Michael Long (footballer)

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Michael Long
OAM
Personal information
Full name Michael Long
Date of birth (1969-10-01) 1 October 1969 (age 51)
Place of birth Tiwi Islands
Original team(s) St Mary's/West Torrens
Draft No. 23., 1988 national draft
Height 178 cm (5 ft 10 in)
Weight 82 kg (181 lb)
Position(s) Midfielder
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1989–2001 Essendon 190 (143)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
1988 Northern Territory 3 (9)
1993 QLD/NT 1 (0)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 2001.
Career highlights
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Michael Long OAM (born 1 October 1969) is a former Australian rules footballer of Aboriginal descent who became a spokesperson for Indigenous rights and against racism in sport.[1]

Early career[]

Despite being drafted to the VFL, the West Torrens Football Club of the Adelaide-based SANFL argued that Long was "contracted with the club and could not play anywhere else."

Noel Judkins said, "I was guaranteed this wasn't the case, so I took the contract to Darwin and met with Michael's father Jack and he was irate. He grabbed it and wrote the word 'bullshit' right across the front of it. When it became clear he wanted to play at Essendon, West Torrens agreed it wasn't a binding contract."[citation needed]

However, despite this, Long did play for West Torrens during the 1988 SANFL season, winning the club's best and fairest award, the third-last player to do so as the Eagles merged with the Woodville Football Club following the 1990 season to become the Woodville-West Torrens Eagles.

Australian Football League career[]

Long played perhaps the best game of his career in the 1993 AFL Grand Final. Playing on Mark Athorn, Long ran amok, helping Essendon gain a healthy quarter-time lead, and to maintain it. By the end of the game, he had amassed 20 kicks and 13 handballs, totalling 33 possessions.

Long's performance was rewarded with the Norm Smith Medal, which was presented to him by fellow Tiwi Islander Maurice Rioli.[2]

In the pre-season of 1994 in a practice match against the West Coast Eagles, Long injured his knee which required 12 months of solid rehabilitation, and he was not seen for the entire 1994 AFL Home and Away season.

In 1995, Long made a triumphant return to AFL football and played almost a full season. In the Anzac Day match between Essendon and Collingwood at the MCG, Long claimed to have been racially taunted by Collingwood's ruckman, Damian Monkhorst.

The AFL arranged a mediation session between Long and Monkhorst, and, although Long was clearly unsatisfied by the short-term outcome of this meeting, the long-term result was that it set a precedent; consequently, since this incident, there have only been three widely publicised accusations of racial taunts on the AFL field in the proceeding 25 years.

For the next two seasons, Long needed knee surgery and only took the field seven times. He missed the first half of 1998 recovering from the surgery but finished the year strongly, playing in nine games.

According to the Round 3 AFL Record of 1999, between the beginning of the 1994 and end of the 1998 seasons, Long played only 38 of a possible 119 games.

Long had the honour of kicking the first-ever goal at the new Docklands Stadium when it opened in 2000. He was also a member of Essendon's record-breaking premiership team in 2000 which saw only one loss for the entire season. Long faced heavy scrutiny for his bump on Troy Simmonds, which rendered Simmonds unconscious and raised the possibility of him losing mobility – which never eventuated. However, this incident inspired the AFL to introduce new rules protecting players with their heads over the ball. Long was suspended for this incident.

2001 was Long's final season, and although Essendon made the Grand Final that year, Long aggravated a hamstring during Grand Final training and was forced to name himself unavailable on the eve of the game, which Essendon lost to Brisbane.

Playing statistics[]

[3]
Season Team No. Games Totals Averages (per game)
G B K H D M T G B K H D M T
1989 Essendon 4 24 19 10 233 203 436 68 63 0.8 0.4 9.7 8.5 18.2 2.8 2.6
1990 Essendon 4 25 13 9 221 184 405 58 51 0.5 0.4 8.8 7.4 16.2 2.3 2.0
1991 Essendon 13 18 13 6 170 132 302 26 34 0.7 0.3 9.4 7.3 16.8 1.4 1.9
1992 Essendon 13 17 13 8 182 157 339 56 34 0.8 0.5 10.7 9.2 19.9 3.3 2.0
1993 Essendon 13 18 12 4 228 188 416 72 40 0.7 0.2 12.7 10.4 23.1 4.0 2.2
1994 Essendon 13 0
1995 Essendon 13 22 27 18 294 221 515 80 40 1.2 0.8 13.4 10.0 23.4 3.6 1.8
1996 Essendon 13 2 2 0 9 6 15 1 2 1.0 0.0 4.5 3.0 7.5 0.5 1.0
1997 Essendon 13 5 4 6 37 39 76 19 3 0.8 1.2 7.4 7.8 15.2 3.8 0.6
1998 Essendon 13 9 9 4 54 60 114 30 9 1.0 0.4 6.0 6.7 12.7 3.3 1.0
1999 Essendon 13 20 12 12 223 122 345 62 27 0.6 0.6 11.2 6.1 17.3 3.1 1.4
2000 Essendon 13 23 18 18 230 135 365 72 59 0.8 0.8 10.0 5.9 15.9 3.1 2.6
2001 Essendon 13 7 1 4 42 30 72 16 16 0.1 0.6 6.0 4.3 10.3 2.3 2.3
Career 190 143 99 1923 1477 3400 560 378 0.8 0.5 10.1 7.8 17.9 2.9 2.0

