At the age of 5 I was excessively hyper-active and more than just a little rebellious. Not the sweet and innocent angel I look in the photo. When I arrived at home after having endured another tedious Sunday school session, I met my neighbour Alf Whimshurst
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who promised my mother he would take me to hockey the following week.
The plan was that I would come back exhausted and be less of a pain around the house. Well the plan almost worked, he did take me to hockey, but I came back with even more energy than before. It was so much fun, I loved it. The name of the club was O.P.C.S. and was based in Portsmouth where I grew up.
So a stick was cut down to my size and a ball issued to me that I could practice with, which was not the most thought out plan, as I was already breaking more than my fair share of windows with just a soft tennis ball!
Well I practiced and practiced and got more addicted every time I had a stick in my hands. My dad got involved and as the weeks went by, more and more of the neighbourhood kids started to play. The lure of a free mars bar and can of coke seem to hasten their interest to join the club.
After a while we had grown to over 50 players and had a thriving junior section. We held lots of fund raising events, the best of which was when my dad organised a cabaret evening, with the stars of the show, the mini player’s themselves. It’s a good job I was a good hockey player, I clearly had no future on the stage!!
In 1983 I won my first award, O.P.C.S. mini colt player of the year. It was such an amazing feeling when I won that award, I smiled the whole evening. The trophy sits just as proud next to my two European Cup Medals I won with England.
That year at the age of 10 I went for my first county trial, Hampshire under 14’s. I was baby-sat by a player who was to become a huge hero of mine, even to this day, Russell Garcia. I wasn’t to get the chance to play for Hampshire until the following year. Russell had moved on by then and was only 4 years away from becoming the youngest ever winner of an Olympic Hockey Gold medal.
I went on to play for Hampshire at all ages, and represented the South-West of England, winning the Under 14 and 18 divisional tournaments along the way. In 1989 though, it was time to move on, I wanted to play for England, but my career had hit a plateau, I needed to move to a bigger club.