2015 Carlton Football Club season explained

Club:Carlton Football Club
Season:2015
President:Mark LoGiudice
Coach:Mick Malthouse (Rds 1–8)
John Barker (Rds 9–23)
Captain:Marc Murphy
Home Ground:Melbourne Cricket Ground
(Training and administrative: Ikon Park)
Regularseason Comp:AFL season
Regularseason Result:18th (4–18)
Club B&Amp;F:John Nicholls Medal
Best And Fairest:Patrick Cripps
Leading Goalscorer:Andrejs Everitt
Club Membership:47,305
Prevseason:2014
Nextseason:2016

The 2015 Carlton Football Club season was the Carlton Football Club's 152nd season of competition, and 119th as a member of the Australian Football League.

Competing in the 2015 AFL season, it was a very poor season for the club and 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 Malthouse’s dismissal on 26 May, backline assistant coach John Barker stepped in as caretaker.

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 – 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.[7]

Squad for 2015

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

Senior List[8]
No. StatePlayer Age AFL Debut Recruited from Career (to end 2014) 2015 Player Statistics
Gms Gls Gms Gls B D K HB M T HO
1 28 179 118 12 12 6 163 106 57 48 22 1
2 20 26 34 14 13 7 130 87 43 46 24
3 Marc Murphy (c) 27 185 143 19 7 6 510 291 219 79 65 1
4 Bryce Gibbs (vc) 25 177 98 10 4 5 209 112 97 21 54 7
5 31 271 224 8 4 2 148 76 72 20 21
6 30 222 121 20 3 1 460 285 175 118 42 1
7 21 8 2 18 5 5 258 152 106 65 38
8 25 106 56 13 9 5 166 91 75 40 55 276
9 19 3 20 6 13 471 158 313 64 98 39
10 22 19 6 4 4 2 32 23 9 18 8 1
11 27 86 17 2 18 8 10 1 3 56
12 21 11 5 9 138 76 62 24 26
13 24 105 87 14 3 2 223 182 41 68 33
14 23 North Hobart, 66 68 9 7 9 65 46 19 31 18
15 21 Gippsland (U18), 29 8 19 2 2 401 260 141 116 40 1
16 Dillon Viojo-Rainbow 18
17 Sam Rowe (lg) 27 31 11 20 2 211 125 86 79 43 28
18 20 7 2 6 1 2 62 39 23 26 8
19 Cameron Giles 19
20 19 1 8 75 31 44 15 31
22 23 Ainslie, 26 22 13 4 5 218 128 90 55 35
23 Lachlan Henderson (lg) 26 101 88 16 16 10 189 134 55 96 24 2
24 22 12 2 8 1 2 95 46 49 17 33 19
25 18 7 55 24 31 11 9
26 Jayden Foster 19
27 28 113 44 12 13 10 145 88 57 25 36
28 23 29 19 22 17 14 465 295 170 97 87 16
31 20 Calder (U18), 6 2 70 40 30 20 12
32 20 10 2 6 3 1 104 51 53 15 29
33 25 Dandenong (U18),, 96 45 22 31 20 334 225 109 132 30 16
35 25 66 11 22 3 478 216 262 75 98
39 27 Gippsland (U18), 177 133 5 2 2 70 42 28 20 6
40 Michael Jamison (vc) 28 North Ballarat (U18, VFL) 131 2 14 132 74 58 56 15 3
41 24 36 29 16 24 12 150 100 50 83 15 86
42 25 76 25 22 9 3 414 239 175 107 24
43 26 45 9 14 1 1 156 93 63 42 26 7
44 31 178 47 16 1 3 365 128 237 40 63
46 25 53 33 10 4 3 102 55 47 24 32
Rookie List
No. StatePlayer Age AFL Debut Recruited from Career (to end 2014) 2015 Player Statistics
Gms Gls Gms Gls B D K HB M T HO
21 24 4
29 18
30 19 5 1 2 1 15 5 10 3 5
34 18 3 1 19 6 13 2 5
36 27 70 23 18 5 3 108 108 72 33 34 319
37 22 2 21 16 5 5 8
38 20 1 9 5 4 1 1
47 Fraser Russell 22 Geelong (U18), Deakin (athletics)
Senior coaching panel[9]
State Coach Coaching position Carlton Coaching debut Former clubs as coach
Senior Coach (Rounds 1–8) 2013 Footscray (s), (s), (s)
Assistant coach (Back-line)
Caretaker coach (Rounds 9–23)
2011 St Kilda (a), Hawthorn (a)
Director of Coaching and Development 2013 Perth (s), (a), Western Australia U16s (s)
Assistant coach (Midfield) 2014 (a), (s), (a), (a)
Assistant coach (Forward-line) 2013
Development coach 2009
Development coach 2013
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
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)
Kristian Jaksch[10] 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)
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)
Liam Jones[11] AFL Trade Period, in exchange for a third-round draft pick (No. 46 overall)
Matthew Dick[12] Signed as a delisted free agent
AFL National Draft, first round (No. 19 overall)[13]
Dillon Viojo-Rainbow AFL National Draft, second round (No. 28 overall)[14]
AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 60 overall)[15]
Jayden Foster AFL National Draft, fourth round (No. 63 overall)[16]
AFL Pre-season Draft, first round (No. 2 overall)[17]
AFL Rookie Draft, first round (No. 6 overall)
AFL Rookie Draft, second round (No. 24 overall)
AFL Rookie Draft, third round (No. 41 overall)

