Carlton is threatening to make a late charge at September after dominating Fremantle at Optus Stadium, climbing to 11th on the ladder with a comprehensive 53-point win.
 
They dominated Fremantle from the opening bounce and showcased all of their weapons in a 14.14 (98) to 6.9 (45) win that leaves the 14th-placed Freo with a mountain to climb if it wants to play finals after one win in its past five weeks.  
 
Sunday's performance would suggest a repeat of last year's breakthrough finals appearance is now beyond the young team, which suffered its heaviest home defeat this season.
 
Carlton's bigger midfield bodies, a rock-solid defence, and a glut of opportunities inside 50 were behind the Blues' third straight win by more than 50 points and their most impressive on the road this year.
 
The concerns post-match will be a knee injury to midfielder Matthew Kennedy, who left the ground with trainers in the third quarter, and a thigh complaint for tall defender Mitch McGovern. 
 
The Blues raced to a 24-point lead at the first break, held their ground through a tight second quarter, and then made their move with eight unanswered goals that opened a 64-point lead at the last change.
 
With just two goals to their name, Freo rallied to kick four in the final term, but it was far too little too late.
 
Captain Patrick Cripps (29 and 10 clearances) and sidekick Sam Walsh (32 and three) were also excellent, while key forwards Harry McKay and Charlie Curnow booted three goals each.
 
McKay played with obvious confidence and slotted his set shots with drop punts in a sign the important big man can still have a large say on the direction of the season.
 
Fremantle's first quarters have been a concern all season, and Sunday's start was its worst of the year, going goalless against a Carlton team that looked prime to exploit it early.
 
The Blues brought a high-pressure style to Optus Stadium and forced repeat turnovers in their own front half, allowing them to dominate field position with 10 of the first 12 inside 50s. 
 
It took time for the rewards to come, but once they did the Blues piled on four straight goals in 11 minutes to open a 24-point lead at the first change, putting Freo on the back foot.
 
When Freo responded and cut the margin to 11 points early in the second term, Carlton lifted again with goals to Matthew Owies and McKay restoring the margin.
 
The third quarter was a landslide as Fremantle's defensive structure fell apart under pressure and the Blues ran relentlessly to create after forcing turnovers.
 
When McKay marked late in the term and instinctively considered a long-range snap before steadying himself and converting a drop punt, it was clear Carlton had all aspects of its game in order as a thrilling run to finals looms.
 

Ruckless Blues find a way
With Marc Pittonet and Tom De Koning both injured, Carlton was again forced to play without a genuine ruckman against the best duo in the game. Darcy took the bulk of the ruck contests and had a career-high 58 hit-outs, but the Blues' ground-level brigade read him well and had the edge all day. Lewis Young, Jack Silvagni and McKay shared duties and kept the centre bounce differential to -1.
 
FREMANTLE           0.3   2.7   2.8   6.9 (45)
CARLTON               4.3   6.8   12.12   14.14 (98)
 
GOALS
Fremantle: Walters 2, Jackson, Amiss, Switkowski, Frederick
Carlton: McKay 3, Curnow 3, Owies 2, Cerra, Cottrell, Docherty, Fogarty, Kennedy, McGovern
 
BEST
Fremantle: Brayshaw, Walters, Young, Darcy, Ryan
Carlton: Walsh, Cerra, McKay, Cripps, Docherty, Curnow, Weitering
 
INJURIES
Fremantle: Nil
Carlton: Kennedy (knee), McGovern (thigh)
 
SUBSTITUTES
Fremantle: Karl Worner (replaced Matthew Johnson in the third quarter)
Carlton: George Hewett (replaced Matt Kennedy in the third quarter)
 
Crowd: 49,469 at Optus Stadium