Bold journey through basketball and belief for OAM recipient
15 December 2020
IT WAS THE CLICK OF A GUN WHICH CHANGED HIS LIFE FOREVER, BUT THE JOURNEY
FROM THE BUSH TO PARALYMPICS TRAILBLAZER IS ONE OF GROWING BOLD IN THE FACE OF
ADVERSITY FOR ORDER OF AUSTRALIA MEDAL RECIPIENT, UNCLE KEVIN COOMBES.
Speaking with journalist Pete Timbs on Feros Care’s Grow Bold with Disability
Podcast, the Wotjobaluk Elder and proud and prominent member of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander community tracked his path through struggle and
success, and how basketball changed his life.
But every story has a beginning, and Kevin’s as he knows it
took shape when hunting in country Victoria in 1953, when the crack of a gun
left him a paraplegic.
“I was 12, my cousin was 14, and
there were two nine-year-olds with us,” Kevin said.
“We all came from Balranald
across the New South Wales border from Swan Hill, and we’d all go shooting
rabbits. We had a rest, and a little bloke came along and started playing with
my gun.
“I heard it go ‘click’, and I
said to myself, ‘I think I left a bullet in that’. Sure enough, I did leave a
bullet in it and it hit me in the back; it came out just between the ribs on my
left side and just missed my heart. I was lucky to be alive really.”
Far from town and in and out
of consciousness, an uncle of Kevin’s was able to reach him, taking him to Balranald
hospital, before he was transferred to Swan Hill.
Kevin already knew his
paraplegic diagnosis but surviving the grimmest of odds and over two years
without seeing family and friends was a journey he could never have prepared
for.
“It was pretty terrible… I had
24 stitches in my stomach, and for me to pass urine, the doctor had to do
handstands on my stomach as there were no catheters,” he said.
“They sent me to Melbourne
because I had bedsores which could get into my bloodstream and kill me. So, I
went and didn’t see another black face for two-and-a-half years; it was pretty
hard.
“I didn’t know much about
paraplegia in those days, and if you had a spinal injury back then, you’d live
for only about five weeks, yet here I am 60 odd years later.”
While modern times have given
passage for a range of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander support networks
and organisations, even the word “disability” was as foreign as they come in
Kevin’s community during the 1950s and subsequent years.
HOW UNCLE KEVIN’S PATH LED HIM TO THE BASKETBALL COURT AND FUTURE
PARALYMPICS GLORY
Although in a wheelchair,
Kevin wasn’t seen as disabled as he worked, particularly with Aboriginal
hostels for about 19 years. However, in 1981, the international year for
disability, Kevin was added to a National Committee fighting for rights of
Aboriginals; placing him on his future path.
“Basketball was part of the
rehab at Austin Hospital, and because there wasn’t any place I could go in
Melbourne; I didn’t know anyone, there weren’t any hostels around in those
days, so, I’d go over there and practice after their program had finished,”
Kevin said.
“That’s how I got into
basketball. They had a Championship in Melbourne in 1960, and myself, and my
mate were selected to go to Rome in 1960; the very first Paralympic Games.”
Not only was Kevin in the
first Paralympics, but he also owns the honour of being the first Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Paralympian to represent Australia.
Referring to the Paralympics
as a “big family”, Kevin would also represent Australia in 1968 in Israel,
after forgoing selection in 1964, when he was “chasing girls”.
Kevin would go on to captain
the Australian side at the 1972 Paralympics, as well as the 1974 Commonwealth
Games, before retiring after his fifth Paralympics in 1984.
“I wanted to travel and see
the world,” Kevin said. “I’ve been to America, England, Europe… there’s nothing
better than sitting in a boat, travelling down the Rhine and sipping a nice
white wine.”
Travelling the world and
playing the sport he loves brought plenty of joy and fulfillment, but off the
court, things weren’t as initially rewarding for Kevin.
A resume underpinned with
national representation and Paralympics pride afforded no professional
concession for Kevin, who found employment pathways and options for a young
Aboriginal man in a wheelchair in the 1960s and subsequent times hard to
navigate.
“One of my mates, who was also
in a wheelchair got me my first job, and I worked for him for 12 months until
they moved and I couldn’t drive out there and back every day,” Kevin said.
“I got a job as a sales
representative selling anything to do with printers, and I did that for 15
years.”
Finding his way, Kevin went on
to spend 39 years in the workforce, 25 of which was spent with the government
in Human Services and Health.
It was through his efforts and
contributions to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander welfare during that
period and disabled sport, which saw Kevin receive his Order of Australia.
“It was a great career, and
basketball opened up a lot of doors for me,” he said. “I played in five
Paralympics, so Basketball Australia was a marvellous thing to be part of then.
“When I became a Hall of
Famer, I was going through a bad time with health and wanted one of my girls to
get my award, but she said, ‘I want you to go, you are the person that deserves
this, not me’.
“I was glad; it was a great
night, and it’s been a great career as part of the Paralympic family.”
GIANT STRIDES MADE IN ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND ACCEPTANCE OF ATHLETES WITH
DISABILITY PLEASING FOR TRAILBLAZER, UNCLE KEVIN COOMBES
Part of that journey with the
Paralympic family has been the satisfaction in seeing the giant strides made in
society’s support and acknowledgement of disabled athletes during his career
and beyond.
Where once Kevin and his
cohort would have to “go begging” for funding while rattling tins outside
Victorian Football League (VFL, now AFL) games, he said progression has seen
things turn around greatly.
“It’s about progression and
it’s very pleasing to see,” he said. “I have never been as proud as when I was
involved in the organising committee for Sydney 2000. To see the first
wheelchair basketball game we played, and to have something like 22,000 people
at the game, was just unbelievable.”
“I also carried the torch
inside the (Olympic) Stadium and was one athlete who alongside the likes of
Dawn Fraser and Marjorie Jackson who had streets named after them in Sydney for
the Games.”
Having carried the torch, its
metaphorical passing to the likes of wheelchair racer Kurt Fearnley and the
next generation of athletes with disability which has brought Kevin joy,
contributing to his overall journey of growing bold and reaching his goals.
“I’ve got the utmost respect
for Kurt… I remember seeing him as a 10-year-old, and I thought, ‘this bloke is
going to be a superstar’, Kevin said. “It turned out I was right, but I’ve
always been very confident in what I do, and I’ve always been pretty bold and
not backwards in coming forward.
“If I see something out of
place or people doing the wrong thing, I’ll tell them, so, I suppose that’s
being bold.”