Former Richmond president Ian Wilson in 2010.Credit: Paul Rovere
6.30pm
Tonight’s clash in a nutshell
The story so far: If you penned a wish list at the start of the year, Collingwood would be delivering all that you desired, while Carlton’s efforts would be buried away at the bottom of the “what-not-to-wish-for” pile. Mathematically, the Blues’ season has a pulse, sitting in 11th and three games out of the eight, but realistically their year is a write-off. The Magpies are on top and 10 points clear of second. They are a lock for top two.
Darcy Moore is the lone tall in Collingwood’s defence against the Blues.Credit: via Getty Images
History says: The Blues put up an admiral fight in their round 4 loss to Collingwood, leading by four points at half-time in wet conditions at the MCG. But as has been the case all year, they ran out of legs after the long break and went down by 17 points. These teams staged two crackers last year, and both times the Magpies emerged in front - by three points and six points. The Magpies have the mental edge.
Loading
Where the game is won or lost: Carlton’s only hope is to win the midfield battle and trap the ball forward. Helping their cause, the Magpies go in with one tall defender, Darcy Moore, having lost Billy Frampton and bringing in Brayden Maynard. But the Magpies are the masters of the half-back intercept, especially Moore, and then the quick rebound. The Pies will have also a more mobile forward line, following their failed four-talls experiment of last week. It’s easy to see the likes of Jamie Elliott running amok. Then the Blues have to contain the Daicos brothers, Scott Pendlebury and Jack Crisp.
At the selection table: Michael Voss swung the axe, dropping Jordan Boyd, Alex Cincotta, Billy Wilson and Lewis Young while the Blues also lost Jack Silvagni (groin soreness) and Adam Saad (concussion) to injury. Voss brought in Lachlan Cowan, Ashton Moir, Matthew Carroll, Francis Evans, Harry O’Farrell and Marc Pittonet. They are hardly names to strike fear into an opposition.
The Magpies made four changes, dropping Charlie Dean and losing Edward Allan (illness), Charlie West (foot soreness) and Steele Sidebottom (illness). They brought in Brayden Maynard, Roan Steele, Tom Mitchell and Wil Parker. Mitchell is slow, but so what against the cumbersome Blues? The only achilles heel is the small backline.
Michael Voss says the Blues are still treating 2025 as a live season.Credit: Getty Images
What the coaches say:
Michael Voss: “What’s really important is that we connect with our supporters: they’re very important to us. We understand there’s a style of football we want to play that they can be proud of, we can be proud of and they can connect to. I think it’s to be stated that for us this season’s live, there’s a lot to get out of this year. There’s nothing parked here. There’s nothing to say, there’s nothing to protect. And we’re going after it.”
Craig McRae: “This is rivalry round. I love my mate (Michael Voss) and I always will, but this is one of those weeks that we both know we don’t text each other, we don’t call each other and we just get to work. Every time we play Carlton I show a version of a video of this 100-year rivalry and what it has meant to our club, and we don’t shy away from it. We step right into it.”
What the experts say: The Age tipsters are unanimous in their support of Collingwood. All 14 have tipped a Magpies victory. No surprises there.
6.28pm
How they line-up tonight
Carlton v Collingwood, 7.20pm, MCG
On paper, the Magpies have the superior fire power.
Carlton president Rob Priestly says it’s all about the next eight weeks at Ikon Park, but the Blues’ problems run deeper than that.
Whatever decision is made at the end of the season about the future of senior coach Michael Voss, who is contracted for 2026, the list needs surgery and the top AFL teams are playing a game style that has moved beyond the contested-ball brand at which Carlton excels.
Ahead of Friday night’s MCG clash with Collingwood, we asked a former AFL list boss and a former senior coach how to fix Carlton.
If you look at our path to the finals below, it was from rounds five and six that the season really started to take shape. The Magpies and the Lions consolidated their standings at the premiership favourites.
The Suns and the Giants started well early, but they have had a worrying downward trend since, and they look to be the two who will fight it out for eighth spot.
6.04pm
Clash of the arch enemies
Good evening, footy fans, ahead of one the great rivalries of the AFL - Carlton versus Collingwood.
While these two are separated by too many rungs on the ladder - the Magpies are on top, while the Blues are languishing in 11th - these two supporter bases always manage to turn out in their droves.
Let’s hope the Blues are up for the challenge and can take it up to the mighty Magpies.
Follow us throughout the night for all the action from the MCG. We will also cross to Perth and bring updates from the West Coast Eagles-Greater Western Sydney clash that kicks off at 8.20pm.