Socceroos Star Awer Mabil Feels Love After Recieving Young Australian of the Year Award

Socceroos Star Awer Mabil Feels Love After Recieving Young Australian of the Year Award
Awer Mabil of Australia reacts after scoring a goal during the International Men's Friendly match between the Australian Socceroos and the New Zealand All Whites at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane, Thursday, September 22, 2022. (AAP Image/Dave Hunt
AAP
By AAP
1/26/2023
Updated:
1/26/2023

Buoyed by receiving the Young Australian of the Year award, Socceroos winger Awer Mabil hopes he can bring greater awareness to the plight of refugees as he looks to rediscover his love for football at a new club, Sparta Prague.

Mabil arrived in the Czech capital earlier this month, reuniting with his former coach Brian Priske after struggling for game time with Spanish outfit Cadiz.

The 27-year-old was recognised in the Australian of the Year honours for the work of his foundation—Barefoot to Boots—which provides sports footwear and medical equipment for the South Sudanese refugee camp in Kenya where he was born.

The 31-cap international was unable to attend Wednesday’s ceremony due to his commitments with his club side.

His mother Agot accepted the award in his absence, with Mabil saying she was “shaking” when she heard he had won.

He took extra comfort in Priske acknowledging his work in a meeting with his new Sparta teammates.

“I feel the love already,” Mabil said with his trademark enthusiasm.

“He (Priske) said there’s something bigger than football, and he mentioned my foundation. He was my assistant coach in Denmark when I started it.

“It’s good to be in a new environment now because, over the last two years, I didn’t really enjoy football as much.

“I am back now, and I’m hoping that things will go to plan.”

Receiving the award also carried extra significance for Mabil, coming four years to the day since his sister, Bor, was killed in a car crash.

“I think she‘d say, ’Hey little bro, you’ve done alright',” he said.

“It’s a mixed day (for the family), but her energy is always with us, and I'll continue to carry her name.”

Mabil, whose family moved to Adelaide when he was 10, has continued to return to his birthplace, where he hopes to build an artificial football pitch.

He said the most touching moment of his charitable work had come when his foundation donated two incubators to the local hospital.

“That, for me, is the biggest achievement because you’re giving life; I don’t know how many lives have been saved,” he said.

“I’m representing kids in the refugee camp that don’t get a chance.

“The title of ’refugee' is just a name because, as I’ve said before, as long as we’re born into this world, it’s all our home.

“It (the refugee camp) taught me the value of sticking together and working hard.

“If we can all just help each other one by one, this world will be a better place for all of us.”