Out

Player New Club League via
Nick Duigan[18] Towns[19] Removed from the list following his retirement in December 2013
Heath Scotland[20] Doncaster[21] Removed from the list following his retirement in May 2014
Josh Bootsma[22] Peel Thunder[23] Removed from the list following his sacking in June 2014
Andrew McInnes[24] Norwood[25] Delisted after the season
Tom Temay Delisted after the season
Richmond reserves[26] Delisted from the rookie list after the season
Luke Reynolds Port Adelaide reserves[27] Delisted from the rookie list after the season
Jarrad Waite[28] Signed as an unrestricted free agent
Jeff Garlett[29] 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)
Kane Lucas[30] Delisted after the Trade Period; later recruited by West Coast in the rookie draft.
Aberfeldie[31] Delisted after the Trade Period
[32] Delisted after the Trade Period; signed by Brisbane Lions as a free agent

List management

Player Change
National draft Carlton received no free agency compensation draft picks, as the loss of Jarrad Waite was not deemed sufficient to justify one
Jason Tutt[33] Resigned from the 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)
Chris Judd[34] 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 timeOpponentScores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold)VenueAttendance
HomeAwayResult
1align=left Friday, 27 February align=left 1.9.15 (78)2.4.5 (47)Lost by 31 points[35] Rushton Park, Mandurah (A)10,000 (approx.)
2align=left Sunday, 15 March align=left 1.7.13 (64)1.9.8 (71)Won by 7 points[36] Queen Elizabeth Oval, Bendigo (A)9,542
3align=left Sunday, 22 March align=left 2.10.14 (92)0.17.9 (111)Lost by 19 points[37] Etihad Stadium (H)10,631
Source:[38]

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 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";[39] 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,[40] 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,[41] [42] but on May 25, he announced a revised position that Malthouse's tenure would be reviewed during the Round 11 bye week.[43] 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, 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.[44]

Backline assistant coach John Barker was installed as caretaker coach for the remainder of the season. 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 .

