Cooper Lord came into the 22 for Carlton last week after spending much of 2025 in the VFL or a sub vest, and was given a role on Caleb Serong. He did not spend much time following Serong between stoppages, but he was part of a Carlton inside mid brigade that blew the much-fancied Freo engine room to smithereens in the first half, with Serong very quiet. The Blues have had the wood on the Dockers in recent times partially because they pick bigger bodies, but as the game wore on Freo's outside run came into play, and consigned Lord et al to spectator status.
Cooper Lord came into the 22 for Carlton last week after spending much of 2025 in the VFL or a sub vest, and was given a role on Caleb Serong. He did not spend much time following Serong between stoppages, but he was part of a Carlton inside mid brigade that blew the much-fancied Freo engine room to smithereens in the first half, with Serong very quiet. The Blues have had the wood on the Dockers in recent times partially because they pick bigger bodies, but as the game wore on Freo's outside run came into play, and consigned Lord et al to spectator status.
Cooper Lord is the sort of fringe roleplayer whose fantasy stocks rise and fall on his job security, and he has done his chances of continued selection no harm with a few notable performances in recent weeks even as the Blues as a whole have been struggling. Earlier in the season Michael Voss sought to fill the hole left by the departed Matthew Kennedy by rotating small forwards through the middle, searching for the next inside-out mid who could break lines in a manner that none of the established Carlton mids can. He has reverted to youth, for now, while his job holds.