Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

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  • macca
    Coaching Staff
    • Sep 2007
    • 2368

    #91
    Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

    Maybe football talent skips a generation ? So remaining on the postive theme, i hope this young james inherited the class footballer gene

    Comment

    • Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
      Bulldog Team of the Century
      • Jan 2007
      • 8970

      #92
      Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

      I really want this to be an inspired selection.
      Go well James.

      Comment

      • Bornadog
        WOOF Clubhouse Leader
        • Jan 2007
        • 66828

        #93
        Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

        Originally posted by Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
        I really want this to be an inspired selection.
        Go well James.
        Bevo really puts alot of faith in to young players
        FFC: Established 1883

        Premierships: AFL 1954, 2016 VFA - 1898,99,1900, 1908, 1913, 1919-20, 1923-24, VFL: 2014, 2016 . Champions of Victoria 1924. AFLW - 2018.

        Comment

        • BornInDroopSt'54
          Bulldog Team of the Century
          • Jan 2009
          • 5286

          #94
          Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

          Another leftie so that's why.
          Footscray Football Republic.

          Comment

          • D Mitchell
            WOOF Member
            • Jan 2023
            • 652

            #95
            Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

            Originally posted by BornInDroopSt'54
            Mate we gotta talk turkey together. Me 80% Irish by blood, irish catholic marrying irish catholic from early settlers to me.
            A Ned Kelly expert student
            At eight I was one of nine irish scouts in australia and they sent me gaelic comics. The fing Orange William and the Battle of the Boyne, the Scottish fing Plantation....
            The fing British %?#&+!@ genocide of irish and aboriginal culture, irish first %?#&+!@ !
            That's an impressive CV. The lad's real name is Seamus O'Domhnaill but let's not tell anyone else. Ned was my father's hero, dad talked about Ned's bushcraft and toughness rather than persecution by the Victoria Police and he had no idea about the Republic of North-East Victoria theory, surprised when I told him about it. If Ireland-Britain relations are of interest, look up Fintan O'Toole's lectures on youtube. I didn't quite get the 9 Irish scout bit, did you, an x th gen Australian, read Gaelic at 8 years old ? If so that's really impressive.

            Comment

            • D Mitchell
              WOOF Member
              • Jan 2023
              • 652

              #96
              Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

              Originally posted by macca
              Maybe football talent skips a generation ? So remaining on the postive theme, i hope this young james inherited the class footballer gene
              Kevin O'Donnell. Well spotted. Had Simon not decided to go on with cricket, who knows.

              PS I thought about your knowledge of Kevin, went to wikipedia, there's already a reference to James' game last night !

              Comment

              • Hotdog60
                Bulldog Team of the Century
                • Aug 2009
                • 5916

                #97
                Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                He would make a handy sub at this early stage can go back or forward maybe wing or centre.
                Doesn't play a whole game unless of an early injury so it helps his tank and get some exposure for the future.
                He'll most likely go back to VFL next week if Treloar is back but if not swap him and McNeil around.
                Don't piss off old people
                The older we get the less "LIFE IN PRISON" is a deterrent...

                Comment

                • AshMac
                  WOOF Member
                  • Aug 2018
                  • 1712

                  #98
                  Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                  I like what I saw tbh. Didn?t think he?d ever break out game one but he is a great size, looks to move well, got near it with a couple of almost moments and the few times he got it he didn?t cough it up.

                  Would I have brought him in when we have others playing VFL, probably not, but I don?t watch any VFL
                  The dam wall has busted!

                  Comment

                  • Hotdog60
                    Bulldog Team of the Century
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 5916

                    #99
                    Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                    From whites to red, white and blue: Joke sparks new Dog's rise

                    James O'Donnell's plans were to take cricket to the next level, but all that changed with an off-hand remark



                    THIS wasn't the plan for James O'Donnell this year. Before Christmas, when the Victorian wasn't training or playing for Essendon Cricket Club, he was sitting behind a desk working as a junior analyst at CitiPower three days a week, spending the other two days in business classes at Monash University.

