Majak Daw - One Giant leap

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  • GVGjr
    Moderator
    • Nov 2006
    • 43911

    Majak Daw - One Giant leap

    One giant leap

    October 31, 2009




    EUGENE Arocca recognises there is something of a poker game at play over a young man who, while clearly not the standout, is arguably the most tantalising prospect on the football world's radar ahead of next month's AFL national draft. When the hands are laid out on the table on November 26, the game could change forever.

    Footy is yet to get a night grand final, but the first night draft might take the game somewhere it has never been. The possibility that an African-born player will be on a senior AFL list in 2010 — which even a few months ago was remote at best — is now very real indeed.

    Majak Daw is a name Arocca has become increasingly familiar with, and North Melbourne's chief executive knows he isn't alone. In other football club offices, heads are being scratched and the same questions pondered. Should we take the punt? And — knowing the gateway to a whole new audience of players, fans and members that will come crashing open — can we afford to let someone else get in first?

    "Majak is on our radar. Our recruiting people have spoken to him and about him and are fully aware of his talent — raw as it is — with plenty of upside," Arocca said this week.

    The AFL's veteran guru of teen talent, Kevin Sheehan, saw enough of Daw's improvement in his second TAC Cup season with the Western Jets to rate that upside highly. "At 194 centimetres, with his speed, his leap, his natural athletic ability, and his potential size ... in a professional environment, you'd have a wonderful athlete in two years."

    The Western Bulldogs see it too, recruiting manager Simon Dalrymple recalling a five-goal haul in mid-August against Murray Bushrangers as a landmark day in Daw's development. "He was outstanding, very exciting. That promoted him from being sort of on our list to, 'Gee, we've really got to monitor this kid'."

    Dogs' football manager James Fantasia cautions that, with only four picks on draft night, a rookie-list berth might be a more realistic outcome. Yet come December, he might not still be around to take; Essendon, an acknowledged trailblazer in new football frontiers, also has an eye cocked in his direction.

    A draft the experts rate as pretty much a stab in the dark beyond the first round of selections won't hurt Daw's chances. "It's very open, so one club's interpretation might be completely different to another's pretty much after the first 15," Dalrymple says. Arocca predicts that, this year more than ever at Arden Street, there will be as much debate over who North takes with its last pick as its first.

    That AFL clubs are even having this conversation represents progress of unforeseen speed. Yet it is only commensurate with the story of the young man at its heart.

    Majak Daw was born in Sudan and spent his childhood in the capital, Khartoum. After three years in Egypt, the family arrived in Melbourne in 2003. Now 18, it is just four footy seasons ago that Majak first put boot to Sherrin. He rated his early efforts to grasp the game "pathetic".

    Yet he liked the sense of belonging football gave him, and soon began to feel part of the game as well as the team. Fantasia notes his humility and impressive qualities as a person, Sheehan his disciple and focus, and eagerness "to forge new ground for the African people by making the grade in the AFL".

    Those who know him want only the best for him. Joey Halloran, a friend and Western Jets teammate, uploaded more than four minutes of highlights of Daw's 2009 season onto YouTube. When an internet poster scoffed that he was "overrated", a poor man's Nic Naitanui, he was howled down by a stream of responses with the same message: "I hope he comes to my club!"

    Among the examples of his spring-heeled leap, deft tapwork in the ruck, surprisingly smooth kicking, contested marking and tackling sit two moments that stayed with Sheehan. Coming in a curtain-raiser to a Werribee-Geelong VFL game in front of a decent crowd at Chirnside Park, they underscored the instant following Daw would bring.

    "It was against the Geelong Falcons, and he took the mark of the day and kicked the goal of the day," Sheehan said. "He's taken a grab and just about got a standing ovation, then a bit later he took two bounces and kicked a goal from outside 50.

    "There were quite a few locals there, and they left no doubt who they were there to watch. They absolutely roared when he went near the ball."

