Polak set to be offered new Tiger contractCaroline Wilson | October 21, 2009
GRAHAM Polak, the footballer almost killed after being hit by a tram 16 months ago and deemed finished as an AFL player, is now set to be offered a new contract with Richmond.
The 25-year-old has received a major, if indirect, fillip from the AFL Commission, which on Monday passed recommendation allowing two mature-age rookies to be included on every club's list regardless of how many games they had played.
Although it was unclear whether Polak's future was on the agenda at last night's board meeting at Tigerland, The Age understands that the defender was already a better-than-50/50 chance to receive a new one-year deal, whether or not the AFL approved the relaxed new rookie rules. A thorough medical examination and ongoing assessments undertaken by Richmond's doctors have resolved that Polak still has significant scope for improvement after the accident in June 2008 that left him suffering from brain damage.
Richmond football boss Craig Cameron returns to work tomorrow and is expected to make a decision on Polak before the end of the week.
The player's resurrection into elite football ranks remains one of the more remarkable success stories in a largely dismal year for the Tigers. Polak returned to senior football at the end of the 2009 season despite the club believing only months earlier he would never return to the game at the top level.
Polak, who has been holidaying in Western Australia, has made no secret of his desire to remain at the Tigers, who pushed late last year for a change in the rookie rules to grant Polak an exemption allowing him on to the rookie list. That push was seen as part of Richmond's attempt to draft Ben Cousins and was refused by the AFL in a scenario that left a bitter taste in Tiger mouths.
Under several changes approved by the commission on Monday, the rules have been relaxed to allow an extra two rookies on to every club's list, with mature-age rookies allowed not only to have played an infinite number of senior games but also paid over the odds in rookie terms. Any contract worth more than the minimum rookie payment would result in the additional money being included in the total player payments.
Rookies from 2010 will be allowed to remain on an AFL club's list for three years and the minimum required delistings of three players per club would result in a rookie being allowed to be included in one of the three footballers replaced on a senior list.
Polak's recovery is understood to be cumulative and ongoing, with his on-field awareness reportedly having improved significantly from the start of 2009 during a year largely spent playing for Coburg in the VFL.
http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/rfnews/polak-to-be-offered-new-contract/2009/10/20/1255891820774.html