i got a message from sharda ugra, who's a journalist the afghanistan women's cricket players and i said, "look, i don't." "and just seeing if they're 0k?" "do you need to get out?" very keen to look at any way possible of getting out. and then it just snowballed from there. "i have absolutely no idea what i'm doing here," butj of where she was in pakistan and we'd organised a car, a driver, what's happening behind - and what they've left behind. survivor's guilt. once the players had safely reached australian soil, used their own money to reunite the group. overwhelming moment. the big one for us was getting the group together, once they got here to australia as well. so, that was another process in terms of getting all the melbourne girls up to canberra, which was one of the most magical days. no amount of money is going to, you know, coverjust the sheer joy it was to see the group reunited and just to hear their stories about how they've managed to sort of land and things like that. reaching australia was just the first challenge. the players had to learn english, find education and j