Geelong Advertiser

TOM PUTS STAMP ON AFL DREAM

‘It (AFL) was never really a reality for me coming through. But 2017 was probably the year where for the first time I thought I was a chance. I thought if I have a really good year here, maybe Geelong will be keen on me, but then I got injured’

- SCOTT GULLAN

MICK Atkins does not want this to be about him. His son’s unconventi­onal tional journey to the AFL is the story.

But what cannot be missed is s the parallel between the journeys s of father and son, albeit with one major difference.

Today Tom Atkins will run on n to the MCG in front of 70,000 people e for his fifth AFL game.

It is something his old man never ever had the chance to do, despite coming ming close a number of times, so when he talks about his son’s perseveran­ce, it comes from a place of knowledge.

“It’s a good lesson for everyone in footy,” Mick says about Tom’s fiveyear wait at Geelong before finally being drafted.

“If you persevere, you never know what happens.”

To understand Tom’s refusal to give up on his AFL dream, some background about his father is required.

Mick Atkins was a high school student in Bairnsdale in 1984 when he was invited down by Footscray coach Mick Malthouse to play in a Tuesday night match against the reigning premier Hawthorn.

He had recently toured Ireland with an Australian junior team and after showing a bit, Malthouse urged him to relocate immediatel­y to Melbourne to start an AFL career.

But given his Year 12 commitment­s and the fact he was also dealing with a minor heart condition, the decision was made to wait until the end d of the season.

Mick did come down to the Western Oval and lasted two years but he never had another look-in at senior level.

“I am the only player in the history of the game to start in the seniors, go to the reserves and then to the under 19s,” Mick says.

“I went backwards.” He then tried out w with Collingwoo­d an and Melbourne but di did not make it befo fore a stint in the VFL with Prahran under the coaching of Brian Taylor.

To get Mick to commit to the Two Blues, they had to find him a job, which is where a couple of the club supporters stepped in.

Prominent journalist­s Jon Ander-son and Tim Habel found the new boom recruit a job at the Sunday Heral Sun and started an un-likely journalist­ic career.

He lasted four years, mainly on the sports desk at the Herald Sun where wher he went front and square with the likes of his former mentor Malthouse.

His most memorable journalist­ic moment was doorstoppi­ng ‘Captain Grumpy’ — Allan Border.

“The hardest thing I ever had to do was front up to Allan Border one morning at the motel after a Test match,” Mick says.

“They’d won, fortunatel­y, he was hungover and used to be so grumpy but it actually turned out to be very good.”

In 1994 Mick became frustrated with journalism and bought a fish-and-chip shop on the Geelong foreshore.

It turned out to be a shrewd investment and he then became a legend of the local footy scene, playing and coaching at a number of different clubs.

One of those gigs was coaching his son Tom in the under-18s at St Joseph’s in the GFL.

While Mick is affectiona­tely known as ‘Mad Mick’, complete with a crazy stare, you will not find a more respectful and well-liked person inside the walls of GMHBA Stadium than Tom.

He smiles when quizzed about his father’s reputation before paying him the ultimate compliment.

“Probably the majority of what I am as a footballer, and a person, can be contribute­d to him,” he says.

After not going through the traditiona­l TAC Cup pathway, Tom was playing for Geelong College when Paul Hood, the Cats VFL coach, invited him to pre-season training.

“In Year 12 I was playing footy and I was never a chance for that draft, so it’s not like I was like other kids where they had a bit of interest in their 18year-old year,” Tom says.

“I was just playing footy and then when Paul Hood asked if I wanted to train with the VFL I thought I would because I wanted to play as high as I could.”

And so started a special relationsh­ip.

Tom started on the VFL’s developmen­t list in 2014 and played five games; the following year he made the main list but still only played six games.

In 2016 he played a full season and won the best-and-fairest award. By this stage he had seen his teammate Tom Ruggles progress from the VFL to the AFL list, which for the first time had planted the seed of a similar progressio­n in his own mind.

“It (AFL) was never really a reality for me coming through,” Tom says. “But 2017 was probably the year where for the first time I thought I was a chance.

“I thought if I have a really good year here, maybe Geelong will be keen on me, but then I got injured.”

A dodgy hamstring kept him sidelined for a couple of months and while he played well at the end of the season, the Cats decided to go with Stewart Crameri with its only pick in the rookie draft.

“I can remember watching the rookie draft and being disappoint­ed when I didn’t get called out,” he says.

“Again it was so far from what

I thought was actually possible, so it was never like I really got my hopes up.

“Mum and Dad will tell you as well, I told them the whole way through that I’m going to expect the worst and then if the worst happens then I won’t be let down.

“I was never s---y or anything.” This attitude is what endeared Tom to Geelong officials, with football boss Simon Lloyd still blown away about a text exchange between the pair when he told him he had missed out again.

The way he handled it, the dignity and class, is used as an example for anyone who now steps into the football club. And Tom’s response?

He won his second bestand-fairest in 2018 as captain, was named in the VFL team of the season and produced double-digit tackles in 10 of his 20 VFL games.

Given forward pressure was the new direction for the Cats, Tom was called in with a month to go in the season and told the wait was over, he would be selected with the club’s first pick in the rookie draft.

He was only allowed to tell his parents and girlfriend about the decision and it played on his mind, affecting his football until his old man intervened. “It was a weird thing for me to deal with. They said, ‘ We’re going to take you barring any injuries’ so I sort of had it in my mind if I do my knee here then … for the first two games after I didn’t play well,” he says.

“Then Dad said to me: ‘ Are you going to go back to playing the way you were before they told you or not?’ I was playing a bit soft, so after that I played a bit better.”

Tom, 23, had been setting up life as an accountant after completing a commerce degree at Deakin.

His lifestyle was not one of an AFL player, given he lived with three mates and takeaway was certainly at the top of the dinner list.

In the lead-up to his debut in Round 1, Tom let slip he had been forced to change his diet and give away his favourite fish souvlaki, which gained traction in the media particular­ly after it was highlighte­d on Channel 7’s The Front Bar.

“That certainly took off,” he says with a laugh.

He has been pleasantly surprised how quickly he has coped with the step up — he has averaged more than four tackles a week — but still cannot believe in many ways that he is now a full-time AFL footballer.

His dad can. Perseveran­ce is in the family genes and Mick’s take on the son who has lived his dream sums everything up perfectly: “He doesn’t give up easy and he’s not intimidate­d easily.”

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 ?? Main picture: ALEX COPPEL ?? WAIT IS OVER: Geelong rookie Tom Atkins and his father, local footy legend Mick, relax in the grandstand at GMHBA Stadium. Tom Atkins, left, as a youngster for St Joseph’s in the GFL against St Mary’s, and, above, in action for Geelong this year.
Main picture: ALEX COPPEL WAIT IS OVER: Geelong rookie Tom Atkins and his father, local footy legend Mick, relax in the grandstand at GMHBA Stadium. Tom Atkins, left, as a youngster for St Joseph’s in the GFL against St Mary’s, and, above, in action for Geelong this year.

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