Very Inspirational......

Menteek

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Love how our juniors are training hard, working hard and the rewards are there for them to take.

seems to me in a couple years we’re gonna see the club finally have a crop of young blokes stepping up to first grade if they all stick together like Penrith.
 

John Matrix

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God bless him, what a insperational person!

This year, the NRL squad’s training standards and culture have been questioned, but Vella’s Jersey Flegg players get up at 4am on some days to arrive for a 5am weights session, go to work all day, and then return to the club in the evening for a field workout with the coach.

Print this out and stick in front of the 1st grade boys who still want to sook.
 

Howie B

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Fuckin Adam Elliott. Always causing trouble.

Glad this young bloke bounced back
 

Nasheed

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Nasheed here,
Can somebody tell me what happened to him?
I understood clearly he did some damage to his spine but it isn’t clear to me what is happening with him now? It says he is passing the ball like Danny Buderus and pics of him upright but still disabled.
So just want some clarity.
 

TOTTO

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Great read thanks for posting, put things in perspective.

I thought we bullied our players lol.
 

JackDog

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A horrific injury cut short his career. Now Luke Vella is helping future stars begin theirs

It’s Friday, April 4, 2014, and inside the away dressing sheds of the old Sydney Football Stadium, young rugby league player Adam Elliott turns to his Bulldogs teammates for the time-honoured rev-up.
“C’mon boys, we’ve got to lift to get back into this,” he urges his side.

Bulldogs pathways coach Luke Vella on the accident that saw him lose the use of his left arm.
They are heavily behind against the Roosters in a National Youth Competition match. In a pocket of the room, one of the team’s smallest players makes a promise to himself.
“I’ll try to make a statement here,” Luke Vella thinks.

The Bulldogs run back onto the field ready to kick-off. The first collision of any half is generally the biggest: think Mark Carroll and Paul Harragon hurtling towards each other with no sense of self-preservation; or James Graham and Sam Burgess in the 2014 grand final.
On this day, Vella decides he’s going to run faster than anyone and provide an instant lift to his teammates.

“I shot out of the line from the kick-off and I got my head in the wrong position,” he recalls. “I went too low and caught [the attacker’s] hip. I was in and out of consciousness on the field and on the stretcher coming off, and then I was straight to hospital ... That stuff is a bit of a blur.”
Less than two weeks before Vella’s career-ending tackle, Alex McKinnon suffered his catastrophic injury in an NRL game in Melbourne, leaving him a quadriplegic. The rugby league world had barely come to terms with what had happened to the promising Newcastle back-rower when another junior player’s life was turned upside down.


The doctors told Vella he had suffered a brachial plexus injury. It meant three of his nerves down the left side of his body had been torn, with no messages being sent from his brain to his arm. It is similar to the injury suffered by former Wests Tigers star Simon Dwyer, whose career was cut short by a tackle in 2011.
What followed were years of rehabilitation for Vella. Five marathon surgeries with the hope of getting some flexion in his left elbow. Countless hospital visits.
“There’s one I remember distinctly,” Vella says. “I was in ICU, but I had to stay in an incubated room where the temperature was over 36 degrees because I had a skin flap attached to my arm which had to be heated. There was no TV, and nurses were coming in and rolling me over to go to the toilet.”
He pauses.
“I try to put that to the back of my mind, but when I think about it, it’s pretty horrific if I’m honest. I was in a pretty dark place after the injury.”

Vella tells the story sitting down among the blue seats of the Belmore Sportsground. In a couple of hours, he’s going to train the Bulldogs’ Jersey Flegg side in preparation for the grand final against the Roosters at CommBank Stadium on Sunday.

Their coach never got the chance to see how far he could go with his playing career, but he’s determined to give the next batch of Bulldogs every chance to make the most of their own.
Unconsciously, he shows them what hurdles they might overcome just by practising a training drill. Vella will often jump in at dummy half. When the ball clears the ruck, he picks it up with just his right hand and rifles a one-handed pass Cameron Smith or Danny Buderus would be happy with.
“This club is very, very special to me,” Vella says. “I played junior league grand finals here when I was nine years old and I’m still here coaching Jersey Flegg at 29. I’ll get emotional if I keep talking about it. They helped me through the darkest time of my life and to come out the other side, I can’t thank them enough for what they’ve done for me.”

Vella rolls into training in his modified Mitsubishi with a steering wheel usually found in a forklift. The blinkers have to be attached to the wheel so he can use them. When he orders a steak from a restaurant, he asks the chef to cut up the meat for him. Every pair of shoes he buys is a size too small, so he can tuck the laces in.
Recently, he’s started playing in a physical disability rugby league side and has been amazed at how much joy others get out of the sport.

“There are things you get frustrated with,” Vella says. “But that gives me a sense of, ‘What have you got to whinge about?’
“I look at it, and I could have been a lot worse. There was an injury to a guy I used to play against, Kurt Drysdale [who was left a paraplegic after an on-field accident]. I look at him and look at myself and think, ‘What are you worried about? That could have been you. Just get on with life’.”

Life will bring the chance on Sunday to provide some happiness for a club that has been in a rut for longer than their supporters want to remember.
This year, the NRL squad’s training standards and culture have been questioned, but Vella’s Jersey Flegg players get up at 4am on some days to arrive for a 5am weights session, go to work all day, and then return to the club in the evening for a field workout with the coach.

In between his work with the next generation of Bulldogs stars, Vella coaches students at Westfields Sports High. They won the national championship this month. Bulldogs NRL coach Cameron Ciraldo has an open-door policy, which allows Vella to sit in on meetings, and he regularly talks to general manager Phil Gould about the game.
Could he be a future NRL coach?

“I’ve got time up my sleeve, which is good,” Vella says. “If I want to challenge myself, that’s the pinnacle of the sport. I think there will come a time when I’d like to push forward to that. But these kids buy into what the club is about. I think the club is about hard work, resilience and turning up when your back is against the wall.”
If that’s the case, then they’ve found the right coach.
 

dogwhisperer

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Great read thanks for posting, put things in perspective.

I thought we bullied our players lol.
Lol, tell me about it.
There's a difference between bullying our players and hardening them up to become physically/mentally strong earning their crust along the way.
All I can say is thank goodness Gus and Ciro are here. A lot who doubt them are going to eat their words.
All this news about some FG players complaining about how hard training is and the long hours just goes to show how far away we are from the top teams in terms of culture and hard work and how far we have fallen over the last 7 years.
 

JackDog

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Lol, tell me about it.
There's a difference between bullying our players and hardening them up to become physically/mentally strong earning their crust along the way.
All I can say is thank goodness Gus and Ciro are here. A lot who doubt them are going to eat their words.
All this news about some FG players complaining about how hard training is and the long hours just goes to show how far away we are from the top teams in terms of culture and hard work and how far we have fallen over the last 7 years.
I'm still hopeful the palaver about first graders complaining that training was too hard is bullshit or massively embellished. If its true, those players making those complaints whilst the Flegg players and coaches from the same club, on the same pitch, are carrying themselves so well should be embarrassed.
 

habs

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Well done Luke. What an absolute legend. Very proud of Luke’s achievements. We do support a great club.

Working his arse off with one arm.

We need more Lukes at the club and less lazy trainers and bludgers.
 

Dogs79

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After reading that I’d be willing to run through a brick wall for this bloke! Great article, wish him and the JF team the best of luck this weekend.
 

Daustin

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what a top guy to battle on from that, theres a video of the tackle on youtube, its sickening
 
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