Carlton made its first VFL grand final in the year of 1904 to be defeated by Fitzroy. Two years later in 1906, it was to enter the first of five consecutive grand finals. The first three were all premierships and Carlton became the first team in the history of the VFL/AFL to win three-in-a-row. The fourth grand final in 1909 made Carlton the closest team to attempt to win four-in-a-row, as it was narrowly beaten by just 2 points to South Melbourne (now Sydney Swans). Had it not been for the political trouble that plagued the club early in the season, the result could well have been different. However, this remarkable feat was subsequently surpassed during the Great Depression by the club's greatest rival - Collingwood (which became famous as 'The Machine') in 1927-30. In Carlton's fifth grand final in 1910, they were defeated by Collingwood and this was the beginning of a strong rivalry between the two clubs that would endure for more than a century. Collingwood's working-class supporter base, close geographic proximity, and many historic on-field (and occasional off-field) tussles mark the rivalry as one of the strongest in the AFL. 1910 had been a controversial year for the club, two players including Alex Lang were banned for 99 games (approximately 6 years) after being found guilty of accepting bribes to play poorly.
Carlton has traditionally been in the top 2 most powerful on-field clubs, boasting a winning record over 11 of the 15 other clubs currently in the competition, including all the VFL teams such as notable rivals Collingwood, Essendon and Richmond. Many memorable battles have been contested against them, most notably in a thriller in the 1947 Grand Final when Carlton beat Essendon by one point, and again in the 1968 Grand Final when Carlton beat Essendon to win by 3 points. In the Grand Final of 1972, Carlton defeated Richmond in a goal kicking spree that saw fifty goals kicked - the highest number of goals ever kicked in a Grand Final.
Changes within the rules of the national competition meant that Carlton and other Victorian teams cannot, as easily, recruit the best players from across Australia because many non-Victorian players can now be recruited by home-town clubs. The recruiting mechanism of all such players is now part of the draft pick process. In addition all teams are confronted by the rules of the salary cap which is designed to limit the funds spent of players in any given season, in an attempt to create a level playing field. Prior to the salary cap, rich Victorian clubs such as Carlton were able to attract prospective players to the club by offering more money than the less successful clubs. Perhaps the sorest point in the club's history was when long time great Jamie McCarney defected to the Hawthorn Football Club.
In the year of its last premiership in 1995, Carlton set a new AFL/VFL record by losing only two games for the entire season having been beaten by the Sydney Swans and St. Kilda. This record stood until 2000 when rivals Essendon went through the entire season losing only one game against the Western Bulldogs. Carlton went on to defeat Geelong comfortably in the 1995 Grand Final, with Stephen Kernahan kicking 5 goals.
In 2002 the club was in great turmoil. Off-field the club had mounting financial losses and accounting irregularities which ultimately caused the club president John Elliott to resign from office and the subsequent removal of his name from the John Elliott Grandstand. He was succeeded by Ian Collins as president in 2003. On-field the team went through the entire season without winning a single game on its home ground, which culminated in the club claiming the wooden spoon for finishing last on the AFL ladder for the first time in its history. Carlton was the last club of the original AFL/VFL teams to 'win' its first wooden spoon.
Under the new Collins administration, it was discovered that the club's previous administration had been making extra, secret payments to certain players. This violattion of the AFL salary cap resulted in the club receiving a record total fine of $980,000 and being banned from first and second round picks in the annual player draft for two years, hampering attempts to rebuild the club's player group. Brendan Goddard and Daniel Wells, who respectively went to St. Kilda and North Melbourne at picks 1 and 2, were two players who possibly would have been selected by Carlton.
Its coach Wayne Brittain, who had taken over the coaching duties in 2001, had his contract terminated and was replaced by Denis Pagan for the 2003 season. Brittain's arrival couldn't have come at a worse time since he took over a club on the verge of collapse which severely damaged his AFL coaching career prospects and he remains a potential coach who was never given a proper coaching opportunity at this level.
The appointment of Denis Pagan as senior coach in 2003 was an attempt to turn the club around. However, Carlton's predicament was clearly underestimated as even Pagan, with a reputation of being one of the best coaches in VFL/AFL history with his impressive long run of premierships with several clubs at several levels, was unable to reverse Carlton's football plight in the short term. It had become apparent that the Carlton team had to be replaced with a more youthful lineup and this has developed over the past 3 years as the club's policy. Recruitment has centred on Carlton attempting to recruit players under 24 years old who are likely to have the capability to play at least 100 games.
