Friday 18 April 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-AUSTRALIAN " MAJAK DAW " IS A PROFESSIONAL AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALLER IN THE AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE (AFL) : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                 BLACK                SOCIAL            HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Majak Daw (born 11 March 1991, in KhartoumSudan) is a professional Australian rules footballer in the Australian Football League (AFL). Daw and his family in Australia are refugees from the civil wars in Sudan. Daw became the first Sudanese Australian to be drafted to an AFL club when he was contracted to the North Melbourne Football Club in the 2009 AFL Draft. Daw's drafting gained international attention: it was reported by the BBC and the Voice of America. Daw made his first appearance for North Melbourne in an NAB Cup match on 20 February 2011. Daw signed a new contract at the end of the 2011 season that will keep him at the North Melbourne Football Club for 2 more years.

Early life

Daw was born in KhartoumSudan, the third of his parents' nine children.[3] His family fled the Second Sudanese Civil War, living in Egypt for three years, then moved to Australia in 2003.[2][4] Daw attended secondary school at MacKillop College in Werribee, where he was first encouraged to play Australian Football.[5]

TAC Cup years

Playing for the Western Jets Daw was identified as a future "key position" player by North Melbourne and the Western Bulldogs.[6] Daw went to the 2009 Victorian Screening portion of the AFL pre-draft testing. He impressed with a 13.6 in the beep test and 3.03 seconds in a 20 metre sprint along with a standing jump of 70 centimetres.[7] He was one of 11 young Australian rules footballers to be given 2010 Mike Fitzpatrick Scholarships awarded by the AFL Players Association, and accepted the awards on behalf of the other players.[8]

Draft to North Melbourne

Daw was picked up with the ninth pick in the 2010 rookie draft.[9] His draft pick gained international media attention.[4][10] His career at North Melbourne began with playing for VFL club Werribee, where he continued to develop his game. He made his first appearance for North Melbourne in a pre-season NAB cup match against the Western Bulldogs on 20 February 2011.[3] In April 2011, playing for Werribee, Daw kicked an impressive running goal from beyond 50 m out,[11] prompting calls for his inclusion to the senior team.[12]

VFL racism incident

On 4 June 2011 Majak Daw was racially abused by a Port Melbourne Football Club supporter, while he was playing for the Werribee Tigers in the VFL.[13] Daw stated that it "made [him] feel really small".[14] The man has since has been banned from all VFL games until he completes an anti-racism work shop and formally apologises to Daw for the slur.[15]The incident has led to renewed calls to stamp out racism in sport, with former Victorian Premier, Ted Baillieu, labelling Daw a hero.[16]

Suspension from North Melbourne senior team

Daw was suspended from North Melbourne in February 2012 and sent back to train with the Werribee Tigers for an indefinite period for lying to the club and coach Brad Scottabout going to a nightclub in a period when he was recovering from knee surgery.[17][18]

2013 - AFL Debut

In 2013, Daw had an excellent showing in the 2013 NAB Cup which prompted calls for his inclusion in the Senior Side. When tall forward Robbie Tarrant went down with a thigh injury, Daw was brought in to replace him and make his debut in Round 4 against the Brisbane Lions. In the first minute of the game, Daw marked the ball inside 50, and kicked his first AFL goal with his first AFL kick. However, his debut ended on a sour note when he collided with teammate Ben Cunnington and suffered a concussion before quarter time, and took no further part in the game. North went on to win the game by 63 points.
Daw held his spot and played the next week, scoring no goals but three behinds against Hawthorn. In Round 7 against the Western Bulldogs, Majak had a breakout performance in just his fourth career game, kicking a game-high 6 goals in North's 54 point win. After the match, North Melbourne coach Brad Scott said of Majak: "'Maj' is a good example of what you can do with really hard work. Hard work trumps talent any day of the week."[19]









































































































































































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