Lloyd knows what it’s like to be racially vilified on the footy field, but that won’t stop him from pursuing his dream

A man wearing a cap talks while a young man in a football jersey stands in the background.

Lloyd Johnston knows all too well what it feels like to be racially vilified on the footy field.

Key points:

  • Lloyd Johnston is determined not to let racism stand in the way of his dream of playing professional footy
  • The league has recently been rocked by fresh allegation of racism against Indigenous players
  • The grandmother of Gold Coast Suns player Malcolm Rosas says Indigenous players could turn their back on the game

The now 18-year-old Yanyuwa man from Borroloola — around 1000 kilometres south-east of Darwin — was playing in an under-16 game when he says he heard a woman in the crowd call out to one of his opponents.

“And she yells out, ‘hit the black c**t,’” he recalls.

It wasn’t the first time he had experienced racism, but the feeling has stayed with him three years on.

“You get really green in your stomach,” he says.

Lloyd Johnston has experienced racism playing for the Wanderers Football Club in Darwin. (ABC News: Myles Houlbrook-Walk)

“It’s a very bad feeling that one.”

Johnston will fly out this week to participate in the AFL National Draft Combine, alongside 67 other young players hoping to impress prospective Aussie Rules clubs.

Author: Ivan Robinson