Author Topic: Brandon Ellis to Gold Coast / Richmond receive pick 39 as compo [merged]  (Read 297591 times)

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #45 on: November 28, 2011, 06:25:20 AM »
Thinking a bit more about why we went for another 180cm small defender/mid. It seems to me that Ellis was chosen not for free up Lids but to eventually take over from Newy's role in defence as well as be part of the overall midfield rotation. Newy is really our only quality older player that we'll lose in the next say 3 years or so. Having a like-for-like replacement on the list in waiting would allow us to keep to the same team structures.
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #46 on: November 28, 2011, 07:07:37 AM »
Ellis' new home at Tiger Land

    by: Patrick Lane
    From: Leader
    November 25, 2011 1:23PM


BRANDON Ellis has already experienced his first bone-crunching tackle in the big time.

It happened on the couch on draft night, when family, friends and Calder Cannons development coach Graeme Burgen leapt on top of him as his name was called out by Richmond with its first pick, and 15th overall.
 
It was not so much being plucked by a club that sent the household into raptures - that was a given - but rather the news that Ellis was staying home in Melbourne.
 
The 18-year-old North Carlton resident had all but conceded he was Fremantle-bound, and was resigned to a trip across the Nullarbor.
 
Instead, Ellis will move in with Burgen – a family friend currently hosting Tiger David Astbury.
 
And if signing at one of Melbourne's most traditional clubs was not enough of a whirlwind experience, Ellis will fly out to Arizona on Tuesday with his newfound Tiger teammates for a 12-day training camp.
 
The 181cm and 83kg athlete, known for his brutality and skill as a rebounding defender, sees success on the horizon at the Tigers. And he oh so wants to be a part of it.
 
"They just got brand new faclities, which is another bonus," he said.

"They are really up and coming and I can't wait to be a part of what is coming in the next few years.
 
"Hopefully we can play finals next year and, with another year of everyone improving, who knows that can happen."
 
Ellis joins Calder draftees Tom Sheridan (Fremantle, pick 16), Daniel Markworth (St Kilda, pick 39) and Michael Talia (Western Bulldogs, pick 39.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/elliss-new-home-at-tiger-land/story-fn53klc6-1226206023192

Online Damo

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #47 on: November 28, 2011, 03:15:01 PM »
Pick 39 was valuable

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #48 on: November 28, 2011, 05:14:03 PM »
A boy called Ellis
By Callum Twomey
Mon 28 Nov, 2011



IT IS hard to imagine there was a more interesting, likeable character at the NAB AFL Draft Combine than Brandon Ellis.

Ellis was selected in November's NAB AFL Draft by the Tigers with pick 15, after a stunning 2011 season with the Calder Cannons in the TAC Cup.

When we caught up with Ellis, prior to the draft, he carried the wide grin of a boy on the cusp of achieving something he had been working towards for much of his life.

Ellis is 18, has just finished year 12 at Princes Hill Secondary in North Carlton and lives with his parents, Nancy and Dale, brother Sean and sister Kate in a small apartment in a housing estate close to the school, in Melbourne's inner north.

He has a strong handshake, an up-right - almost mechanical - gait, and parts his blond hair to the left, all part of the strong body of a fair dinkum, old-fashioned footballer.

In conversation, Ellis lets out an occasional teenager's laugh - short, sharp and fading - but he is often far wiser and more heartfelt than first impressions suggest.

He is very conscious of where his life sits - prior to the draft he was finishing his English, Psychology, Physical Education and Media exams to complete his VCE. Then, three days later, it was the 2011 NAB AFL Draft. But Ellis didn't let that affect his studies, although his footballing fate was never far from his mind.

"I have thought about it, a lot," he said with smile that indicated it was too hard not to think about. "I think every kid would have."

Ellis' draft chances catapulted after a superb season. After 13 games for the Cannons as a bottom-age player in 2010 - including their TAC Cup premiership win - Ellis played 16 games in 2011.

A tough and skillful medium-sized defender, he had a standout NAB AFL Under-18 Championships with Vic Metro and was named in the All Australian Under-18 team. At the NAB AFL Draft Combine, Ellis only strengthened his claims with some brilliant testing.

His results reflected a player confident and comfortable. His standing vertical jump of 70cm put him in the top 11 per cent of those tested, and his running vertical jump (83cm) rocketed him into the top 4 per cent. He ran 3.05 seconds over 20m, 8.14 seconds for the agility test, and scored 15.4 in the shuttle run, placing him in the top 4 per cent.

He's not particularly big - he stands 181 cm (about the size of Geelong's Joel Selwood) - but he's strong and well-built and seems ready to play senior football in 2012.