                    The 20-year-old had a plan for 2023. At least, he thought he did. It involved cementing a spot at Premier Cricket level and taking the next step with his bowling. It also involved ticking off more subjects and advancing his professional career. But sometimes the best-laid plans can be changed for the better.

                    After making his debut 35 days after joining with the Western Bulldogs as a Category B rookie in April, O'Donnell has now played five games for the club and will add a sixth to his tally when he returns to face Fremantle at Marvel Stadium on Saturday.

                    So how did a boyhood dream become a reality? How does someone who hadn't played a game of football since his final game for Xavier College in Year 11 end up landing a spot at the Whitten Oval?

                    It turns out a flippant t?te-?-t?te in the nets between O'Donnell and his new bowling coach at Essendon Cricket Club quickly turned into more. Much more. When the bowling coach is also the Western Bulldogs' fitness boss, Mat Inness, things move fast. Very fast.

                    O'Donnell played for Victoria at under-12 level and was a decent schoolboy footballer until Year 9 when everyone became bigger and stronger than him. He then started focusing on cricket more seriously, but after a growth spurt in his late teens, footy was always an itch that had to be scratched if an opportunity presented.

                    This was that opportunity. Inness, who was a first-class cricketer for Victoria and Western Australia before transitioning into a career in high performance, introduced O’Donnell to Footscray VFL coach Stewart Edge and they caught up for a coffee and a kick.



                    When Western Bulldogs list manager Sam Power did his due diligence, the club realised they could use the same mechanism Geelong used to sign Mark Blicavs while he chased qualification for the 2012 Olympic Games, the same lever Collingwood pulled to add Mason Cox as a project player back in 2014.

                    "I started pre-season at Essendon ahead of what was going to be my second full year at Essendon. That was my third winter not playing and I was kicking the footy every other day and missing it a lot. The itch just started to build and I knew I could do it. I didn't know the level I could play and I wanted to find out if I could do it," O'Donnell told AFL.com.au at the Whitten Oval this week.

                    "Mat Inness was just starting as bowling coach at the Bombers and he was one guy I just started chewing his ear off. I was bowling and I joked to him: 'Do you need a utility in the VFL next year?' Then he asked if I was serious. Deep down it was what I wanted to do. He was only half-serious.



                    "All I wanted to do was try out at VFL because that would be a fast way to find out if I was good enough or not. I thought if I tested myself against those blokes and it didn't work out, I would not have any regrets at 25. Mat put me in touch with Stewart Edge and we went for a coffee. He asked me how long it had been since I played. When he realised it was three years, he came back to me and said, 'Don't worry about the VFL, have a crack at this'. The rest is history."

                    To be eligible to join an AFL club via the Category B rookie list rule, O'Donnell couldn't have been registered in an Australian Football competition for a minimum of three years. He couldn't train with the Western Bulldogs over the pre-season, but he could train with Footscray. That's what he did from late January until April, watching Beveridge's squad from over the fence at Skinner Reserve on Friday mornings in the pre-season, hoping he would join that program, not daring to imagine he would be playing for them in the months ahead.

                    But after making his debut for Footscray against Southport in April and playing the next fortnight against Carlton and Greater Western Sydney reserves, the match committee inside the Whitten Oval produced arguably the boldest selection of the season to date when they picked O'Donnell to debut against the Blues in round nine.



                    "I haven't really had time to reflect on it because it has gone quick, even you play a game and then you're onto the next week. I don't think it will sink in until the end of the season, but in terms of how my life has changed, it has completely flipped on its head. I have always wanted this, I've always wanted to be a professional sportsman," O'Donnell said an hour after being told he would return to help fill some of the holes in the Bulldogs' backline this weekend.

                    Everything has happened far more swiftly than O'Donnell envisaged. The contract. The debut. The games. Beveridge has been a believer from the start, and it is that ongoing conviction shown by the senior coach and the rest of the coaching department that has allowed him to navigate the meteoric leap from nowhere to the big time.

