2024 Carlton Football Club season

The 2024 Carlton Football Club season is the Carlton Football Club's 161st season of competition.

Carlton Football Club
2024 season
PresidentLuke Sayers
CoachMichael Voss
Captain(s)Patrick Cripps
Home groundMarvel Stadium, Melbourne Cricket Ground
(Training and administrative: Ikon Park)

It is the club's men's team's 128th season as a member of the Australian Football League, and the third under senior coach Michael Voss. The club's women's team will contest its ninth season of the AFL Women's. The club will also field its men's reserves team in the Victorian Football League and its state level women's team in the VFL Women's.

Club summary

The 2024 AFL season is the 128th season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it is also the 128th season contested by the Carlton Football Club. The club will also field its women's team in the ninth season of the AFL Women's competition, its men's reserves team in its seventh Victorian Football League season, and its VFL women's team in its sixth VFL Women's season.

As in 2023, Carlton's primary home ground is Marvel Stadium and secondary home ground is the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with the team playing six home games at the former and five at the latter.[1] Traditional home ground Ikon Park continues to serve as the training and administrative base, and as the home ground for AFL Women's and the men's reserves matches.

Car manufacturer Hyundai, which had been a major sponsor of the club continuously since 2008,[2] and Great Southern Bank, which became a major sponsor during the 2021 season, continued as the club's major sponsors through the 2024 season;[3] in March, Great Southern Bank signed an extension to its major sponsorship of the club through until the end of 2027.[4]

Senior personnel

Luke Sayers will continue in his third year as president, Brian Cook in his third year as CEO, and Michael Voss in his third year as senior coach of the club. Prior to the season, Cook and Voss signed contract extensions to remain at the club until the end of 2025 and 2026 respectively.[5] Patrick Cripps will continue in his third year as sole club captain and sixth year overall (having served as co-captain with Sam Docherty for three years). The number of vice-captains was increased from two to three to make up the broader leadership group, with Charlie Curnow appointed a new vice captain, and Jacob Weitering and Sam Walsh continuing in the role.[6] The coaching panel was mostly steady from 2023, the only change being former player Jordan Russell joining as the forward line assistant coach, with Ashley Hansen promoted to senior assistant coach.[7]

Squad for 2024

The following is Carlton's squad for the 2024 season.

Statistics are correct as of end of 2023 season.