However, it was not just his football and his athleticism that impressed many recruiters. His character was just as impressive.

In the back room of the community house across the road from Ellis' home, he and his father sat answering questions from AFL.com.au.

To Brandon, in our second interview in a week before the draft, it still seemed a novelty - that it was all actually happening, that the media was interested in him.

To Dale, who works part-time with Nancy cleaning houses in local areas, he was excited and cautious in equal doses about his son's future.


Brandon Ellis describes his father Dale as a 'fighter' after he came through radiation and chemotherapy to treat a cancer doctors said was inoperable


He knew nobody was drafted until their name was read out... but he was clearly pleased by the hard work Brandon had put in to get to this point.

"We can't explain how proud we are," he said, his weathered face and greying hair suggesting a life lived tough. "He's had a dream and he's getting closer and closer to it."

Brandon's progression would not have got to this point without Dale, who coerced him into returning to football after he quit in December, 2008.

Dale, two years after having his right kidney removed due to cancer, had been having trouble swallowing his food. He let it be, but then weeks later found a lump on his neck. He had cancer in his esophagus, and was told it couldn't be operated on.

He left Melbourne's Peter McCallum Cancer hospital in tears with Nancy, and returned home, where Sean, now 12, Kate, now 16, and Brandon, then 15, were waiting. Brandon could see something was up.

"I just went in the bedroom and Brandon looked at me and we both started crying," Dale said, his voice trembling at the recollection. "It was pretty hard."

The doctors told Dale nobody had ever survived such a delicate, inoperable cancer. But, when they called two weeks later to say he was eligible for some radiation and chemotherapy, he jumped at the chance. "He's a fighter," Brandon said.

Ellis, then in the Barry Davis development squad at Calder, gave up on football. To him, in such tough times, it meant little.

Dale and Nancy, and Andrew Johnston (Calder Cannons president), spoke to Brandon about reconsidering. They knew his talent - he had already shown enough to suggest he would be a regular TAC Cup player at least - and they knew he was struggling. "But he didn't want a bar of it," Dale said.

So Dale, at one of his chemotherapy appointments, brought Brandon with him to talk to a counsellor at the hospital. It worked.

"I had everything bottled up," Brandon said. "I didn't want to speak to Mum or Dad about it because it was just too hard.

"We spoke for about two hours and I came out and everything was off my chest. I saw everything clearer and thought, 'What the hell am I doing quitting football?'"

He called Ian Kyte, Calder's regional manager, and asked if he could rejoin the program. The answer was an emphatic yes. It was the kick-start to a period of continual improvement for Ellis.

"I used it as motivation," he says. "I just never take things for granted. That's why everything I do I do it at my best because I know it can get taken away at any time."

It also reignited a passion for the game that had begun when he was four, when he started NAB AFL Auskick. His uncle, Shane, was running the program and was able to sneak his nephew - who was yet to start school - into the local clinic early. "We cheated a bit," Dale said, smiling broadly.

Immediately, Brandon showed a natural ability. He could read where the ball was going, and how it would bounce, and knew where to go to get a kick. "We just knew he had something then," Dale said.

It was when he was six, though, that Brandon decided playing footy at the highest level he could achieve was what he wanted to do. His cousin's nanna was Judy Francis, a long-time cook at North Melbourne renowned as almost a de facto mother to the Kangaroo players.

Francis took Brandon, then a Collingwood supporter like his Dad, into the North Melbourne rooms to meet the players. Wayne Carey and Glenn Archer said hello and Mick Martyn was there, and Brandon was consumed. Not only did he switch allegiances - "It broke my heart," Dale said, with a laugh - but he turned his undivided attention to football.

From then on, it was what he wanted to do.

However, it was his fitness more than his application that caused him, more than 10 years later, to sit out the start of Calder's 2010 campaign.

After being initially frustrated not to be getting picked - "He was pretty annoyed," Calder coach Martin Allison said - Ellis joined the team in round seven when it took on Gippsland Power. He didn't miss another game, and was one of Calder's best players in its successful finals series last year.

But he wanted to get better. His parents, at his request, got him a heart-rate monitor for Christmas 2010, so he could check if he was actually going his hardest at training. His maximum heart rate is 202 beats per minute, so, at training, he aims to push it above 185 on a consistent basis.

He worked on his diet. At home every night, Nancy, and occasionally, Kate, would make dinner. Each night, they asked Brandon what he would like. It's always pasta or risotto, something good for his football.

He did extra recovery sessions before and after pre-season training sessions, and would spend 20 minutes before training stretching and then another 20 minutes on a foam roller, designed to improve flexibility.

