 When I was young I knew I wanted to be a footballer and such was the culture of the sport back then here in Australia that you had to kind of be okay with the idea that you might have to leave home and travel pretty fast. So I ended up taking a couple of opportunities here and there when they came up to go overseas and spend more horizons, learn a little bit from different footballing cultures and to be involved in different setups even just for a short period of time to get to grow as a young person, as a young footballer. Every time you go somewhere new you learn from the players, you learn from the style of the players. So I had a different pathway to a lot of players but it was something that I'm very happy that I did because it's made me the person and the player I am now. I had accepted I would do all this travelling and I got given a chance in my home city so it was nice for my family to be able to enjoy that and to come to the games and I had a great time at Sydney FC so I'm very successful there so it's a good part of my life. A lot of people they go their whole careers, they might play 20 years and not win a trophy so I still remember winning the Grand Final and just looking at the other boys and dressing room after them and the boys we actually, this is ours, I don't want them to take this away from us and that's there forever now. So we almost had that with the Wanderers last year and it just wasn't to be the last step but that's something that's now going to drive this group of players to have that feel. At Sydney FC the way the club was viewed by the rest of the league was almost like they didn't want us to win whereas the Wanderers were such a fairy tale story it felt like everyone in Australia was on their side so it was pretty special going on the streak that we went on to win the Premier's play and the last day of the season in Newcastle to wrap it up the way that we did was very special. Long after we've all finished playing football this club's going to be massive and we all know that so we're very proud to be involved in these early stages and be part of building something that really is, I believe, it's going to step up. The way football is viewed in this country and the way the fans, you've seen our fans and I hope the rest of the league steps up now because it could really be the start of a new era for Australian football. Overnachewski, furiously trying to get his wall rights. Is this the moment for the Wanderers? It's Cole, it's a goal for Shana Cole! I mean scoring a goal anyway. Especially when I play at the back a lot of the time it doesn't happen all that often so I mean a few of my mates gave me a stick, a few of my mates at Sydney FC fans still and it gave me a hard time. It's not too bad, I don't think anyone was overly offended but if I could celebrate it it was a big moment for us to get back into a big game so I mean I celebrated every goal that I scored for Sydney FC and the same for the Wanderers. Win games and being successful is the most important thing. That scoring goals is fun, yeah, of course. That feeling never changes from when you're a kid and you hit the back of the net. I mean for everyone that's worked with Poppa as a player and as a coach Poppa's Poppa he must have been the best so that hasn't changed. He's taken that into his coaching but I see now he sometimes understands that players need a little bit of nurturing. Not all players, definitely not me but I've seen at times that some players he needs to nurture a little bit which is maybe something as a captain he didn't have time for but I mean there's a reason people are drawn to him because they want to work under him because he brings the best out of you he demands the best of himself and so he's always going to demand the best of him and he's working with him as well.