Re: Rhan Hooper
Brisbane's prodigal son
Andrew Stafford | March 10, 2008
Source: http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/brisbanes-prodigal-son/2008/03/09/1204998284228.html
Brisbane's prodigal son
Andrew Stafford | March 10, 2008
NOT everyone has the same dream. When Geelong forward Nathan Ablett decided, at just 22 and with a premiership medal around his neck, that he didn't have the required commitment to continue at AFL level, Brisbane Lion Rhan Hooper could relate to him.
"I knew how he would feel," he says. "There's only one person that really knows what they want, and that's the person that's doing it."
Hooper knows the value of being given space to make your own decisions. After a promising first year of football in 2006 in which he played 11 games, the speedy forward stunned his club when he went absent without leave on the eve of the 2007 pre-season. It was a move that led his pay to be docked and, in his coach Leigh Matthews' words, "wrecked his year".
It's an incident Hooper hasn't publicly discussed in any detail until now and his explanation is simple, and doubtless common to boys making their way in a man's game. "It's not going to be fun every single day, that's something I had to get my head around," he says.
"It wasn't like you could go to two training sessions a week and then you go to your club games every weekend. That was fun, but this is a job, this is something you can't muck around with. That was one thing that I had to get my head around — how much of a commitment it is to be an AFL footy player."
The second reason behind Hooper's decision to take a break is even more disarming: he missed his mum. Having grown up with his mother, sister and grandmother — he has never met his natural father — Hooper's struggle with the workload of an AFL footballer was thrown into sharper relief when his mother moved to Albury.
Born in Cunnamulla in Queensland's south-west, Hooper grew up in Charleville, then Melbourne. When his stepfather died, the family relocated to Ipswich, west of Brisbane, from where he was recruited by the Lions (41st in the 2005 draft). When he moved out of home to live with his partner of five years, it was only around the corner.
"I've got a really close bond with my mother and my nan, and my nan ended up moving down to Albury with my mother, so it was kind of weird not having them around," he says. "Even though I wasn't at the house with them, they were still there every single day for me."
A chat with co-captain Simon Black helped bring him back into the Lions' fold. "I think he was probably a bit worried about what everyone was thinking of him. Because he was away for so long, coming back would a big thing," Black says. "I just basically said if you don't want to play footy, make sure you really know that — (don't give up) just because you don't want to play at the moment."
Hooper eventually returned, in time for the start of the 2007 season. Longer training sessions were his reward. "Worked my backside off, earned the trust back of the boys, got fit again," he says.
To his surprise, Matthews recalled him to play against Richmond in round 10. He was dropped for two further games, but between rounds 13 and 19 Hooper demonstrated why the Lions had been so keen to woo him back.
Hooper is an Aboriginal footballer in the Aaron Davey mould — super quick, super smart around goals, but with super defensive skills to match.
In round 14, Hooper picked up his first Brownlow vote in the Lions' upset victory over West Coast at Subiaco. Two games later, he kicked four goals in the 117-point demolition of Carlton that led to the sacking of coach Denis Pagan. He followed it up with another three goals and 22 possessions against Collingwood.
It was performances such as these that added another dimension to the Lions and prompted his coach to gripe, after the Collingwood game, that such efforts were needed from the season's start, not its second half, by which time the Lions' finals chances were all but shot.
"He played half a dozen really good games," Matthews says now. "But we want him to play 22 good games, not half a dozen good games."
With the core of a new Lions team in place following a protracted period of post-premiership rebuilding, Matthews' comments make it clear that in 2008, Hooper will form part of that core, adding not only twinkle around the toes of Jonathan Brown, but extra dash and defensive pressure to its midfield.
"I'd hope that I could get a run in the midfield this year," he says. "I'm obviously getting fit enough to withstand the hard running they need in there, (so) I wouldn't mind coming from forward into the midfield, working through one of the other players."
What's more, his mum will be watching. "She moved back up a couple of weeks ago."
Source: http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/brisbanes-prodigal-son/2008/03/09/1204998284228.html