Author Topic: 2006 Potential Draftees thread  (Read 29817 times)

Offline Captain__Blood

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Dean Kelly article (The Age)
« Reply #135 on: October 16, 2006, 06:16:55 PM »

Dean Kelly of the Oakleigh Chargers takes a mark under pressure during the TAC Cup Grand Final against the Calder Cannons.
Photo: Mark Dadswell

Kelly looks the goods, but not like his brother
Craig O'Donoghue
The Age
October 4, 2006

FREMANTLE star Heath Black could be joined in the AFL next season by his half-brother, who had a best-on-ground performance in the TAC Cup grand final last Saturday.

Oakleigh Chargers captain Dean Kelly may have a different surname but with 22 disposals, seven marks and 6.1 in the grand final win over Calder Cannons, he made sure recruiting officers wouldn't forget him on draft day.

Black and Kelly are very different. Kelly has light hair while Black's is dark. The Docker is a speedy wingman with a raking left-foot kick, Kelly is a nuggety right-footed ball winner who takes contested marks. The pair have different fathers and a nine-year age difference.

While Black was always destined to be drafted, Kelly has had to work harder. Despite winning Oakleigh's best and fairest last year and representing Victoria at the under-18 national titles this season, he hasn't been invited to the AFL draft camp. He will get the chance to impress at the state screenings later this month.

"He's done it the hard way and I admire the way he's gone about it," Black said. "I've seen that tenacious need to to make the grade. He's zoned in and it's all he wants to do. I really like watching him play. A lot of the things he does, I can't do. I can't take one-on-one contested marks and for his size, I admire the way he goes about it."

Despite standing only 180 centimetres and playing only 14 games, Kelly finished eighth in the league for contested marks with 39 grabs. Black has managed only 21 contested marks in the past seven years.

Kelly said Black's career had taught him it takes more than just taking marks and kicking goals to be successful and he had worked hard to refine his game.

"I've seen a lot of things that a lot of guys wouldn't have seen. I know how hard you have to work just to stay in the AFL," he said. "A lot of people take it for granted that when they get drafted. I've realised that it's so hard to then get a game and be one of the best players."

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2006/10/03/1159641325871.html

Impressed by this guy in the TAC Cup GF.

How we get him (with a latter pick).

Offline bluey_21

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread
« Reply #136 on: October 21, 2006, 07:04:28 PM »
Sorry but gonna have to disagree CB, Kelly for mine is a bit of a scrapper and has some things but not enough IMO. If you wanna look at someone from Oakleigh then look at Batsansis, Gray or even Sheldon if Carlton don't take him F/S

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread
« Reply #137 on: October 24, 2006, 11:35:54 AM »
Anyone think that Les Bourdes and Travate Malakies will get drafted?

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Tom Hurley article
« Reply #138 on: October 25, 2006, 02:17:48 AM »


Too much on offer to be ignored
ZAC MILBANK
Adelaide Advertiser
October 25, 2006 12:15am

IT'S pretty rare when an All-Australian state captain is not invited to the AFL draft camp.

Sturt rover Tom Hurley did everything right in 2006, playing 16 league games, but still didn't generate enough interest from AFL scouts to get a berth in Canberra this month.

While he at least made it to SA's state-based screening on October 13, Hurley is keeping an extremely level head when it comes to having his name called on November 24.

"I'd really like to get drafted but I just have to wait and hope for the best," Hurley, 18, said.

On face value, Hurley's size and perceived lack of leg speed appear to be keeping clubs from jostling for his signature.

"It would be nice to be a bit taller but I'm not so I've just got to make do with what I've got," Hurley said.

"Hopefully someone looks past my height (178cm) and reckons I'm a good player and picks me for that."

Taller and heavier than Port Adelaide's Danyle Pearce, Hurley also possesses a similar trait to the 2006 AFL Rising Star - an uncanny ability to find the football.

Playing in a team which lost more than it won, Hurley had the ball on a string on more than one occasion for the Double Blues this season.

In round six, he collected 32 possessions, six marks and a goal and, in front of Essendon coach Kevin Sheedy, Hurley stood out against the Tigers with 24 disposals.

"His ability to think through a situation is as good as I've seen come through this club," former Sturt coach Brenton Phillips said in June.

As a result, Phillips is certain Hurley would be a valuable selection for any AFL club.

"No question about that. He'd be worth a look in somewhere," Phillips said yesterday.