    Sheehan asked him to attend state screening of young footballers who were not invited to the draft camp earlier this month, and Daw was a standout. His 70-centimetre standing vertical jump would have put him third at the main camp in Canberra. In the beep test, the "mean" for tall forwards was 12.9, the best tall forward in Canberra 13.3. Daw managed 13.6.

    His 20-metre sprint result of 3.03 seconds was also faster than the mean for tall forwards at the draft camp. Not actually being at the Australian Institute of Sport with the invited elite should not harm his chances; Sheehan notes that 20 players were drafted out of state screens last year, "so they do get up from there".

    To read the full article click Here
    Western Bulldogs Football Club "Where it's cool to drool"
  • The Coon Dog
    Bulldog Team of the Century
    • Jan 2007
    • 7575

    #2
    Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

    With this paragraph:

    If the Bulldogs — whose heartland the Daws adopted and whose colours the family wore when hosted by the AFL in week two of the finals — are the other most logical suitor, the draft order plays to the Kangaroos' advantage. They have six picks, while the Dogs have only four, and certainly would not use either of their first two. Come the last two, he might already be gone; North's last selection is pick 53.

    he seems more likely to end up at Arden Street than the Whitten Oval.
    [COLOR="Red"][B][U][COLOR="Blue"]85, 92, 97, 98, 08, 09, 10... Break the curse![/COLOR][/U][/B][/COLOR]

    Comment

    • comrade
      Hall of Fame
      • Jun 2008
      • 17847

      #3
      Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

      He's the perfect rookie candidate, but due to the increased exposure he's had this year, that now looks unlikely.

      If North pick him purely on marketing potential, then good luck to them. At least Dalrymple was actually quoted talking about the kid's talent and what he's been able to do on the park this year. It seems Arocca can only see the dollar signs.
      Our 1954 premiership players are our heroes, and it has to be said that Charlie was their hero.

      Comment

      • Remi Moses
        WOOF Member
        • Jan 2009
        • 14785

        #4
        Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

        Originally posted by comrade
        He's the perfect rookie candidate, but due to the increased exposure he's had this year, that now looks unlikely.

        If North pick him purely on marketing potential, then good luck to them. At least Dalrymple was actually quoted talking about the kid's talent and what he's been able to do on the park this year. It seems Arocca can only see the dollar signs.
        That's what I thought as well. Arocca has some pipe dream that Norf are going to suddenly gather thousands of African fans

        Comment

        • Missing Dog
          WOOF Member
          • Jan 2007
          • 8501

          #5
          Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

          Call me a stickler here but I believe Damien Cupido was born in Sth Africa making him the first player born in Africa to play AFL football.

          Comment

          • Rocco Jones
            Bulldog Team of the Century
            • Jun 2008
            • 6920

            #6
            Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

            Originally posted by strebla
            Call me a stickler here but I believe Damien Cupido was born in Sth Africa making him the first player born in Africa to play AFL football.
            Ian Perrie and former Hawthorn ruckman Stephen Lawrence were born in Zimbabwe. Lawrence's father played test cricket for South Africa.

            Jack Baggott would probably be the first VFL/AFL born in Africa. He was born in South Africa, apparently Ian Muller was too (not sure who he is but he played VFL/AFL).

            Comment

            • Missing Dog
              WOOF Member
              • Jan 2007
              • 8501

              #7
              Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

              Originally posted by Rocco Jones
              Ian Perrie and former Hawthorn ruckman Stephen Lawrence were born in Zimbabwe. Lawrence's father played test cricket for South Africa.

              Jack Baggott would probably be the first VFL/AFL born in Africa. He was born in South Africa, apparently Ian Muller was too (not sure who he is but he played VFL/AFL).
              Thanks RJ it really beggars belief how lazy some journos are they just write what they like and expect us to believe them

              Comment

              • Topdog
                Bulldog Team of the Century
                • Jan 2007
                • 7470

                #8
                Re: Majak Daw - One Giant leap

                Did any of them grow up in Africa?

                Comment

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