Plucky Parker steeled for AFL derby final

It didn't take Sydney vice-captain Luke Parker long to establish himself as one of the toughest players in the AFL.

AFL

Sydney's Luke Parker is regarded as one of the toughest players in the AFL. (AAP)

From the moment Luke Parker played through the pain of a broken jaw as a 19-year-old against GWS it was clear he was cut from a different cloth.

Parker will make a timely return on Saturday, when Sydney host the Giants in an AFL elimination final.

The big-bodied midfielder is the latest in a long line of plucky Swans on-ballers to have followed in the footsteps of 'Captain Courageous' Paul Kelly, leading by example and setting incredibly high standards.

There are many good reasons that Parker, who played a pivotal role in the Swans' late-season resurgence, shapes as Sydney skipper Josh Kennedy's likely successor.

The vice-captain has twice been voted the AFLPA's most courageous player by his peers; proof of Parker's capacity to weather brutal blows while attacking the ball with scant regard for his own safety.

Most pundits pinpoint the 2016 qualifying final as the moment when the rivalry between Sydney's two clubs became genuine.

The ill-feeling was there from the Giants' first game in 2012. GWS veteran James McDonald shirtfronted a blindsided Parker, earning himself a two-game ban.

''He's one of the toughest kids I've seen," Swans coach John Longmire said at the time.

"He copped a knock, didn't whinge about it, got up, dusted himself off and kept playing."

Scans later confirmed Parker had a broken jaw. He didn't miss a single game because of the injury.

Jude Bolton, who mentored Parker when he joined the club via the 2010 draft, once remarked of his protege that "you could hit him over the head with a block of wood and he'd get up".

Brett Kirk, another hard-nosed midfielder who led the Swans to a drought-ending premiership in 2005, can't fault Parker's superb work at the stoppages.

"He's a tough bugger. He has an ability to play with injury and the way he plays is what finals demand," Swans assistant coach Kirk said.

"There's a lot of contested situations with a lot of heat, a lot of pressure.

"Luke has a strong ability to stand up in those big moments. He's done that consistently."

Parker's contested marking and capacity to kick clutch goals is also part of the reason that GWS co-captain Phil Davis is wary.

"He's a formidable player," Davis said, noting Parker was among the leading best-on-ground contenders in the Swans' derby win some three weeks ago.


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Source: AAP



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