
Blues hold off Bombers fightback for crucial win
Carlton have beaten arch-rivals Essendon by eight points in a pulsating duel, finally holding on when threatened in the second half.
The Blues' handling of a high hit to Adam Cerra will be a major talking point after the 11.12 (78) to 11.4 (70) win on Sunday night at the MCG.
After a hot start that proved decisive, Carlton were in all sorts of trouble in the second half before steadying, partly thanks to an effusive three-quarter-time spray from coach Michael Voss.
Blake Acres kicked a booming goal from an acute angle at the start of the last term to fortify Carlton, before Zac Williams added another that gave them crucial breathing space.
Just like last week against Brisbane, the Bombers paid dearly for a woeful first term.
Blues defender Jack Silvagni was outstanding, keeping Essendon young gun Nate Caddy goal-less, while midfielder Darcy Parish had 10 clearances in his return from injury.
The Blues were missing key forward Harry McKay with a knee ailment, but his replacement Hudson O'Keeffe made an excellent AFL debut.
Carlton looked like enjoying a night out when they kicked the first four goals in 14 minutes.
Bombers debutant Luamon Lual briefly stemmed the onslaught when he joined the "first kick, first goal" club.
But the Blues kicked another two goals to close out the first term and broke out to a 38-point lead 10 minutes after the first break.
As soon as De Koning laid the tackle, Williams was GONE 💨#AFLBluesDons pic.twitter.com/fylLDBxK7L— AFL (@AFL) June 8, 2025
Two minutes into the second term, Sam Durham collected Cerra with a high bump that looks certain to earn the Essendon on-baller a suspension.
Cerra was left with a black eye and was assessed on the ground, but surprisingly did not come off for a HIA.
Carlton medical staff reviewed the incident on boundary-line video and finally, after 14 minutes, Cerra was taken off the ground for the HIA, which he passed.
It is unclear whether there was any AFL intervention before the Blues decided to take Cerra to the rooms.
Meanwhile, the Bombers rallied from their dismal first term and steadily worked into the game.
They reduced the margin to 28 points at the main break and went on the attack in the third, kicking four goals to one.
Remarkably, Carlton captain Patrick Cripps went stat-less in the third as Essendon surged.
The Bombers could have closed to within a goal late in the third, but a desperate tackle from Adam Saad stopped Xavier Duursma from having a shot.
Sam Walsh was instrumental again for Carlton, with an equal game-high 32 disposals.

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The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Carlton's great escape: Blues hold off ferocious Bomber fightback in King's Birthday eve blockbuster
Loading Key posts 10.36pm Voss says Cripps put himself in goal square 10.30pm 'He was not malicious': Cerra 10.28pm Carlton's great escape 10.23pm Cerra: I got the all clear from the docs 9.11pm COMMENT: Cerra should have been taken off the ground immediately 9.09pm 'The Cerra thing is ridiculous' 8.08pm Durham to face MRO scrutiny for high bump on Cerra 6.50pm Magpies, Demons make changes for King's Birthday clash Hide key posts Posts area Go to latest Pinned post from yesterday 10.28pm Carlton's great escape Carlton have escaped with an eight-point victory over Essendon at the MCG on Sunday night after a mid-match collapse threatened to waste their seven-goals-to-one start. However, the Blues' much-needed win – 11.12 (78) to 11.4 (70) – was overshadowed by a second-quarter incident where Bomber Sam Durham put Adam Cerra on his back with a front-on bump that is sure to attract match review scrutiny. Durham's hit on Cerra dazed the Blue and left him briefly flat on his back as Carlton teammates, including former Bomber Adam Saad, rushed in to remonstrate with the Essendon midfielder. Cerra remained on the field for more than 10 minutes before disappearing into the Blues' rooms for a head injury assessment (HIA) that cleared him of a concussion. Speaking on Fox Footy, Melbourne great Garry Lyon was critical of Carlton's delay in undertaking the test, but the Blues defended their decision. '[Cerra] was immediately assessed out on the ground and was OK to remain out there,' a Carlton spokesperson told this masthead. 'Vision was also reviewed on the bench, [and] the club made the decision to have HIA completed as an absolute precaution. He passed that also.' The Blues seemed on track for a comfortable win over the injury-ravaged Bombers when they went to quarter-time with a 33-point lead in front of 74,280 fans. Ex-Essendon forward Orazio Fantasia extended Carlton's margin to a match-high 38 points in the second quarter, but the Bombers kicked six of the next seven goals either side of half-time to launch a fierce fightback. Michael Voss' men, who led by 11 points at three-quarter-time, again looked safe when Blake Acres slotted a brilliant 50-metre goal from the boundary before Zac Williams blasted through another from point-blank range. But Essendon kept on coming and were only six points behind with almost four-and-a-half minutes left when Xavier Duursma soared across a pack to mark then kick a goal. Neither team managed a goal thereafter, although Blues pair Charlie Curnow and Acres had the