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Round 22, 2024

Carlton 3.2 21 3.6 24 4.7 31 5.8 38
Hawthorn 3.5 23 8.9 57 12.14 86 16.16 112
Venue: MCG
Date: Sunday 11 August 2024 (1.10 pm).
Result: Lost by 74 points.
Crowd: 84, 773
Goalkickers: M. Owies 1.2, H. McKay 1.1, E. Hollands 1.0, B. Acres 1.0, C. Curnow 1.0, Z. Williams 0.1, J. Motlop 0.1, M. McGovern 0.1, O. Hollands 0.1, P. Cripps 0.1.
Reports: Nil.
Umpires: Matt Stevic, Curtis Deboy, Brendan Hosking, Cameron Dore.
Injuries: C. Curnow (ankle), L. Fogarty (collarbone), J. Martin (hamstring), A. Saad (hamstring), J. Boyd (corked leg), H. McKay (thigh).
Ladder: 9th.


Game Review

Blues suffer defeat

A summary of the Round 22 clash with Hawthorn. - By Cristian Filippo, Carlton Media

Carlton has fallen by 74 points to Hawthorn at the MCG. The Blues struggled to contain the Hawks from quarter time, producing just two goals after the opening change in the 5.8 (38) to 16.16 (112) defeat. Carlton was outrun and outgunned by Hawthorn, and was left to lick its wounds with Jack Martin (hamstring), Lachie Fogarty (collarbone), Charlie Curnow (ankle) and Adam Saad (hamstring) all ending their days early due to injury. After conceding the opening two goals inside the first two minutes of the game, the Blues responded, with Curnow and Harry McKay both kicking truly to get the Blues back within two points at the first break. A collision between Fogarty and Martin saw them play little to no further part in the contest from there, and it started a run for the Blues where they lost players throughout the day. The second term was where the Hawks broke the game open, kicking five unanswered majors to put the Blues to the sword in front of over 84,000 fans at the MCG. Carlton’s contest game was strong, with Marc Pittonet and Matthew Kennedy working hard to keep the team in the game, but it was in transition where the Blues were unable to go with the Hawks.

Despite leading contested possessions and clearances at the main break, the Blues found themselves 33 points behind, with the Hawks dominating inside 50s (+6) as well as uncontested possessions (+32) and tackles (+14). The Blues looked to respond with a Blake Acres goal in the opening minutes of the second half, but in the same marking contest, Curnow hobbled from the ground with an ankle injury and played no further part. When Saad left the ground in the final term and Jordan Boyd hobbled through the game following an injury inside the opening minutes of the game, the Blues had extremely limited rotations on the bench and simply couldn’t go with the ruthless Hawks. The Blues head to Optus Stadium next week to take on West Coast in the Sunday twilight fixture.

Hawks into the eight, Blues drop out amid horror injury toll

Hawthorn surges into the top eight for the first time all season after defeating Carlton by 74 points - By Josh Gabelich at the MCG.

Sundays in round 22 used to involve calculators. No one expected them to be required on Sunday, with two rounds still to play. But Hawthorn's stellar rise this winter has reached a new summit after the Hawks' thumping win over Carlton saw them replace the Blues in the eight on percentage. After starting the season 0-5, Sam Mitchell's precocious young side have climbed into the top-eight for the first time in 2024 – and first time since 2022 – after smashing an injury-ravaged Carlton by 74 points at the MCG. Hawthorn kicked 13 goals to just two after quarter-time to make percentage a factor from early in the second half until the final siren, with the 16.16 (112) to 5.8 (38) win resulting in the Hawks moving 1.1 per cent clear of the Blues. Carlton had spent every round of 2024 aside from round 10 in the top eight – and two months in the top four from round 13 until a fortnight ago – but are now on the outside looking in, needing to win both games from here to play in September. The Blues were second on the ladder after they defeated North Melbourne in round 19, but after five losses in six weeks, Michael Voss has more problems than he had when he arrived at the ground.

Two-time Coleman Medallist Charlie Curnow injured his ankle again early in the second half and played no further part in the match. It wasn't the only personnel issue Voss had to deal with after Jack Martin, Jordan Boyd and Lachie Fogarty all came off the ground late in the first quarter. Martin was subbed out at quarter-time with a hamstring concern. Fogarty didn't return due to a collarbone injury, and Boyd tried to play on but hobbled off the ground midway through the second quarter with a corked quad, before returning on one leg. To add to their woes, defender Adam Saad finished the game on the bench after suffering a hamstring injury. Led by captain James Sicily in defence and his right-hand man Josh Weddle, who kicked three goals from defence, Hawthorn heads towards September as one of the most in-form teams in the League, with Dylan Moore and Massimo D'Ambrosio keeping their names front and centre ahead of the final All-Australian meeting later this month. Hawthorn burst out of the blocks, kicking the first two goals before Carlton had even registered an inside-50 entry. When the Blues did enter, it was Curnow, who shrugged off a week of focus on his ankle to put the Blues on the board. Carlton settled from there. They had chances, but didn't take them, breaking down with the final kick inside 50. Jesse Motlop and Matt Owies were ever-present, but wasteful. It was frenetic early, like a final in finals weather, with perfect spring conditions arriving ahead of schedule in mid-August.