"He's a fair talent that can find the footy. Whenever you get those types of kids I think you've got to have a look at them at some stage.

"When I speak to people the question has always been about his leg speed. But I question that because he's the type of kid who only uses his leg speed when he has to, so I reckon he's got it there."

http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,20640808-21543,00.html

Offline bluey_21

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread
« Reply #139 on: October 25, 2006, 09:01:16 PM »
Hurley's a good talent. A bit unexposed though.

Finds heaps of the ball but is neither quick enough to break open a game nor damaging enough with his kicking IMO.

Still worth a punt late in the draft though

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread
« Reply #140 on: October 27, 2006, 02:53:42 PM »
Anyone have a decent update on the state of Bachar Houli's back etc. Just been having another look at some tapes...hes a nice player at the level.

Offline bluey_21

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread
« Reply #141 on: October 27, 2006, 03:31:04 PM »
Very classy and polished player. Tremendous kicking skills.

Only injuries and a bulky body holding him back

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Matthew Leuenberger article (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #142 on: November 10, 2006, 02:13:52 AM »
 
Hot property: Matthew Leuenberger impressed recruiters at the AFL draft camp in Canberra. Picture: Michael Dodge
 
Leuenberger's draft stocks on the rise
10 November 2006   Herald-Sun
David Davutovic

MATTHEW Leuenberger is the type of recruit the AFL prides itself on these days.
 
Basketball and athletics were part of his sporting repertoire years ago but the ruckman reached the fork in the road.

"I took athletics pretty seriously and I played a lot of basketball in my early teens and had to choose basketball or footy," the 203cm Leuenberger said.

"I always wanted to make it to the highest level in footy because the AFL looks so much more appealing than the NBL."

Recruiters are licking their lips at the prospect of snaring Leuenberger, who is regarded as the best national draft ruck prospect since Collingwood's Josh Fraser in 1999 and in the mould of West Coast's Dean Cox.

Despite his enormous potential, the East Perth giant could slip as low as No. 6 in the November 25 draft because of the way the cards have fallen.

Carlton has committed to St Kilda ruckman Cain Ackland in the pre-season draft and is keen on a Glenelg's ready-made onballer Bryce Gibbs for its No. 1 selection.

Essendon appears to be leaning towards Victorian Lachlan Hansen with the next selection and the Kangaroos, with pick No. 3, have two young ruckmen in David Hale and Hamish McIntosh.

Should the Brisbane Lions pass him up, Port Adelaide (No. 5) or Hawthorn (No. 6) will take him.

Leading player manager Liam Pickering said it could be the biggest steal in draft history.

"If he goes to five or six, he'll be the best fifth or sixth pick we've seen for a long time but it's just the way it's unfolded," Pickering said.

"If Carlton had picks one and two this year, I'm sure they'd take him.

"I still think he's as good a big man as I've seen in the draft and he was the best ruckman in the under-18 carnival. I just think he's an outstanding prospect."

Leuenberger's father migrated from Switzerland back in 1986.

The Leuenbergers settled in Perth, opened a French restaurant a drop punt from Subiaco Oval and dad Jean-Francois ensured he and son Matthew made the short trek to watch visiting AFL teams train when possible.

"Dad would try and free up time in the afternoon because games were generally played on Sundays then, so the visiting club would train on Saturday so we'd watch them run around and get signatures," he said.

"I go for Carlton because they were the first ones I watched train back in 1995 and I spoke to a few of their players like Stephen Kernahan and Greg Williams and they seemed pretty nice."

Leuenberger almost slipped through the net a couple of years ago and was in line to join WA pair Cox and Aaron Sandilands, who entered the system via the rookie draft.

But he was spotted by WA's state under-16 coach playing for Hale School in Year 11 and an invitation to train with the state side was promptly followed by his inclusion in the East Perth Colts.

"I always wanted to play AFL but before I made the state side I never knew about the process of getting there, so I hadn't given AFL much consideration. I was playing for fun with my school mates," Leuenberger said.

As a result he does not regard himself as a "footy head".

"I wouldn't change anything at all. I'm happy with the way it's panned out," he said.

It's not hard to understand why. Leuenberger played six senior WAFL games after the national under-18 carnival last season and averaged almost 15 hitouts.

He then won the Mel Whinnen Medal as best-on-ground in the Colts grand final at Subiaco before further impressing at the draft camp in Canberra.

