Author Topic: Polak media articles  (Read 903 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Polak media articles
« on: October 14, 2006, 02:00:17 AM »

Graham Polak in Tigers kit yesterday.
Photo: Megan Powell (The Age)


Offline one-eyed

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Re: Polak media articles - Polak gets fresh start (The Age)
« Reply #1 on: October 14, 2006, 02:02:47 AM »
Polak gets fresh start
Martin Boulton
The Age
October 14, 2006

AS MINUTES ticked down to the close of trade week yesterday, Graham Polak's future was hanging in the balance.

Then, with less than an hour to go, the 22-year-old Docker discovered he was on the move to Richmond.

He switches clubs on a three-year deal after talks with Fremantle also delivered the Tigers No. 13 and No. 63 picks in next month's draft in exchange for their picks No. 8 and No. 42.

Fremantle then traded pick No. 8 to Collingwood as part of a deal to secure forward Chris Tarrant.

Polak, a Rising Star nominee in 2003, was pick No. 4 in the 2001 national draft and played 74 games with the Dockers.

He missed seven games in a row this year but played in the round-22 game against Port Adelaide, then was a late withdrawal from the squad that beat Melbourne in the first week of the finals.

Last year a knee injury restricted him but he bounced back, started the pre-season injury-free and was in good form early this year before fading and missing games in the later part of the season.

Polak lost his defensive spot to Luke McPharlin and Michael Johnson this year but the de-listing of Andrew Kellaway left a vacancy at Punt Road and Polak intends to take it.

"They've said they'll give me a fair crack at centre half-back," Polak said.

"It's fair to say I had my best year of AFL at centre half-back so I'm really keen to give it another crack. I'm really looking forward to that. I think I've got my best footy ahead of me. I just need the opportunity.

"I was looking for a club that would give me some game time and Richmond have indicated that they'll give me that. I'm ready."

Polak recognised the importance of bulking up in 2006 and his extra work in the gym will be crucial when he arrives at Tigerland. He started the year at 90 kilograms but now tips the scales at 94 — the heaviest he has been.

"I really knuckled down with my training this year and tried to focus on putting on some weight," Polak said. "That was one of the things that the club and I both thought I needed to do. I was aiming to be 93 kilograms but got to 94 so I was really happy with that. It makes a huge difference."

Richmond's football director, Greg Miller, said the club was thrilled to get a tall player who would most likely fill a key role in defence.

"To get a key-position player for exchange of draft choices — we're rapt," Miller said. "At 22 years of age with the credentials he's got, it's a great win for the Richmond footy club — we've got a hole down back and to have a guy 195 centimetres down there is going to be a great help."

Miller acknowledged that Polak had almost faded from view in the second half of 2006, but said that with more than 70 games under his belt, Polak was an experienced AFL player.

"The last part of his season wasn't as good as his previous time, but we think he's ready to play," Miller said. "He's absolutely ecstatic."

With WEST AUSTRALIAN

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2006/10/13/1160246328849.html

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Re: Polak media articles - Defender on high with Tigers (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: October 14, 2006, 02:05:54 AM »
Defender on high with Tigers  :blah
By Daryl Timms
Herald-Sun
October 14, 2006

GRAHAM Polak hopes the equation of moving from Fremantle to Richmond will be a simple one.

The key defender rates the Tigers alongside the Dockers, and both teams are on the way up.

Polak, who was traded to Richmond yesterday, admits he's "stoked".

"I really love Fremantle, just love the club dearly, but didn't feel I was getting enough opportunity," he said.

"I just thought it was time for a change, and Richmond was very keen to give me a go and I'm happy to be there."

Polak said it was a difficult decision to leave a club on the way up.

"I'm going to miss my mates and miss the club, but I'm really happy to be going to Richmond because I think they are on the rise as well," he said.

"So I'm leaving a club that is on the rise and going to a club that is on the rise and I'm really happy."

The Tigers were keen to snare a key defender to support Joel Bowden, and Polak sees himself slotting into centre half-back. He said he also would not mind getting a chance in attack.

"Richmond has indicated I'll be playing down back, and I probably had my best year of football with Fremantle down back, so I'm happy to play there," Polak said.

