MELBOURNE will take it.

Sunday's 15.15 (105) to 15.10 (100) triumph at the MCG over David Teague's Blues should provide a much-needed morale boost in what's been a rough campaign.

And this game could quite easily have been another chapter.

Six unanswered Carlton goals either side of three-quarter time, followed by a skied snap from Matt Kennedy for a behind, saw it snatch an unlikely one-point lead as time ticked past 27 minutes.

It was an incredible turn of events after the Demons threatened to blow the Blues away for much of the afternoon and led by a game-high 38 points late in the third term.

Steven May flies for a mark against Ed Curnow. Picture AFL Photos

There was time for one last twist, with a wild Kade Simpson kick out of defensive 50 going straight to Clayton Oliver, who instantly found Jayden Hunt about 45m out.

Hunt's accurate set shot – his third goal from as many attempts – regained Melbourne's lead with 90 seconds to go and set the scene for a frenetic finish.

Mitch Hannan could have sealed the contest soon after with a long bomb to an unguarded goalsquare from beyond 60m that stopped rolling millimetres short of the line and was rushed through.

Carlton launched one last charge and it came down to a one-on-one contest between high-profile recruits, with Steven May and Mitch McGovern grappling near goal.

May fell to ground and McGovern's toe-poke in the dying seconds hit the post to deny the Blues a draw and leave the Demons to celebrate a five-point victory.

DEES HOLD OUT BLUES Full match coverage and stats

There will be significant relief at Melbourne, which banked just its fifth win from 15 games this season in what's been a torrid campaign.

On a low-scoring weekend, the Dees snuck through the 100-point barrier for the first time since round four.

GAMEBREAKER Injured T-Mac sinks six

They were left to desperately hang on after starting the final term with one player on the bench, including losing six-goal forward Tom McDonald in the dying seconds of the third quarter.

McDonald rose above the error-strewn contest – although even he sent his first shot at goal out on the full – to boot four first-half goals and six for the day.

They all came before three-quarter time, with a left knee problem sidelining him for the final term and leaving him on crutches post-match.

It was McDonald's second strong performance in three games as he puts his own early season struggles behind, and Carlton rival Liam Jones was powerless to stop him in the air from the get-go.

INJURY BLOW Goodwin hopeful McDonald's knee isn't too serious

The Blues didn't escape the carnage – temporarily losing Matthew Kreuzer in the second half, as well as Jacob Weitering going off for good after a clash of heads with Christian Petracca in the last term.

Carlton, fresh from a remarkable come-from-behind win over Fremantle out west a week ago, took advantage of Melbourne's situation with its best patch of the day.

Jack Silvagni, who started the game tagging Clayton Oliver, booted three goals in the second half, including the first of the final quarter to kickstart Carlton's comeback.

The Blues barely touched the ball in the opening 20 minutes of the contest and looked dead and buried as the match became a shootout in the third term, with the teams combining for 12 goals.

They performed admirably in upsetting Fremantle out west a week ago minus Patrick Cripps, Sam Docherty, Harry McKay and mostly without Charlie Curnow and almost did it again.

A loss would have sent the Demons below Carlton into 17th spot, and last year's preliminary finalists are still another win and significant percentage from climbing out of the bottom four despite the result.

Outside of McDonald, Oliver (26 disposals) and Hunt, they will be thankful for strong efforts from James Harmes (27), Bayley Fritsch (26), Nathan Jones (24) and Christian Petracca (three goals).

Star ruckman Max Gawn (left ankle) was a predictable late withdrawal after his injury against Brisbane last week, but his 206cm replacement, former Kangaroo Braydon Preuss, filled in serviceably.

BLUES FRUSTRATED David Teague wants players to bring heat earlier

There were few four-quarter performers for the Blues, but they'll take great heart in Silvagni's performance as he fights for his AFL career.

No.1 draft pick Sam Walsh (25) was good again, veterans Marc Murphy (24) and Ed Curnow (23) stood up late, and newcomers Nic Newman (26) and Will Setterfield (three goals) made telling contributions.

MEDICAL ROOM
Carlton: Ruckman Matthew Kreuzer and Jacob Weitering (broken nose) came off second-best in respective clashes in the third and fourth quarters. Kreuzer passed a concussion test and was able to return midway through the final term.

Melbourne: First-year defender Marty Hore suffered a broken collarbone in the opening quarter and spent the rest of the afternoon cradling his left arm in a sling. Medical staff also took a close look at Bayley Fritsch's right knee, but he played the game out. Tom McDonald (knee) and Harry Petty (concussion) also finished the game on the bench. The Dees lost dual All Australian ruckman Max Gawn (ankle) before the match, with ex-Roo Braydon Preuss replacing him.

NEXT UP
The Blues will try to exact revenge for their round three defeat when they head to the SCG on Saturday to face Sydney. Melbourne's won twice in its past three ahead of a date with the in-form Bulldogs at Marvel Stadium next Sunday.

CARLTON        2.4       5.4       10.6     15.10 (100)
MELBOURNE  4.4       7.11     14.12   15.15 (105)

GOALS
Carlton:
Casboult 3, Silvagni 3, Kennedy 2, Setterfield 3, Dow, Fisher, O'Brien, Gibbons,
Melbourne: T.McDonald 6, Petracca 3, Hunt 3, Neal-Bullen, Weideman, Harmes,

BEST
Carlton: 
Silvagni, Murphy, Curnow, Newman, Walsh, Setterfield
Melbourne: McDonald, Oliver, Fritsch, Harmes, Petracca, Frost

INJURIES
Carlton: Weitering (broken nose)
Melbourne: Max Gawn (ankle) replaced in selected side by Braydon Preuss, Hore (broken collarbone), McDonald (knee), Petty (concussion)

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Rosebury, Deboy, Heffeman

Official crowd: 55,593 at the MCG