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Posted: 2022-06-01 01:30:00

“I felt a little bit guilty, but it definitely saved me from getting out there feeling stiff,” Wright said.

“That was my first ever time in a helicopter, and I was sweating the whole way – any bit of wind I was [panicking]. My feet were planted ... I’ve seen too many things in the news. It was actually quite cool, although the whole time I wouldn’t let go of any seatbelt or anything.

“I had a great view of Wembley, right through London. [We landed] at an equestrian centre by the Thames, and it was just like ... people just galloping on their horses in the middle of London. I was like, ‘What is going on here? This is how the other half lives.’”

There were more than 46,000 fans at Wembley – where Wright also won the League One play-offs with Preston North End in 2015 – and the vast majority of them were clad in Sunderland’s red and white stripes.

“There’s something in the air about Wembley, it’s just like this moment where your whole career can be summed up in one,” he said.

“To be there and play there and win there ... a lot of good players go their whole careers without getting the chance to play at Wembley and lift a trophy at Wembley, and thankfully, I’ve done it twice. And I hope there’s more to come because it just gives you that taste.

“The buzz of the stadium, the arch over it and the size of it – it is, I guess, the home of football. It was just class.”

James Jeggo (left) in Honduras with Bailey Wright during the Socceroos’ successful 2018 World Cup play-off mission.

James Jeggo (left) in Honduras with Bailey Wright during the Socceroos’ successful 2018 World Cup play-off mission.

After injury wrecked the end of his stint with Bristol City, Wright joined Sunderland in January 2020 – just as the Netflix cameras that filmed their rapid descent from the Premier League to England’s third tier were switched off.

“I watched it myself – it shows you the size of the club, the passion of the fans. We had a historian come in pre-season and tell us why Sunderland means so much to the fans, and what the city had been through when the shipyards got closed down, and the mining industry shut down,” he said.

“People lost their jobs, they lost their incomes, and it was terrible for the city, but they always had their football club. When you understand that ... when you play for the club, we then feel that. If we’re performing [badly], they certainly let us know. But when we do ... God, did they get behind us.”

Now Wright is hopeful of channelling his personal momentum into the Socceroos, where he looms as a strong contender to start in their must-win clash against the UAE in the early hours of Wednesday [AEST], as well as their lead-in friendly against Jordan this Thursday.

If Australia beat the UAE, they will then face Peru in a winner-takes-all clash for a World Cup spot on June 14 in Doha.

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As a regular fixture of the Australian team that got to the 2018 World Cup through the play-offs, and after steering Sunderland through a similarly fraught process, Wright has solid and recent first-hand experience of winning things the hard way.

“Everyone wants to qualify automatically, but doing things through the play-offs – I’ve done it at club level, I’ve done it qualifying for a World Cup, and I know many other boys have as well. It’s the best feeling ever when you do it,” Wright said.

“The togetherness, the momentum it can give you to carry you on is incredible. I want to feel that, we want to feel that – it’d be special to go and achieve it.”

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