                    "I've received great faith from 'Bevo' and the coaching staff. I don't take that for granted. I'm very grateful for that, and in some ways I get confidence out of it," he said. "Although it's happened quick, they haven't chosen me to play because it’s a cool story. I just think I try my arse off and try to be the best I can be. Whether that's resonated with them to put that faith in me, that’s pretty amazing."

                    Football and cricket courses through O'Donnell's veins. James is the son of former Australian cricketer and St Kilda forward Simon, who has been a popular voice in the sports media landscape for more than two decades. He is also the grandson of Kevin, who played 49 times for the Saints in the 1940s before returning to Deniliquin where he continued to play both sports until he couldn’t any longer.

                    "I was never able to meet Pa, unfortunately. I was born in 2002 and he died just before I was born. But I learnt a lot about him, not only as a sportsman but a person and my dad is very similar to him. Dad is my idol, he is someone I look up to so much. He is having as much fun as I am right now. I can see that. He is also someone I can lean on, and I always have," O'Donnell said.

                    "In terms of that lineage, it is cool to have that link. My pa wore 18 for St Kilda and that gives me an extra link to the number. Obviously the name comes with a little bit of pressure, but dad never put that pressure on me. He would never force anything. He would wait for me to ask questions. I'd be lying if I said it wasn’t a burden at times; you want to live up to your old man. But I am my own biggest critic in many ways, so I put the pressure on myself more than what my name puts pressure on me."



                    The dream is the same that it was this time last year, only the sport has changed. O'Donnell has always wanted to be a professional sportsman, he just thought he'd be wearing whites and standing in the field for hours on end, not wearing the red, white and blue and playing a role – in defence, attack and on a wing – in a side hunting a spot in September.

                    "Growing up the dream was always footy or cricket. Now to have this opportunity, and knowing what it was like to work, play sport and do uni at the same time – and all you wanted to do was get to the position I’m in now – I'll never take anything for grated," he said.

                    "I love it so much and want to get the most out of myself and reach my fullest potential. I would love to have as long a career as I can and make the most out of this crazy opportunity that I've been given."

                    Crazy is the right word. O’Donnell’s life has been crazy from the moment he floated the idea to Inness. And it is only going to get crazier if he continues along this trajectory.

                    LINK
                    Don't piss off old people
                    The older we get the less "LIFE IN PRISON" is a deterrent...

                    Comment

                    • EasternWest
                      Hall of Fame
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 10002

                      Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                      It's a good article. He seems a good kid. I'm bullish about his future.
                      "It's over. It's all over."

                      Comment

                      • Grantysghost
                        Bouncing Strong
                        • Apr 2010
                        • 18991

                        Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                        Small world.

                        Well done Matt Innes!
                        BT COME BACK!​

                        Comment

                        • GVGjr
                          Moderator
                          • Nov 2006
                          • 44701

                          Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                          Originally posted by EasternWest
                          It's a good article. He seems a good kid. I'm bullish about his future.
                          We haven't used him in the right way so far but he just seems ultra professional and that sort of intelligent youngster who will just figure out how to succeed.
                          Western Bulldogs Football Club "Where it's cool to drool"

                          Comment

                          • GVGjr
                            Moderator
                            • Nov 2006
                            • 44701

                            Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                            Originally posted by Grantysghost
                            Small world.

                            Well done Matt Innes!
                            It proves there are many different avenues to the AFL and our recruiting network has done well.
                            Western Bulldogs Football Club "Where it's cool to drool"

                            Comment

                            • EasternWest
                              Hall of Fame
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 10002

                              Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                              Originally posted by GVGjr
                              We haven't used him in the right way so far but he just seems ultra professional and that sort of intelligent youngster who will just figure out how to succeed.
                              I get Dosh Junkley vibes without the weird vapidity.
                              "It's over. It's all over."

                              Comment

                              • GVGjr
                                Moderator
                                • Nov 2006
                                • 44701

                                Re: Welcome to the Bulldogs: James O'Donnell

                                Originally posted by EasternWest
                                I get Dosh Junkley vibes without the weird vapidity.
                                Nice comparison. A better balance.
                                Western Bulldogs Football Club "Where it's cool to drool"

                                Comment

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