Mercury (Hobart)

Reality check for Blues as Eagles cruise

- BEN McKAY

WEST Coast has served Carlton a reminder of its place in the pecking order, easing to a 24point win over the Blues.

Carlton’s undermanne­d defence was found wanting by the flag-hunting Eagles, who prevailed 15.9 (99) to 11.9 (75) at Docklands Stadium yesterday.

High-flying Liam Ryan (4.0) and prominent forward Jack Darling (2.2) were Carlton’s chief tormentors, though nine West Coast players kicked goals in the rout.

Jeremy McGovern was dominant within the Eagles’ defensive arc, taking a gamehigh 13 marks and restrictin­g the Blues to just a handful of their own inside their forward 50. Luke Shuey and Elliot Yeo were also superb in midfield as Adam Simpson’s side improved to sit alongside ladder leader Geelong with 14 wins from 19 games.

They remain on track for an all-important top-two finish, or better yet, the minor premiershi­p.

A home clash with Adelaide before a mouth-watering MCG date with Richmond in the next fortnight will prove critical to their hopes.

For Carlton, the result ended a fine run of three straight wins under interim boss David Teague, although the loss should not affect the caretaker’s chances of landing the full-time role.

There was plenty of effort from the Blues, who simply came up against a good side tuning up for September.

Carlton battled without three first-choice defenders — Tasmanian Liam Jones (bereavemen­t), Dale Thomas (illness), Caleb Marchbank (injury) — as well as long-term absentee Sam Docherty.

That much was evident in the second term.

They led midway through the second quarter after a spell of midfield dominance, led by Sam Walsh on a quiet day for Patrick Cripps.

Then, in the blink of an eye, West Coast took the contest away. Three goals in three minutes saw the Eagles regain the lead and three more in time-on turned a seesawing contest into a comfortabl­e afternoon.

The procession — including a run of six straight goals — was a timely reminder of why axed coach Brendon Bolton was so intent on implementi­ng defensive structures before free-flowing football.

Nic Newman was Carlton’s best, kicking a career-best four goals in a prominent showing off half back.

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