In 2005 the club also became the last of the former VFL clubs to move away from its original home ground when it played its last match at Optus Oval against Melbourne in Round 9 of the 2005 season. Carlton had played at Princes Park for 108 years. Carlton now play half of their home games at the Telstra Dome and the other half at the MCG. (The games at the MCG are generally against traditional rivals Collingwood, Richmond, Essendon and Melbourne).
On 24 July 2007, following a loss to the Brisbane Lions by 117 points, Denis Pagan was sacked as coach and replaced on an interim basis by Brett Ratten. On 20 August 2007, the club announced that Ratten would become full time coach for the 2008 and 2009 seasons.
On 11 October 2007 during the AFL trade week, Chris Judd was officially traded to Carlton along with a third round selection in the 2007 AFL Draft (#46 overall) for Carlton's first and second round selections (#3 and #20) and Josh Kennedy.
On 15 October 2007, Carlton announced it had delisted its captain, Lance Whitnall, after receiving medical reports that his knee injury would affect his ability to train in 2008.
Carlton showed noticeable improvement during the 2008 Home & Away season, boasting an 10-11 win-loss record after Round 21. Notable wins came against arch-rival Collingwood in round 4 to snap a 14 match losing streak that dated back to mid 2007. There was also a memorable come from behind victory over 2007 runners-up Port Adelaide at AAMI stadium in round 11. The Blues trailed by 30 points at three quarter time and had registered just three goals before piling on seven goals to none in the last quarter to snatch victory. Carlton backed up their early season victory over Collingwood with another come from behind win over the Magpies in Round 12. The Blues spent a week inside the eight after the match, the first time since 2001 that this has occurred in the second half of the season.
The Blues finished their 2008 season with 10 wins and 12 losses to equal their 2004 season.
There are proposals to redevelop the ground to make it into an elite training facility for the players. The project would see the currently dilapidated facilities to be replaced with a high-tech gym, indoor swimming pool and medical centre that would rival the facilities of Collingwood's Lexus Centre. The project will commence when it receives Melbourne City Council approval which is estimated to be early to mid 2008. The Blues currently have an arrangement that allows the Melbourne Storm NRL club to train, and base its administration offices, at Princes Park. The Storm, 2007 NRL Premiers, hosted a well-attended fan day there after their premiership win. Many Carlton Blues players and officials attended this day, and there is a close relationship between the Blues and Storm administrations and playing staff.
Assistant Coaches - Gavin Crosisca, Mark Riley, Brett Montgomery, Robert Harvey
VFL Affaliate - Northern Bullants and Development Coach - David Teague
Development Coach - Matthew Lappin
Part-time Coaches - Craig Bradley(Midfield Coach), Steve McKee(Ruck Coach)
High Performance Manager - Justin Cordy
Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach - Noel McCarthy
In April 2006, the club announced a "clash" jumper in accordance to the AFL's request that each club have an alternative jumper to be worn against other clubs in similar design. The jumper consists of inverted colours from the regular home season outfit, complemented by blue stripes on the sides. This white jumper was first worn on Friday, 4 May 2007 in the club's 43 point loss to St Kilda at Telstra Dome.
We are the Navy Blues is the official club song of the Carlton Football Club. It is sung to the tune of "Lily of Laguna" by Leslie Stuart.
