GVGjr
17-12-2012, 05:37 AM
Setback after setback doesn't deter
http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2012/12/16/1226537/931413-dale-morris.jpg
DALE Morris got a blunt reminder about his football mortality when moving house earlier this month. While unpacking a few boxes in his new study, the Western Bulldogs defender stumbled on a dog-eared cardboard folder.
They make tasty Pies up north
Young gun bonds as Dees feel heat
"It had all of these X-rays of my leg, which I'd never really looked at before," he said. "I had a look at them and called my wife (Gemma) in for a look, thinking, 'Holy moly, have a look at this, how bad it was'."
The X-rays showed a clean break through the right lower leg, with both the tibia and fibula off-set. The injury occurred when Morris's leg was caught awkwardly beneath him during a marking contest in the final quarter against Essendon in Round 21, 2011.
"That night was the worst pain I've ever experienced in my life," Morris recalled.
"I had three or four of those pethidine pens and they felt like they did nothing. Then I got to the hospital and had more pain-killers and it finally settled down, but just a cough or a sneeze was enough to bring the pain flooding back. It was intense."
Morris remembered lying in a hospital room that night wondering if he would play football again.
"I'd had the X-rays and I was lying there with a million things going through my head and in walked Boydy (captain Matthew Boyd). He'd come straight from the game. I don't even think he'd had a shower, and he just sat with me.
"We had a little bit of a chat, but he didn't even have to say anything."
Another teammate, the injury-plagued Tom Williams, brought over a laptop loaded with dozens of movies - "he knew what was ahead of me" - and Daniel Cross's wife Sam dropped off some containers of home-made pasta sauce at the Morris home.
Although Morris faced months on the sidelines, that weekend confirmed what he had always known: that Whitten Oval was and would remain his second home.
"If anything it really felt like I was even more a part of a team," he said. "That's the beauty of the Bulldogs."
Read More.. (http://dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/afl/setback-after-setback-doesnt-deter-popular-bulldog-dale-morris-as-he-continues-road-back-from-serious-injury/story-e6frexx0-1226537933565)
http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2012/12/16/1226537/931413-dale-morris.jpg
DALE Morris got a blunt reminder about his football mortality when moving house earlier this month. While unpacking a few boxes in his new study, the Western Bulldogs defender stumbled on a dog-eared cardboard folder.
They make tasty Pies up north
Young gun bonds as Dees feel heat
"It had all of these X-rays of my leg, which I'd never really looked at before," he said. "I had a look at them and called my wife (Gemma) in for a look, thinking, 'Holy moly, have a look at this, how bad it was'."
The X-rays showed a clean break through the right lower leg, with both the tibia and fibula off-set. The injury occurred when Morris's leg was caught awkwardly beneath him during a marking contest in the final quarter against Essendon in Round 21, 2011.
"That night was the worst pain I've ever experienced in my life," Morris recalled.
"I had three or four of those pethidine pens and they felt like they did nothing. Then I got to the hospital and had more pain-killers and it finally settled down, but just a cough or a sneeze was enough to bring the pain flooding back. It was intense."
Morris remembered lying in a hospital room that night wondering if he would play football again.
"I'd had the X-rays and I was lying there with a million things going through my head and in walked Boydy (captain Matthew Boyd). He'd come straight from the game. I don't even think he'd had a shower, and he just sat with me.
"We had a little bit of a chat, but he didn't even have to say anything."
Another teammate, the injury-plagued Tom Williams, brought over a laptop loaded with dozens of movies - "he knew what was ahead of me" - and Daniel Cross's wife Sam dropped off some containers of home-made pasta sauce at the Morris home.
Although Morris faced months on the sidelines, that weekend confirmed what he had always known: that Whitten Oval was and would remain his second home.
"If anything it really felt like I was even more a part of a team," he said. "That's the beauty of the Bulldogs."
Read More.. (http://dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/afl/setback-after-setback-doesnt-deter-popular-bulldog-dale-morris-as-he-continues-road-back-from-serious-injury/story-e6frexx0-1226537933565)