Updated ,first published
Carlton Football Club have confirmed that Elijah Hollands has been admitted to hospital, as scrutiny intensifies on the clubโs handling of the young midfielderโs welfare.
โWhile the club acknowledges the publicโs interest, it again asks that the privacy of Elijah and his family be respected,โ Carlton said in a statement released on Monday night.
โThis request for privacy extends to the media to please not report or speculate on Hollandsโ location and private health information.โ
The Hollands situation has dominated the AFL landscape for days after he was allowed to play last Thursday night against Collingwood in a match at the MCG in which the club has since acknowledged he experienced a โmental health episodeโ.
Carlton are under mounting pressure to justify the decision to allow Hollands to remain on the field deep into the game, including the final quarter, despite what has been described internally as a significant episode and a visibly limited on-field impact.
The AFL is monitoring the situation closely, although it has stopped short of launching a formal investigation, instead allowing Carlton to conduct its own internal review. That review is expected to examine communication between medical staff, coaches and interchange officials, as well as the protocols followed once Hollandsโ condition became apparent.
Under league rules governing a playerโs fitness to participate, Carlton could face a fine of $50,000 or more if it is determined Hollands should have been removed from the match. While those provisions have historically been applied to head trauma and concussion cases, they are not limited to physical injuries.
The AFL would need to determine that Hollands was medically unfit to continue โ a threshold that introduces complex questions around how mental health episodes are assessed in real time compared to more visible physical injuries.
Senior figures across the competition privately acknowledge the case could become a watershed moment for how clubs handle acute mental health incidents during matches, with current frameworks largely built around concussion management and physical distress.
There is also growing unease within industry circles about the optics of Hollands continuing to play despite having minimal involvement, raising questions about whether competitive pressures overrode welfare considerations on the night.
Carlton have maintained that they acted on the advice available to them at the time, but the episode has prompted broader discussion about whether the AFL needs clearer, standardised protocols for mental health scenarios, similar to those that now exist for concussion.
The league has in recent years invested heavily in mental health programs and education, but Thursday nightโs events have exposed a potential gap between policy and practice when incidents unfold mid-game.
For now, the immediate priority remains Hollandsโ wellbeing, with the club reiterating its request for privacy as he receives medical care.
Carlton would not confirm on Monday whether Hollands had been drug-tested.
Support is available from Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14 and MensLine Australia on 1300 78 99 78.
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