Carlton, Essendon, the Kangaroos, Port Adelaide, the Brisbane Lions, Hawthorn, Geelong and St Kilda have spoken to the athletic ruckman and, with West Coast and Fremantle enjoying stellar seasons, an interstate move is highly likely.

Paul Peos, East Perth coach in the latter part of this year, said Leuenberger was a similar player to Cox and had no doubt he would become a star.

"I wouldn't expect him to play every game next year, but he's developed enough to have some influence and he's the sort of guy that won't let the expectations get to him," the former West Coast and Brisbane player said.

"I was assistant coach when Dean Cox came through at East Perth and they're similarly sized and skilled, although Matt's a little more athletic than Dean was at the same time.

"He's a young man that they can really build their side around in the future with his ability to get first hands to the ball."

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,20731759%255E20322,00.html

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Nathan Djerrkura article (The Age)
« Reply #143 on: November 17, 2006, 12:58:36 AM »

Nathan Djerrkura in Arnhem Land.
Photo: Anthony Howard

Bigger fish to fry
Paul Kennedy
The Age
November 17, 2006

THREE mongrel dogs follow Nathan Djerrkura through a river outlet wriggling into the Arafura Sea. If they could calculate the danger of nearby crocodiles, they wouldn't be yapping so freely through the receding water.

"You get one or two crocs, but not very often," Djerrkura said. "They take a dog every now and then."

Then he runs off, 174 centimetres and getting smaller, dashing past a group of children spearing fish in the shallows of the clearest, bluest water anyone has ever seen. Arnhem Land is not so much a paradise lost as one found by very few.

"People wonder why I get home sick," Djerrkura says later under a giant frangipani, bathing in its familiar perfume.

Right now the Top End is dry, but rain's promise adds natural urgency to the air he breathes. Up to a dozen AFL clubs have spoken to Nathan Djerrkura. Although he's spent the past two years in a Melbourne boarding school, he is back home counting the days until the draft.

"I can feel the nerves building but this is the best place I can be," he said.

Djerrkura's family, indeed the whole Yirrkala community (population 800), is proud of the teenager, as they were of his father, before his political career ended tragically.

Gatjil Djerrkura was one of the most prominent Aboriginal activists in the land. He devoted 54 years to advancing indigenous Australia. In 1984 he was awarded the Medal in the General Division of the Order of Australia. He served as ATSIC chairman from 1996-99.

In 2004, the reconciliation advocate died of a sudden heart attack. Like many Aboriginal men, he went in his prime, leaving yet another leadership void. A nation exhaled, a sorrowful wind washing over the territory.

His son, about to be schooled at one of Victoria's most prestigious institutions, pondered life without his father or the Arafura Sea.

Nathan Djerrkura was at Scotch College just weeks ago. Graduating. Boys wearing grey vests, red ties and tall socks moved about the school campus outside his lodgings.

He lifted dumbbells in his room for the last time. A whiff of rain came through the window and shunted his mind instantly home, to wet Christmases, bare feet, children, football, puddles, cackles, love and despair. Loneliness joined him and he summoned an image of his family's totem, the spirit carrier.

His is the Giant Trevally, a marauding prince of the territory's oceans and the Northern reaches of Nathan Djerrkura's soul. "It looks after me."

It swims through his art, more beautiful in paint than reality, and blows bubbles in the salt water buoying his ambitions. A photograph of his father was pinned above his study desk. Gatjil Djerrkura's image often tipped him into a well of sadness, before pride winched him out.

"He always wanted to help his people and I want to follow in his footsteps and help my people," Nathan said, his eyes resting thoughtfully on his words. "But he did it in a political way. I want to do it through the AFL because for the majority of Aboriginal kids it's their indigenous game.

"Hopefully they can see where I've come from, such a small community, and how far I've made it. Hopefully they can follow in my footsteps."

Nathan's graduation from Scotch was a remarkable achievement. Head of sport Robert Smith called it the highlight of his 20-year career. "I know how much hard work and struggle he has gone through to get there."

Smith bonded with Nathan halfway through his first semester, when he was ready to chuck it in and go home, away from the loneliness and the bloody cold. Sensing despair, he took his student to a cafe and the pair talked about living and smelled coffee and felt Melbourne.

Smith said he would support Nathan's next decision. It was an important latte; Nathan stayed and persisted and flourished.

Such was the student's appreciation for his teacher he invited Smith and his family home for a warm holiday. They went fishing and sought turtles. Smith was later adopted into the Djerrkura tribe. He is forever Nathan's honorary brother.

