This story has got me. One of the player stories of the year in my opinion. I will be watching with anticipation tomorrow night.
From todays Herald Sun
LAST year Liam Jurrah was playing footy barefoot in the dust. Tomorrow he will line up at Etihad Stadium. Mark Stevens reports on a desert fairytale. THERE is nothing Gold Class about the outdoor cinema at Yuendumu.
Tomorrow night, almost 600 people will cram on to a cracked slab of concrete that doubles as the basketball court.
But nothing will detract from the excitement of watching a fantasy unfold on the hastily arranged big screen.
Liam Jurrah, born and bred in the community about 300km north west of Alice Springs, will make his AFL debut for Melbourne.
Only last year, Jurrah was playing in bare feet in the dust just down the road from the basketball rings.
Youth counsellor Brett Badger, who has watched Jurrah blossom in his five years in Yuendumu, said the community had greeted the selection news with stunned silence.
"It's beyond what anybody thought was possible from a small, remote desert community," Badger said.
"Living out in the bush, AFL may as well be people playing footy on the moon."
Badger and Jurrah's family members - mother Corinna, father Leo and grandmother Cecily - will be special guests at Etihad Stadium as Melbourne plays Essendon.
Several Demons staff sitting nearby will be almost as proud.
"Project Jurrah" is complete.
Melbourne chief executive Cameron Schwab perhaps summed it up best: "This guy's come from further back than Jimmy Stynes - and he came from Ireland".
Jurrah, 20, does not speak fluent English. His native tongue, the Warlpiri language, is spoken by perhaps only 500 people.
Since being selected at No. 1 in the pre-season draft in December, Jurrah has been taking English lessons.
He can comprehend and read English, but until recently has struggled to express himself.
"It's going to be very good . . . I want to play on the big stage," Jurrah said of his impending debut.
Jurrah has taken to driving in Melbourne, but settling in hasn't been easy.
"It's a bit busier than where I came from . . . driving around, seeing the lights, the traffic and the people."
Peak hour is nothing, though, compared with the shock of seeing the bay for the first time.
Jurrah had a brief stint with Collingwood in the VFL last year and after his first game followed teammates to St Kilda beach for rehab.
"I was sitting in the car and Paul Licuria said to me we had to walk in the water . . . I said to him I didn't want to get in. It was freezing," Jurrah said.
Jurrah had seen a beach only once before, when he was seven years old.
A few weeks later, Jurrah was off home to help support a dying friend. But after a couple of games in bare feet on the dust, Jurrah headed to Darwin to play in the NTFL.
Jurrah didn't nominate for the national draft, but received special permission from the league to be allowed in the pre-season and rookie draft pools.
Three days before the pre-season draft, Melbourne recruiting boss Barry Prendergast decided to head to Darwin for a look.
"It poured rain, then the sun came out. It was sweltering. He's kicked five and hit the post," Prendergast said.
Prendergast had seen enough of the freakish 188cm forward, who can soar for marks one moment then crumb like a rover the next.
Once Prendergast realised the community would not only support Jurrah's move, but embrace it as a "mission", it was a done deal.
Jurrah, the man they call "LJ" will do something to make the crowd gasp tomorrow night. Like Nicholas Naitanui, he is that kind of player.
Imagine the cheers from the cracked court up at Yuendumu.