"I put on 3kg this year when my aim was to get to 94kg, so I was happy with that."

Polak said although Carlton had approached him, he was keener on the Tigers.

"I was very disappointed at not getting a finals game and that probably tipped me over the edge a bit, but I love the club dearly and I'm not leaving on any sour note," he said.

Polak, who has also convinced his girlfriend Alyce Oksuz to move to Melbourne, was traded in a deal that saw Richmond swap first-round picks with Fremantle (No.8 for No.13), as well as a third and fourth-round exchange of selections.

Richmond coach Terry Wallace, who is on holidays in the US, said while the Tigers wanted the 195cm Polak, they didn't want to give away too much.

"In the end we certainly think it's a fair and reasonable deal because we are still in the first round of the draft, which is an important factor for us," Wallace said.

"There's no doubting Graham's ability and, at just 22, we're excited about what he has to offer us over the next decade."

Polak, was the No.4 pick overall in the 2001 national draft behind Luke Hodge, Luke Ball and Chris Judd.

http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,20577887-23211,00.html

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Richmond move hits right chord for Polak
Courtney Walsh
The Australian
October 14, 2006

A FRAMED album of Melbourne band The Cat Empire lies on the floor of discarded Docker Graham Polak's north Fremantle flat.

It will be among the first items packed by Polak, who believes a more regular gig with Richmond will help propel him to a place among football's elite.

Polak does not know much about Melbourne, although he said yesterday he was keen to check out the live music scene. Nor does he know the words to the Tigers' famed team song, but that is another thing he will soon rectify.

What he does know, and has since September, was that a move was necessary to lift a career that once promised plenty, despite Fremantle coach Chris Connolly's pledge that Polak would be a 10-year player for the club. The versatile key position player was unable to move from the fringe to centre stage with the Dockers as they made their historic run in the latter part of the season.

"I would have liked another crack during the finals, but I didn't get one, and that annoyed me a little bit," Polak said. "A lot of the time Chris said I was close to playing, but then I never got picked.

"Obviously I was jumping out of my skin to play. He knew that, but I just didn't get the opportunity."

It seems that will not be a problem at Punt Road, with Polak believing new coach Terry Wallace will give him every chance to succeed with the Tigers.

"Richmond was really keen to get me over and was pretty much guaranteeing to play me in round one and during the season, so I'm happy to go," Polak said.

Expectations about Polak's prowess have been high after he was selected fourth in the stellar national draft of 2001. His form since has fluctuated, with Polak having the misfortune of being constantly compared to the three men selected above him.

After all, players like Hawthorn sensation Luke Hodge, St Kilda captain Luke Ball and Chris Judd, who has done it all for the Eagles, are hard men to follow.

Polak, who finished runner-up to Hawk Sam Mitchell in the 2003 NAB Rising Star award, denies feeling pressured by the deeds of those three. But he said he made an effort to avoid watching their progress.

"I was just trying to concentrate on my footy and no one else's," he said. That may not be as easy now, with Richmond pursuing Polak with a view to him holding down a key position.

"'There's no doubting Graham's ability and, at just 22, we're excited about what he has to offer us over the next decade," Wallace said.

"As a young, key-position player, we feel he'll fit really well into our youthful group, who are all coming through together."

Although Polak played only 11 games for the season, he showed he could compete with the very best. In round four against Adelaide, he kicked three goals, standing out in what was an ordinary effort by the Dockers. He followed that with an 11-mark effort against the Eagles two weeks later but was unable to maintain consistent form.

The 22-year-old, whose partner Alyce will also move to Victoria, acknowledged off-field disciplinary problems were partly to blame for that but said he believed the shift would help him overcome that.

"Yeah, that has actually got a bit to do with it," he said. "(It will be good to) just get away for a start."

Encouragingly for the Tigers, Polak believes a fresh start, and an uninterrupted run at senior level, will allow him to reach the high notes achieved by his three star peers.

"I knew the three above me were obviously quality players and knew they would be superstars in the AFL obviously at some stage, but that is the way I look at myself as well now that I will be playing with Richmond," Polak said.

"I haven't reached it yet, but obviously my best years are to come, and they'll be with Richmond."

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20577076-36035,00.html