Bay of Plenty Times

Payne factor: Defender puts past behind to give Phoenix hope in knockout clash

- Football Jason Pine

Life has always been an exercise in ups and downs. Two years ago, Wellington Phoenix defender Tim Payne experience­d the latter.

As the Phoenix relocated across the Tasman in an initially unsuccessf­ul attempt to complete the Covid-halted 2019/20 A-league football season, Payne broke quarantine and curfew, commandeer­ing a golf cart with teammate Oli Sail for an ill-advised late-night joy ride. The hijinks ended with a visit to the local police station, a fine and a fourmatch ban. In the immediate aftermath, Payne cut a forlorn figure, but owned his actions and vowed to do better. Fast forward two years and the evidence of his personal and profession­al growth is clear. Payne has now played 65 times for Wellington and is one of the side’s leaders. He’s been a regular feature this A-league season, missing only the matches that took place while he was helping the All Whites to victory in the Oceania World Cup qualifying tournament. He’s a lock in Danny Hay’s New

Zealand side for next month’s interconti­nental playoff against Costa Rica and a crucial player in the Phoenix’s hopes of progressin­g deep into the playoffs.

“I don’t like to reflect back too much. I like to keep looking forward,” says Payne.

“It happened, and I think I’ve dealt with it pretty well and moved on. It’s obviously still disappoint­ing and a little bit of a taint on my name but I think I’ve shown people — and particular­ly younger people — that you sometimes mess up and it’s how you react that matters. I’ve tried to do all the right things since then.

“I’ve had quite a few setbacks, some self-inflicted and others which were out of my control. If I step back and think about it, I guess I’d be quietly positive about how I responded,” he said.

Adversity has been a catch cry for the Wellington Phoenix this season, too. If being forced to spend another full season based in Australia wasn’t bad enough, they were hit with Covid, injuries to key players, ongoing issues with access to internatio­nal players and a schedule which at one stage saw them play 12 games in seven weeks.

Under those circumstan­ces, a place in the top six seemed almost fanciful. And yet, the Phoenix will play finals football for a third time in the last four years. “Even after a couple of our heavy defeats, it was about getting back on the horse and trying to pick up three points in the next game,” Payne said.

“The beauty of football is it gives you another opportunit­y the next weekend. We just stuck to our processes and how Uffie [coach Ufuk Talay] wanted us to play. At times, the top six seemed more unlikely than at other times, but we just worried about each game as it came.”

The Phoenix finished sixth, feeding them into a knockout clash against thirdplace­d Western United tonight A win in this match would bring the added bonus of a return to Wellington. The semifinals are two-legged affairs, meaning the Phoenix would host Melbourne City on Wednesday night before the return match in Melbourne a few days later.

“We don’t want to get too far ahead of ourselves, but we’d love to bring finals football back to Wellington and the Yellow Fever faithful,” said Payne.

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