Senior List[8]
No.PlayerHgt (cm)Date of BirthAge (end 2023)AFL DebutRecruited fromGames (end 2023)Goals (end 2023)
1Jack Silvagni19417 December 1997262016Oakleigh (U18)11587
2Lachie Cowan1871 December 2004192023Devonport, Tasmania (U18)70
3Jesse Motlop18023 November 2003202022South Fremantle3336
4Oliver Hollands18316 January 2004192023Murray (U18)194
5Adam Cerra1877 October 1999242018Eastern (U18), Fremantle11630
6Zac Williams18520 September 1994292013GWS Academy, GWS13632
7Matthew Kennedy1906 April 1997262016Collingullie-Glenfield Park, GWS9441
8Lachie Fogarty1801 April 1999242018Western (U18), Geelong5516
9Patrick Cripps (c)19518 March 1995282014East Fremantle18396
10Harry McKay20424 December 1997262017Gippsland (U18)107203
11Mitch McGovern19111 October 1994292016Claremont, Adelaide110106
12Tom de Koning20316 July 1999242018Dandenong (U18)6021
13Blake Acres1897 October 1995282014West Perth, St Kilda, Fremantle14547
14Orazio Fantasia18014 September 1995282014Norwood, Essendon, Port Adelaide99141
15Sam Docherty18718 October 1993302013Gippsland (U18), Brisbane Lions16725
16Jack Carroll18720 December 2002212022East Fremantle61
17Brodie Kemp1921 May 2001222021Bendigo (U18)231
18Sam Walsh (vc)1842 July 2000232019Geelong (U18)9937
19Corey Durdin17314 February 2002212021Central District3427
20Elijah Hollands18925 April 2002212022Murray (U18), Gold Coast148
21Jack Martin18629 January 1995282014Claremont, Gold Coast148130
22Caleb Marchbank1937 December 1996272015Murray (U18), GWS600
23Jacob Weitering (vc)19624 November 1997262016Dandenong (U18)15911
24Nic Newman18715 January 1993302017Frankston, Sydney11017
25Jaxon Binns18229 October 200419Dandenong (U18)
27Marc Pittonet2023 June 1996272016Oakleigh (U18), Hawthorn595
28David Cuningham18530 March 1997262016Oakleigh (U18)5329
29George Hewett18530 December 1995272016North Adelaide, Sydney15739
30Charlie Curnow1923 February 1997262016Geelong (U18)110224
31Harry Lemmey20030 January 200419West Adelaide
33Lewis Young20121 December 1998242017Sturt, Western Bulldogs582
35Billy Wilson18316 June 200518Dandenong (U18)
42Adam Saad17823 July 1994292015Calder (U18), Coburg, Gold Coast, Essendon17710
43Asthon Moir18715 April 200518Glenelg
44Matthew Owies17919 March 1997262020St Kevin's, Seattle Redhawks4956
46Matthew Cottrell18129 February 2000232020Dandenong (U18)5425
Rookie List[8]
No.PlayerHgtDate of BirthAgeDebutRecruited fromGamesGoals
32Matt Carroll18828 November 200518Sandringham (U18)
34Rob Monahan19429 June 202419Kerry
36Cooper Lord18420 March 200518Sandringham (U18), North Melbourne reserves
37Jordan Boyd18222 September 1998252022Western (U18), Footscray reserves160
38Sam Durdin1996 June 1996272017West Adelaide, North Melbourne, Glenelg231
39Alex Cincotta18717 December 1996272023Newtown & Chilwell, Carlton reserves193
40Hudson O'Keeffe20216 December 200419Oakleigh (U18)
41Domanic Akuei19412 May 200221Carlton academy
45Alex Mirkov21017 November 199924Carlton reserves
Senior coaching panel[9]
CoachCoaching positionCarlton Coaching debutFormer clubs as coach
Michael VossSenior coach2022Brisbane Lions (s), Port Adelaide (a)
Luke PowerHead of development, reserves coach2020GWS (a), AFL Academy Manager
Tim ClarkeAssistant coach (Midfield)2016Richmond (a), Coburg (s), Richmond reserves (s), Gold Coast (a)
Aaron HamillAssistant coach (backline)2022St Kilda (a), Sandringham (s)
Ashley HansenAssistant coach (senior)2022Western Bulldogs (a), Footscray reserves (s)
Matthew KreuzerAssistant coach (ruck)2022
Jordan RussellAssistant coach (forward line)2022Western Bulldogs (d), North Melbourne (a)
Tom LonerganDevelopment and talent manager2023Calder Cannons (d), Geelong Falcons (d)
Brad EbertDevelopment coach2023Port Adelaide (m)
Torin BakerCarlton College of Sport and Academy and development coach2021Western Jets (s), Hawthorn (d)
Aaron GreavesCoaching and performance manager2022Melbourne (d, a), Port Adelaide (a, d), North Melbourne (d), AFL umpires (s)
  • For players: (c) denotes captain, (vc) denotes vice-captain.
  • 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 occurred after the 2023 season. Unless otherwise noted, draft picks refer to selections in the 2023 national draft.

Between seasons, Carlton saw the retirements of two long-term players: Ed Curnow, after thirteen seasons and 221 games; and Lachie Plowman after eight seasons and 125 games. Fringe midfielders Zac Fisher and Paddy Dow requested and were granted trades after seven and six years with the club respectively, seeking greater opportunities in other clubs' midfields. The club also traded for former top ten draft pick Elijah Hollands – brother of second-year player Oliver – from Gold Coast.

In

PlayerFormer ClubLeaguevia
Rob MonahanKerry GAAGAACategory B rookie signing[10]
Elijah HollandsGold CoastAFLTrade period, along with a second-round selection (provisionally No. 28) and a fourth-round selection in the 2024 AFL draft#2024 national draft, in exchange for a higher second-round selection (provisionally No. 25) and Essendon's third-round selection in the 2024 national draft.[11]
Orazio FantasiaPort AdelaideAFLSigned as a delisted free agent after the trade period.[12]
Ashton MoirGlenelgSANFL2023 national draft, first round selection (No. 29 overall).[13]
Billy WilsonDandenong StingraysCoates Talent League2023 national draft, second round selection (No. 34 overall).[13]
Matt CarrollSandringham DragonsCoates Talent League2024 rookie draft, first round selection (No. 15 overall).[13]
Cooper LordNorth Melbourne reservesVFL2024 mid-season draft, first round selection (No. 9 overall).[14]

Out

PlayerNew ClubLeaguevia
Ed CurnowLorne (as coach)[15]Colac & District FLRetired from the rookie list.[16]
Lachie PlowmanMaribyrnong Park[17]Essendon District FLRetired.[18]
Sam PhilpBundoora[19]Northern FLDelisted after the season.[20]
Josh HoneyKeilor[21]Essendon District FLDelisted after the season.[20]
Lochie O'BrienWangaratta Rovers[22]O&MFLDelisted from the rookie list after the season.[20]
Zac FisherNorth MelbourneAFLTrade period, along with a first-round selection (provisionally No. 17), in exchange for a lower first-round selection and a second-round selection (provisionally No. 21 and 25).[23]
Paddy DowSt KildaAFLTrade period, in a four-way trade which saw Carlton give up Dow and its third-round and fourth-round selections in the 2024 national draft to St Kilda and Essendon respectively, in exchange for Essendon's third-round selection and Western Bulldogs' and Fremantle's fourth-round selections in the 2024 national draft.[24]