The Djerrkura family knew then Nathan was transformed. His mother Jenny was particularly moved. Cheeky and honest, she desperately wants her son to be drafted because she knows his sacrifices. She also knows footy and says her youngest boy can "break the lines".

Brother Damien Djerrkura empathised with Nathan's struggle. Eight years Nathan's senior, Damien trained as an athlete at the AIS and was once a charge of Cathy Freeman's coach. He was to run the 400 and 800 metres Sydney Olympics selection trials before homesickness chased him down.

Damien now works as a senior training officer in partnership with a bauxite mining company, helping young men earn. Nathan is carrying his brother's sporting hopes. They wear identical giant trevally tattoos.

At Scotch, Nathan (11 seconds in the 100 metres) resisted calls to run without a ball. He loves footy and art, which also blooms on the Djerrkura family tree. Sister Fiona is a talented painter, who worked with the team that designed the Aboriginal patterns on the Qantas 747.

Nathan's paintings are so impressive he's preparing to be interviewed for an elite university scholarship in Melbourne. His art teacher said he once painted traditionally flat patterns but now superimposes motifs, merging western ideals of space on canvas.

To the uncultured gaze, his paintings are calm yet lively, turtles swimming through the ocean, fish, serpents, goannas, rocks and coral. "People paint what they think," he says. "I'll never stop painting."

Talking to Nathan Djerrkura leaves you wondering what he will become. Could he be the next Michael Long? Is that too much? He has to be a hell of a footballer.

Kevin Sheehan, the AFL's talent guru, says Djerrkura may "go top 30" in tomorrow week's draft. Clubs will snatch taller kids first before measuring the rest on hunches and statistics.

Djerrkura popped eyes at the draft camp, particularly in sprint and endurance testing, a light aircraft with a jet engine. His under-18 national carnival made him the Northern Territory's only All-Australian. "You can't ignore that speed," Sheehan said.

To examine his chances one needs to watch on tape an exhibition game played by draft hopefuls in September. The finest teenage football is delightful. The kicking is instinctive, the handballing quicksilver, the passages of movement slick and unwashed. And there are snapshots of brilliance, played out like short trailers to blockbusters you just can't miss, no way!

It must be said Nathan Djerrkura wasn't the only boy dazzling. A Queensland hill named Kurt Tippett marked bombs as easily as he would mark time. Midfielders delivered passes as polished as church floors. And then Djerrkura flew like a spear through the centre.

He was still in defence when someone flipped him the ball. The lad chasing him died after Djerrkura's second bounce. Another opponent came from the side, but Djerrkura shimmied sideways and into more space.

If you watch the tape of the evasion with the sound up, you can hear the spontaneous responses from spectators (keep in mind there were only recruiters in the stands, men who were impressed by little, save for a truly exceptional athletic feat).

"Ooaaww," was all they said.

Djerrkura had another bounce and was now just beyond the goal square. He had run 100 metres. Without another soul to baulk, he kicked a goal. It appeared to be the least satisfying part of his display because it meant he could run no further with the ball. Captivating.

Back in the pristine saltwater of Nathan Djerrkura's backyard, the young man is spear-fishing the time away and saying goodbye to his eventful childhood forever.

"People can stand in one place all day waiting for one fish to come," he explained of the traditional hunt, his weapon and eyes paralleled and poised. "And then when the fish comes, you have to make the most of it."

with ANTHONY HOWARD

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2006/11/16/1163266713571.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Mitch Thorp article (The Age)
« Reply #144 on: November 21, 2006, 02:01:08 AM »

Described as both tough and smart by good football judges, Mitch Thorp hopes to make a name for himself in the AFL.
Photo: Getty Images

Teen moves into relatively familiar territory
Emma Quayle
The Age
November 21, 2006

MITCH Thorp could speak for several hours about why he was born to play football. The Tasmanian teenager sometimes drops in on Brent Crosswell, the North Melbourne premiership player and local legend who is a cousin on his mother's side. He thinks.

"He's a cousin … or a second cousin. Something like that," Thorp said. "He stays to himself, pretty much. He can't get out and about too much these days, but he's a good fella. I catch up with him when I can."

