 It's a nice easy one to start with. Obviously we're here in Rose making coffee. Enjoy yourselves. Very much so, it was my first time. So I perhaps wasn't as good as I was hoping for. I enjoyed it a lot too. She's pulled that one out twice now. I'm just really bumpkin' it to be honest. Oh God. Move on quickly. Yeah, move on very quickly. I've been following women's football for five or six years now and it does seem like coffee is a big deal in women's football. I've seen players transfer to new clubs and the first question I've seen to ask is... Which is good coffee. Yeah, to be fair like in every team... We have a lot in our team. Yeah, there's like a coffee club in there where there's a group of players and you just know we always go to coffee shops together. My secret Santa gift was a guide to coffee around the world. It's one of the best coffee shops in each of the major cities so it's definitely a strong coffee theme. I guess you need that now a bit in professional football because you do have so much free time that you need to be filled, don't you? Yeah, I think as well. It's a very bonding thing to have a coffee with someone and we all move around a lot or a lot of us away from home. So there's nothing simpler than just grabbing a coffee with someone and that just kind of grows. It's just the socialness of it as well, like getting together, a cup of coffee. You could sit here for hours, couldn't you? Yeah. How else do you two fill your time away from football? I guess I'm in a few different things. I play the guitar, well try to anyway. Just as a little bit of a hobby, you know, non-football related and you know, I'm into photography and trying out little things like that. Chester. And yeah, my dog is an Instagram page like... Forum. You know what I mean? So like, I like taking photos and you know, a photo shoot with that dog every day, you know. Yeah. No, I do a few things. Not somebody likes to be bored, so I try to overfill my time if possible. I do some part-time work for a company that helps high school kids get sports scholarships. And then I also am studying to become a childhood financial analyst, so that's a bit of a heavier one. But yeah, and other than that, like I live in the team house with four of the other girls and you know, we're always planning to do something, hanging out, going to a movie, doing just or just watching a movie at home. It must be quite useful having four of your teammates kind of on your doorstep. Yeah, definitely. And you know, it's... those four girls are some of the closest girls on the team, so as well, obviously. Yeah, I'm an outsider. Give her a shout. No, it's such a bonding thing, all being away from home in the same boat, so you always go pretty close together and it's really nice to have them just as a support system, I guess, as well. And so the guitar and the photography, did you just kind of, well, I've got time on. That's what I'm going to do. I mean, I think the guitar started when I was a student and I, you know, I first came over. I always had a guitar, you know, as a kid and that, but it kind of just sat in the corner. But when I became a student, I loved to free time and I was like, do something. So I just picked it up and kind of taught myself how to play it. And I mean, I say I play it, I try to, I don't know if I'm any good or not, but... You've got a lot better. I've improved since I first came over. And I upgraded my guitar as well, so... I'd like to think you have improved and you came over at 18. Yeah. Is it important to have non-footballing hobbies, to kind of have that escapism because of the pressures of football? Yeah, I think it's good sometimes to just switch off, you know, and just, you know, like get yourself away and do something else. And that's why I, you know, play the guitar, just takes my mind off things. And it just, you know, helps me relax and chill out a little bit. I think people often look at our jobs and they say it's, you know, the hours are quite easy and it's quite relaxing to just be playing football, but for us it's a very mentally intense process to be a professional footballer. So you really do need to have those switch-off moments, otherwise it can get a bit, you know, over-absorbing, I guess. It's quite a structured life as well. So in many ways, is that quite good to be able to have quite a balanced lifestyle in terms of having that balance to go off and do new things? Yeah, of course. I think as in any job you need to have balance. You need to have, you know, other friends who are not your football friends and you need to have other things that aren't involved in football. Otherwise, you know, just being healthy and making sure that, you know, a football maybe isn't going as well as you hope it for a week. You know, you have a loss or, you know, you get dropped or something. You need to have people outside of that to be able to go to and then pick you up and get you back on the field when, you know, times are a bit tough and also to enjoy those moments when they're going really well. So, yeah. That's it, pretty much, yeah. What she said. Let's go back to when you were kids. Was football always the kind of first love that you remember? Yeah, for me, 100%. I mean, I started playing when I was four. I had an older brother who played, so that's actually all we did. Yeah, we're similar with that. Same thing, older brother story. There was actually any free time I got, I was like, outside playing football until it was dark. You know, I mean, that's all my childhood was. So, first thing I fell in love with, and that's, you know, it was what I did. It's what I always wanted to be when I was a kid, and, you know, we're here now, so... Who were your teams going up? I played for my school team. I was the only girl on a boys' school team until I was about 12, I think, and then finally got into a girls' club, which is North West Sydney Koalas, give them a shout out. I played all my football there, and, yeah, if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't have got where I am, so... Yeah, I was quite similar. I played, obviously, through school and stuff, and I joined a boys' team and a girls' team, just like my local clubs. And, you know, I played for the girls in the summer and the boys in the winter, kind of right through. And then I stayed with that girls' club right through until I was 18, and then I made the move over here. That literally just stayed with the same club all the way through. What about going to games when you were kids? Did you do that? Well, I grew up in Australia where football really isn't that big. You know, my dad is really into sport. We grew up going to cricket games and Australian rules football games, which... You drink your coffee. Which, you know, I didn't have a team growing up, you know, I'm sorry, you're a big man, you know, I didn't really have... I cut that one out. Sorry. Yeah, I know. I grew up, you know, going to other sports, and I was just more of a big sports fan rather than being a football fan, so I didn't have, like, a follow, a team I followed, really. I remember I always used to go to the Northern Ireland games, like every game I went to. I was a fan ever since I was, like, that big, and I remember when we beat England, and that was, like, the turning point for Northern Ireland, like, cut that out. I've got to keep that one in. It was, like, one of the most historic nights in our history, and I remember... David Healy, yeah. Like, David Beckham, everyone was playing, it was great. I remember, and I turned up to school on that Monday and everyone at Northern Ireland shirts on, and I was like, I've been here from the start. So I'd always been a hardcore fan, and then, obviously, my dream was always to play for Northern Ireland, and then I got to do that as well, so, you know, I'm still even now, like, I still... I'm, like, following the men, I'm, like, still such a fan. Yeah, ever since I was a kid.