List management

PlayerChange
Matt CottrellElevated from the rookie list to the senior list.[25]
Lachie CowanChanged guernsey number from No. 26 to No. 2.[26]
Oliver HollandsChanged guernsey number from No. 14 to No. 4.[26]
Jaxon BinnsChanged guernsey number from No. 32 to No. 25.[26]
Matt DuffyCarlton announced Duffy's recruitment from Longford GAA as a Category B rookie signing in August 2023;[10] but after he suffered a knee injury suffered playing Gaelic football in November 2023, his start was deferred by a year and he was left off the 2024 list.[27]

Season summary

Pre-season

Carlton played two practice matches, the first deemed unofficial match simulation and the second deemed an official practice match, as part of its lead-up to the premiership season.

Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue
Home Away Result
Thursday, 22 February (11:30 am) Geelong 8.8 (56) 10.13 (73) Lost by 17 points[28] Ikon Park (H)
Wednesday, 28 February (6:40 pm) Melbourne 10.3 (63) 15.11 (101) Lost by 38 points[29] Ikon Park (H)

Home-and-away season

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance Ladder
Home Away Result
Op Friday, 8 March (7:40 pm) Brisbane Lions 12.13 (85) 13.8 (86) Won by 1 point[30] The Gabba (A) 33,367 4th
1 Thursday, 14 March (7:30 pm) Richmond 12.14 (86) 12.9 (81) Won by 5 points[31] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 83,881 4th
2 Bye 7th
3 Friday, 29 March (4:20 pm) North Melbourne 12.9 (81) 21.11 (137) Won by 56 points[32] Marvel Stadium (A) 47,565 6th
4 Saturday, 6 April (3:50 pm) Fremantle 9.9 (63) 10.13 (73) Won by 10 points[33] Adelaide Oval (N) 45,970 D/H 4th
5 Saturday, 13 April (4:35 pm) Adelaide 14.14 (98) 16.4 (100) Lost by 2 points[34] Marvel Stadium (H) 46,283 6th
6 Saturday, 20 April (4:35 pm) GWS 17.15 (117) 15.8 (98) Won by 19 points[35] Marvel Stadium (H) 40,474 4th
7 Saturday, 27 April (4:35 pm) Geelong 18.10 (118) 15.15 (105) Lost by 13 points[36] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 87,775 6th
8 Friday, 3 May (7:40 pm) Collingwood 12.7 (79) 12.13 (85) Lost by 6 points[37] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 88,362 8th
9 Thursday, 9 May (7:30 pm) Melbourne 12.5 (77) 11.10 (76) Won by 1 point[38] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 58,472 7th
10 Friday, 17 May (7:40 pm) Sydney 17.15 (117) 9.11 (65) Lost by 52 points[39] Sydney Cricket Ground (A) 44,047 10th
11 Saturday, 25 May (1:45 pm) Gold Coast 15.12 (102) 11.7 (73) Won by 29 points[40] Marvel Stadium (H) 39,597 8th
12 Thursday, 30 May (7:30 pm) Port Adelaide 10.11 (71) 16.11 (107) Won by 36 points[41] Adelaide Oval (A) 40,532 5th
13 Sunday, 9 June (7:20 pm) Essendon 9.16 (70) 15.6 (96) Won by 26 points[42] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 88,510 2nd
14 Bye 2nd
15 Friday, 21 June (7:40 pm) Geelong 21.12 (138) 11.9 (75) Won by 63 points[43] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 75,218 2nd
16 Sunday, 30 June (3:20 pm) Richmond 10.10 (70) 20.11 (131) Won by 61 points[44] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 58,298 2nd

Team records

  • Opening round – Carlton trailed Brisbane Lions by 46 points halfway through the second quarter, before recovering to lead at three-quarter time and ultimately win by one point.[30] It was the greatest in-game deficit Carlton had overcome for victory since 2007, and the second greatest in club history.[45]
  • Opening round – Carlton's win against Brisbane ended Brisbane's 14-game home winning streak at the Gabba.[30]
  • Opening round – Carlton defeated Brisbane at the Gabba for the first time since round 9, 2013, ending an 8-game losing streak.[30]
  • Round 22, 2023 to Round 1 2024 – Carlton went through a streak of six consecutive victories (in non-consecutive matches) by six points or fewer, the longest such streak in VFL/AFL history.[46]

