Earwig's Copyvio Detector

Settings

This tool attempts to detect copyright violations in articles. In search mode, it will check for similar content elsewhere on the web using Google, external links present in the text of the page, or Turnitin (via EranBot), depending on which options are selected. In comparison mode, the tool will compare the article to a specific webpage without making additional searches, like the Duplication Detector.

Running a full check can take up to a minute if other websites are slow or if the tool is under heavy use. Please be patient. If you get a timeout, wait a moment and refresh the page.

Be aware that other websites can copy from Wikipedia, so check the results carefully, especially for older or well-developed articles. Specific websites can be skipped by adding them to the excluded URL list.

Site: https:// . .org
Page title: or revision ID:
Action:
Results generated in 1.524 seconds. Permalink.
Article:

Melbourne Cricket Ground (Training and administrative: Ikon Park)

Matthew Wright (22) 2015 2017

The 2016 AFL season was the 120th season in the Australian Football League contested by the Carlton Football Club. In its first season under new senior coach Brendon Bolton, the club won seven games out of twenty-two to finish fourteenth out of eighteen teams.

Club summary

The 2016 AFL season was the 120th season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it was also the 120th season contested by the Carlton Football Club. Carlton's primary home ground continued to be the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with the club playing six home matches there and five at Etihad Stadium; traditional home ground Ikon Park continued to serve as the training and administrative base. The club's two joint major sponsors were car manufacturer Hyundai, which has sponsored the club since 2008, and job seekers' service provider CareerOne, newly signed in 2016 to a two-season deal; the club's six-year association with confectionery company Mars came to an end at the end of the 2015 season. The club faced a financially challenging schedule, with no matches in the most lucrative Friday night timeslot following poor performances in 2015. The club's membership was 50,130, a 6% increase from 2015. 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.

The club made a small alteration to its clash guernsey for 2016, by removing the navy blue panel around the waist of the guernsey and narrowing the widths of other blue panels and features, resulting in an overall whiter design. The design is plain white with navy blue side and shoulder panels, trimmings, monogram and number. A second match day mascot, Navy Nina, was introduced to serve as a female counterpart to established mascot Captain Carlton; as with Captain Carlton, she is a masked, navy-wearing superhero.

In June, Carlton was granted one of four Victorian licences for a team in the AFL's national women's competition, which is planned to be established from the 2017 season. Carlton's was one of the four successful bids among the eight Victorian clubs who applied for licences, with , and the other successful applicants and , , and the unsuccessful bidders.

Senior Personnel

Mark LoGiudice continued as club president, a role he had held since June 2014. Marc Murphy retained the role of captain for his fourth season in the role, and Kade Simpson remained vice captain; the rest of the seven-man leadership group comprised Patrick Cripps, Ed Curnow, Bryce Gibbs, Andrew Walker and Sam Docherty.

The club's coaching panel underwent significant changes after the 2015 season, following the dismissal of incumbent Mick Malthouse after Round 8, 2015. In August 2015, assistant coach Brendon Bolton was appointed Carlton's new senior coach; the club appointed Bolton to an ongoing staff position, rather than the more typical approach of hiring a senior coach on discrete fixed term contracts, with the caveat that Bolton be paid out for his first three years if dismissed during that time. The majority of the assistant coaching panel was turned over with only John Barker, who had served as caretaker coach in 2015 following Malthouse's dismissal, and Matthew Capuano surviving from the 2015 panel. New additions to the assistant coaching panel were assistant coach Tim Clarke (midfield), assistant coach Dale Amos (backline), assistant coach Shane Watson (forward-line), and reserves coach Josh Fraser (development and VFL senior coach). Neil Craig replaced Rob Wiley as director of coaching, development and performance, after having served in a similar role at .

Squad for 2016

The following is Carlton's squad for the 2016 season after offseason transfers and drafts.

Statistics are correct as of end of 2015 season.

