My wife,Angela,woke up right in time to join me for the shootout,so I got to experience it with her. She spotted the fan with my jersey behind the goal – I hadn’t yet noticed,so it was quite funny.
Other than for a team that I’ve played in or coached,I don’t think I’ve ever celebrated like I did on Tuesday morning – I haven’t been able to wipe the smile off my face.
It was on par to the amount of emotion and fist-pumping that I’d done at AAMI Park a few weeks back whenWestern United won the A-League championship. That’s how much it means to me. I love this game so much and the World Cup means everything in terms of growing football in Australia.
After scoring the winning penalty against Uruguay to get Australia into the Cup in 2005,I still get asked to run around with my top off,and now goalkeeperAndrew Redmayne will be asked to do the Wiggles dance every time people see him. He’s written in sporting folklore.
Leading up to it,we knew the enormity of the game against Uruguay. We hadn’t qualified for 32 years,but we had the belief that we were going to get there and that we were good enough. We just knew it was our time.
The night before,I practised penalties at the stadium,five down that end of the stadium and I put each of them in that same right corner. I remember staying down there,practising against Ante Covic and Lucas Neill asked me why I kept putting them in the same corner. If we get to a shootout,I said,I only get one chance. And for the record,Ante didn’t get close to one of them.