Carlton Football Club premierships

The Carlton Football Club has been involved in 29 VFL/AFL Grand Finals from 1897-2006, winning 16 premiership titles.

Notable Grand Finals

1945: The Bloodbath

An infamous battle between Carlton and South Melbourne (now Sydney Swans), in which the game became footbrawl rather than football. It is the most bloodiest and toughest grand final of all time with the reporting and suspension of ten footballers from both teams. Fights went on all day with several players being knocked out, involving umpires, police, trainers, and spectators, all fighting on the field. Princes Park in Melbourne had 63,000 spectators screaming for blood. Carlton won by 28 points with the following ten players being reported:

1970: The Great Comeback

The most famous Grand Final of all time took place in 1970 before a record crowd of 121,000 people at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) who watched Carlton take on Collingwood. At half-time, the Blues were 44 points behind (nearly 8 goals) and the game seemed all but over, with a victory seeming a certainty for mighty Collingwood. At the half-time break, legendary Carlton coach Ron Barassi blasted his players with a frightening tirade of verbal abuse, pushing and motivating his team to concentrate on handpassing and short kicks - a strategy that worked wonders. In the second half of the game...the tide had turned...and the Blues came storming home. At the time-on stage in the last quarter with the final siren about to go off at any second, the Blues were still two points behind, then suddenly two quick goals - one from Crosswell and another from Alex Jesaulenko - saw Carlton in front by ten points. The clock was ticking...suddenly...the siren sounded...the game was over...Carlton...had snatched victory from the jaws of defeat. There was nothing...absolutely nothing...but euphoria for the Carltonians...the MCG was shaking...the whole world and the skies were painted Navy Blue.

During the game, the football world was inspired by one of the most famous marks in VFL/AFL history. Towards the end of the second quarter David McKay kicked it to the wing and Jesaulenko soared high into the sky on the shoulders of Collingwood's ruckman Graeme "Jerker" Jenkins, a giant of a man at 6'6", and took the heaven-high-grab with his hands out in front of his face. The commentator, Mike Williamson, spoke the infamous words "McKay, to the wing position on the member's stand side, OH JESAULENKO! YOU BEAUTY!" The mark symbolises Carlton famous victory over Collingwood in this Grand Final.[1]

For 37 years this Grand Final victory stood as the greatest comeback in Carlton's history, until the 2007 season when the record was broken by an impressive win from 48 points down in the Round 3 clash against Essendon. It is fitting that Carlton's two greatest comeback wins are against its two fiercest rivals.

Premiership teams

Source: Graeme Atkinson, "The COURAGE book of VFL Finals 1897 - 1973", Wren Publishing Pty Ltd & Courage Breweries Ltd, 1973. ISBN 0-85885-152-0.

(C) = Captain, (NSM) = Norm Smith Medallist.

1906 The First of Many: The first Carlton Premiership Team -
Defeated Fitzroy Football Club
B: Clark Gillespie Beck
HB: Payne Johnson Hammond
C: Bruce McGregor Kennedy
HF: Caine Marchbank Grace
F: Lang Topping Little
Foll: Flynn (C) Jinks Elliot
Int:
Coach: Jack Worrall

1907 Premiership Team: The first double - Defeated South
Melbourne Football Club now Sydney Swans Football Club
B: Clark Gillespie Beck
HB: Gotz Flynn (C) Payne
C: Bruce Ingleman Kennedy
HF: Jinks Kelly Caine
F: Grace Topping Harris
Foll: Johnson Hammond Lang
Int:
Coach: Jack Worrall

1908 Premiership Team: The First three-in-a-row in the VFL/AFL -
Defeated Essendon Football Club
B: Clark Beck Ford
HB: Flynn Payne Jinks
C: Bruce McGregor Kennedy
HF: Lang Marchbank Gotz
F: Kelly Gardiner Topping
Foll: Johnson Hammond Elliot (C)
Int:
Coach: Jack Worrall. Note: This was the first premiership team
not containing a single first year player.