Rd Date and local timeOpponentScores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold)VenueAttendanceLadder
position
HomeAwayResult
1align=left Thursday, 2 April align=left 11.12 (78)15.15 (105)Lost by 27 points[45] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H)83,49316th
2align=left Friday, 10 April align=left 20.11 (131)9.8 (62)Lost by 69 points[46] Domain Stadium (A)34,58816th
3align=left Saturday, 18 April align=left 11.18 (84)16.9 (105)Lost by 21 points[47] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H)54,85417th
4align=left Saturday, 25 April align=left 12.9 (81)18.13 (121)Won by 40 points[48] Westpac Stadium, Wellington (A)12,12514th
5align=left Friday, 1 May align=left 6.9 (45)18.12 (120)Lost by 75 points[49] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H)71,75917th
6align=left Sunday, 10 May align=left 11.9 (75)12.12 (84)Lost by 9 points[50] Etihad Stadium (H)20,27317th
7align=left Saturday, 16 May align=left GWS9.3 (57)19.21 (135)Lost by 78 points[51] Etihad Stadium (H)16,67618th
8align=left Friday, 22 May align=left 22.8 (140)9.9 (63)Lost by 77 points[52] Etihad Stadium (A)32,03218th
9align=left Friday, 29 May align=left 19.8 (122)9.8 (62)Lost by 60 points[53] Sydney Cricket Ground (A)32,10518th
10align=left Saturday, 6 June align=left 14.6 (90)14.15 (99)Lost by 9 points[54] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H)32,03517th
11Bye18th
12align=left Saturday, 20 June align=left 17.8 (110)16.10 (106)Won by 4 points[55] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H)27,69316th
13align=left Sunday, 28 June align=left 14.19 (103)9.15 (69)Won by 34 points[56] Etihad Stadium (H)30,20716th
14align=left Saturday, 4 July align=left 9.10 (64)7.11 (53)Lost by 11 points[57] Etihad Stadium (A)31,44516th
15align=left Friday, 10 July align=left 10.11 (71)5.11 (41)Lost by 30 points[58] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A)52,56416th
16align=left Saturday, 18 July align=left 13.17 (95)8.5 (53)Lost by 42 points[59] Domain Stadium (A)33,58116th
17align=left Friday, 24 July align=left 4.11 (35)27.11 (173)Lost by 138 points[60] Etihad Stadium (H)26,81516th
18align=left Saturday, 1 August align=left 8.6 (54)18.10 (118)Lost by 64 points[61] Etihad Stadium (H)25,25116th
19align=left Saturday, 8 August align=left 16.9 (105)13.9 (87)Lost by 18 points[62] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A)48,13317th
20align=left Saturday, 15 August align=left 20.11 (131)9.13 (67)Lost by 64 points[63] Gabba (A)17,74418th
21align=left Sunday, 23 August align=left 12.6 (78)7.13 (55)Won by 23 points[64] Melbourne Cricket Ground (H)33,96217th
22align=left Saturday, 29 August align=left GWS20.12 (132)7.9 (51)Lost by 81 points[65] Spotless Stadium (A)9,53817th
23align=left Saturday, 5 September align=left 17.11 (113)8.8 (56)Lost by 57 points[66] Melbourne Cricket Ground (A)33,18218th

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 MedalThe 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
1stPatrick Cripps68
2ndMarc Murphy67
3rdZach Tuohy64
4thTom Bell57
Ed Curnow
6thSam Docherty48
7thKade Simpson45
8thAndrejs Everitt37
9thSimon White35
10thAndrew Carrazzo23
Other awardsThe following other awards were presented on John Nicholls Medal night:-

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.

Playerwidth=5%Goalswidth=5%Behinds
31 20
24 12
17 14
16 10
13 10

Other awards

NAB AFL Rising StarPatrick Cripps was nominated for 2015 NAB AFL Rising Star award after his Round 4 performance against .[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]

