 Football growing up in the inner west of Sydney for me was, it was life, you know, I was born at Rudd Park for my local club, Belmo Eagles, and my brother played there, my dad played there for the last 40 years, I played the last two seasons with him at 72, so he's kind of a, he's the original local legend of the Canterbury district, kind of everywhere I go, like, oh you're Keith's son, no one knows me as local SC, which is kind of cool, and I was very lucky I grew up in kind of a golden era of the NSL, my brother played professionally as well, played for Blacktown, Arpia, played in for me, probably one of our best Olly Roo teams of all time that went to the Barcelona Olympics, and I have such fond memories of growing up with football, especially in the inner west, it's all we did. Playing with my dad the last two years, back to my junior club was, no matter what I achieved, playing professionally, I played for over 13 or 14 years, you know, to do that with your dad at 72. Yeah, I'd say it's probably one of my major highlights to sit down and have a barbecue and a beer after the game, and playing for Sydney United doing an apprenticeship there, and playing close to nine seasons at Marconi, I think over 150 games for them was a real career highlight, a great club, and then, you know, the privilege now of, you know, letting Brisbane rule out as captain of their club for their first ever game is something that, you know, no one can ever take away, and is part of the history of Australian football. It's something I do with local FC, with what I do now is always remembering the past and moving it forward, so I think that's an important factor. It's about leaving the game in a better place than when you stepped in. I want to see football reach its potential in this country, and now that's, you know, my life work. It's being an advocate for Australian football. Local FC is now local, but it's gone global, and, you know, embracing the past and moving the game forward is what it's all about.