Lance Franklin will be the leading light for Sydney’s swathe of in-form players entering the finals after the superstar forward ravaged Carlton and threw open the Coleman Medal race with a 10-goal masterclass at the SCG.

Franklin’s mission seemed to stretch beyond guiding his side to a conclusive 81-point win over the Blues in the last home-and-away match and completing one of the AFL’s great comebacks after the Swans horror 0-6 start to 2017. 

With each stupendous goal, the left footed 30-year-old raised the pressure on West Coast marksman Josh Kennedy, who led Franklin by five goals going into the match and trailed by five as the final siren sounded on the 21.12 (138) to 8.9 (57) win.

Kennedy’s West Coast hosts Adelaide on Sunday.

Franklin was at his brilliant best en route to his largest match return for the Swans.

Three first-half goals included one from distance and two from tight angles, before the floodgates opened in the second half to the delight of the crowd of 38,969.

Franklin’s attention-commanding game didn’t detract from a range of high performers for arguably the competition’s hottest side on finals eve, with Josh Kennedy (30 possessions, six tackles) and Luke Parker (28 and eight) ruling the centre of the ground while Dan Hannebery was given the night off, and Dane Rampe, Heath Grundy and Nick Smith continuing their quest for Sydney to finish with the competition’s most miserly defence.

Franklin finished with 25 touches and 10 marks, while Gary Rohan and emerging forward Will Hayward scored three goals each.

Carlton was overrun, though Marc Murphy with 32 touches, and Kade Simpson (29) headed a group that never gave up in fan-favourite Dennis Armfield’s final game after 10 seasons at the Blues.

Blaine Boekhorst scored three goals and Charlie Curnow two.  


The Swans owned the first quarter to lead 22-6 and Franklin’s two early majors in the second put them up by 29 points seven minutes in.

However, Carlton sprang to life after that with their best period of the game, potting four unanswered goals to reduce the deficit to just five points, before a Will Hayward goal on the stroke of half-time gave Sydney a lead of 6.7.(43) to 5.1.(31).

The Blues’ comeback was little surprise as, despite losing Irishman Ciaran Byrne to a knee injury, they raised their disposal efficiency with the ball and their workrate without it, to force Sydney onto the back foot. 

The Swans wrenched back the advantage in a gruelling third quarter, scoring seven goals to three, including three goals to Franklin and two to Rohan, the first of which saw the red-headed flyer flip over the boundary signage and into the crowd before re-emerging triumphantly to a mixture of cheers and giggles.

The fourth quarter belonged to Franklin, who scored another four goals.

More to come

SYDNEY        3.4    6.7    13.10    21.12 (138)
CARLTON     1.0    5.1      8.4         8.9 (57)

GOALS

Sydney: Franklin 10, Rohan 3, Hayward 3, Tippett, Reid, Kennedy, Newman, Heeney

Carlton: Boekhorst 3, Curnow 2, Pickett, Kreuzer, Casboult

BEST 

Sydney: Franklin, Kennedy, Grundy, Parker, Jones, Newman

Carlton: Murphy, Weitering, Gibbs, Simpson

INJURIES 

Sydney: Tippett (ankle), Sinclair (ankle)

Carlton: Byrne (knee)

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Chamberlain, Gavine, Mitchell

Official crowd: 38,965 at the SCG