only two set shots in the dying minutes. The Bombers' last opportunity slipped through Durham's hands just outside 50, and they were unable to piece together a match-winning passage. Carlton's restricted free agent Tom De Koning was best afield with 23 disposals, 13 contested possessions, seven clearances and a goal in a ruck mismatch with veteran big man Todd Goldstein. Blue Sam Walsh and Bomber Nic Martin were also prominent with an equal-game-high 32 disposals apiece, while Darcy Parish amassed 30 touches and 10 clearances in a strong return game. Latest posts yesterday 10.36pm Voss says Cripps put himself in goal square Blues coach Michael Voss spoke to Channel Seven post-game Is it satisfaction or relief for you right now? It was a fairly familiar tale for a while. We started the game really well, but then a couple of moments we could do better, they scored the last goal of the second quarter, and then the first goal of the third quarter and there is a 12-point swing and it turns the momentum. There have been games we have not been able to persevere and show the grit as well, so I felt like it wasn't necessarily because we weren't trying to do things, it was more to the credit of Essendon, to turn the tide and, lucky enough, we were able to hold on. One of your big balls spent most of his time in the third quarter in the goal square in Patrick Cripps? I will have to talk to him about that. That is a player move? One of the big ones for Crippa is that I think he has been able to share the load a lot, so the beneficiaries of that have been Cerra, Hewett and others being able to step up, and it is hard to do that as a leader in those times, but you want to know when the big moments are coming, and put yourself in the middle and say that it is my turn and let's go. He has been fantastic like that, to give the opportunity for the other guys to build their games, and he has been prepared to take a backward step. yesterday 10.30pm 'He was not malicious': Cerra Adam Cerra has also spoken to Channel Seven post game. He was asked by Kane Cornes whether he thought the footy was past the attempted bump that Sam Durham made on him in the second term The play happened so quickly, as you would know, and the rule is to protect the guy putting his head over the ball, but I can understand that accidents happen, and he was not malicious and [not] trying to hurt me. It happens with the game being so quick. Obviously, we hope it is out of the game, and there are rules around that but accidents happen. yesterday 10.28pm Carlton's great escape Carlton have escaped with an eight-point victory over Essendon at the MCG on Sunday night after a mid-match collapse threatened to waste their seven-goals-to-one start. However, the Blues' much-needed win – 11.12 (78) to 11.4 (70) – was overshadowed by a second-quarter incident where Bomber Sam Durham put Adam Cerra on his back with a front-on bump that is sure to attract match review scrutiny. Durham's hit on Cerra dazed the Blue and left him briefly flat on his back as Carlton teammates, including former Bomber Adam Saad, rushed in to remonstrate with the Essendon midfielder. Cerra remained on the field for more than 10 minutes before disappearing into the Blues' rooms for a head injury assessment (HIA) that cleared him of a concussion. Speaking on Fox Footy, Melbourne great Garry Lyon was critical of Carlton's delay in undertaking the test, but the Blues defended their decision. '[Cerra] was immediately assessed out on the ground and was OK to remain out there,' a Carlton spokesperson told this masthead. 'Vision was also reviewed on the bench, [and] the club made the decision to have HIA completed as an absolute precaution. He passed that also.' The Blues seemed on track for a comfortable win over the injury-ravaged Bombers when they went to quarter-time with a 33-point lead in front of 74,280 fans. Ex-Essendon forward Orazio Fantasia extended Carlton's margin to a match-high 38 points in the second quarter, but the Bombers kicked six of the next seven goals either side of half-time to launch a fierce fightback. Michael Voss' men, who led by 11 points at three-quarter-time, again looked safe when Blake Acres slotted a brilliant 50-metre goal from the boundary before Zac Williams blasted through another from point-blank range. But Essendon kept on coming and were only six points behind with almost four-and-a-half minutes left when Xavier Duursma soared across a pack to mark then kick a goal. Neither team managed a goal thereafter, although Blues pair Charlie Curnow and Acres had the only two set shots in the dying minutes. The Bombers' last opportunity slipped through Durham's hands just outside 50, and they were unable to piece together a match-winning passage. Carlton's restricted free agent Tom De Koning was best afield with 23 disposals, 13 contested possessions, seven clearances and a goal in a ruck mismatch with veteran big man Todd Goldstein. Blue Sam Walsh and Bomber Nic Martin were also prominent with an equal-game-high 32 disposals apiece, while Darcy Parish amassed 30 touches and 10 clearances in a strong return game. yesterday 10.23pm Cerra: I got the all clear from the docs By Jon Pierik Carlton midfielder Adam Cerra said he felt fine to remain on the field, despite a heavy hit from Essendon's Sam Durham which will be scrutinised by the match review officer. Cerra was hit flush by Durham in the second term, prompting teammates to remonstrate, and was left with a shiner but remained on the field for 14 minutes before he was taken from the ground for a HIA test to determine whether he had been concussed. He had been assessed on field by the Blues' doctors, and was adamant he could play on. 