Individual awards and records

Individual records

  • Round 10 – the match was Charlie Curnow's 57th consecutive appearance in which he scored at least one goal, breaking the Carlton Football Club record set by Harry Vallence in the 1930s.[47]

Other awards

Carlton Football Club Hall of Fame

At the 2024 Carlton Football Club Hall of Fame dinner on 18 March, three players were inducted into the Hall of Fame:[48]

  • Jack Carney, who played 84 games and won one premiership for the club between 1936 and 1941, before serving in administrative and reserves team support roles with the club over the following decades;
  • Neil Chandler, who played 76 games and won three premierships with the club between 1968 and 1974;
  • Brendan Fevola, who played 187 games and kicked 575 goals for the club between 1999 and 2009, winning two Coleman Medals and seven club leading goalkicker awards.

Additionally, to celebrate the club's 160th season, a special contingent of historical inductees representing the club's early history were inducted. As of 6 May, the inductees announced are:[49]

  • Jack Baker, who played 116 matches and won one premiership between 1882 and 1888, and was captain in 1884 and 1885;
  • Jack Conway, who played about 33 matches and won one premiership between 1866 and 1871, and was captain from 1868 until 1871;
  • Jack Donovan, who played about 72 matches and won one premiership between 1869 and 1883, and was captain in 1871, 1872 and 1874;
  • John Gardiner, who played and won four premierships between 1872 and 1879, was captain from 1876 until 1879, and served as president from 1914 until 1924;
  • Billy Goer, who played about 130 matches and won four premierships between 1873 and 1889, and was captain in 1882;
  • Harry Guy, who played about 70 matches and won four premierships between 1865 and 1878, and was captain in 1875;
  • Robert Heatley, who played 33 matches in 1883 and 1884, served as president from 1901 until 1903, and was chairman of the Carlton Recreation Ground Management Committee;
  • Tommy Leydin, who played about 91 matches and won one premiership between 1885 and 1889, and was captain from 1887 until 1889;
  • Lanty O'Brien, who played about 50 matches and won four premierships between 1865 and 1876;
  • George Robertson, who played between 1872 and 1881, and was captain from 1880 until 1881.

AFL Women's

Squad

The club's AFL Women's 2024 squad is given below, correct as of 7 April 2024. From 2023, Carlton lost inaugural AFL Women's player Phoebe McWilliams, who retired after eight seasons in the league and two with Carlton;[50] traded Paige Trudgeon and Annie Lee;[51] and delisted Imogen Milford, Daisy Walker and Chloe Wrigley.[52] Carlton gained three-year Collingwood player Tarni Brown, five-year Western Bulldogs player Celine Moody, and Port Adelaide's Yasmin Duursma in trades;[51] and Lila Keck and Meg Robertson in the draft.[53]

Senior list Coaching staff

Head coach

  • Mathew Buck

Assistant coaches

  • Tom Couch (midfield)
  • Christina Polatajko (forwards)
  • Glenn Strachan (backline)
  • Lachlan Swaney (development)
  • Ash Naulty (head of AFLW)

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

Updated:
Source(s): Senior list, Coaching staff

Reserves

Carlton will field reserves teams in the men's and women's competitions during the 2023 season.

Men's

Carlton's men's reserves team will contest its seventh VFL season; and its 87th overall season of reserves and state level competition dating back to 1919.

Club head of development Luke Power continued as reserves coach for the second season. VFL-listed players newly signed to team included: former AFL senior players Lachie Young (Western Bulldogs/North Melbourne) and Tom Phillips (Collingwood/Hawthorn); and Ollie Badr, Kristian Ferronato, Jess Gedi, Luca Goonan, Bailey Lambert, Luke Nelson, Flynn Riley, Michael Rudd, Tyson Sruk and Callum Verrall. Retained from 2023 were Noah Barnes, Jed Brereton, Ned Cahill, Patrick Dozzi, Hayden Gill, Darcy Hogg, Blake Kuipers, Jack Lefroy, Michael Lewis, Zavier Maher, Jack Maruff, Liam McMahon, Aiden “AJ” Mills, Hugo Nosiara, Logan Prout, Heath Ramshaw, Archie Stevens, Lachie Swaney and Will White. Lachie Young and Lachie Swaney were appointed co-captains following the departure of 2023 captain Ben Crocker.[54]

Women's

The club will field a team in the VFL Women's competition for the sixth time. The club's AFL Women's senior assistant coach Glenn Strachan took over from Tom Stafford as VFL Women's senior coach, after the latter had served two seasons in the role.[55]

Footnotes

1.^ The match was the first half of a ticketed Gather Round double-header, played prior to the Western Bulldogs vs Geelong match at 7:40pm.

References

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