Corey Payne deserving of his representative status

By Curtis Woodward / Expert

Nobody in the National Rugby League epitomises the term ‘toiler’ more than Corey Payne. The rugged Canterbury Bulldogs backrower will play his first top grade representative game on Sunday afternoon when he runs out for City Origin.

Payne is the kind of player every coach likes to have in their side. There isn’t any flash or pizzazz in his game. But the Chester Hill junior brings plenty to the table.

The workaholic prides himself on the little things. The one percenters that many fans will never see or don’t care to see. The backrower may not make the highlight reel every week, but he will never let you down.

After debuting for the St George Illawarra Dragons in 2005 and enjoying 47 first grade games, Payne was moved on. Not for any particular reason, there were simply players ahead of him in the pecking order.

Wests Tigers coach Tim Sheens quickly snapped him knowing exactly what he was going to get. That’s all coaches ever want.

So it came as no surprise that the Canterbury Bulldogs came calling in 2010. Payne should have always been a Bulldog. Chester Hill is the same club that brought us the greatest Bulldog of them all, Terry Lamb.

But Payne isn’t just a footballer.

The Bulldog is currently enrolled in a Master of Commerce at the University of Sydney. During his time at the University, Payne has created the Future Direction Network (FDN), an organisation which encourages students from South-West Sydney to pursue higher education by offering them mentoring, career advice and support to find and apply for scholarships.

Payne told Sydney.edu.au how grateful he is.

“A lot of kids in the west think a place like Sydney University is for other people, not for them,” he said.

“The natural progression is to leave school, get a job and start contributing to the family. But that’s a short-term gain. We’re so lucky here.

“There are support networks available, scholarships available. And that’s where the University of Sydney’s disadvantaged students alumni funds really help.”

Payne donates his own money to the FDN scholarship fund every month.

“It is my belief that society is diminished when anyone of us is denied a proper education,” he said.

“That’s why the scholarship fund is so important. For me it’s a chance to give something back to the community that gave me so much and I hope to continue it for the rest of my life.”

Payne runs out on Sunday in Mudgee in his first City Origin jersey. It may or may not be his last, but does it really matter? Payne’s aspirations go a little higher than a City Origin jumper.

Some people are just winners. But that doesn’t come without hard work. Payne is a winner because he works harder than most.

The Crowd Says:

2012-04-23T02:15:49+00:00

Luc

Guest


Good to see a player like Corey Payne getting the credit he deserves, but does not seek. It is such a shame that players of his character and achievement are not highlighted more by the NRL. Their All-Academic team rated barely a mention when it was announced last year. My dream is for the NRL pre-season to be characterised in the future with stories of which player has graduated from university with the best marks rather than another scandal. Corey Payne is an example to all of us, not just other NRL players. As one who has benefitted from the powers of education, I appalud him for his efforts to in this area. A quality piece Curtis! Cheers

AUTHOR

2012-04-19T00:41:30+00:00

Curtis Woodward

Expert


You cant tell me his form hasnt spiked since signing with the Dogs?

2012-04-18T07:43:21+00:00

Blazza

Guest


Doesn't mean he deserves to be there. He is just one of a handful of players that gets thrown into this meaningless game every year because there isn't anyone else.

AUTHOR

2012-04-18T06:49:26+00:00

Curtis Woodward

Expert


Have to disagree mate. I love the way he plays.

2012-04-18T04:54:56+00:00

B.A Sports


Payne is in the grand final for the worst players to ever be selected to play "rep football". The reason there were other players in the pecking order when he was at the Draongs was because he wasn't that good. He is an average back rower who makes far too many mistakes pushing the pass. His fitness is below average, hence he is always off the bench and his tackling has always been questionable having knocked himself out several times. Good luck to him with his off field ventures. Its good to see a player trying to better themselves, but a representative football player he is not.

2012-04-18T04:37:08+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Payne does have a bit of razzle to his game - watch for some of his offloads in the middle of the ruck with defenders on him. Barba shodows him every time he hits it up and they scored a few tries from it last year. One of the few true ball playing forwards in the NRL. People that say City v Country is meaningless should ask players like Payne what they think of it...

2012-04-18T03:48:17+00:00

Tim S

Guest


Good read as ussual Curt Payne definetely no nonsense bloke who deserves a crack

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