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Deaf rookie wins Broncos
contract "Copyright News Limited - used with permission - no reproduction of this
article allowed" CHRIS DAVIES will never hear the roar of the
crowd if he achieves his dream of playing at Suncorp Stadium with the
Brisbane Broncos. Chris, a utility player, has been signed by the Broncos and has moved
to Brisbane from his family's watermelon farm at Horse Creek near
Chinchilla to prepare for the 2003 season.
His strength honed by five years of picking melons, Chris will start in
the Broncos colts team which will play in the Toowoomba first grade
competition, and if he has what it takes he will progress through the
club's Queensland Cup feeder team, the Clydesdales, to the NRL.
Chris's mother Sandy has no doubt her son will go all the way.
"He's awesome actually," she said this week after watching
Chris go through his paces at Broncos training alongside internationals
Darren Lockyer, Ben Ikin and Brent Tate.
"He has been deaf since birth but we have always emphasised to him
he is a person first and deaf second.
"He has played league since he was 10 and in his first season he
made the representative sides and he has been in them ever since.
"His deafness has not been a problem. In fact, I think it has made
him get to the point where he is today because he has had to try so much
harder than other boys and remain focused.
"The visual part has taken over from the hearing and he reads play
beautifully."
Chris's brother, Matt, 20, is also deaf and plays for Chinchilla in the
Roma and District League where his talents have come to the attention of
Queensland Cup club, Wests.
"Matt will have another season in the country to finish his
boilermaking apprenticeship," Sandy Davies said.
"There was no history of deafness in my family or [her husband]
Bern's. It was just a genetic mismatch."
Both boys attended Chinchilla High where Chris also played the
saxophone in the school band. Chris wrote to the Broncos two years ago
asking to attend a development camp. The Broncos liked what they saw and
after monitoring his progress, signed him for their colts squad.
"He has level six deafness which is in the highest range, and
hearing aids do not help," Sandy Davies said. "Copyright News Limited - used with permission - no reproduction of this article allowed"
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