Author Topic: Dustin Martin [merged]  (Read 1155842 times)

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4560 on: August 12, 2018, 10:20:58 PM »
Dusty starting to hit form heading into the finals  :thumbsup.

I can't get through the paywall but I don't suppose Mr miyagi is on that list?
:lol
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Offline one-eyed

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Dustin Martin, Heavily Tattooed Man, Not Great With The Pain (pedestrian.tv)
« Reply #4561 on: August 13, 2018, 08:24:22 PM »
Dustin Martin, Heavily Tattooed Man, Admits He’s Not Great With The Pain

By Courtney Fry
pedestrian.tv
13 Aug 2018


Dustin Martin‘s greyscale tattoos are probably the most iconic ones out on the green grasses of the MCG at the moment, from the script on his neck, to the jobstoppers on both hands, right down to the clown portraits and the hand of four aces on his shins. Dusty sits atop the table of “most recognisable tattoos in the AFL” with Essendon‘s Jake Stringer hot on his heels with that god-awful stomach lion and chest bird combo.

Dusty, the boy from Castlemaine, has got some serious ink and in PEDESTRIAN.TV‘s latest episode of our AFL podcast Balls Up, we decided to quiz the Richmond champion on his body of work.

Did this involve looking at a bunch of photos of Dusty in his jocks for the new Bonds campaign to examine his tattoos? Yes, and I don’t regret a single second of it. Moving on.

First of all, Dustin put to bed the rumour that his neck was the first piece of work that he had done under the needle – and I maintain that no good artist would EVER tattoo someone’s neck for their first. His stomach was the one that began the itch, way back when he was 16 years old. Interestingly, his stomach is a space where he’s still got a lot of real estate and blank skin, after focusing more on his arms and legs in the following decade.

    I think I got one on my stomach when I was about 16. Yeah so that was a while ago. That [neck tattoo] was actually my second one… I thought it would look cool at the time, so I just went and got it done.

Dustin’s tattoos are heavily inspired by Chicano-style blackwork – which typically depicts imagery like clowns and masks, weapons, money, women, and elaborate script – and credits US artist Boog Star as one of the main people he looks to when figuring out new work he wants to be done.

Dustin’s current Australian artist is Arn Lyons who works out of Oculus Tattoo in Thornbury and Collingwood, specialising in using tonal shading to bring grey and black tattoos to life. Hiss approach to getting work done absolutely terrified me as a person who spent most of her 2017 planning and organising a large tattoo. Nope, none of that for Dustin – he just walks into Lyons’ studio and picks out a design on the day.

    I’ve got a lot of trust in him… I literally walk in there not knowing what I’m getting and I just go “yeah, that’ll do” – there’s no planning that goes into it. He [Arn] texts me saying “what are we doing tomorrow?” if I’m booked in and I just go “I dunno, I’ll come in and we’ll figure it out.” Yeah I just go in there and pick something out and he whacks it on.


That’s fine. I’m fine. I’m definitely not stressing out on Dustin’s behalf here at ALL.

Despite getting that itch of wanting a new tattoo, Dustin tells us that he’s not great with the pain, and can only sit in the studio under the needle for a couple of hours at a time. Considering how much work he’s had done, I’m guessing we’re looking at enough hours to fill a couple of solid days that he’s spent in the chair since he was 16.

    Two hours is my limit, I can’t sit any longer than two hours. I’m a bit of a chicken. I swear every tattoo that I get lately, the pain just gets worse and worse.


“A lot of cheeky clowns…I just pick out the stuff that I thought looked cool.” (Credit: Bonds Australia.)

Dustin tells us that no, he doesn’t have a 2017 Richmond Premiers tattoo, simply because he was “having too much fun” directly after the big game last September (I assume his blood would have been too thin for about a month after the fact), but his favourite tattoos are the jobstoppers on the backs of his hands.

    It was just too hectic after the Grand Final, with all the celebrations and everything, I didn’t have time. I was having too much fun.

We spent a solid half hour with Dustin on the blower, where we chatted about his jocks, his lucky game day socks, and his tattoos. It all kicks in at the 50 minute mark, so get around it below and subscribe to Balls Up on iTunes HERE.

https://www.pedestrian.tv/sport/dustin-martin-interview-tattoos-pain-richmond-tigers-2018/

Offline one-eyed

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How Richmond star Martin coped with 2017 expectations (SEN)
« Reply #4562 on: August 14, 2018, 11:27:21 AM »
How Richmond star Martin coped with 2017 expectations

By Andrew Slevison
SEN
14 Aug 2018


Dustin Martin admits he allowed the pressures of his remarkable 2017 season to creep in to his mindset earlier this year.

In a wide ranging interview with complex.com, the Richmond superstar spoke about the burden he felt in the early stages of 2018 as he attempted to replicate what he exceptionally achieved the season prior.

