Ready for redemption after injury setback - Elliot KavanaghEmma Quayle
The Age
November 15, 2011THERE'S a shoe rack in one corner, brimming with runners, boots and the odd pair of thongs. There's a pile of magazines by the table tennis table, bikes hanging from one wall and a Swiss ball rolling around underneath them.
The small home gym is pushed up against another wall, squeezed between a bright blue drum kit and an old, brown hairdressing mirror. The sun is out, shining through the open garage doors at Elliott Kavanagh's house.
Kavanagh didn't expect to spend much of the last year here. He had plans for this season: to play football for the Western Jets, for Vic Metro, for Essendon Grammar and the Australian Institute of Sport squad. This time last year he was the sort of on-baller every AFL club wanted: quick, and able to keep running. He could zip in and out of packs, beckon the ball to his hands and take it with him. He could see space, scoot into it and put the ball into places where his teammates could easily reach it. He wanted to enjoy the last little bit of life as a teenage footballer, but his body had other plans.
Because of what he had done - and what his left hamstring has barely let him do since - he is the curiosity of this year's draft, the kid that clubs can't be entirely sure what to do with. Can he still do all the things he used to do? Have other players edged past him? Is his leg better now, or will it continue to trouble him?
Kavanagh is intriguing, and he knows it; glancing up during his medical examination at last month's combine, he found 20 doctors and physios peering down at him. ''It was a little bit overwhelming,'' he said. ''It's like they don't really see you, you're just body parts.''
It was late last season that Kavanagh dived at a player to tackle him and felt his hamstring clutch, down near his knee. He looked after it, let it repair and didn't think too much about it. But when it happened again during the pre-season, higher up his leg this time, he started to wonder what was going on.
''The first time I did it I was thinking, 'OK, I'm going to get this right.' And for it to happen again, you don't feel all that sure,'' he said. ''A lot of people started to question it, to wonder what to do. They were all thinking, is his leg strong enough? And when you know they're not sure, it makes you start to question it too.''
His head filled with opinions, advice and plans-of-action, Kavanagh listened to what Michael Makdissi, the AIS doctor, told him. He stopped playing, stopped training and got his head around the thought that he wasn't going to start again for several months.
He spent part of every second evening in his downstairs gym in Williamstown, working his way through a list of small, subtle exercises, starting to slowly strengthen the troublesome tendon.
''A good day was when you would kneel down and have someone hold on to the back of your leg,'' he said. ''You'd lean forward, then try to lean back up again. If you made it, you felt as though it must be getting a bit stronger.''
Kavanagh was patient, because he needed to be. He was patient again when Makdissi told him to take a little longer and not play for the AIS in its three April games, and the same again when he realised he wouldn't be back in time to make the Vic Metro squad. He kept remembering what the doctor had told him - that if he did every little thing right, his leg would do the right thing by him - and it was an interesting time for his parents, to see how he coped.
''He just stuck with it. It takes a bit for Elliott to let his guard down, '' said his father, Tony. ''I remember when Michael rang the week before the AIS game. He said, 'I want you to have the best recovery you possibly can, so let's leave it a bit longer,' and I thought to myself, 'This will be interesting, will he drop the lip?' But all he said was, 'No, that's all right, if that's what I have to do, I'll do it.'
''He's had a lot of challenges thrown at him this year, but he's coped with it pretty well. Someone told us once that if you've had a good 17th year, it doesn't really matter if you get injured because at least you've shown people what you can do. I can remember Elliott wandering around the house saying, 'Thank God I had a 17th year, thank God I had a 17th year …' ''
A different test was to come. When he did get to play again, late in June, Kavanagh started with a half for his school side, then moved back to the Jets and built his game time back up all over again. He played nine or 10 games but missed the TAC Cup finals after corking a thigh, and in only one or two games did he feel like himself again. ''It was a bit of a relief,'' he said, ''when things started working. But it took a while to feel like that.''
Starting back out at school he was jumping too early for marks, asking the full-back to handball to him from kick-ins and being too hard on himself. ''He lost all his game sense and wanted to be in the midfield getting 35 possessions from day one,'' said his dad. ''He forgot how good it was just to be back out on the grass.''
Kavanagh was also conscious of his body, taking a while to trust it again. ''I think I was too cautious at times,'' he said. ''I had to try and stop that, to clear my mind, but there were times I'd half feel my hamstring pull and then realise it was fine, it was nothing. It gives you a bit of a fright and I felt like I got used to that, but it was hard to impact the game like I wanted to.
''I've had a few recruiters say I lost form coming back, but I found it hard to impose myself. I was focusing on what I couldn't do, and it was better when I just started to feel happy to be out there playing again.''
What happens from here? Kavanagh won't slide too far next week - he shouldn't get into the 20s - and he thinks about his hamstring in a scientific way now. He's done everything he was supposed to do, he's played on it, and it shouldn't cause any more problems. That said, he's as curious as anyone to find out how it handles the next step.
''I guess you just have to believe in what you've done for it,'' he said. ''Of course, you question it and you hope, a little bit, and wonder, but I believe in all the work I've done on it. I can't know that it will be all right, but I believe it will be and I expect it to be.''
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