Notes and References

  1. News: Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. Carlton will play six home games at the MCG in 2015 despite campaign for more. Sam Edmund. 18 September 2014. 31 October 2014.
  2. News: Herald Sun. Carlton name new leaders, new sponsor but Mick Malthouse’s future biggest talking point. Grant Baker. 16 February 2015. 16 February 2015. Melbourne, VIC.
  3. Web site: Carlton to honour history with future guernsey. 29 November 2014. 4 December 2014. Carlton Football Club.
  4. Web site: Swans' surge drives new AFL club membership record. 26 August 2015. 29 August 2015. Nathan Schmook. Australian Football League.
  5. News: Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. Carlton reveals the full extent of its financial woes in annual report. Grant Baker. 1 December 2015. 1 December 2015.
  6. News: The Age. New Blues president Mark LoGiudice wants a grand era of success. 26 April 2014. 26 April 2014. Jon Pierik. Melbourne, VIC.
  7. News: The Age. Melbourne, VIC. 3 December 2014. 51. Murphy captain in Carlton's downsized leadership group.
  8. Web site: Senior Players List. Carlton Football Club. 30 January 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141007041751/http://www.carltonfc.com.au/football/players/senior-players. 7 October 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Coaching panel. 31 October 2014. Carlton Football Club. https://web.archive.org/web/20141006203445/http://www.carltonfc.com.au/football/coaching-panel. 6 October 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  10. Web site: Giants Jaksch and Whiley now in the navy blue. 15 October 2014. 31 October 2014. Nick Bowen. Australian Football League.
  11. Web site: Another Dog gone as Liam Jones joins Carlton. 16 October 2014. 31 October 2014. Jennifer Phelan. Australian Football League.
  12. Web site: Blues sign Matthew Dick. 5 November 2014. 5 November 2014. Loretta Johns. Carlton Football Club.
  13. Web site: Pick 19: Blaine Boekhorst. 27 November 2014. 28 November 2014. Madeleine McClure. Carlton Football Club.
  14. Web site: Pick 28: Dillon Viojo-Rainbow. 27 November 2014. 28 November 2014. Madeleine McClure. Carlton Football Club.
  15. Web site: Pick 60: Clem Smith. 27 November 2014. 28 November 2014. Madeleine McClure. Carlton Football Club.
  16. Web site: Pick 63: Jayden Foster. 27 November 2014. 28 November 2014. Madeleine McClure. Carlton Football Club.
  17. News: Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. 74–75. Sam Landsberger. Last piece in Dons puzzle.
  18. News: Herald Sun. Carlton given permission to place Nick Duigan on long-term injury list. 9 December 2013. 9 December 2013.
  19. News: The West Australian. Twist takes Duigan to Geraldton. Dale Miller. 22 February 2014. 28 March 2014.
  20. News: Herald Sun. Carlton defender Heath Scotland retires after 268 AFL games including five years at Collingwood. 20 May 2014. 20 May 2014. Glenn McFarlane.
  21. News: Manningham Leader. Former Carlton and Collingwood midfielder Heath Scotland signs on with Eastern Football League club Doncaster. Eamonn Molloy. 20 October 2014. 31 October 2014.
  22. News: Herald Sun. Carlton sacks defender Josh Bootsma over inappropriate behavior on social media. 3 June 2014. 3 June 2014. Sam Landsberger. Mark Robinson. Scott Gullan.
  23. News: Mandurah Mail. Mandurah, WA. Disgraced former AFL footballer Josh Bootsma joins Peel Thunder. 26 June 2014. 31 October 2014.
  24. Web site: Four more Blues delisted. 2 September 2014. 31 October 2014.
  25. Web site: Former Blue McInnes joins the Legs. 27 October 2014. 31 October 2014. Norwood Football Club.