Martin became the first player in VFL/AFL history to win the Brownlow Medal, Norm Smith Medal and a flag in the one year as he played a pivotal role in helping the Tigers break a 37-year premiership drought.

While the 27-year-old’s form was solid in the opening month of this season, Martin’s output seemingly dropped below what is expected of him, which he attributes to a yearning for reproduction of his unprecedented 2017.

“It was a really different feeling I had at the start of this year, off the back of last year,” said the humble champion in his interview on complex.com.

“You spend your whole life trying to achieve your dreams, and then when it all kind of happens … it’s a strange feeling. It’s like, ‘poo – what’s next?’

“I certainly struggled a bit early on in the year with that kind of thing and where I was in my life.”

Martin admits that after worrying about his own individual showing, he quickly discovered that simply contributing to his teammates around him would suffice for the greater cause.

“I probably put a bit of pressure on myself to live up to last year and in reality I didn’t need to; I just need to keep doing my bit for the side,” he added.

“Once I figured that out, my footy’s probably got a bit better in the last month. I’m appreciating the journey (and) I’m in a really good place.

“I’ve just got to keep doing my bit for the team. When I walk off the field I just like to know that I’ve given my best effort to my teammates, my coaches and the fans.

“I think that’s all I’ve got to do.”

Martin and the Tigers, who sit on top of the ladder after 21 matches, look ahead to Friday night when they take on Essendon at the MCG.

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2018/08/13/how-richmond-star-martin-coped-with-2017-expectations/

Offline lamington

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4563 on: August 14, 2018, 02:08:58 PM »
Even though we lost he was awesome against Adelaide! And not to mention he single handedly kicked more goals than all of Brisbane combined. But yes I can't remember what match it was but nothing seemed to go his way. He was I think trying to assert himself too much while at the same time being scragged and getting a lot more attention off the ball this year.

It has helped a lot of other players get off the chain so I don't think dusty minds. He's been unlucky to not kick more goals this year but that could be from some sort of groin complaint which has resulted in a lot of his kicks falling short?

Offline Eat_em_Alive

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4564 on: August 14, 2018, 03:07:38 PM »
I have no doubt there is a groin complaint, I think we've suspected that for quite sometime now.
I guess from my point of view I dont expect him to replicate last years season however it is defintely noticable that there is a niggling issue and the fact that he just keeps soldiering on says alot about the person and player that he is or has become.



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Offline one-eyed

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Dustin Martin Has Nothing Left to Prove (complex.com)
« Reply #4565 on: August 14, 2018, 06:37:04 PM »
Here's the full 'Complex' interview with Dusty:

Dustin Martin Has Nothing Left to Prove

In 2017 he won the AFL premiership, the Brownlow Medal and the Norm Smith Medal. In 2018, he’s on a mission to do it again with a new state of mind. Dustin Martin speaks to Complex AU about finding comfort in chaos, with thanks to the new Bonds Tech Trunk.

Brodie Lancaster
complex.com
Aug 13, 2018

Video via YouTube

If there’s one thing sports media loves more than a rowdy bad boy it’s a quiet one. It’s so much simpler to colour in the lines of a person – to add flourishes and guess what he’s really like – when you know he won’t offer a correction.

Even after years of being the most closely watched player in the AFL, Dustin Martin has remained a complete enigma. His shyness and protective instincts have compounded, leaving him safer in silence than he could ever be as a talking head.

A preternaturally nervous kid – who, despite having emerged as a star of the Richmond Football Club and an inevitable legend of the game, hasn’t quite grown out of that as a 27-year-old – in interviews Martin inhales air like it’s in short supply, looks like he’d rather be just about anywhere else, and sticks to a short list of failsafe responses. As a Richmond supporter I’ve heard all of his lines many times over. But I also knew this player – who inspires affection and gushing praise in everyone from his coach and captain to the most composed commentators – had more to say than a media environment that relies on instant quips and critiques could fully accommodate.

“I just don’t really like talking about myself,” he explains simply, when I begin our interview by asking him why avoidance is the course of action he chooses most often. “I’m quite reserved, I ‘spose. I like to just stick to my footy and let [it] do the talking.”

In the days following his Brownlow win in 2017, Fairfax’s Greg Baum wrote, “Dusty has become a puzzle the media feels it must solve.”

But when you look past the ways in which he doesn’t meet the expectations of how we demand celebrities and beloved public figures behave, the pieces fit together pretty simply: the things that mattered came naturally to Dustin Martin. It was the side-effects of his success – the attention, the craning necks, the speculation about his motivations and pressures – that didn’t sit right. So he didn’t sit with them.