Thorp is also related to former Demon and Eagle Andy Lovell, "somewhere on my dad's side", and sees another cousin, Craig Davis, when Nick's dad heads to Tasmania at Christmas. "He's a cousin to me. No, actually to my dad. Or to me. I don't really have any idea, but Craig's a great guy," Thorp said. "Me and Nick are a bit different, but that's OK. He's got a premiership, so he's done all right."

All those things considered, Thorp still understands why he so badly wants to play football, and why he plays with such desperation. He can't remember really watching his father, Peter, play, but people keep telling him how similar they are.

He knows his dad was accidentally shot many years ago, and that he was supposed to never walk again, but ignored medical wisdom and went on to win 10 best and fairests in a row in Campbelltown. Thorp doesn't know all the details, because his dad doesn't like to talk about it, but he has nonetheless been inspired.

"He played for 12 years after it happened, even longer than that, and everyone tells me how good he was, and how tough. He was just a really tough player and that's what I want to be like," Thorp said.

"He rides me pretty hard, and he wants me to do well. We have our clashes every now and then, our little fights, but two days down the track we're fine. If I'm any good at footy, he's the one I got it from."

Thorp wasn't able to do much at last month's AFL draft camp in Canberra, where 72 AFL hopefuls were put through their paces in the lead-up to Saturday's AFL National Draft, because of a swollen left ankle. However, he will be ready to go when he gets to his new club next week.

The recruiters have long known that Thorp is an intense and versatile player, who played in Tasmania's VFL side all of last season — at both ends of the ground, in the ruck and even on the ball.

Most like him best in the forward line. "He plays centre half-forward in a way that everyone would love. He's strong, and he's courageous, and he competes," said Western Bulldogs recruiting manager Scott Clayton. "He's just really good at his craft, really smart at his craft."

Tough, too, and in more ways than one. Thorp has a tattoo on his right arm that says "fortuna" — good luck, in Latin — and if you could rub tattoos off and start over, he'd go back for lots more. "It (getting the tattoo) is a good sort of pain," is his theory. "I actually kind of like it. It felt good."

Thorp moved from his Launceston farm at the start of last season, to live in a "pretty flash" Hobart house with a couple of other teenage Devils, learning to cook stir-fries and practise making his bed. "You're meant to be able to put a 50-cent coin down on it and not make a crease," he said. "Mum's always at me to do that. It's not easy."

Neither was competing against players already on AFL lists, though Thorp felt more used to that as the year wound on and tried to learn from the Kangaroos players who came back to play with the Devils.

Jade Rawlings, a former Devonport player who was recruited from the Devils, phoned each week to see how he was doing, and made other important gestures. "The week before he played his last AFL game, he'd kicked eight goals up to three-quarter-time," said Thorp. "He came back out and kicked his ninth, then came off for me to get back on the ground. He could have stayed on and kicked 10 and had all his glory, but he came off to give me a run. That just tells you what sort of guy he is. I was rucking that day, but I went forward and managed to kick a goal. I told Jade he could have it, for his 10th."

The 2006 AFL draft takes place on Saturday from 10am. AFL national talent manager Kevin Sheehan places Thorp in his top 30.

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2006/11/20/1163871340095.html

Offline Fishfinger

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Mitch Thorp article (The Age)
« Reply #145 on: November 21, 2006, 02:06:03 AM »
"He's a cousin … or a second cousin. Something like that," Thorp said.
Derr. It's Tassie.  8)
It's 50 of one and half a dozen of the other - Don Scott

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Lachlan Hansen is a Tigers supporter
« Reply #146 on: November 21, 2006, 03:59:49 AM »
Lachlan Hansen is a Tigers supporter but he won't last to 8 for us to get him  :-\

Quote
Although a noted defender, Hansen can also play up forward. Although he barracks for Richmond and his hero is Matthew Richardson, he has modeled his game on a Power premiership player.

http://afl.com.au/default.asp?pg=news&spg=display&articleid=302143


If by some miracle he slips I reckon we will snap him up without hesitation

Hansen confirmed again he was a Tiger supporter in the Herald-Sun yesterday  :(
 
Quote
A lifelong Richmond fan, Hansen said he would have liked the opportunity to play for the Tigers alongside his idol Matthew Richardson.

But with the Tigers sacrificing their first draft pick -- No. 8 -- during trade week, it is more realistic that Hansen will one day line up on Richo rather than alongside him.

"My favourite player has always been Richo at Richmond," Hansen said. "I just like the way he plays. He's always been my favourite. Big grabs, he's just the best."