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

Senior List No. State Player Hgt (cm) Wgt (kg) Date of Birth Age (end 2015) AFL Debut Recruited from Games (end 2015) Goals (end 2015) 1 Andrew Walker (lg) 190 88 4 February 1986 29 2004 Bendigo (U18) 191 130 2 Jack Silvagni 191 81 17 December 1997 18 2016 Oakleigh (U18) – – 3 Marc Murphy (c) 180 80 19 September 1987 28 2006 Oakleigh (U18) 204 150 4 Bryce Gibbs (lg) 188 85 15 March 1989 26 2007 Glenelg 187 102 6 Kade Simpson (vc) 182 75 5 May 1984 31 2003 Eastern (U18) 242 124 7 Dylan Buckley 179 75 16 March 1993 22 2013 Northern (U18) 27 7 8 Matthew Kreuzer 200 103 13 May 1989 26 2008 Northern (U18) 65 9 Patrick Cripps (lg) 190 88 18 March 1995 20 2014 East Fremantle 23 6 10 Harry McKay 200 84 24 December 1997 18 – Gippsland (U18) – – 11 Sam Kerridge 188 85 26 April 1993 22 2012 Bendigo (U18), 27 23 12 Blaine Boekhorst 184 75 2 September 1993 22 2015 Swan Districts 11 5 13 Jed Lamb 182 83 19 October 1992 23 2013 Gippsland (U18), , GWS 22 17 14 Liam Jones 198 98 24 February 1991 24 2010 North Hobart, 75 75 15 Sam Docherty (lg) 184 85 18 October 1993 22 2013 Gippsland (U18), 48 10 16 Dillon Viojo-Rainbow 184 82 8 February 1996 19 – Western (U18) – – 17 Sam Rowe 198 96 19 November 1987 28 2013 Murray (U18), Sydney, Norwood 51 13 18 Kristian Jaksch 196 90 7 October 1994 21 2013 Oakleigh (U18), GWS 13 3 19 Liam Sumner 177 75 16 August 1993 22 2012 Sandringham (U18), GWS 12 9 20 Lachie Plowman 192 90 11 September 1994 21 2013 Calder (U18), GWS 20 1 22 Jason Tutt 177 81 15 May 1991 24 2011 Ainslie, 39 26 23 Jacob Weitering 195 94 23 November 1997 18 2016 Dandenong (U18) – – 24 Mark Whiley 188 87 1 December 1992 23 2012 Murray (U18), GWS 20 3 25 Clem Smith 177 77 3 February 1996 19 2015 Perth 7 – 26 Jayden Foster 194 91 1 June 1995 20 – Calder (U18) – – 27 Dennis Armfield 181 81 22 December 1986 29 2008 Swan Districts 125 57 28 David Cuningham 183 78 30 March 1997 18 2016 Oakleigh (U18) – – 30 Charlie Curnow 191 95 3 February 1997 18 2016 Geelong (U18) – – 31 Matthew Dick 187 88 3 November 1994 21 2015 Calder (U18), 6 – 32 Nicholas Graham 182 80 12 June 1994 21 2013 Gippsland (U18) 16 5 33 Andrejs Everitt 194 88 13 March 1989 26 2007 Dandenong (U18), , 118 76 34 Andrew Phillips 202 98 3 July 1991 24 2012 Lauderdale, GWS 14 5 35 Ed Curnow (lg) 182 84 7 November 1989 26 2011 Geelong (U18), Adelaide, Box Hill 88 11 37 Daniel Gorringe 200 96 2 June 1992 23 2011 Norwood, 22 7 39 Dale Thomas 185 84 21 June 1987 28 2006 Gippsland (U18), 182 135 40 Michael Jamison 193 98 11 June 1986 29 2007 North Ballarat (U18, VFL) 145 2 41 Levi Casboult 199 100 15 March 1990 25 2012 Dandenong (U18) 52 53 42 Zach Tuohy 187 92 10 December 1989 26 2011 Laois GAA 98 34 43 Simon White 190 93 17 June 1988 27 2010 Subiaco 59 10 46 Matthew Wright 178 76 14 December 1989 26 2011 North Adelaide, 94 63 Rookie List No. State Player Hgt Wgt Date of Birth Age Debut Recruited from Games Goals 21 Ciarán Sheehan 188 80 19 November 1990 25 2014 Cork GAA 4 – 29 Billy Gowers 184 81 10 June 1996 19 – Oakleigh (U18) – – 36 Cameron Wood 204 101 4 March 1987 28 2005 West Adelaide, , , Williamstown 88 28 38 Ciarán Byrne 188 90 6 December 1994 21 2015 Louth GAA 1 – 45 Andrew Gallucci 178 67 28 January 1994 21 – Calder (U18), Williamstown – – 47 Jesse Glass-McCasker 195 95 3 January 1997 18 – Swan Districts – – 48 Matt Korcheck 208 105 12 October 1991 24 – Arizona – – Senior coaching panel State Coach Coaching position Carlton Coaching debut Former clubs as coach Brendon Bolton Senior Coach 2016 North Hobart (s), Tasmania (VFL) (s), Clarence (s), Box Hill (s), (a) John Barker Assistant Coach (Stoppages) 2011 St Kilda (a), Hawthorn (a) Neil Craig Director of Coaching, Development and Performance 2016 Norwood (s), (s), (cs), (m) Tim Clarke Assistant Coach (Midfield) 2016 (a), Coburg (s), Richmond reserves (s) Shane Watson Assistant Coach (Forward-line) 2016 Lower Plenty (s), Sandringham (U18) (a), Eastern (U18) (s), (a) Dale Amos Assistant Coach (Back-line) 2016 South Barwon (s), (a), Geelong reserves (s) Matthew Capuano Development Coach 2009 Josh Fraser Development Coach, Northern Blues senior coach 2016 Gold Coast reserves (s)

