The Gold Coast Bulletin

Man of moment set to get more

- JON ANDERSON

THE unlikely heroics of a 211cm one-time US-based soccer player named Mason Cox has sparked a renewed search for similar talent from the home of the brave.

And 27-year-old Cox’s journey has been nothing but brave. He has been the subject of ridicule at times as he has tried to master a code he knew nothing about five years ago.

From those humble beginnings to dominating a preliminar­y final for Collingwoo­d may just represent the “remarkable performanc­e” in the code’s 160-year history, a view AFL national talent and internatio­nal manager Kevin Sheehan agrees with.

“To put a stamp on a game like that, I can’t think of a more remarkable performanc­e from a player who didn’t grow up with our code,” said Sheehan, who has been closely involved since the first US draft combine in Los Angeles in 2014.

“He desperatel­y gets to ground balls and pushes out four or five balls per game, which seven-footers just don’t do. And he is so discipline­d in making sure he isn’t outmarked.

“From the moment in the 1987 preliminar­y final when (Irishman) Jimmy Stynes ran over the mark, to 31 years later when another import takes eight contested marks on the same stage, that is the evolution of the internatio­nal experiment.

“Mason Cox has been laughed at, probably on the field and definitely in the media off the field, but he has a very thick skin which sees him get stronger and, more importantl­y, better.”

So will it lead to further exploratio­n of US talent?

Sheehan believes “yes” – a view shared by one senior AFL recruiter.

“You definitely do look closely at the US experiment,” the recruiter said. “Probably there is another Mason Cox out there and clubs just have to be resourced ... to find him.”

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? The Magpies' Mason Cox has been a success story in the AFL.
Picture: GETTY IMAGES The Magpies' Mason Cox has been a success story in the AFL.

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