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22-02-2009, 09:11 AM
Hill hopes all comes out well in the wash (http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/hill-hopes-all-comes-out-well/2009/02/21/1234633137090.html)
http://www.realfooty.com.au/ffximage/2009/02/21/majjoshhill_wideweb__470x376,0.jpg
Emma Quayle | February 22, 2009
IT'S four o'clock on a Thursday and Josh Hill's peaceful afternoon nap has been interrupted by an irate teenage sister, screaming for him to give back her iPod. Hill did pinch it, he concedes, but only because 14-year-old Kirra had left his last two in her pockets, then put them in the washing machine. As the screaming continues, Hill sighs, then politely asks for a call back.
In five minutes? "Maybe 10 …" he says. "I might need 10 to deal with this."
Such domestic dramas will soon be far less common for the young Western Bulldog: next week, Hill will move into a Maribyrnong house with two of his teammates, Jarrod Harbrow and Malcolm Lynch. As far as he is aware, the two have iPods of their own. He expects, however, to encounter some entirely new challenges.
"Everyone's saying, 'You'll have to do your own washing and everything', but that's fine with me," Hill said. "It's about time I learnt how to do all of those things, I reckon. I've never really had to look after myself before, so it'll be good. I'm 20 years old now so the time has probably come for me."
Still, Hill is not sure he would be attempting to back up such an exciting 18-game season had he not been heading home to some familiar faces after work each night last year. His parents and sister moved from Perth to Taylors Lakes at the end of 2007 — having contemplated moving to Melbourne for a while, with Josh being drafted by the Bulldogs a happy coincidence — and he found himself distracted from football, in a positive, refreshing way.
He enjoyed simply being around his family again, too, having moved from Broome to Perth as a 13-year-old to go to school at Trinity College, live with relatives and get drafted four years later. "Coming home to your family, everyone has other things to talk about," Hill said. "It's never just football all day long. That made everything feel a bit less stressful."
Hill had some thinking to do midway through last year, though. He had been determined to make the first-round side last year, with his single, entirely unexpected, game at the end of 2007 a spur. "I came in as emergency that week and I'd spent all week thinking how good it was to be an emergency," he said. "When I played, it just clicked in my head that I should have had bigger aims."
To read the full article click the link below
Hill hopes all comes out well in the wash (http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/hill-hopes-all-comes-out-well/2009/02/21/1234633137090.html)
http://www.realfooty.com.au/ffximage/2009/02/21/majjoshhill_wideweb__470x376,0.jpg
Emma Quayle | February 22, 2009
IT'S four o'clock on a Thursday and Josh Hill's peaceful afternoon nap has been interrupted by an irate teenage sister, screaming for him to give back her iPod. Hill did pinch it, he concedes, but only because 14-year-old Kirra had left his last two in her pockets, then put them in the washing machine. As the screaming continues, Hill sighs, then politely asks for a call back.
In five minutes? "Maybe 10 …" he says. "I might need 10 to deal with this."
Such domestic dramas will soon be far less common for the young Western Bulldog: next week, Hill will move into a Maribyrnong house with two of his teammates, Jarrod Harbrow and Malcolm Lynch. As far as he is aware, the two have iPods of their own. He expects, however, to encounter some entirely new challenges.
"Everyone's saying, 'You'll have to do your own washing and everything', but that's fine with me," Hill said. "It's about time I learnt how to do all of those things, I reckon. I've never really had to look after myself before, so it'll be good. I'm 20 years old now so the time has probably come for me."
Still, Hill is not sure he would be attempting to back up such an exciting 18-game season had he not been heading home to some familiar faces after work each night last year. His parents and sister moved from Perth to Taylors Lakes at the end of 2007 — having contemplated moving to Melbourne for a while, with Josh being drafted by the Bulldogs a happy coincidence — and he found himself distracted from football, in a positive, refreshing way.
He enjoyed simply being around his family again, too, having moved from Broome to Perth as a 13-year-old to go to school at Trinity College, live with relatives and get drafted four years later. "Coming home to your family, everyone has other things to talk about," Hill said. "It's never just football all day long. That made everything feel a bit less stressful."
Hill had some thinking to do midway through last year, though. He had been determined to make the first-round side last year, with his single, entirely unexpected, game at the end of 2007 a spur. "I came in as emergency that week and I'd spent all week thinking how good it was to be an emergency," he said. "When I played, it just clicked in my head that I should have had bigger aims."
To read the full article click the link below
Hill hopes all comes out well in the wash (http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/hill-hopes-all-comes-out-well/2009/02/21/1234633137090.html)