Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsSpotlight on Aussie icons

Spotlight on Aussie icons

IT WAS the Taylors in the spotlight last week, but this week I would like to turn the attention to a couple of Noosa’s sporting celebrities Dawn Fraser and Evonne Goolagong Cawley.
These two wonderful ambassadors have been busy over the past few weeks doing what they do best, give people inspiration.
The Aussie larrikin Dawn popped in to catch up with her old Olympic mate Betty Cuthbert at her aged care home in Mundurah WA, just to say gidday.
Betty, a four-times Olympic Gold medallist, is wheelchair-bound and almost deaf due to her 46-year battle with multiple sclerosis, and could only utter “you came to see me’’.
They both welled tears of joy when the pair held each other in an embrace that left the staff completely gobsmacked.
Dawn has nothing but admiration for her.
“You talk about strength in people… she’s got to be the strongest person I’ve ever known in my life, here she is suffering MS for 50 years, and she’s still alive today.”
Both Aussie icons are in their 78th year, and it was more than a half a century after they each won gold at the 1962 Commonwealth Games.
The three-time Olympic freestyle champion is baffled by the sprint queen’s resolve.
“She’s as deaf as a doornail but she still has a contagious smile and laughter and that says a lot about a person’’.
Dawn left with this beautiful statement: “the friendships you make in sport are there for ever’’.
Totally agree champ.
OK let’s return the serve now to the former Wimbledon and French Open champion Evonne Cawley, who is trying to unearth the next Indigenous tennis champion.
Forty-five years ago in a small NSW country town Barellan, a young promising tennis player got a break that would allow her to achieve her first dream play tennis and be a champion.
The local community rallied to help cover the costs of going to train in Sydney, buy cloths and suitcase.
Evonne says, “if it wasn’t for their support I probably wouldn’t be here today”.
Along with her husband Roger, her foundation’s CEO, they have visited at least three centres in every state in the past 15 months, hosting clinics.
While winning Wimbledon is the thrust of this national initative, Evonne’s other goal is that every child remains at school.
“I’ll help kids achieve their dreams, but they have to stay at school and find out there where they want to be.”
Their foundation has given out 43 scholarships, and all recipients are at really good schools.
Indigenous players between the ages 5 and 15 are invited to a tennis ‘come and try day’, with the Cawley’s simple resolution ‘hopefully they will have a good time and will want to keep playing’.
Gee what a great pair of champions on and off the playing field and what an honour they live on the Sunshine Coast.
Until next time.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

From boardwalk to beach again

For Noosa local Rebecca, 46, the sand at the very end of Noosa Spit has long been just out of reach. Last Sunday morning,...

Community update

More News

Youturn sets up YouConnect Gym

In response to rising levels of youth mental illness and a growing need for early, meaningful support, Youturn has announced the development of its...

Mallets, Magic, and Morning Tea

Ready to swap the gym for some fresh air, sunshine, and a bit of friendly competition? At Noosa Croquet Club, we’ve got the perfect...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. ROVING RESTORERS Join the Roving Restorers Noosa...

Shower off sea lice

Noosa beach visitors are being advised to take extra care after reports of sea lice in local waters. Lifeguards and surf lifesaving staff have...

Triple fatality

Queensland Police Forensic Crash officers are investigating the cause of a traffic crash which left three people dead near Taabinga - about two hours...

LifeFlight 2025 rescue record

The LifeFlight Sunshine Coast crew airlifted nearly 700 people as the region welcomed a new advanced rescue helicopter and a number of winch rescues...

TAFE plans in ruin

Plans for Tewantin TAFE to be reinvigorated into a new Sunshine Coast School of Design have been scrapped due to vandalism and building deterioration...

Free Innovate to grow program for farmers

Australia's national science agency, CSIRO, is calling on farm and food innovators to apply for its latest Innovate to Grow program — helping small-to-medium-sized...

Tackling life head-on

PRECEDE Farming brings enough challenges without the added concern of health issues, as Central Queensland couple Neil and Jan-Adele Reinke have found. Yet they have...

603 weapons seized under Jack’s Law

Police have scanned 82,648 people, seized 603 weapons, made 1,280 arrests and laid 2,424 charges across Queensland in the six months since Jack’s Law...