Brisbane Broncos player Amber Pilley has a self-imposed nickname – Catwoman – because she’s been a fan of the superhero for much of her life.
But when Amber was in school, a few classmates called her something else; ‘Mamber’, a combination of her name with ‘man’.
“They thought it was a joke, because I was a tomboy, and loved playing footy with the boys,” Amber tells Mamamia.
“It was really juvenile. I still remember it – but it never stopped me from loving sport.”
Far from being deterred, Amber, who had been playing footy with the boys in the schoolyard, finally asked her parents to sign her up for the local team, when she was just eight years old.
“I loved it,” Amber recalls. “I’d never played a sport quite like it.”
And the rest, as they say, is history. Amber has been an Indigenous All Star with the NRL since 2015, and is employed by the Brisbane Broncos not just as a player, but also for the Beyond the Broncos Girls Academy. It’s a natural fit, considering the 21-year-old’s background is in education.
“I work with Indigenous girls at Kingscliff State High School,” Amber explains of her current role. “We have a huge focus on attendance, which is so important. It’s a great opportunity for the girls to talk about and learn about their Indigenous heritage. In fact, I learn so much from them, too.”
Amber, who is a proud Wiradjuri woman, didn’t discover much about her heritage when she was younger, due to the reluctance of her elders to recall their historic traumas.