  26. Web site: 2015 Peter Jackson VFL fixture. 18 December 2014. 22 December 2014. Port Melbourne Football Club. 22 December 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141222093706/http://www.portmelbournefc.com.au/2015-peter-jackson-vfl-fixture/. dead.
  27. Web site: Coming, going for 2015. Zac Millbank. 14 January 2015. 24 January 2015.
  28. Web site: No free agency compo for Blues as Jarrad Waite hops to Kangaroos. 3 October 2014. 31 October 2014. Nick Bowen. Nathan Schmook. Australian Football League.
  29. Web site: Blue turns blue and red: Garlett moves to Demons. 9 October 2014. Ben Guthrie. 31 October 2014. Australian Football League.
  30. Web site: Experienced trio gone as Blues delist more midfielders. 21 October 2014. 31 October 2014. Australian Football League.
  31. News: Moonee Valley Leader. Melbourne, VIC. Chris Cavanagh. 12 January 2015. 24 January 2015. Delisted Carlton midfielder signs on with Aberfeldie in EDFL.
  32. News: Herald Sun. 3 November 2014. 3 November 2014. Mitch Robinson joins Brisbane Lions as delisted free agent. Melbourne, VIC.
  33. News: Herald Sun. Jason Tutt to join Carlton after Western Bulldogs agree to part ways. Jon Ralph. 7 November 2014. 8 November 2014.
  34. Web site: Judd announces retirement. 9 June 2015. 9 June 2015. Carlton Football Club.
  35. Web site: Mackenzie injury darkens Eagles' win over Blues. Alex Malcolm. 27 February 2015. 27 February 2015. Australian Football League.
  36. Web site: Revved-up Yarran powers Carlton to NAB Challenge win over Collingwood in Bendigo. Ben Guthrie. 15 March 2015. 15 March 2015. Australian Football League.
  37. Web site: Hawkins and Clark fire as Cats outclass Blues. 22 March 2015. Ben Guthrie. 22 March 2015. Australian Football League.
  38. Web site: 2015 NAB Challenge details. Carlton Football Club. 31 October 2014. 28 October 2014.
  39. News: Herald Sun. Mick Malthouse is confident Carlton will be successful in 2015, saying hard to see team lose . Sam Edmund. 20 March 2015. 23 May 2015.
  40. Web site: 'Rebuild' may be the dirtiest word to Malthouse. Damian Barrett. 23 April 2015. 23 May 2015. Australian Football League.
  41. News: Herald Sun. Mark Robinson. Mick Malthouse’s job as Carlton coach is safe for the season, says Blues president Mark LoGiudice. 16 April 2015. 23 May 2015. Melbourne, VIC.
  42. Web site: Malthouse will see out the season: LoGiudice. Callum Twomey. 11 May 2015. 23 May 2015. Australian Football League.
  43. Web site: From the president: May 25. Mark LoGiudice. Carlton Football Club. 25 May 2015. 25 May 2015.
  44. News: Herald Sun. Mick Malthouse sacked: Carlton terminates veteran coach’s contract after explosive radio interview. Michael Warner. Mark Robinson. Eliza Sewell. Jon Anderson. 26 May 2015 . 26 May 2015 . Melbourne, VIC.
  45. Web site: Rampaging Tigers down Blues in action-packed season opener. Nick Bowen. 2 April 2015. 2 April 2015. Australian Football League.
  46. Web site: Kennedy bites Blues as Eagles get off the mark. Alex Malcolm. 10 April 2015. 11 April 2015. Australian Football League.
  47. Web site: Dons scrape past Blues, Cooney may be hamstrung for Anzac Day. Travis King. Australian Football League. 18 April 2015. 17 April 2015.
  48. Web site: Blues break through by storming past Saints. Roger Vaughan. 25 April 2015. 25 April 2015. Australian Football League.
  49. Web site: Collingwood cruises to win as Malthouse milestone falls flat. Travis King. 1 May 2015. 1 May 2015. Australian Football League.
  50. Web site: Lions end the drought as pressure mounts on Mick. 10 May 2015. 10 May 2015. Jennifer Phelan. Australian Football League.
  51. Web site: Giants smash insipid Carlton in record-breaking win. 16 May 2015. 16 May 2015. Australian Football League.
  52. Web site: Cats’ cruise adds to bad news for Blues. Jennifer Phelan. 22 May 2015. 22 May 2015. Australian Football League.
