By Damian McIver
Queensland teenager Kitara Farrar’s first sporting love is track and field, but she is finding the appeal of AFL hard to resist.
“I am actually a sprinter, so this [AFL] is just more of a fun sport… [but] I would like to play on TV,” she said.
“I would like to go to the Olympics first and then play football after.”
Farrar, 15, is part of the AFL’s push to recruit more Indigenous girls to take up the game.
Last year she was picked in a national squad, the Woomeras, which has spent the past week in Melbourne for a development camp.
Not surprisingly, the camp has emphasised the new possibilities that have opened up for female footballers following the creation of the national AFLW league.
“[The program] is designed to give the girls a pathway to footy and the opportunities that are happening now with AFLW,” said former Geelong and Essendon player Matthew Stokes, who has been working with the AFL’s development team since retiring in 2015.
“It teaches them about culture, we can bring them together and teach them that, but also give them an introduction into being a professional athlete.”
There are currently 12 Indigenous footballers in the AFL Women’s league, about 6 per cent of the total playing pool. Stokes said there was potential for that number to grow significantly.
“Especially in the communities — the boys play footy and the sisters and cousins get forced to play with them — so you’ll find that most of the community girls are really skilful because they’ve been playing with their brothers and cousins their whole lives,” he said.
New opportunities helping women find inspiration to play.
Adelaide utility Tayla Thorn is one of two Woomeras graduates currently playing in the AFLW (the other is Brisbane’s Shaleise Law).
“Meeting young Indigenous girls the same age as me throughout the program was really an inspiration and I still call those girls sisters to this day,” Thorn said.