1914 Premiership Team Defeated South Melbourne Football Club
now Sydney Swans Football Club
B: O'Brien Jamieson McDonald
HB: Leehane Dick (C) Haughton
C: Baud McGregor Brown
HF: Lowe Cook Daykin
F: Fisher Green Burleigh
Foll: Calwell Hammond Morris
Int:
Coach: N Clark

1915 Premiership Team: Another Double - Defeated Collingwood
Football Club
B: O'Brien Jamieson McDonald
HB: Baud (C) Robinson Brown
C: Morris McGregor Challis*
HF: Burleigh Daykin Fisher
F: Green Gardiner Sharp
Foll: Hammond Haugton Valentine
Int:
Coach: N Clark. *Note Challis was killed in WWI

1938 Premiership Team Defeated Collingwood Football Club
B: McIntyre Gill Park*
HB: Chitty Francis Anderson
C: Green Crisp Carney
HF: Vallence Wrout Schmidt
F: McLean Baxter Price
Foll: Diggins (C) Hollingshead Hale
Int: McInnes
Coach: Brighton Diggins. *Note Jim Park was killed in WWII

1945 Premiership Team: The Bloodbath - Defeated South
Melbourne Football Club now Sydney Swans Football Club
B: Sanger Brown Baird
HB: Chitty (C) Deacon Clark
C: Turner Wines Williams
HF: Collins Hands Way
F: McLean Baxter Mooring
Foll: Savage Bennett Price
Int: McInnes
Coach: Perce Bentley

1947 Premiership Team Defeated Essendon Football Club
B: Green Grieve Bailey
HB: Brown Deacon Clark
C: Williams Henfry (C) Fitzgibbon
HF: Stafford Hands Garby
F: Davies Baird Turner
Foll: Howell Bennett Conley
Int: Baxter Greensheilds
Coach: Perce Bentley

1968 Premiership Team Defeated Essendon Football Club
B: Collins Lofts Walls
HB: Gill Goold Hall
C: Crane Crosswell Robertson
HF: Jesaulenko Bennett Quirk
F: Munari Kekovich Jones
Foll: Nicholls (C) Silvagni Gallagher
Int: Chandler McLean
Coach: Ron Barassi

1970 Premiership Team: The Great Comeback - Defeated
Collingwood Football Club
B: Gill Hall Waite
HB: Goold McKay Mulcair
C: Crane Robertson Pinnell
HF: Crosswell Walls Jackson
F: Jones Jesaulenko Thornley
Foll: Nicholls (C) Silvagni Gallagher
Int: Hopkins Chandler
Coach: Ron Barassi

1972 Premiership Team Defeated Richmond Football Club
B: O'Connell Southby McKay
HB: Waite Doull Hurst
C: Robertson Armstrong Dickson
HF: Chandler Walls Jackson
F: Nicholls (C) Jesaulenko Keogh
Foll: Jones Hall Gallagher
Int: Lukas Crane
Coach: John Nicholls

1979 Premiership Team Defeated Collingwood Football Club
B: Harmes (NSM) Southby McKay
HB: Klomp Doull McConville
C: Francis Jesaulenko (C) Young
HF: Keogh Maclure Johnston
F: Fitzpatrick Brown Sheldon
Foll: Jones Armstrong Buckley
Int: Austin Marcou
Coach: Alex Jesaulenko

1981 Premiership Team Defeated Collingwood Football Club
B: English Howell Perovic
HB: Harmes Doull (NSM) Hunter
C: Maylin Wells Glascott
HF: Bosustow Maclure Johnston
F: Buckley McKay McConville
Foll: Fitzpatrick (C) Sheldon Ashman
Int: Bortolotto Marcou
Coach: David Parkin

1982 Premiership Team Defeated Richmond Football Club
B: English Bortolotto Perovic
HB: Klomp Doull Hunter
C: Harmes Buckley Glascott
HF: Bosustow Maclure Johnston
F: Marcou Ditchburn McConville
Foll: Fitzpatrick (C) Maylin Ashman
Int: Jones Sheldon
Coach: David Parkin

1987 Premiership Team Defeated Hawthorn Football Club
B: Aitken Silvagni Glascott
HB: Alvin Rhys-Jones (NSM) Dean
C: Robertson Bradley Kennedy
HF: Hunter Kernahan (C) Dennis
F: Meldrum Dorotich Naley
Foll: Madden Johnston Murphy
Int: Gleeson McKenzie
Coach: Robert Walls

1995 Premiership Team Defeated Geelong Football Club
B: Hogg Silvagni Sexton
HB: Christou Dean McKay
C: Koutoufides Ratten Hanna
HF: Rice Spalding Clape
F: Pearce Kernahan (C) Williams (NSM)
Foll: Madden Bradley Brown
Int: Camporeale Manton Whitehead
Coach: David Parkin

References

  1. Video of Jezza's Mark Archived September 5, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
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