Polak relieved at new opportunityrichmondfc.com.au
By Mic Cullen | Fri 21 August, 2009
RICHMOND defender Graham Polak says he's relieved to be back playing the game he loves at the top level after a rolled ankle nearly derailed his late-season comeback bid.
Polak was hit by a tram midway through last year and was placed in a medically-induced coma but has completed an arduous football rehabilitation; through Richmond's pre-season, the Coburg reserves, the Coburg seniors and now the AFL.
He has been selected in the 22 for Saturday night's game against Hawthorn at the MCG, after being named as an emergency for the Swans clash two weeks ago and then rolling the ankle.
At a much larger than normal media conference at Punt Road on Friday, the 25-year-old said it was going to be impossible to keep the grin from his face in his comeback game.
"I can't wait to get back out there, and show them I still can play footy it's going to be a real buzz and I'm looking forward to it," he said.
"It'll be a big relief to be able to get back, I'll run out with a smile on my face.
"It'll be a buzz I think all the boys will get around me and make me feel like I deserve to be out there."
With September approaching, time was running out for Polak to make an AFL appearance, and he was distraught when he injured his ankle, fearing it may have ended his season.
But the former Fremantle player worked hard in the training room, following all the rehab crew's orders and now feels ready to play.
"I probably could have come up last week, but the physios told me to rest it for a bit longer so I was 100 per cent this week," he said.
One of the major things encouraging Polak to work through any barriers that arose was the support he received from friends and family.
"This is the best I've felt in the year-and-a-bit [since the tram incident] they say it's a two-year process until you're back to perfect, but I feel perfect now," Polak said.
"[My family] have been great, obviously it's pretty hard for them they're in Perth, over the other side of the country, but they've come across a lot, they're coming across this weekend, and they've given me a lot of support along the way.
"I couldn't have done it without them, and all the support from around Australia, even from people who weren't Richmond fans writing emails and letters of support have kept my spirits high.
"The Richmond Football Club, the doctors at the Epworth and the Alfred (hospitals), have been a real helping hand in what I've done."
Polak has worn a helmet when training and playing since the accident, but said he wouldn't be worried about putting his head over the ball, despite having copped a couple of head-knocks while playing for Coburg.
"Not at all that's part of football," he said.
"I'm not going to step back from that challenge, and if the ball's there to be won, I'll be throwing everything into it to get that ball."
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