Carlton crush Port as McKay runs riot up forward
With Michael Voss' future as coach secure into next year, the Blues raced out of the blocks at Marvel Stadium on Saturday with their best first half of the season - 13.5 to lead by 55 points at the main break.
Carlton were never threatened by a lacklustre Port in Ken Hinkley's penultimate game as Power coach, kicking the first six goals in just 10 minutes on their way to a dominant 18.10 (118) to 9.10 (64) win.
After finishing off strongly in last week's defeat to Gold Coast with a blistering final term, the Blues again played more like the finals team of 2023 and 2024 than the strugglers of 2025.
Harry McKay has 6️⃣ goals 🌭#AFLBluesPower pic.twitter.com/N5Uxszv4E6
— AFL (@AFL) August 16, 2025
Star Blues forward McKay was back to his best, booting four first-half goals in a commanding and confident display.
McKay finished with seven, his best return in a game since his Coleman Medal season of 2021, after battling injuries and mental ill health this year.
But the dominance started from the Blues' midfield, winning clearances 30-10 in the first half, including a staggering 16-3 from the centre.
The return of star midfielder Sam Walsh was profound, playing his first game since round 13 after battling a foot injury.
Tom De Koning, who is expected to accept a monster contract from St Kilda in the trade period, was immense back in the ruck.
Carlton had been using De Koning up forward and as a second ruck option for large parts of this season, but he has shown the last two weeks he is best suited to the middle.
Preliminary finalists last year, Port have been crawling to the end of the home-and-away season.
It was hard to find any winners for them against the Blues, but rookie forward Jack Whitlock showed promise with the first three goals of his career.
Port will be desperate to put in a better showing next Friday night when they farewell Hinkley and club legend Travis Boak when they host Gold Coast at Adelaide Oval.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Storm officials left 'fuming' over South Sydney's poaching of Melbourne players
The Storm have reportedly found it 'hypocritical' that Souths are complaining about the Roosters entering their territory considering the Rabbitohs have academies in Melbourne and the Gold Coast. The Rabbitohs have lodged a complaint with the NSW Rugby League about the Roosters using Matraville Sports High School for training junior rep teams. The Roosters have been using the school grounds for 15 years, but the Rabbitohs want their rivals kicked out as Matraville is in South Sydney territory. The Rabbitohs reportedly believe the Roosters are attracting local Souths juniors to Bondi by training in enemy territory. Clubs can only play and train within their designated district boundaries, unless they've received approval from the relevant officials. South Sydney hierarchy believe the Roosters are breaching the rules by using the grounds at Matraville, but the Roosters claim they've poured in $200,000 to improve the facilities. 'We think this is an important issue for all NRL clubs that have a strong relationship with their junior rugby league competitions and invest in pathways programs," Souths CEO Blake Solly told the Sydney Morning Herald. 'We have made our case to the NSWRL for the application of the rule in this situation." Souths chairman Nick Pappas told the Daily Telegraph: "I find it disappointing that the Roosters have effectively invaded our district to train their junior representative teams, knowing full well that [it] will cause significant disruption to our own juniors. "Either we have districts for our juniors or we don't have districts. Given the opposition the Roosters have openly expressed regarding our return to Allianz, to now come and train their juniors at Matraville, in the heart of our district, is brazen.' Melbourne Storm 'fuming' over South Sydney move The stoush continues a bitter feud between the arch-rival clubs, which culminated in Souths being blocked from playing more home games at Allianz Stadium - the Roosters' home ground. But the situation has now taken an interesting turn, with the Storm pointing out the Rabbitohs have set up pathways systems in Melbourne. Danny Weidler of the revealed over the weekend that Storm officials are "fuming" that the "Rabbitohs have tried to pick the eyes out of their