Like too many other football-crazy little girls, Kate Sheahan was told her footy career was over at the ripe old age of 12.
Devastated, she swapped her big red, oval-shaped ball for a fuzzy little green one and channeled her energies into playing tennis.
She’s made a career as a tennis coach, but Sheahan — whose dad is veteran sports journalist Mike Sheahan — never forgot the first game she loved.
Fast forward to 2017, and on Saturday night the 35-year-old mother-of-one made her debut in Round 4 of the inaugural AFL Women’s season.
It was a dream, years in the making, and it lasted right up until the Collingwood rookie’s first touch of the football.
Missed it? Here’s what went down in Round 4:
“I took the ball and felt right at home. I saw two Dogs players ahead and remembered Wayne telling us to use the boundary when kicking into the wind. So I decided to turn the opponent inside out and planted my left leg and went to change direction. BANG. My knee gave way. It snapped,” Sheahan wrote in a column for the Herald Sun yesterday.
“This surge of pain ran through my body and I went down like I had been shot, but to be honest that’s how it felt. I remember screaming: “My knee, my knee.”
“The look on the medico’s face said it all. I wanted so badly to get up. But I simply couldn’t.”
Doctors later confirmed she had an ACL tear. Her dream was over.