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,20785949%255E20322,00.html

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Mitch Thorp article (The Age)
« Reply #147 on: November 21, 2006, 04:04:52 AM »
"He's a cousin … or a second cousin. Something like that," Thorp said.
Derr. It's Tassie.  8)

You're on fire this morning FF  :ROTFL
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline one-eyed

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Leroy Jetta article (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #148 on: November 23, 2006, 03:42:26 AM »

Great pick: dual under-18 All-Australian Leroy Jettas is widely tipped to be a first-round selection in Saturday's AFL national draft. Picture: Michael Dodge
 
Leroy Jettas into calculations
23 November 2006   Herald-Sun
David Hastie

IF THE No. 1 pick in Saturday's AFL national draft was determined on the strength of his surname, South Fremantle's Leroy Jetta would be a shoo-in.

One of the smallest prospects in the draft, Jetta, a dual under-18 All-Australian, is widely tipped to be a first-round selection.

At 177cm, Jetta's blistering pace and ball-winning ability sees him stand out in a draft oozing with talent.

Speaking from Western Australia, Jetta said his preference was to remain in Fremantle next season.

However with the Dockers sacrificing both their first and second round picks during trade week, it seems highly unlikely the livewire midfielder and forward would be granted his wish.

"I wouldn't mind going to Freo," Jetta said.

"I've spoken to the club so, yeah, that's where I want to play.

"But I wouldn't mind moving to Melbourne.

"There's always something to do over there."

Either Collingwood or the Western Bulldogs look his likely home.

Port Adelaide has also expressed interest in Jetta, but is unlikely to use its No. 5 pick to secure him.

Jetta, who played six senior games for South Fremantle in the WAFL this season, isn't feeling any pre-draft pressure but is keen to learn where he will play his football.

"There's not that much pressure on me really," he said. "Just wait and see where I'm going."

South Fremantle football manager Marty Atkins described Jetta as an emerging talent, likening him to a young Andrew McLeod.

"I've got no doubt that he'll be destined for the midfield but I think very early on in his career he'll just be a small forward," Atkins said.

"He's very light-framed but his pace and his evasiveness is exceptional. I wasn't around when Andrew McLeod first started his football career but they rate (Jetta) along the same lines as him at the same stage."

While he admitted Jetta's light build had occasionally told against him at South Fremantle, Atkins said it didn't stop the youngster from showing flashes of brilliance.

"He was basically in the (South Fremantle) squad most of the year. At times he struggled to play league footy and at other times just showed you how good he's going to be," Atkins said.

"He's a terrific kid. Now he basically has to realise he's in for a lot of hard work."

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,20805232%255E19742,00.html

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Re: 2006 Potential Draftees thread - Travis Boak article (The Age)
« Reply #149 on: November 25, 2006, 02:59:17 AM »

Photo: Drew Ryan

Brave new world
Emma Quayle
The Age
November 25, 2006

SHOULD the AFL draft take Travis Boak away, he will miss home and he will be missed.

Last week, the teenager went to his high school valedictory dinner, with friends he has grown up with on the beach at Jan Juc. "They're all wondering what they'll be doing next year, so I'm a bit lucky in that way," Boak said.

"I know what I'll be doing, hopefully. I just don't know where I'll be doing it."

Boak can sense how much his 14-year-old sister, Cassie, looks up to him, and will miss being near her and his elder sister, Sarah. Then there is his mother, Chicki, such a devoted kick-to-kick partner that she injured her knee chasing after a loose ball this year, and had to have surgery.

"She fell to the ground and Cassie and I were laughing, telling her to get up and stop having a rest," Boak said. "I suddenly thought: 'Uh oh … I'd better get over and help, here!' "

In these ways, Boak is no different from the hundreds of young footballers who have thrown their names forward this morning, understanding that the draft might take them to a place far away, but still wishing they could choose where.

But in the days, weeks and months before his big day, Boak has thought about much more than getting through school, getting a kick, and what the recruiters might see in him.

Today he will feel nervous — then happy, he hopes, and relieved — but there will be some sadness too. Even though he knows his father, Roger, who died last year, will know exactly how things work out. "It feels like he will," Boak said. "I know he will. I know whatever happens, he'll be there with me."

For a long time, Boak didn't understand exactly how tough his dad had been. But when his mum told him Roger had fought the cancer in his stomach for a 18 months longer than his doctor thought he could, he wasn't at all surprised.