slim but growing junior playing ranks" and are "stunned" by Souths' "hypocritical" complaining about the Roosters. RELATED: Family first as Cameron Smith makes major career decision Brutal call made on Cherry-Evans before 350th game in NRL This year, the Rabbitohs started the Victorian-based Iron Armour Academy in Melbourne, stating: 'The ground-breaking partnership between the oldest club in rugby league in Australia and the long-established Melbourne-based academy is unique, with players, coaches and staff from Iron Armour coming to Maroubra to check out the USANA Rabbitohs Centre [of excellence] in February.' Souths also have a partnership with renowned rugby league school Keebra Park State High School on the Gold Coast - in Titans territory. The Rabbitohs previously declared: "This partnership will enable the Rabbitohs to expand its reach into Queensland for elite young players and coaches to add to the talent from the South Sydney district and other recruited players from New South Wales and beyond.' Rabbitohs CEO responds amid latest criticism Responding to claims of 'hypocrisy' from the Storm, Solly told the SMH: 'I had a good meeting with [Storm CEO] Justin Rodski on Thursday and explained our position. There is one major and fundamental difference here - we are not training our Harold Matthews, SG Ball and Jersey Flegg teams in Melbourne. The Roosters are training all their girls and boys representative pathways teams in our district.' It should be pointed out that NRL clubs started academies in enemy territory is nothing new. The Warriors became the latest club to do something similar when they announced a new academy in Queensland last month.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rattler rallies Saints to a 17-all preseason tie with the Jaguars after Lawrence's productive start
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Spencer Rattler connected with Dante Pettis for a 20-yard touchdown with 21 seconds left and scrambled for a 2-point conversion to help the New Orleans Saints salvage a 17-17 tie with the Jacksonville Jaguars in a preseason game Sunday. With no overtime in the preseason, the Jaguars crossed midfield in the final seconds — one week after kicker Cam Little made a 70-yard field goal. But Seth Henigan's pass over the middle bounced off of Chandler Brayboy's hands and into the arms of Saints safety Jonas Sanker, whose 40-yard return ended when he was pushed out of bounds at the Jacksonville 24 as time expired. Had Sanker run out of bounds a bit earlier, New Orleans (0-1-1) could have set up for a game-winning kick. Rattler, who relieved rookie Tyler Shough in the second half, went 18 of 24 for 199 yards, one TD and one interception. Mason Tipton, a second-year pro out of Yale, caught six passes for 100 yards, one week after his 54-yard touchdown catch from Shough against the Los Angeles Chargers. Parker Washington caught a 7-yard touchdown pass from Trevor Lawrence and Bayshul Tuten rushed for a 3-yard touchdown for Jacksonville (0-1-1). Lawrence played for two drives and had little trouble moving the offense while going 8 of 10 for 76 yards and a TD. However, his first drive ended with a turnover on the New Orleans 12 when Lawrence tripped as he turned to hand off to Tank Bigsby. The ball squirted loose and defensive lineman Vernon Broughton recovered. Shough, who started for the first time and played the whole first half, went 9 for 12 for 66 yards without a turnover. He led one scoring drive that concluded with Blake Grupe's 51-yard field goal after Chris Olave dropped a third-down pass that could have extended the series. Little converted from 53 yards as the first half ended to make it 17-3, making him 5 for 5 in the preseason, all on kicks longer than 39 yards. Rattler, a second-year pro competing with Shough for the starting spot, took over to start the second half and quickly led New Orleans into field goal range with the help of Christian Braswell's pass interference penalty on a deep pass intended for Tipton. That set up the first of Irishman Charlie Smyth's second-half field goals. The second kick, which made it 17-9, came after Rattler connected with Tipton for 45 yards down the right sideline. The Saints threatened to score one possession before the tying drive, but that series stalled when Rattler was intercepted by Keni-H Lovely at the Jacksonville 