During his first month in New Zealand, Roy Krishna spent much of his time crying alone in his room. Eleven years on, he departs New Zealand as Oceania's most lethal footballer, having earned a multi-year contract worth several hundred thousand dollars a season at an as yet unconfirmed Asian club.
Brought to Waitakere United in 2008 by Rex Dawkins as a raw 19-year-old, homesickness enveloped the young Fijian as he adjusted to being away from family for the first time.
But year after prolific year at National League level saw Krishna signed by the Wellington Phoenix as an injury replacement for club legend Paul Ifill in January 2014. He's spent the past five years overtaking Ifill's club scoring record, growing from a shy but potentially brilliant player into a confident leader and consummate professional. And in 2018-19, he went from good to great as an A-League striker.
Challenged by Mark Rudan to change some off-field habits, tweak small yet crucial parts of his game and have his best season, Krishna delivered probably beyond even the wildest expectations of his coach.
Nineteen goals delivered Wellington back to the A-League playoffs for the first time in four seasons and earned Krishna the Johnny Warren Medal for the competition's best player.