Early playing career Jesaulenko has credited his time at Eastlake for instilling in him a winning culture. After breaking into the senior team, he quickly established himself as a star, playing in three consecutive premierships for Eastlake from 1964 to 1966.
Carlton On joining Carlton, Jesaulenko reflected in an interview with
The Canberra Times that:
[Eastlake] certainly provided a winning culture. I was lucky to play at a footy club that was on the way up that just had a new regime put in, with George Harris and his mob, appointed a new coach in Ronald Dale Barassi, they had experienced players and they recruited young guns ... and I just fitted into the mix. He would play every game for Carlton that season, one of four players to do so. In that season's
Brownlow Medal count, he would poll 15 votes to finish third behind eventual winner
Ross Smith (24 votes) from and 's
Laurie Dwyer (17 votes). Jesaulenko was selected for
All-Australian honours in 1969 and 1972. He also has the dubious record at Carlton for the most inaccurate score of 5 goals and 12 behinds, against Hawthorn in 1969. In an article for
The Canberra Times, Jesaulenko reiterated his commitment to Carlton: He went on to play in the famous
1970 VFL Grand Final against
Collingwood. In front of an all-time record
MCG crowd of 121,696 fans, Carlton came from a 44-point deficit at half-time to win by 10 points. This "
specky" is acclaimed by some to be the "Mark of the Century", and it was the first to be recognised officially as the
Mark of the Year; the medal awarded to the annual winner is called the
Alex Jesaulenko Medal. Jesaulenko has downplayed the specky, citing other marks he took—even during the same game—as greater feats. He later said: "The images make it look classical, like it was taken from the marking manual, ... It was against Collingwood, a Grand Final, the biggest crowd ever, Graeme's a six-foot-four ruckman, I guess there's a mystique in standing on top of him with your arms outstretched."
Media commitments For a brief period in 1977, Jesaulenko wrote a weekly Tuesday column for
The Canberra Times called 'Jezza on Rules'. In his first article on 5 April, he spoke of the Night Series rift between the VFL and the then
National Football League (the VFL had separated itself from this umbrella organisation the previous year) and advocated the formation of a national competition: The two separate night series will prove nothing and achieve little. Both will survive, but neither will prosper to the same degree as one half the response as one fully national competition would do. The ideal solution to the night-series dispute lies somewhere between the structures of the two present competitions. The VFL must play along with all the other States and games must be spread (televised) right around Australia. Jesaulenko's vision would be realised 13 years later when the VFL became the Australian Football League.
1978–1981: The last VFL captain-coach The
1978 VFL season began dreadfully for Carlton. After finishing top of the ladder in
1976 but losing the Preliminary Final by one point and then losing in the last round of the home-and-away season to miss out on the finals in
1977, they had brought
Ian Stewart over from to replace
Ian Thorogood as senior coach. By Round 6, they had only won one game and were sitting second-last on the ladder, and Stewart had gone. Carlton president George Harris turned to Sergio Silvagni to fill the void while a long-term replacement was being sought, but on the suggestion of media personality
Michael Williamson, Harris gave the job to Jesaulenko. Jesaulenko continued on as Carlton's captain-coach in
1979. With a superb support cast, the Blues took out the minor premiership with 19 wins and also set a new VFL record for the largest-scoring aggregate in a home-and-away season (2,772 points). In the second quarter of the Round 10 match against Collingwood at Princes Park, Jesaulenko was running back with the flight of the ball when he was met heavily by
Stan Magro, resulting in concussion and a shoulder injury. The Blues were trailing by 25 points at that stage, He underwent a daily 30-minute exercise routine to strengthen his stomach and back muscles, He played 23 games and kicked 20 goals for the Saints in 1980–1981 and stayed on for a further season as senior coach. He was the last person to serve as captain-coach in the VFL; however,
Malcolm Blight was a player-coach at
North Melbourne until Round 16 of the same season but was not captain during this time. ==Later years in football and coaching career==