With Carlton's injury crisis deepening, Hawthorn sensed a whiff of opportunity and struck, repeatedly. Weddle hit a stunning kick from the axis of the 50m arc and boundary line to kickstart the Hawks. Lloyd Meek then made Mitch McGovern pay for a sloppy moment, converting a 50m penalty, before Jack Gunston kicked two goals in two minutes. Hawthorn had complete control, reaching half-time 33 points ahead after kicking all five goals of the second quarter. Play stopped three minutes into the third quarter when Curnow was helped off the MCG in the arms of two trainers, after re-injuring his ankle. Carlton fans held their collective breath, while Blake Acres kicked truly to end a run of 41 minutes of game time without a goal. But the response was short-lived. Jack Ginnivan juggled a mark, snapped a goal and then whipped out another celebration that was designed for TikTok. Ten minutes later, Ginnivan snapped another goal on his other foot, after a period where Hawthorn's defence was almost impenetrable. Curnow was ruled out of the game in this time, making Carlton's bench a key part of the story unfolding on the other side of the boundary line. Channelling Dermott Brereton, Weddle showed the current No.23 can hit the scoreboard on Sunday, sweetly converting a long-range set shot from 50m to capitalise on a third quarter assault by the Hawks. The former first-round pick then launched a stunning coast-to-coast move that resulted in Calsher Dear kicking his third from the goal square. Gunston finished with three to make an impact once again. Hawthorn dominated the third quarter, just like the second, reaching the final change 55 points ahead, creating a focus on the final margin. Carlton didn't respond. Veteran Hawk Luke Breust replaced Will Day and made them pay, kicking two goals late to make up the percentage difference on a day that could dictate who finishes where at the end of round 24.

Another soft tissue headache at Princes Park
Jack Martin has only just returned from injury but is set for another stint on the sidelines after the former Gold Coast forward was subbed out at quarter-time with a hamstring injury. Martin played once before July this year due to repeat calf issues and the West Australian has managed only three senior appearances in 2024 for a total of 54 across his five seasons at Princes Park.

Best: M. Kennedy, N. Newman, B. Acres.

Team

B: 17 Brodie Kemp 23 Jacob Weitering 2 Lachlan Cowan
HB: 42 Adam Saad 11 Mitch McGovern 24 Nic Newman
C: 4 Ollie Hollands 9 Patrick Cripps (c) 13 Blake Acres
HF: 20 Elijah Hollands 10 Harry McKay 21 Jack Martin
F: 8 Lachie Fogarty 30 Charlie Curnow 3 Jesse Motlop
Ruck: 27 Marc Pittonet 18 Sam Walsh 29 George Hewett
Interchange: 37 Jordan Boyd 7 Matt Kennedy 6 Zac Williams
44 Matt Owies
Substitute: 39 Alex Cincotta
Coach: Michael Voss
Emergencies: 16 Jack Carroll 33 Lewis Young 25 Jaxon Binns


Substitute: Alex Cincotta (replaced Jack Martin at quarter-time)

In; Lachlan Cowan, Zac Williams
Out: Matt Cottrell (shoulder), Adam Cerra (hamstring),

Milestones

100 Games (Carlton): Nic Newman
Last Game: Jack Martin

Interesting Facts

1. This was the largest Carlton vs Hawthorn home and away crowd.
2. The two biggest Carlton vs Hawthorn crowds were 101,861 (1986 Grand Final) and 92,754 (1987 Grand Final).

Free Kicks

Carlton 17
Hawthorn 19

Front Runners

Oliver Hollands 16.5km
Elijah Hollands 16.0km
Jesse Motlop 15.6km
Sam Walsh 15.4km
Lachlan Cowan 14.8km

AFLCA Votes

9 - Dylan Moore (HAW)
9 - Massimo D'Ambrosio (HAW)
6 - James Sicily (HAW)
4 - Joshua Weddle (HAW)
2 - Jarman Impey (HAW)

Brownlow Votes

3 - Dylan Moore (HAW)
2 - Joshua Weddle (HAW)
1 - Massimo D’Ambrosio (HAW)

Best and Fairest Votes


Video



Round 21 | Round 23
Contributors to this page: Bombasheldon , blueycarlton and molsey .
Page last modified on Tuesday 24 of September, 2024 20:08:59 AEST by Bombasheldon.
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