  53. Web site: Goodes takes centre stage as Swans add to Blues' woes with thumping win. Adam Curley. 29 May 2015. 30 May 2015. Australian Football League.
  54. Web site: Jenkins boots five as Crows hold off gallant Blues. Nick Bowen. 6 June 2015. 6 June 2015. Australian Football League.
  55. Web site: Port Adelaide's season on life support as Blues outmuscle the Power. 20 June 2015. 20 June 2015. Callum Twomey. Australian Football League.
  56. Web site: Back-to-back Blues leave Suns further off the pace. Nathan Schmook. 28 June 2015. 28 June 2015. Australian Football League.
  57. Web site: Dogs hold off Blues in low-scoring scrap. 4 July 2015. 4 July 2015. Australian Football League.
  58. Web site: Tigers continue their roll, top Blues after early scrap. Peter Ryan. 10 July 2015. 11 July 2015. Australian Football League.
  59. Web site: Shaky Dockers get the points against plucky Blues. Alex Malcolm. 18 July 2015. 18 July 2015. Australian Football League.
  60. Web site: Eight straight for Hawks as premiers (sic) blast Blues. 24 July 2015. 25 July 2015. Nick Bowen. Australian Football League.
  61. Web site: Roos cruise to routine belting of Blues. 1 August 2015. 8 August 2015. Australian Football League. Roger Vaughan.
  62. Web site: Finally, Magpies still have September hope. Nathan Schmook. 8 August 2015. 8 August 2015. Australian Football League.
  63. Web site: Blues sink to bottom of ladder after loss to Lions. Ed Jackson. 15 August 2015. 16 August 2015. Australian Football League.
  64. Web site: Bye bye, wooden spoon. Ferocious Blues upset hapless Demons. Ben Guthrie. 23 August 2015. 23 August 2015. Australian Football League.
  65. Web site: Treloar, Cameron sizzle as Giants crush Blues. 29 August 2015. 29 August 2015. Nick Seewang. Australian Football League.
  66. Web site: Hawthorn vs Carlton match report. 5 September 2015. 5 September 2015. Australian Football League.
  67. Web site: Carlton quarters & halves. 6 June 2015. AFL Tables.
  68. Web site: Carlton – All Games – By season. 27 July 2015. AFL Tables.
  69. Web site: AFL Rd 4 - St Kilda v Carlton. 26 April 2015. 25 April 2015. Hagen Hopkins.
  70. Web site: Cripps wins John Nicholls Medal. Loretta Johns. 17 September 2015. 17 September 2015. Carlton Football Club.
  71. Web site: 2015 Player Stats. AFL Tables. 17 September 2015.
  72. News: Herald Sun. Carlton’s Patrick Cripps is the Round 4 AFL Rising Star nominee after outstanding performance against St Kilda in Wellington . Sam Landsberger. 27 April 2015. 28 April 2015. Melbourne, VIC.
  73. News: Hogan wins the 2015 NAB AFL Rising Star award. King. Travis. 9 September 2015. AFL.com.au. Telstra Media. 9 September 2015.
  74. News: Jake Stringer named captain of the AFLPA’S ‘22under22’ team. Beveridge. Riley. 15 September 2015. Fox Sports Australia. News Corp Australia. 15 September 2015.
  75. News: Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. AFLPA 22under22 squad: Jesse Hogan, Chad Wingard, Taylor Adams, Jake Stringer. 26 August 2015. 26 August 2015. Adam Baldwin.
  76. Web site: Tuohy an AFLCA All-Australian. Loretta Johns. 22 September 2015. 22 September 2015. Carlton Football Club.
  77. Web site: Armfield 'lost for words'. 29 September 2015. 29 September 2015. Danielle Balales. Carlton Football Club.
  78. Web site: Judd wins Madden Medal. 9 October 2015. 9 October 2015. Carlton Football Club.
  79. Web site: Season Fixture : Northern Blues (2015 Peter Jackson VFL). 30 August 2015. Fox Sports Pulse.
  80. Web site: Current Ladder. 30 August 2015. Fox Sports Pulse. 30 August 2015.
  81. Web site: Walsh wins Northern Blues B&F. Cristian Filippo. 11 September 2015. 11 September 2015. Carlton Football Club.