| Year | Finishing position | President | Coach | Captain | Best and Fairest | Leading Goalkicker (Total) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1897 | 7th | A.H. Shaw | - | Jimmy Aitken | - | Wally O'Cock (13) |
| 1898 | 7th | A.H. Shaw | - | Ernie Walton | - | Tommy O'Dea (8) |
| 1899 | 7th | A.H. Shaw | - | Ernie Walton | - | Harry Thompson (8) |
| 1900 | 7th | A.H. Shaw | - | Will Stuckey | - | Joe Sullivan (18) |
| 1901 | 7th | Robert Heatley | - | Will Stuckey | - | Joe Sullivan (14) |
| 1902 | 6th | Robert Heatley | Jack Worrall | Joe McShane | - | Fred Webber (11) |
| 1903 | 3rd | Robert Heatley | Jack Worrall | Joe McShane | - | Joe Sullivan (27) |
| 1904 | 2nd | Henry Bourne Higgins | Jack Worrall | Joe McShane | - | Mick Grace (26) |
| 1905 | 3rd | W.F. Evans | Jack Worrall | Jim Flynn | - | Frank Caine (25) |
| 1906 | Premiers | W.F. Evans | Jack Worrall | Jim Flynn | - | Mick Grace (50) |
| 1907 | Premiers | J. Urquhart | Jack Worrall | Jim Flynn | - | Frank Caine (32) |
| 1908 | Premiers | J. Urquhart | Jack Worrall | Fred Elliott | - | Vin Gardiner (34) |
| 1909 | 2nd | J. Urquhart | Jack Worrall | Fred Elliott | - | George Topping (36) |
| 1910 | 2nd | J. McInerney | Fred Elliott | Fred Elliott | - | Vin Gardiner (42) |
| 1911 | 4th | J. McInerney | Fred Elliott | Fred Elliott | - | Vin Gardiner (47) |
| 1912 | 3rd | D. Bell | Norman Clark | Jack Wells | - | Vin Gardiner (47) |
| 1913 | 6th | D. Bell | Jack Wells | Jack Wells | - | Vin Gardiner (27) |
| 1914 | Premiers | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Billy Dick | - | Bill Cook (27) |
| 1915 | Premiers | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Billy Dick | - | Herb Burleigh (46) |
| 1916 | 2nd | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Billy Dick | - | Vin Gardiner (44) |
| 1917 | 3rd | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Billy Dick | - | Billy Dick (22) |
| 1918 | 3rd | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Rod McGregor | - | Ern Crowley (35) |
| 1919 | 4th | Jack Gardiner | Viv Valentine | Charlie Fisher | - | Charlie Fisher (36) |
| 1920 | 3rd | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Paddy O'Brien | - | Horrie Clover |
| 1921 | 2nd | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Gordon Green | - | Horrie Clover (58) |
| 1922 | 4th | Jack Gardiner | Norman Clark | Horrie Clover | - | Horrie Clover (56) |
| 1923 | 7th | Jack Gardiner | Horrie Clover | Horrie Clover | - | Horrie Clover (28) |
| 1924 | 7th | Jack Gardiner | Percy Parratt | Paddy O'Brien | - | Alex Duncan (27) |
| 1925 | 9th | D. Young | Paddy O'Brien | Jim Caldwell | - | Harvey Dunn (35) |
| 1926 | 6th | D. Young | Ray Brew | Ray Brew | - | Horrie Clover (38) |
| 1927 | 3rd | D. Young | Horrie Clover | Horrie Clover | - | Harold Carter (33) |
| 1928 | 4th | D. Young | Ray Brew | Ray Brew | - | Horrie Clover (41) |
| 1929 | 3rd | Dave Crone | Dan Minogue | Ray Brew | - | Harry "Soapy" Vallence (64) |
| 1930 | 3rd | Dave Crone | Dan Minogue | Ray Brew | - | Les Allen (56) |
| 1931 | 3rd | Dave Crone | Dan Minogue | Ray Brew | - | Harry Vallence (86) |
| 1932 | 2nd | Dave Crone | Dan Minogue | Colin Martyn | - | Harry Vallence (97) |
| 1933 | 4th | Dave Crone | Dan Minogue | Frank Gill | - | Harry Vallence (84) |
| 1934 | 5th | Dave Crone | Dan Minogue | Maurie Johnson | Creswell Crisp | Creswell 'Mickey' Crisp (44) |
| 1935 | 4th | Dave Crone | Frank Maher | Charlie Davey | Jim Francis | Harry Vallence (66) |
| 1936 | 4th | Dave Crone | Frank Maher | Jim Francis | Ansell Clarke | Harry Vallence (86) |
| 1937 | 5th | Dave Crone | Percy Rowe | Ansell Clarke | Don McIntyre | Harry Vallence (39) |
| 1938 | Premiers | Sir Kenneth G.Luke | Brighton Diggins | Brighton Diggins | Creswell Crisp | Harry Vallence (81) |
| 1939 | 5th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Brighton Diggins | Brighton Diggins | Frank Gill | Ken Baxter (65) |
| 1940 | 5th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Brighton Diggins | Brighton Diggins | Jim Francis | Paul Schmidt (55) |
| 1941 | 3rd | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Jim Francis | Bob Chitty | Paul Schmidt (77) |
| 1942 | 5th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Jim Francis | Jim Mooring | Paul Schmidt (47) |
| 1943 | 4th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Jim Francis | George Gneil | Jack Wrout (33) |
| 1944 | 5th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Jim Francis, Bob Atkinson | Bob Chitty | Jim Mooring (42) |
| 1945 | Premiers | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Bob Chitty | Ron Savage | Lance Collins (49) |
| 1946 | 6th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Bob Chitty | Jack Howell | Ken Baxter (46) |
| 1947 | Premiers | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ern Henfry | Bert Deacon, Ern Henfry | Ken Baxter (42) |
| 1948 | 6th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ern Henfry | Jack Howell | Ken Baxter, Ray Garby (39) |
| 1949 | 2nd | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ern Henfry | Ern Henfry | Ken Baxter (46) |
| 1950 | 8th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ern Henfry | Arthur Hodgson | Ken Baxter (43) |
| 1951 | 7th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ern Henfry | Jim Clark | Keith Warburton (48) |
| 1952 | 4th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ern Henfry, Ken Hands | Ollie Grieve | Jack Howell (42) |
| 1953 | 5th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ken Hands | Ken Hands | Jack Spencer (32) |
| 1954 | 8th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ken Hands | Bill Milroy | Noel O'Brien (45) |
| 1955 | 7th | Sir Kenneth G. Luke | Percy Bentley | Ken Hands | John James | Noel O'Brien (73) |
| 1956 | 5th | Horrie Clover | Jim Francis | Ken Hands | Doug Beasy | Kevan Hamilton (22) |
| 1957 | 4th | Horrie Clover | Jim Francis | Ken Hands | Bruce Comben | Gerald Burke (34) |
| 1958 | 7th | Lew Holmes | Jim Francis | Bruce Comben | Bruce Comben | John Heathcote (19) |
| 1959 | 3rd | Lew Holmes | Ken Hands | Bruce Comben | John Nicholls | Sergio Silvagni (40) |
| 1960 | 7th | Lew Holmes | Ken Hands | Bruce Comben | John James | Leo Brereton (44) |
| 1961 | 8th | Lew Holmes | Ken Hands | Graham Donaldson | John James | Tom Carroll (54) |
| 1962 | 2nd | Lew Holmes | Ken Hands | Graham Donaldson | Sergio Silvagni | Tom Carroll (62) |
| 1963 | 6th | Lew Holmes | Ken Hands | John Nicholls | John Nicholls | Tom Carroll (27) |
| 1964 | 10th | Lew Holmes | Ken Hands | Sergio Silvagni | Gordon Collis | Ian Nankervis (18) |
| 1965 | 6th | George Harris | Ron Barassi | Ron Barassi | John Nicholls | Bryan Quirk (29) |
| 1966 | 6th | George Harris | Ron Barassi | Ron Barassi | John Nicholls | Adrian Gallagher (24) |
| 1967 | 3rd | George Harris | Ron Barassi | Ron Barassi | John Nicholls | Brian Kekovich (38) |
| 1968 | Premiers | George Harris | Ron Barassi | Ron Barassi, John Nicholls | Sergio Silvagni | Brian Kekovich (59) |
| 1969 | 2nd | George Harris | Ron Barassi | John Nicholls | Garry Crane | Alex Jesaulenko (66) |
| 1970 | Premiers | George Harris | Ron Barassi | John Nicholls | Adrian Gallagher | Alex Jesaulenko (115) |
| 1971 | 5th | George Harris | Ron Barassi | John Nicholls | Geoff Southby | Alex Jesaulenko (56) |
| 1972 | Premiers | George Harris | John Nicholls | John Nicholls | Geoff Southby | Greg Kennedy (76) |
| 1973 | 2nd | George Harris | John Nicholls | John Nicholls | Peter Jones | Brian Walsh (60) |
| 1974 | 7th | George Harris | John Nicholls, Robert Walls | John Nicholls, Alex Jesaulenko | Bruce Doull | Craig Davis (45) |
| 1975 | 4th | Ivan Rohrt | John Nicholls | Alex Jesaulenko | Alex Jesaulenko | Robert Walls (59) |
| 1976 | 3rd | Ivan Rohrt | Ian Thorogood | Alex Jesaulenko | Trevor Keogh | Robert Walls (55) |
| 1977 | 6th | Ivan Rohrt | Ian Thorogood | Robert Walls | Bruce Doull | Mark Maclure (39) |
| 1978 | 4th | George Harris | Ian Stewart, Alex Jesaulenko | Robert Walls, Alex Jesaulenko | Trevor Keogh | Rod Galt (49) |
| 1979 | Premiers | George Harris | Alex Jesaulenko | Alex Jesaulenko | Mike Fitzpatrick | Ken Sheldon (53) |
| 1980 | 4th | Ian Rice | Peter Jones | Mike Fitzpatrick | Bruce Doull | Wayne Johnston (51) |
| 1981 | Premiers | Ian Rice | David Parkin | Mike Fitzpatrick | Ken Hunter | Peter Bosustow (59) |
| 1982 | Premiers | Ian Rice | David Parkin | Mike Fitzpatrick | James Buckley | Ross Ditchburn (61) |
| 1983 | 5th | John Elliott | David Parkin | Mike Fitzpatrick | Wayne Johnston | Ken Hunter (43) |
| 1984 | 4th | John Elliott | David Parkin | Wayne Johnston | Bruce Doull | Warren Ralph (55) |
| 1985 | 5th | John Elliott | David Parkin | Wayne Johnston | Justin Madden | Mark Maclure (48) |
| 1986 | 2nd | John Elliot | Robert Walls | Mark Maclure | Wayne Johnston, Craig Bradley | Stephen Kernahan (62) |
| 1987 | Premiers | John Elliot | Robert Walls | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Kernahan (73) |
| 1988 | 3rd | John Elliot | Robert Walls | Stephen Kernahan | Craig Bradley | Stephen Kernahan (54) |
| 1989 | 8th | John Elliot | Robert Walls, Alex Jesaulenko | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Kernahan (59) |
| 1990 | 8th | John Elliot | Alex Jesaulenko | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Silvagni | Stephen Kernahan (69) |
| 1991 | 11th | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Justin Madden | Stephen Kernahan (46) |
| 1992 | 7th | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Kernahan (83) |
| 1993 | 2nd | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Craig Bradley | Stephen Kernahan (68) |
| 1994 | 5th | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Greg Williams | Stephen Kernahan (82) |
| 1995 | Premiers | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Brett Ratten | Stephen Kernahan (63) |
| 1996 | 6th | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Stephen Silvagni | Stephen Kernahan (56) |
| 1997 | 11th | John Elliot | David Parkin | Stephen Kernahan | Brett Ratten | Anthony Koutoufides (28) |
| 1998 | 11th | John Elliot | David Parkin | Craig Bradley | Fraser Brown | Lance Whitnall (46) |
| 1999 | 2nd | John Elliot | David Parkin | Craig Bradley | Matthew Allan | Lance Whitnall (55) |
| 2000 | 3rd | John Elliot | David Parkin | Craig Bradley | Brett Ratten, Scott Camporeale | Lance Whitnall (70) |
| 2001 | 6th | John Elliot | Wayne Brittain | Craig Bradley | Anthony Koutoufides | Matthew Lappin (49) |
| 2002 | 16th | John Elliot | Wayne Brittain | Brett Ratten | Corey McKernan | Corey McKernan (40) |
| 2003 | 15th | Ian Collins | Denis Pagan | Brett Ratten, Andrew McKay | Andrew McKay | Brendan Fevola (63) |
| 2004 | 11th | Ian Collins | Denis Pagan | Anthony Koutoufides | David Teague | Brendan Fevola (66) |
| 2005 | 16th | Ian Collins | Denis Pagan | Anthony Koutoufides | Anthony Koutoufides | Brendan Fevola (49) |
| 2006 | 16th | Ian Collins, Graham Smorgon | Denis Pagan | Anthony Koutoufides | Lance Whitnall | Brendan Fevola (84) |
| 2007 | 15th | Graham Smorgon, Stephen Kernahan, Richard Pratt | Denis Pagan, Brett Ratten | Lance Whitnall | Andrew Carrazzo | Brendan Fevola (59) |
| 2008 | 11th | Richard Pratt, Stephen Kernahan | Brett Ratten | Chris Judd | Chris Judd | Brendan Fevola (99) |
| Year | Members | Ladder after Round 22 | Final Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | 25,402 | 11th | 11th |
| 1999 | 25,719 | 6th | 2nd |
| 2000 | 27,571 | 2nd | 3rd |
| 2001 | 27,735 | 5th | 5th |
| 2002 | 26,385 | 16th | 16th |
| 2003 | 33,525 | 15th | 15th |
| 2004 | 32,445 | 11th | 11th |
| 2005 | 33,534 | 16th | 16th |
| 2006 | 28,756 | 16th | 16th |
