Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeLocal NewsAFL players provide motivation for indigenous youth

AFL players provide motivation for indigenous youth

LEARNING: Port Adelaide Football Club players Dom Barry and Joel Garner prepare for a training session with local indigenous youth as part of the South Australian Aboriginal Sports Training Academy at Mount Gambier High School.

IT was a day of inspiration and motivation for indigenous youths at Mount Gambier High School on Friday as they met some of their sporting idols from the Port Adelaide Football Club.

Undertaking a training session with Dom Barry and Joel Garner, the South Australian Aboriginal Sports Training Academy (SAASTA) students delved into their cultural heritage while also learning some football tips and tricks.

Organised in the lead-up to the Power Cup – which will see SAASTA teams from across the state compete in Adelaide – the training session gave students a better understanding of where their future can take them.

“It was really cool to meet the players, it is good to have role models like them,” student Denzel Wilson said.

“We usually learn about our culture from family, friends and elders in the community, but it was good to talk to the players about it too.”

Thrilled to be a part of the experience, newly recruited Port Adelaide player Joel Garner said programs such as SAASTA were beneficial to young indigenous people.

“Part of the program is working with the students with footy, but we also help them through their schooling and look for avenues they can take when they graduate,” he said.

“For so many of these students the statistics are not too good at school, but SAASTA provides an 85pc strike rate of kids passing and getting that further education.

“It’s been running for 11 years now, it started with six schools and now has 66 so it is obviously growing and becoming popular.”

Previously working with indigenous youth in his home community of Fregon, Dom Barry said he was grateful for the opportunity to help motivate the students.

“I worked as a school attendance officer in Fregon helping kids to come to school and tutoring them, it was rewarding and life changing for me,” he said.

“I would not be in this position if I had not of worked there.

“It is great Joel and I were able to come down to Mount Gambier and become leaders and role models for the students so they can see there is a light at the end of the tunnel and that we are here to support them as much as we can.”

Guiding the students through their SAASTA journey, Grant High School Aboriginal educator and SAASTA coordinator Sarah McCarthy said the weekly sessions at the school were strengthening young people’s understanding of culture in general as well as their own personal cultural identity.

“That strength to culture is going to be what develops them as leaders in the community, it is what will continue to support the hard work of elders past and present in moving forward as a united Australia and ensuring we have informed life long learners as active citizens,” she said.

“All of the studies we are doing are preparing us for the Power Cup where we will demonstrate what we have learnt about Aboriginal histories and Aboriginal perspectives of history.

“However, for us the most important outcome is establishing a strong foundation for future students to engage with as part of the SAASTA program.”

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Hero Harris at Coonawarra in May

Stand Like Stone Foundation will welcome Australian of the Year and Thai cave rescue hero Dr Richard “Harry” Harris to the Limestone Coast for...
More News

Three fisherman dead at Beachport

Three fishermen who went missing on Sunday have been found dead in waters off Beachport on Sunday. Police will prepare a report for the...

Local talent signs on

THE Castec Rural Pioneers have continued their commitment to developing local talent, with Mount Gambier guard Taj Brumby signing with the club for the...

Heavens open up at Millicent

IN very wet and windy conditions 21 women played a stableford event at the Millicent Golf Club for the first round of the Lonergan...

True North at Field Days

True North RV are gearing up bigger and better in 2026 for the South East Field Days. On the popular corner site 421, True North...

Fringe fun begins in Mount Gambier

Fringe Mount Gambier kicks off next week with a packed lineup of shows, events and experiences to enjoy. Check out what’s on for the...

Bipartisan commitment secures stronger future for regional journalism in South Australia

Country Press South Australia, CPSA, has welcomed commitments from Premier Peter Malinauskas and Opposition Leader Ashton Hurn to implement one full page of government...

Voters push core concerns

Health care, household expenses, and ageing infrastructure are at the forefront of regional South Australians’ minds as the state election approaches, according to a...

Colour Eruptions with BeArtiful – Join the 100!

Don't miss your chance to be part of Colour Eruptions with BeArtiful, the Sip and Paint event everyone will be talking about during Fringe...

Christian Comment: Expectantly Expectant

Expectant. A strange word, most often used in relation to pregnant mothers who wait patiently (or impatiently!) for the birth of their child. It...

Saleyards kicks off

TRANSFORMATION is underway for the Mount Gambier Saleyards with the District Council of Grant funding the project. Council had previously applied for external, federal...