Hull FC's Will Pryce feels he is a better player now than he was before his spell in Australia, despite admitting some may see his move as a "failure".
Pryce, 22, joined the Newcastle Knights from Huddersfield Giants in 2024 but was limited to just six games in the NRL before leaving on compassionate grounds earlier this year. A few days later, his move to Hull was confirmed, and he quickly made five Super League appearances before suffering a hamstring injury at the end of May.
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"Everything about Australia, I definitely miss it. I miss it a lot," Pryce told Sky Sports on The Bench podcast. "I think the lifestyle is great. I had some fantastic people around me. And I probably could have stayed and maybe hoped to get a few NRL games under my belt this year, and hoped if injuries went my way, I might have been playing.
"But when I sat and spoke to John (Cartwright, Hull head coach) and Richard (Myler, CEO), we just spoke about how invested they are in me to be a vital part of this team.
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"I think anyone can say, especially at my age now, I don't really want to be in and out of a team anymore. I want to try and play week in, week out at the professional level and prove that I can do it at that level.
"I obviously had an opportunity to stay in Newcastle. I had a couple of opportunities to maybe stay in Australia for a bit longer. But for me, it was about playing first-grade rugby, and Hull were keen on me getting here."
Pryce is set to miss Hull's next Super League game - which is live on Sky Sports+ against Huddersfield on Saturday from 3pm - but could return against Salford Red Devils next month. Whenever he next features, Pryce will be taking his lessons from Australia into it.
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"I feel like my expectations were to probably play a bit more NRL games than what I did, but now looking back on it, did I work hard enough to play them games? No," Pryce added.
"It wasn't until I started to put the graft in mid-year and started to work a bit harder, get fitter, stronger, put better performances together in reserve grade there that I earned the chance to play NRL.
"I'm really proud of the way I turned it around and worked a bit harder and took myself out of the comfort zone a bit. There's not many English lads that can say they've played in the NRL. Obviously some people can turn around and say it's a failure, and I've come home and I've not managed to stay out there.
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"But for me, I've learned so many life lessons. I've learned so many rugby lessons that I probably wouldn't have learned in England.
"The coaching I had in Newcastle from them coaches over there in Australia, you don't get that here. Young kids don't get that here. So going there at such a young age has put me in good stead, I'd say."
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