ladder
position
Home Away Result
1 Friday, 3 February (7:40 pm) Collingwood 7.4 (46) 1.5 (11) Won by 35 points[98] Ikon Park (H) 24,568 1st
2 Saturday, 11 February (3:35 pm) GWS 7.5 (47) 5.4 (34) Won by 13 points[100] Ikon Park (H) 8,000 2nd
3 Sunday, 19 February (11:35 am) Adelaide 2.5 (17) 2.2 (14) Lost by 3 points[101] Thebarton Oval (A) 9,006 3rd
4 Saturday, 25 February (11:35 am) Melbourne 6.6 (42) 5.6 (36) Lost by 6 points[102] Casey Fields (A) 3,965 4th
5 Saturday, 4 March (11:35 am) Western Bulldogs 8.6 (54) 7.6 (48) Won by 6 points[103] Ikon Park (H) 6,833 3rd
6 Friday, 10 March (3:05 pm) Fremantle 6.7 (43) 4.3 (27) Lost by 16 points[104] Domain Stadium (A) 1,200 4th
7 Sunday, 19 March (3:35 pm) Brisbane Lions 6.1 (37) 5.7 (37) Match drawn[105] Ikon Park (H) 5,801 4th

The following individual awards were won by Carlton players:

Northern Blues

The Carlton Football Club had a full affiliation with the Northern Blues during the 2017 season. It was the fifteenth 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 with six matches at the VFL club's traditional home ground Preston City Oval, and three matches at Carlton's traditional home ground Ikon Park.[109] The Northern Blues finished 9th out of 15 in the VFL with a record of 8–10 to miss the finals on percentage by 8.1%pts.

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