'It's all good. Obviously, I went off and had the test, and passed all that,' Cerra told Fox Footy after the Blues' eight-point win at the MCG. 'I got the all clear from the docs. I thought that was all good, to keep running around. It felt normal. But, obviously, I came off for due diligence, and did the test. I had 20 minutes off and passed all of that. So, it felt great.' During the 14 minutes before Cerra was removed from the field of play, the Blues' doctors continued to analyse footage of the incident. 'I played out the game and felt great,' Cerra told Seven in the Blues' change room. He said he did not feel Durham's act was 'malicious', declaring 'accidents happen'. The clash will spark more debate about how head knocks are treated, and the role the AFL's review system with its concussion scrutineers is used. yesterday 10.15pm Cripps sticks it to Motlop's critics By Roy Ward Blues skipper Patrick Cripps spoke to Channel Seven soon after the siren... On how the Blues handled their second-half demons We just have to not get distracted and keep playing, and keep sticking to the process and keep playing an especially aggressive brand of footy, and the ball movement stuff – we have to do it for longer. On Jesse Motlop's impact on the game I thought Jesse Motlop was huge – he has copped a fair bit of criticism this year, which I have felt has been unfair for a fourth-year player, and for him to not only kick the goals, but put in the pressure, he was huge – he was tremendous today. yesterday 10.03pm Blues hang on Patrick Cripps and Sam Walsh have held firm in the final term, the Blues hanging on for an eight-point win (78 to 70) at the MCG. Their finals hopes remain alive, but this wasn't as strong a win as they should have enjoyed. The key stats from Sunday night footy at the MCG... yesterday 10.01pm What a blunder Youngster Archer Day-Wicks concedes an inexplicable 50-metre penalty for crossing the protected area. Sam Walsh then finds Blake Acres on the lead, but Acres' shot for goal is out on the full. The Blues then score a point. Their lead is eight points with just over a minute remaining.


Perth Now
8 hours ago
- Perth Now
Blues hold off Bombers fightback for crucial win
Carlton have beaten arch-rivals Essendon by eight points in a pulsating duel, finally holding on when threatened in the second half. The Blues' handling of a high hit to Adam Cerra will be a major talking point after the 11.12 (78) to 11.4 (70) win on Sunday night at the MCG. After a hot start that proved decisive, Carlton were in all sorts of trouble in the second half before steadying, partly thanks to an effusive three-quarter-time spray from coach Michael Voss. Blake Acres kicked a booming goal from an acute angle at the start of the last term to fortify Carlton, before Zac Williams added another that gave them crucial breathing space. Just like last week against Brisbane, the Bombers paid dearly for a woeful first term. Blues defender Jack Silvagni was outstanding, keeping Essendon young gun Nate Caddy goal-less, while midfielder Darcy Parish had 10 clearances in his return from injury. The Blues were missing key forward Harry McKay with a knee ailment, but his replacement Hudson O'Keeffe made an excellent AFL debut. Carlton looked like enjoying a night out when they kicked the first four goals in 14 minutes. Bombers debutant Luamon Lual briefly stemmed the onslaught when he joined the "first kick, first goal" club. But the Blues kicked another two goals to close out the first term and broke out to a 38-point lead 10 minutes after the first break. As soon as De Koning laid the tackle, Williams was GONE 💨#AFLBluesDons AFL (@AFL) June 8, 2025 Two minutes into the second term, Sam Durham collected Cerra with a high bump that looks certain to earn the Essendon on-baller a suspension. Cerra was left with a black eye and was assessed on the ground, but surprisingly did not come off for a HIA. Carlton medical staff reviewed the incident on boundary-line video and finally, after 14 minutes, Cerra was taken off the ground for the HIA, which he passed. It is unclear whether there was any AFL intervention before the Blues decided to take Cerra to the rooms. Meanwhile, the Bombers rallied from their dismal first term and steadily worked into the game. They reduced the margin to 28 points at the main break and went on the attack in the third, kicking four goals to one. Remarkably, Carlton captain Patrick Cripps went stat-less in the third as Essendon surged. The Bombers could have closed to within a goal late in the third, but a desperate tackle from Adam Saad stopped Xavier Duursma from having a shot. Sam Walsh was instrumental again for Carlton, with an equal game-high 32 disposals.

News.com.au
9 hours ago
- News.com.au
'Make the call' Confusion over Cerra HIA
AFL: Adam Cerra was completely cleared of concussion but was removed from the field ten minutes later, creating confusion over the consussion syste.