For players: (c) denotes captain, (vc) denotes vice-captain, (dvc) denotes deputy vice-captain, (lg) denotes leadership group.

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 have occurred since the conclusion of the 2015 season. Unless otherwise noted, draft picks refer to selections in the 2015 AFL draft.

In

Player Previous Club League via Matt Korcheck University of Arizona Pac-12 Basketball Signed as a Category B International rookie late in the 2015 season. Sam Kerridge AFL AFL Trade Period, with 's second-round draft pick (provisionally No. 28, obtained in the trade for Patrick Dangerfield), in exchange for Troy Menzel. Jed Lamb GWS AFL AFL Trade Period, with a first-round draft pick (provisionally No. 8), in exchange for Carlton's fifth- and sixth-round draft picks (provisionally No. 77 and 95), 's second-round draft pick (provisionally No. 28, obtained from in the trade for Troy Menzel) and 's first-round draft pick in the 2016 National Draft (obtained in exchange for Lachie Henderson). Andrew Phillips GWS AFL Lachie Plowman GWS AFL Liam Sumner GWS AFL Daniel Gorringe AFL Signed as a delisted free agent prior to the National Draft. Jacob Weitering Dandenong TAC Cup AFL National Draft, first round (No. 1 overall) Harry McKay Gippsland TAC Cup AFL National Draft, first round (No. 10 overall) Charlie Curnow Geelong TAC Cup AFL National Draft, first round (No. 12 overall) David Cuningham Oakleigh TAC Cup AFL National Draft, first round (No. 23 overall) Jack Silvagni Oakleigh TAC Cup AFL National Draft, third round (No. 53 overall) under the father-son rule, after demoting a fourth round selection (from No. 55 to No. 58) to match the bid made by Matthew Wright AFL Signed as a delisted free agent after the National Draft. Jesse Glass-McCasker Swan Districts WAFL AFL Rookie Draft, first round (No. 1 overall) Andrew Gallucci Williamstown VFL AFL Rookie Draft, second round (No. 19 overall)

Out

Player New Club League via Chris Judd Removed from the list following his retirement in June 2015 Andrew Carrazzo Field umpiring VAFA Retired from playing David Ellard Greensborough Northern FL Retired Matthew Watson East Fremantle WAFL Delisted prior to the trade period Cameron Giles Woodville-West Torrens SANFL Delisted prior to the trade period Blaine Johnson South Fremantle WAFL Delisted from the rookie list prior to the trade period Fraser Russell Northern Blues VFL Delisted from the rookie list (category B) prior to the trade period Lachlan Henderson AFL AFL Trade Period, in exchange for a first-round draft pick in the 2016 National Draft. Tom Bell AFL AFL Trade Period, with a third-round draft pick (provisionally No. 41), in exchange for a second-round draft pick (provisionally No. 21) and a fourth-round draft pick (provisionally No. 60). Troy Menzel AFL AFL Trade Period, in exchange for Sam Kerridge and 's second-round draft pick (provisionally No. 28, obtained in a trade for Patrick Dangerfield). Chris Yarran AFL AFL Trade Period, in exchange for 's end-of-first-round compensation draft pick (provisionally No. 19, obtained in a three-way trade involving ). Robert Warnock Delisted prior to the national draft Nick Holman Central District SANFL Delisted prior to the national draft Brad Walsh Peel WAFL Delisted from the rookie list prior to the national draft Tom Fields South Adelaide SANFL Delisted from the rookie list prior to the national draft

List management

Player Change National draft Carlton applied for a priority draft pick in the national draft, but the request was rejected by the AFL. National draft Carlton traded its second-round draft pick (provisionally No. 20), Brisbane's second-round draft pick (provisionally No. 21, obtained in the trade for Tom Bell) and its fourth-round draft pick in the 2016 National Draft in exchange for ' first-round draft pick (provisionally No. 11) and its third-round draft pick in the 2016 National Draft. Nick Holman Received permission to train with Carlton from the beginning of pre-season training in November 2015, but he was not redrafted. Andrew Walker Retired from playing following the Round 20 match against . Michael Jamison Retired from playing following the Round 20 match against .

Season summary Pre-season matches

The club's three scheduled pre-season matches were played as part of the 2016 NAB Challenge series.

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance Home Away Result 1 Thursday, 18 February () 0.8.5 (53) 0.4.8 (32) Lost by 21 points Aurora Stadium (A) 9,181 2 Sunday, 28 February () 1.3.8 (35) 1.13.8 (95) Lost by 60 points Ikon Park (H) 18,718 3 Friday, 11 March () 1.8.12 (69) 0.14.7 (91) Lost by 22 points Etihad Stadium (H) 6,804

Home and away season

Rd Date and local time Opponent Scores (Carlton's scores indicated in bold) Venue Attendance Ladderposition Home Away Result 1 Thursday, 24 March () 14.8 (92) 12.11 (83) Lost by 9 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 75,706 12th 2 Sunday, 3 April () 10.11 (71) 20.11 (131) Lost by 60 points Etihad Stadium (H) 33,146 15th 3 Saturday, 9 April () 13.17 (95) 5.11 (41) Lost by 54 points Metricon Stadium (A) 13,885 17th 4 Saturday, 16 April () 7.7 (49) 13.7 (85) Lost by 36 points Etihad Stadium (H) 27,662 18th 5 Sunday, 24 April () 9.14 (68) 10.12 (72) Won by 4 points Domain Stadium (A) 34,796 15th 6 Sunday, 1 May () 10.12 (72) 8.9 (57) Won by 15 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 43,827 14th 7 Saturday, 7 May () 12.12 (84) 15.9 (99) Won by 15 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 60,222 12th 8 Sunday, 15 May () 14.9 (93) 13.13 (91) Won by 2 points Etihad Stadium (H) 26,924 11th 9 Saturday, 21 May () 17.11 (113) 6.10 (46) Lost by 67 points Etihad Stadium (A) 38,419 12th 10 Sunday, 29 May () 16.8 (104) 12.13 (85) Won by 19 points Etihad Stadium (H) 33,535 11th 11 Saturday, 4 June () 16.6 (102) 9.10 (64) Won by 38 points Etihad Stadium (H) 30,722 10th 12 Sunday, 12 June () 17.8 (110) 12.6 (78) Lost by 32 points Etihad Stadium (A) 47,945 11th 13 Bye 11th 14 Saturday, 25 June () GWS 18.19 (127) 9.11 (65) Lost by 62 points Spotless Stadium (A) 10,355 13th 15 Saturday, 2 July () 6.9 (45) 8.9 (57) Lost by 12 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 56,157 14th 16 Sunday, 10 July () 7.5 (47) 16.11 (107) Lost by 60 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 32,430 14th 17 Sunday, 17 July () 11.9 (75) 12.10 (82) Lost by 7 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 26,389 14th 18 Saturday, 23 July () 10.14 (74) 10.8 (68) Lost by 6 points Sydney Cricket Ground (A) 31,765 14th 19 Saturday, 30 July () 10.14 (74) 7.13 (55) Lost by 19 points Aurora Stadium (A) 18,112 15th 20 Sunday, 7 August () 7.9 (51) 19.8 (122) Lost by 71 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 37,797 15th 21 Saturday, 13 August () 15.9 (99) 13.17 (95) Lost by 4 points Gabba (A) 17,432 15th 22 Sunday, 21 August () 11.12 (78) 7.16 (58) Won by 20 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (H) 40,693 14th 23 Saturday, 27 August () 15.13 (103) 10.19 (79) Lost by 24 points Melbourne Cricket Ground (A) 46,566 14th

Team records, awards and notes

Round 3 – Carlton's score of 5.11 (41) set a new record as the lowest score ever conceded by in its five year history in the AFL.

Round 7 – Carlton won the Peter Mac Cup, the annual perpetual prize in Collingwood home games against Carlton.

Round 10 – Carlton defeated for the first time since Round 5, 2010, ending a seven game losing streak.

Round 10 – Carlton defeated at Etihad Stadium for the first time ever, after fourteen consecutive losses dating back to 2002.

Round 17 – the match between and was witnessed by serving Vice President of the United States, Joe Biden, who was hosted and presented a guernsey by Carlton.

