Author Topic: One lucky break for Newman  (Read 785 times)

Offline one-eyed

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One lucky break for Newman
« on: June 22, 2007, 03:30:24 AM »
One lucky break for Newman
22 June 2007   Herald-Sun
Scott Gullan

PART of Chris Newman's role as the lesser known third member of the "Broken Leg Brothers" is to constantly remind the football world that he is the lucky one.

While his Richmond teammate Nathan Brown and St Kilda's Matt Maguire have very publicly battled problem after problem with their leg fractures, Newman has quietly slipped back into active duty.

Newman, who snapped his left leg against Collingwood in Round 13 last year, has not missed a game in 2007.

By contrast, Brown has waged a two-year battle with complications while Maguire, who snapped his leg in Round 18, did play in Round 1 but hasn't been seen since.

"Mine was a clean break so I knew that I wasn't going to have the problems the others have had in the past," Newman said. "There was no ligament damage, it was just very clean.

"Browny was a bit flat that I came back so early and made him look bad. He wanted me to let everyone know that his break was a lot worse than mine."

Newman has spoken to Maguire several times.

"I think his (Maguire's) was a similar break to mine, but he had different circumstances with his compartment syndrome and stuff like that," Newman said.

"We speak to each other for updates and wishing each other luck and yeah, I suppose, we're a bit like the broken leg brothers. It has been really good to have those blokes to talk to and compare notes."

Newman's return caught everyone off guard, including his family, who weren't expecting to have to fly to Perth in Round 11 to celebrate his 100th game.

"I looked at the fixture at the start of the year and I didn't really expect to get there by Round 11," he said.

"I was just focusing on playing Round 1 and then everything was going to depend on how my legs felt and kept pulling up."

The broken leg was the first major injury of his career and threw him out of whack on several fronts.

Newman shared a double-storey apartment with teammate Brent Hartigan but, in a freak twist, Hartigan broke his ankle playing in the VFL on the same weekend.

This meant the apartment became a no-go zone, with Newman heading to his parents' home in Narre Warren.

"It was the first major injury I have had so it was sort of hard to deal with at first," Newman said.

"I basically went back and lived with my mum and dad again. It was like a holiday being there because mum was superb looking after me. In the end I didn't really want to leave."

In typical Newman fashion he put his head down and went about getting his leg - which now has a rod in it - back to working order.

"I got re-acquainted with the swimming pool and the conditioning staff and I was training by Christmas, which really surprised me a little bit," he said.

The injury couldn't have come at a worse time for the defender, whose career was starting to take off after playing every game in 2005 and representing Australia in the International Rules Series against Ireland.

"He came of age to a degree when, as a club, we recommended he play in the international rules game a couple of years ago at Telstra Dome," Tigers football manager Paul Armstrong said.

"I don't think Sheeds and a few of the coaches knew who Chris Newman was, but he really made an impression on them there."

Armstrong said the 25-year-old was one of the key leaders at Punt Rd.

"He is a very strong-principled sort of guy," Armstrong said. "Inside a club you get to know who the influential key people are and he is one of them.

"He is used as an example to the younger boys on how to go about things, how to train and how to play."

Newman thinks he is just starting to get back to the right level.

"I was blowing up early on and I needed the conditioning," Newman said. "I don't feel like I have lost too much speed or anything like that. It's just about getting that continuity into my leg and my conditioning."

He figures the Tigers are ready to turn a horror season around and the presence of his BLB mate in Brown against Melbourne at the MCG tonight could do the trick.

"He's obviously been frustrated but I am sure he will come back with a bang," Newman said.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,21945897%255E19771,00.html

Bulluss

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Re: One lucky break for Newman
« Reply #1 on: June 22, 2007, 11:45:14 PM »
Another great performance by Newy.

Even more so after hearing that he has two broken ribs and suffered a punchtured lung after the Freo game. :thumbsup

Offline mightytiges

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Re: One lucky break for Newman
« Reply #2 on: June 23, 2007, 07:28:38 AM »
That chase and run down of a Melbourne player late in the game when there was nothing further to play for typified the attitude of the whole team. Plough said he wasn't expecting Newy to play because of his ribs.
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline one-eyed

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Punctured lung, broken ribs — no problem (The Age)
« Reply #3 on: June 24, 2007, 03:32:35 AM »
Punctured lung, broken ribs — no problem
Emma Quayle | June 24, 2007 | The Age

RICHMOND defender Chris Newman had a tube put in his chest and risked broken ribs and a punctured lung to help his side beat Melbourne on Friday night.

Newman, who was injured when the Tigers lost to Fremantle in Perth two weeks ago, had a fitness test before the breakthrough win and surprised coach Terry Wallace by passing it.

The defender, who returned from a broken leg this season, also pleased his coach with a chase and tackle late in the last quarter, with Richmond's first win for the season already well secured.

"I just thought that typified the spirit of the side," said Wallace after the 49-point win over the Demons.

"Chris broke two ribs and punctured a lung two weeks ago over in Fremantle. It looked at one stage like we were going to have to drive him back over the Nullarbor. He ended up going in and getting a tube put in his chest to be able to fly back on our flight.

"I didn't think he had any hope of playing in the match. We had a test for him (Friday) morning and to come through that test and play with that sort of injury, then perform and, when the game's over, run a bloke down like that … I think he'll be a very sore boy tonight, but that's the attitude of the group."

The tube was placed in Newman's chest so he could fly back from Perth and was taken out after he returned to Melbourne.

http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/punctured-lung-broken-ribs-151-no-problem/2007/06/23/1182019435699.html