Post-football[]

Following his retirement, Long became a spokesman for Indigenous Australians. He was a critic of then-Prime Minister John Howard's policies towards Indigenous Australians—most notably Howard's refusal to make an apology to the Stolen Generation. In a letter published in Melbourne's The Age, Long likened Howard to "those cold-hearted pricks" who stole his parents.[4]

His political activities culminated in a protest march from Melbourne to Canberra, leaving on 21 November 2004. The aim of the walk was to obtain a meeting with the Prime Minister. After ten days of intense media scrutiny of the walk, the Prime Minister eventually granted Long a meeting, at which point Long called an end to the walk, having completed about 325 km of the planned 650 km walk.[4] He later said: "I wanted to make a change. It was about challenging the government about some of the issues Aboriginal people were facing and still face – education, employment, health, housing, the Stolen Generations."[5] The walk became known as The Long Walk, and the tradition of a commemorative community walk in Melbourne has continued, with thousands turning out for the event.[6] The walk takes places in late May or early June before the Dreamtime game, starting at Federation Square and ending at the MCG.[5] Long is patron of The Long Walk, an organisation inspired by his walk and which works for the health and well-being of Indigenous Australians.[6]

In 2006, he was charged with assaulting a man at a football club function in Darwin.[7] He pleaded guilty when the case came to trial in 2009, saying that he had struck a man who had attacked his sister. No conviction was recorded, with the magistrate saying that he was unlikely to re-offend.[8]

In July 2011, Long signed up as ambassador for weight-loss agency Jenny Craig, partly to highlight indigenous health. Weighing 112 kg, 30 kg more than his playing weight, his aim was to drop at least 10 kg in around 10 weeks.[9]

In 2015, he became board member of the newly founded Michael Long Foundation (MLF), and in 2016 the Michael Long Learning and Leadership Centre (MLLLC) opened in Darwin. MLF funds education and football programs for indigenous people, and the MLLLC, funded by the federal government and managed by the Australian Football League Northern Territory (AFLNT), aims to nurture talent and improve lives and communities.[10][11]

In 2018, he was treated for a life-threatening infectious disease, melioidosis, in a hospital in Darwin; however, this did not stop him from announcing plans for a second Long Walk, as he was honoured for the Sir Doug Nicholls round at Dreamtime at the 'G in May 2019.[12]

Long was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours, for "service to Australian rules football, and to the Indigenous community".[13]

Champions of Essendon[]

In 2002, an Essendon panel ranked him at 23 in their Champions of Essendon list of the 25 greatest players ever to have played for Essendon.

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Racism in AFL much less: Long". The Age. 8 May 2003.
  2. ^ NT great to present Norm Smith
  3. ^ Michael Long's player profile at AFL Tables
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Landers, Kim (3 December 2004). "Long walk secures meeting with Howard Reporter". Lateline. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 26 December 2011.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Di Sisto, Peter (23 May 2019). "The Long vision". Essendon Football Club. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "About". The Long Walk. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  7. ^ "Ex-AFL star Long on assault charges". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  8. ^ "AFL great escapes assault conviction". 17 March 2009. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  9. ^ Langmaid, Aaron (5 July 2011). "Michael Long makes a stand for indigenous health". Herald Sun.
  10. ^ "About". Michael Long Foundation. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  11. ^ "New Michael Long sports academy using football to improve lives and communities". Australian Govt. Dept of Prime Minister & Cabinet. Indigenous Affairs. 19 January 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  12. ^ Vaughan, Roger (24 May 2019). "AFL great Long reflects on health scare". Victor Harbor Times. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Queen's Birthday 2021 Honours - the full list". Sydney Morning Herald. Nine Entertainment Co. 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.

References[]

  • Main, Jim. The Big Aussie Rules Book, Bombers have too Long to wait, Rugby Press Limited 1994 page 67
  • Hobbs, Greg. AFL Record, A mighty Long performance to offset a captain's pain, Australian Football League, Progress Printers & Distributors, Round 3 1999, page 61
  • Football Record, AFL Grand Final Football Record, 1993
  • Main, Jim. & , 1989 Football The Year in Review, Century Magazines 1989
  • The 90's: The Decade that Delivered (video/DVD)
  • The Long Walk – History[permanent dead link]
  • Give us some hope Source: The Age 4 December 2004

External links[]

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