Individual awards and records

Milestones and game records

Round 8 – Kade Simpson played his 250th senior game for the club, the first player to reach the milestone since Anthony Koutoufides in 2006.

Round 11 – Tom Rockliff () recorded 48 disposals, setting a new record for the most disposals ever recorded by a single player in a match against Carlton. (Statistics recorded since 1965).

Round 15 – Jack Silvagni, son of Stephen and grandson of Sergio, made his debut for Carlton. The Silvagnis became the first paternal grandfather-father-son trio to represent Carlton; and, with their collective 552nd game, usurped the record of Hawthorn's Kennedy family (John Sr, John Jr and Josh) for most games by a paternal grandfather-father-son trio at a single VFL/AFL club.

Other awards

NAB AFL Rising Star

Jacob Weitering was nominated for 2016 NAB AFL Rising Star award after his Round 3 performance against .

Carlton Football Club Hall of Fame

At the 2016 Carlton Football Club Hall of Fame dinner on 29 April, four players were inducted into the Hall of Fame and one was elevated to Legend Status:

Sergio Silvagni, who played 239 games for and won two premierships and two best-and-fairests with Carlton between 1958 and 1971, became the thirteenth player elevated to Legend Status;

Scott Camporeale, who played 233 games for and won one premiership and one best-and-fairest for the club between 1995 and 2005, was inducted;

Mil Hanna, who played 190 games for and won one premiership with the club between 1986 and 1997, was inducted;

Ian Robertson, who played 125 games for and won three premierships with the club between 1966 and 1974, was inducted;

Jack Wrout, who played 130 games for the club between 1936 and 1944 and later served as chairman of selectors, was inducted.

Other

Senior coach Brendon Bolton was inducted into the Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame for his playing and coaching career at North Launceston, North Hobart, Clarence and Tasmanian Devils.

Northern Blues

The Carlton Football Club had a full affiliation with the Northern Blues during the 2016 season. It was the fourteenth 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 with five matches at the VFL club's traditional home ground Preston City Oval, and four matches at Carlton's traditional home ground Ikon Park. The Northern Blues finished 13th out of 15 in the VFL with a record of 6–12.

References

Source:

Deutsch العربية Azerbaijani Català 中文 Hrvatski Čeština Dansk Nederlands English Estonian Persian Français Deutsch עברית Magyar Italiano Macedonian Norwegian Português Português Română Русский Español Svenska Türkçe Українська Einloggen Warenkorb ansehen Kundencenter Home Domains Webhosting Wissensdatenbank Kontaktieren Sie uns subdomain.com felicitysmoak.info.tm

Diese Subdomain ist noch frei und kann registriert werden!

Registrieren Domain registrieren

Verlieren Sie keine Zeit und registrieren Sie Ihre Domain, bevor es jemand anderes macht.

Registrieren Andere Domains

Doch noch nicht die richtige Domain? Kein Problem, mit mehr als 100 Domainendungen finden Sie bei uns mit Sicherheit Ihre Wunschdomain.

Mehr Domains Webhosting gefällig?

Nutzen Sie unser Angebot und holen Sie sich eins unser Webhosting Pakete. Ihre gewählte Subdomain bekommen Sie kostenlos* dazu!

Klein Medium Groß Wieso .co.de?

Die deutsche TLD .de ist über 15 Millionen mal registriert. Daher sind die Auswahlmöglichkeiten bei der Registrierung einer .de Domain stark eingeschränkt. Sich da mit einer guten Domain einen Namen zu machen, wird immer schwieriger. Genau da positioniert sich co.de. Sie haben hier die Möglichkeit Ihre Wunschdomain zu registrieren.

Mehr ... Kostenlose Subdomains!

Unter anderen Domainendungen bieten wir die Möglichkeit auch kostenfrei Subdomains zu registrieren. Falls Sie also nicht eine kostenpflichtige Subdomain mit der Endung co.de registrieren möchten, bieten wir Ihnen Alternativen.

Übersicht

*Dieses Angebot gilt nicht für Premium Domains

Dienste Newschannel Filesharing Imagesharing Anonymus Proxy Shopping Videoclip Domains DNS Einträge WHOIS Einträge kurze URLs Company KV GmbH QR.de qualigo.de Jobs Community

Copyright © 2024 Subdomain.com. All Rights Reserved.

× Close Lädt... Lädt... Close Submit × Generate Password

Please enter a number between 8 and 64 for the password length

Password Length Generated Password Generate new password Copy Close

Copy to clipboard and Insert