He had been inspired by his father long before then, anyway. A Carlton supporter, Boak grew up wanting to be a bit like Anthony Koutoufides, but more like the guy who wore No. 5 in 230 games for Torquay.

Already, his mum has seen him play with the same instinct that her husband displayed. "One of Roger's coaches used to call him 'Dial-a-Goal'. He'd say, 'Call Boaky, he'll get you a goal' and, sure enough, he would," Chicki said.

"He always knew what to do. He was a very smart player, very intelligent, and I can see a lot of that in Travis. You can see he's thinking all the time out there. He always seems to have time."

Football, though, was not always the game Boak thought he would play. He was a cricketer as a kid, made a couple of representative sides in Geelong, and thought that was the sport calling him.

He was a fast bowler playing in senior and junior teams. The workload caused stress fractures in his back, which he fixed for good only last summer, but which helped tell which sport he really preferred to play.

"I hated being injured. I needed a punching bag some days but, when I think back on it, it was probably a bit of a blessing," Boak said.

"All I could do was handball, and a bit of kicking, so I was doing skills, skills, skills, all the time, and I think that's made me a better player. But it just made me want to play again. I realised how much I loved footy, and that was a good thing."

Earlier confirmation had come when Boak made the AIS-AFL Academy after the national under-16 championships in 2004. He toured Ireland at Easter last year with Joel Selwood, Lachlan Hansen, Scott Gumbleton and others, and will wait to hear their names called today, too.

Last week, Boak hung out on a Queensland beach with Mitch Thorp, another academy boy keen to know which club will choose him. "We went up there to get away from the draft and not speak about it," Boak said. "It was the only thing we did talk about, in the end …"

Chicki and Cassie went on the Irish trip, too, and discovered their own network of footy friends, who have been there for them ever since.

Roger had wanted to go, but he wasn't well enough; having Chicki with him meant Boak worried less than had he been away on his own, but his mind was still full, and he thought of his dad every time he played.

He took his Australian guernsey straight home, and made sure it was hanging in his dad's hospital room when he died, three weeks later. "I gave it to him as soon as I got home. I just wanted him to have it and for him to feel really proud," Boak said.

"While I was away it was the only thing that helped me get by, thinking of him every time I was out in the jumper and wishing he was there with me.

"It was hard in some parts, but it motivated me as well. I knew my dad would just want me to go out there and play and so every time I went for the ball I wanted to go flat out, because I knew he was there with me.

"It was a terrible time. It was crazy. It was really scary sometimes. You never think something like that will happen to your family, but he was so tough and such a fighter, and that's what I keep thinking.

"He was an inspiring person and he fought as hard as he could. He didn't want to leave us, and that's something that will be with me for the rest of my life. It drives me, a fair bit."

Boak has spoken to every club since the end of the season, and knows he could end up anywhere. Both Adelaide and Port Adelaide drove out to his home last week, but he might not have to take his bags that far.

Geelong and a bunch of Melbourne-based clubs hold the eight picks between the Crows and the Power, and the odds are Boak will be chosen somewhere in there.

The team that does choose him will get its hands on a smart, speedy and skilful player who, according to Geelong Falcons regional manager Mick Turner, confirmed himself as an early pick in week six of the TAC Cup season.

"He only had half a game under his belt after his back injury. We played Queensland, who were highly rated, and he was our best player," Turner said.

"He's just a natural. He knows how to play. The great thing about Travis is that once he gets his hands on the ball, he makes a decision and releases it very quickly.

"He can sum up a situation well, he's got good hands, he can read the play, and he's a beautiful long kick on both feet. He's a bit like Brett Deledio in how he moves. He's just a very good player."

He feels fit now and ready to get fitter. Boak can't wait to get started on his first real pre-season, and to become part of a whole new team.

"It makes me a bit nervous," he said, "but it's been such a long wait. It will be so good to just get started."

He's not so keen on the other realities of moving — learning to wash his own clothes, etcetera — though Chicki had planned to teach him a few quick culinary tricks last week. "I think it will start with that and end with that," she said. "I won't even mention the iron. That's getting far too complicated!"

Like Boak, Chicki expects some relief when his name is called today, and knows there will be a few tears. The uncertainty will end, and her boy will have a chance at something he has worked hard for, and wanted badly.

"I'm extremely proud of him. Very much so," she said. "He's kept himself together and he's dealt with things most kids would never think of. He's been unbelievable. I couldn't be more proud."

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2006/11/24/1164341396782.html