Simon Cox interview: Southend to Sydney for Ireland international

0:46 Brisbane Roar boss Robbie Fowler on why the season must be completed

“It is a beautiful city and I have settled in really nicely,” he says.

“Our stadium is a new 30,000-seater stadium. The crowds are decent with 9,000 at home games and many more for the Sydney derby. Anything you could ever want is there and the training ground is the same so it is completely different to what we had at Southend.

“I have been nothing but impressed by the facilities and the standard of play. It is just a nice way to enjoy the rest of your career. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not a place to relax and not try hard. You come over here and you soon know that defenders are going to kick you up in the air. That’s what they are there to do. The boys don’t take any prisoners over here.”

A goal off the bench on his debut against Central Coast Mariners was a good start – “a nice way to introduce myself” – and there has been another since in a win over Adelaide United.

But there is no getting away from the fact that the added scrutiny hasn’t all been positive – when Cox beat the goalkeeper against Melbourne City last time out only to be caught on the goal-line by defender Curtis Good, the footage of the moment was seen around the world.

“My phone was quite hot straightaway,” he admits.

“It was a poor piece of judgment. I thought it was going to go in but it’s never in until it’s over the line. It was quite nice in a way because I was obviously quite disappointed but the boys and the manager were great with me. Sometimes the best thing in those situations is to have a bit of a laugh and a joke about it to get yourself out of the mood I was in.”

All part of the fun.

1:27 EFL chairman Rick Parry confirms their priority is to finish the season

The plan is to return to England in the summer for “three or four weeks” when Cox intends “to take in some of the playoff games” with so many of his former clubs potentially involved. “I am hoping that West Brom can seal promotion automatically but there’s my old clubs Brentford, Bristol City and Nottingham Forest still in the mix too.”

After that, he will be back in Australia and looking forward to a new season that will take in the long trips to Perth and Wellington that the fixture schedule denied him this time around.

“Perth is a three-hour flight and a five-hour time difference or something like that. Apparently, that is a real body-clock mess-up. It is obviously the travelling that’s different here. Friday travel and getting back on a Sunday is a little bit different to what I am used to.”

Even so, Cox would recommend this experience to anyone.

“Yeah, 100 per cent,” he adds. “There’s everything you need here and it is 25 degrees. I have had lots of calls from people back home who want to come over but they are very restricted in terms of the number of foreign players per club so opportunities are limited.

“It is a real adventure and it is about enjoying every day.”

Sourse: skysports.com

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