The night he’d win the Brownlow perfectly encapsulated this: Martin showed up with a teammate in place of a date, removing any possibility of romantic speculation based on who was on his arm; he raced in 90 minutes after the red carpet arrivals commenced – so late that some waiting media believed he’d sneaked past them and avoided the cameras altogether; and after the medal was slung around his neck, Martin ignored photographers’ instructions to kiss it. He’s not rebelling or resentful, he just seems only willing to play along to a point.

“I can’t control what people think of me; they’re always gonna have their opinions – good or bad – and as long as I know that my friends and family know I’m a good person that’s all that really matters,” Martin explains, when I ask if he’s ever tempted to correct assumptions made about him. “I don’t really know what people think of me, and that’s none of my business.”

“There’s so much more to life than footy and the media stuff that people talk about. I just try to separate myself and not buy into it,” he says. “In Melbourne everyone loves footy and loves talking about footy. I try and stay away from all that; I don’t watch too many footy shows or read the papers.”

    "Over the last two years I’ve really got in touch with my spiritual side"

Instead, when he’s not playing or training, he visits friends’ houses for time out. “A lot of my friends have got kids and I love going to see them; that’s when I’m most comfortable.” Otherwise, he taps out altogether with private night swims at the Brighton sea baths – a meditative activity of Martin’s that Richmond CEO Brendan Gale discusses learning about in one of the closing chapters of Konrad Marshall’s 2017 book Yellow and Black : A Season With Richmond. Going from the sauna to the freezing, black water at night is “good for the body”, Martin tells me, but also proves an essential escape from a life he describes as “hectic”. “I live by myself and enjoy my own space,” he says, simply. “I love being around my friends and family just as much but I’d certainly say I’m an introvert.”

In the same chapter, Martin’s beloved coach Damian Hardwick perfectly encapsulated how it must feel to be his star player who cannot help but attract attention everywhere he goes: “If you’re Dustin it’s like you’re in a zoo. And you’re the lion.”

And even in his most natural habitat, Martin’s never without curious eyes on him. Jerry’s Milk Bar in Elwood is a popular and unassuming cafe, and also happens to be one of Martin’s favourites. He stops in for coffee almost daily. When I sat down at a table there for breakfast recently, his face was staring back at me – not in person, but from the covers of books and magazines deposited around the cafe’s tables. Next to the register is a poster of him with a new award: “Jerry’s #1 Ticket-Holder”. Their love of him is not exactly inconspicuous.

“It is slightly embarrassing,” he admits, but the recognition comes with the territory. “You’ve just got to deal with it.”

And after a year like the one he had in 2017 – when he signed a multi-million dollar deal to stay at Richmond for seven more years; was the most-watched player on a team that won the club’s first premiership in almost four decades; and took home just about every individual award named after past legends of the game – recognition becomes a part of his everyday.

This notoriety, Martin tells me, can make it challenging to form new relationships and separate genuine connections from the ones only eager to be near celebrity. “It’s good to meet people that are interested in you the person, not you the footballer,” he says, with more conviction than he’s had at any other time during our conversation. “It’s very refreshing when you meet someone that doesn’t know who you are.”

Throughout our interview, Martin avoids talking directly about himself by reverting to generalised ‘you’s rather than specific ‘I’s and ‘me’s. It’s something I was once told women are socialised to do more often than men, as a way to play down accomplishments and signal in conversation that we’re not bragging or self-important. When you remove the gendered categorising, the same applies perfectly to Martin, who’s humble almost to a fault, and credits just about every personal success to his team. Even when he’s answering my questions about assessing whether people’s intentions when they meet him are genuine, he catches himself acknowledging his own fame and tries to re-frame it as a common occurrence: “With that said, the bigger my profile has got … people will come to you for you the footballer, not you the person.” Martin shirks the spotlight even when admitting how brightly it’s shining in his eyes.

“I just really value the meaningful relationships that I’ve got with my close friends and the boys that I play with,” he continues, and I get the sense that Martin’s acknowledgements of his team carry more weight that he quite knows how to articulate. When accepting his Brownlow, he read a message to them from a prepared speech: “this medal is about each of you and the connection we all have”.

    "I probably put a bit of pressure on myself to live up to last year and in reality I didn’t need to; I just need to keep doing my bit for the side."

In 2017, the year he and his teammates brought home Richmond’s first premiership cup in his lifetime, the club began conscious, focussed work on strengthening that connection. Beginning in pre-season, players were asked to prepare and share stories about their lives’ heroes, hardships and highlights in what they called ‘Triple H Sessions’.

Martin appreciated the affect the emotional and revealing sessions had on his team, but found tapping into the vulnerability required to share his own stories difficult. “I was a bit uncomfortable and kept putting it off and putting it off. Eventually I had to, [but] I was probably one of the last in the group to do it. I was very nervous – as was everyone that got up there. It takes a lot of courage to get up there in front of 30 or 40 people and bare it all. But it was really powerful and something I’m very lucky to be a part of. It just brings you closer to your friends at the club. Definitely enhanced [my relationships]. You know people on a deeper level, which is really important.”

As well as chipping away at his defences in front of his teammates, Martin has been doing active work on quieting his mind and managing his nervous instincts with regular meditation before games, and sessions with the club’s high-performance mindfulness coach, Emma Murray. As a result, Martin has become somewhat of an advocate for the practice. “Over the last two years I’ve really got in touch with my spiritual side, and Emma’s been fantastic for me,” he says. “I think it’s really important for everyone to be emotional, stable … The mental side of the game is just as important as the physical, and keeping on top of it is something I’ll continue.”

Despite avoiding the endless commentary around the game, Martin is not immune to letting some its pressures seep in. And while the unprecedented successes from the 2017 season have allowed him a chance to relax into his playing recently, it wasn’t like that at first.

“It was a really different feeling I had at the start of this year, off the back of last year. You spend your whole life trying to achieve your dreams, and then when it all kind of happens … it’s a strange feeling. It’s like, ‘poo – what’s next?’ I certainly struggled a bit early on in the year with that kind of thing and where I was in my life.”

This affirmed a suspicion I’d had watching him play this season; that there was an unfamiliar kind of tension in his game until recently, when its shadow suddenly dissipated and a kind of disciplined freedom appeared in its place. “That’s the best thing – just being free, you know?” he agrees. “I probably put a bit of pressure on myself to live up to last year and in reality I didn’t need to; I just need to keep doing my bit for the side. Once I figured that out, my footy’s probably got a bit better in the last month. I’m appreciating the journey [and] I’m in a really good place.”

Marshall wrote in Yellow and Black that, when the teenaged Martin was first drafted, he listed two aspirations for his new career as an AFL footballer: to win a premiership and to be a one-club player. Considering he’s not only achieved both goals, but has done so in the kind of season any player – himself included – will observe as a benchmark in years to come, I ask Martin what he still has to prove as a footballer. The answer was in keeping with his character: uncomplicated, generous and genuinely honest. “Nothing, I don’t think. I’ve just got to keep doing my bit for the team. When I walk off the field I just like to know that I’ve given my best effort to my teammates, my coaches and the fans. I think that’s all I’ve got to do.”

Learn more about Dustin Martin's partnership with Bonds here.
Styling by Jade Leung. Photography by Sam Wong. Dustin Martin wearing Bonds clothing throughout.

https://www.complex.com/sports/2018/08/dustin-martin-has-nothing-left-to-prove

Offline The Machine

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4566 on: August 17, 2018, 10:40:14 PM »
Was huge tonight  :bow

Offline Chuck17

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4567 on: August 17, 2018, 11:11:26 PM »
Agree for the first three quarters

Would have liked him to stand up in the last

Offline Francois Jackson

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4568 on: August 18, 2018, 12:39:37 AM »
assuming we make it to a prelim, it will be dustys 200th :thumbsup
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Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4569 on: August 18, 2018, 02:05:57 AM »
Could play his 200th in a semi-final :shh
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Offline YellowandBlackBlood

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4570 on: August 18, 2018, 11:44:29 AM »
It's as if he thinks the H&A season is there just to get you into gear for the important stuff called finals....  :shh
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Offline Hard Roar Tiger

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4571 on: August 18, 2018, 12:12:40 PM »
Could play his 200th in a semi-final :shh
Jack is due for game 250 in the prelim
“I find it nearly impossible to make those judgments, but he is certainly up there with the really important ones, he is certainly up there with the Francis Bourkes and the Royce Harts and the Kevin Bartlett and the Kevin Sheedys, there is no doubt about that,” Balme said.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4572 on: August 25, 2018, 06:30:50 PM »
Can Dusty win back-to-back Brownlows?

After a somewhat subdued start the season – inhibited by a persistent calf complaint – Dustin Martin remains a chance to win the Brownlow Medal, particularly after Saturday's barnstorming display against the Western Bulldogs. Martin began prolifically, amassing 10 disposals, three clearances and three inside 50s in the first term alone. Compared to his extraordinary Brownlow medal-winning 2017 season, Martin has dropped off in average disposals, goals and tackles but the Tigers onballer is still producing elite numbers: Score involvements (ranked first in the League), inside 50s (first) and clearances (second). Martin was one of the Tigers' best with a team-high 33 disposals and nine clearances to inspire the thrilling three-point victory.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-08-25/five-talking-points-richmond-v-western-bulldogs

Offline Diocletian

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4573 on: August 25, 2018, 06:34:22 PM »
Rusty Dusty.... :shh
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Offline Owl

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #4574 on: August 25, 2018, 06:37:43 PM »
saw him grabbing his back a few times today after that mark where the dog kneed him ...
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