| 2007 | 35,431 | 15th | 15th |
| 2008 | 40,764 | 11th | 11th |
| Incumbent | Term |
|---|---|
| Jim Allison | 1980-1981 |
| Ian Collins | 1981-1993 |
| Stephen Gough | 1994-1999 |
| John Gurrieri | 2000 |
| Don Hanly | 2001-2002 |
| Michael Malouf | 2003-2007 |
| Greg Swann | 2007- |
| Player | Career Years | Goals |
|---|---|---|
| Stephen Kernahan | 1986-1997 | 738 |
| Harry "Soapy" Vallence | 1926-1938 | 722 |
| Brendan Fevola | 1999-Present | 486 |
| Alex Jesaulenko | 1967-1979 | 424 |
| Horrie Clover | 1920-1924, 1926-1931 | 398 |
| Player | Career Years | Games |
|---|---|---|
| Craig Bradley | 1986-2002 | 375 |
| Bruce Doull | 1969-1986 | 356 |
| John Nicholls | 1957-1974 | 331 |
| Stephen Silvagni | 1985-2001 | 312 |
| Justin Madden | 1982-1997 | 287 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Bert Deacon | 1947 |
| John James | 1961 |
| Gordon Collis | 1964 |
| Greg Williams | 1994 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Wayne Harmes | 1979 |
| Bruce Doull | 1981 |
| David Rhys-Jones | 1987 |
| Greg Williams | 1995 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Tom Carroll | 1961 |
| Brendan Fevola | 2006 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Alex Jesaulenko | 1970 |
| Peter Bosustow | 1981 |
| Ken Hunter | 1983 |
| Stephen Silvagni | 1988 |
| Matthew Lappin | 1999 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Brendan Fevola | 2008 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Peter Bosustow | 1981 |
| Eddie Betts | 2006 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Craig Bradley | 1997 |
| Brendan Fevola | 2005 |
| Nick Stevens | 2007 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Greg Williams | 1994 |
| Anthony Koutoufides | 2000 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Matthew Lappin | 2005 & 2006 |
| Jarrad Waite | 2005 |
| Brendan Fevola | 2006 |
| Kade Simpson | 2006 |
| Player | Year Won |
|---|---|
| Brendan Fevola | 2006 |
| Premiership Record | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Competition | Level | Wins | Year Won |
| VFA | Seniors | 2 | 1877, 1887 |
| VFL/AFL | Seniors | 16 | 1906, 1907, 1908, 1914, 1915, 1938, 1945, 1947, 1968, 1970, 1972, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1987, 1995 |
| VFL/AFL | Reserves | 8 | 1926, 1927, 1928, 1951, 1953, 1986, 1987, 1990 |
| VFL/AFL | Under 19s | 6 | 1948, 1949, 1951, 1963, 1978, 1979 |
| VFL/AFL | Night/Pre-Season Premierships | 4 | 1983, 1997, 2005, 2007 |
| VFL/AFL | McClelland Trophy | 5 | 1969, 1979, 1985 (tied), 1987, 1995 |
| VFL/AFL | Minor Premiers | 17 | 1906, 1907, 1908, 1910, 1914, 1916, 1921, 1932, 1938, 1941, 1947, 1972, 1976, 1979, 1981,1987, 1995 |
| VFL/AFL | Wooden Spoons | 3 | 2002, 2005, 2006 |
| Ladder Position | Year (Finals in Bold) | Tally |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1906, 1907, 1908, 1914, 1915, 1938, 1945, 1947, 1968, 1970, 1972, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1987, 1995 | 16 |
| 2nd | 1904, 1909, 1910, 1916, 1921, 1932, 1949, 1962, 1969, 1973, 1986, 1993, 1999 | 13 |
| 3rd | 1903, 1905, 1912, 1917, 1918, 1920, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1941, 1959, 1967, 1976, 1988, 2000 | 16 |
| 4th | 1911, 1919, 1922, 1927, 1928, 1933, 1935, 1936, 1943, 1952, 1957, 1975, 1978, 1980, 1984 | 15 |
| 5th | 1934, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1953, 1956, 1971, 1983, 1985, 1994 | 12 |
| 6th | 1902, 1913, 1946, 1948, 1926, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1977,1996, 2001 | 11 |
| 7th | 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1923, 1924, 1951, 1955, 1958, 1960, 1974, 1992 | 13 |
| 8th | 1950, 1954, 1961, 1989, 1990 | 5 |
| 9th | 1925 | 1 |
| 10th | 1964 | 1 |
| 11th | 1991, 1997, 1998, 2004, 2008 | 5 |
| 12th | nil | 0 |
| 13th | nil | 0 |
| 14th | nil | 0 |
| 15th | 2003, 2007 | 2 |
| 16th | 2002, 2005, 2006 | 3 |
http://www.carltonfc.com.au