After he'd finish school - he got up at 8am on school days for an 8.40 start because Princes Hill is only minutes away - he'd go for a kick with friends at Visy Park (they have a secret entrance to the ground). While they'd kick torpedoes, Ellis would be kicking one on his left foot and the next on his right and he'd make sure he hit the target each time.

At one point, Kyte even had to call him into his office and tell him to slow down.

"You'll burn yourself out before the year even starts," he told Ellis, who cut back his training load accordingly.

If nothing else, football has harnessed Ellis' idea of karma or, as he describes it, "giving a little and taking a little." Because he worked hard at the Cannons, he was rewarded.

It's a lesson he's taken outside of football, too. Ellis used to tell his parents, when he was growing up, that he wanted to be a policeman. That he wanted the right thing to happen to the right people.

One of football's guiding principles - you get back what you put in - had taught Ellis that gains could be made from sacrifices.

It's why his All Australian selection this year signalled to him that his draft hopes were more realistic than he had previously believed. "To be honest, I didn't even know what All Australian was until about a week before it was announced. I never looked too much into it because I never thought it would happen to me," he said.

"My jaw dropped when I got the call saying I was in the team. I was nearly in tears, that's how happy I was. Not because I made the team, but just because of how hard I'd worked."

Ellis is a sharp player. He cuts angles, he's efficient with his ball use, and he's courageous when a ball needs to be won. He's smart with his body - often using his balance and a nudge to push off an opponent in a one-on-one - and he's competitive. He's also a playmaker, equally as capable shutting down a dangerous opponent as setting up the Cannons' attack.

He was made a member of Calder's leadership group in 2011, and enjoyed the extra responsibility, in trying to set a good example for the bottom-age players coming behind him.

Allison said: "He's gone from being a guy who wasn't too sure of himself - but wasn't going to die wondering - to a point where he's a leader and had a great year."

The change was clear at home too: Dale noticed his son mature rapidly with the responsibility.

When we first met at the NAB AFL Combine at Etihad Stadium, Ellis impressed with his bounce and life.

He's grown into himself, sure of his abilities and sure of the people around him, although he is well prepared for whatever happens. "I'd be the happiest man alive if I get taken," he said.

They were prophetic words for right now, Ellis is indeed the happiest man alive, proud to be in the yellow and black.

Follow Callum Twomey on Twitter at @Cal_Twomey

http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/126625/default.aspx

Offline bojangles17

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #49 on: November 28, 2011, 06:16:28 PM »
One word "whoa"...we have a future norm smith medalist here boys, keep ya feet on the ground...i like what I hear :clapping
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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #50 on: November 28, 2011, 06:18:18 PM »
One word "whoa"...we have a future norm smith medalist here boys, keep ya feet on the ground...i like what I hear :clapping

Have you won a PR contract from the club or something  :lol

Online Hard Roar Tiger

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #51 on: November 28, 2011, 06:30:49 PM »
One word "whoa"...we have a future norm smith medalist here boys, keep ya feet on the ground...i like what I hear :clapping

Have you won a PR contract from the club or something  :lol

Tony Bojangleberg
“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 Loui Tufga

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #52 on: November 28, 2011, 06:37:29 PM »

gerkin greg

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #53 on: November 28, 2011, 06:48:45 PM »
 :lol

Offline Willy

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #54 on: November 28, 2011, 06:51:52 PM »

Offline Loui Tufga

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #55 on: November 28, 2011, 06:55:21 PM »
 :lol :lol :lol :lol :rollin :rollin :rollin :rollin :rollin :lol :lol :lol :lol :lol :lol
Nice work Slickster ;D ;D

Offline Smokey

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #56 on: November 28, 2011, 06:56:59 PM »

Offline Penelope

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #57 on: November 28, 2011, 07:02:17 PM »
 :rollin
“For My thoughts are not your thoughts,
Nor are your ways my ways,” says the Lord.
 
“For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
So are my ways higher than your ways,
And my thoughts than your thoughts."

Yahweh? or the great Clawski?

yaw rehto eht dellorcs ti fi daer ot reisae eb dluow tI

Offline The Big Richo

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Re: Brandon Ellis [merged]
« Reply #58 on: November 28, 2011, 07:17:33 PM »
 :lol
Who isn't a fan of the thinking man's orange Tim Fleming?

Gerks 27/6/11

But you see, it's not me, it's not my family.
In your head, in your head they are fighting,
With their tanks and their bombs,
And their bombs and their guns.
In your head, in your head, they are crying...

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from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)