7. Jacksonville QB Nick Mullens, who took over for Lawrence in the second quarter, passed for 112 yards and led the Jags to 10 points. Mullens' 26-yard pass to tight end Hunter Long, who made a leaping grab in tight coverage, set up Tuten's TD. But Mullens saw a promising drive end in the third quarter when his pass over the middle was intercepted by Jaylan Ford at the Saints 15. Injuries Jaguars: Heisman Trophy winner and No. 2 overall draft choice Travis Hunter was scratched before the game with what the team has called an upper-body injury. Saints: Caesar Ruiz was examined in the injury tent in the second quarter after going down awkwardly as the pocket collapsed on Shough, who was sacked by Ventrell Miller and Jack Kiser. Up next Jaguars: Visit the Miami Dolphins on Saturday. Saints: Host the Denver Broncos on Saturday. ___ AP NFL:

Associated Press
6 hours ago
- Associated Press
Rattler rallies Saints to a 17-all preseason tie with the Jaguars after Lawrence's productive start
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Spencer Rattler connected with Dante Pettis for a 20-yard touchdown with 21 seconds left and scrambled for a 2-point conversion to help the New Orleans Saints salvage a 17-17 tie with the Jacksonville Jaguars in a preseason game Sunday. With no overtime in the preseason, the Jaguars crossed midfield in the final seconds — one week after kicker Cam Little made a 70-yard field goal. But Seth Henigan's pass over the middle bounced off of Chandler Brayboy's hands and into the arms of Saints safety Jonas Sanker, whose 40-yard return ended when he was pushed out of bounds at the Jacksonville 24 as time expired. Had Sanker run out of bounds a bit earlier, New Orleans (0-1-1) could have set up for a game-winning kick. Rattler, who relieved rookie Tyler Shough in the second half, went 18 of 24 for 199 yards, one TD and one interception. Mason Tipton, a second-year pro out of Yale, caught six passes for 100 yards, one week after his 54-yard touchdown catch from Shough against the Los Angeles Chargers. Parker Washington caught a 7-yard touchdown pass from Trevor Lawrence and Bayshul Tuten rushed for a 3-yard touchdown for Jacksonville (0-1-1). Lawrence played for two drives and had little trouble moving the offense while going 8 of 10 for 76 yards and a TD. However, his first drive ended with a turnover on the New Orleans 12 when Lawrence tripped as he turned to hand off to Tank Bigsby. The ball squirted loose and defensive lineman Vernon Broughton recovered. Shough, who started for the first time and played the whole first half, went 9 for 12 for 66 yards without a turnover. He led one scoring drive that concluded with Blake Grupe's 51-yard field goal after Chris Olave dropped a third-down pass that could have extended the series. Little converted from 53 yards as the first half ended to make it 17-3, making him 5 for 5 in the preseason, all on kicks longer than 39 yards. Rattler, a second-year pro competing with Shough for the starting spot, took over to start the second half and quickly led New Orleans into field goal range with the help of Christian Braswell's pass interference penalty on a deep pass intended for Tipton. That set up the first of Irishman Charlie Smyth's second-half field goals. The second kick, which made it 17-9, came after Rattler connected with Tipton for 45 yards down the right sideline. The Saints threatened to score one possession before the tying drive, but that series stalled when Rattler was intercepted by Keni-H Lovely at the Jacksonville 7. Jacksonville QB Nick Mullens, who took over for Lawrence in the second quarter, passed for 112 yards and led the Jags to 10 points. Mullens' 26-yard pass to tight end Hunter Long, who made a leaping grab in tight coverage, set up Tuten's TD. But Mullens saw a promising drive end in the third quarter when his pass over the middle was intercepted by Jaylan Ford at the Saints 15. Injuries Jaguars: Heisman Trophy winner and No. 2 overall draft choice Travis Hunter was scratched before the game with what the team has called an upper-body injury. Saints: Caesar Ruiz was examined in the injury tent in the second quarter after going down awkwardly as the pocket collapsed on Shough, who was sacked by Ventrell Miller and Jack Kiser. Up next Jaguars: Visit the Miami Dolphins on Saturday. Saints: Host the Denver Broncos on Saturday. ___ AP NFL: