England hooker Thompson desperate to grab second chance

Wed Nov 4, 2009 4:24pm GMT
 

By Mitch Phillips

BAGSHOT, England (Reuters) - Three years ago, and three years after helping England win the World Cup, hooker Steve Thompson's rugby career was over. At 28 he was forced by a neck injury to give up the game he loved and excelled in.

He took a hefty insurance payment, drowned his sorrows, and saw his weight balloon as he took his first, tentative steps towards a coaching career.

Yet on Saturday, in one of the most unlikely and uplifting comebacks in sport, he will run out to face Australia at Twickenham as, once again, England's starting hooker.

It will be his first start since the 2006 Six Nations and though he made a cameo two-minute appearance off the bench against Argentina in June, it will be a special moment.

"It was my target always. That was my whole reason for coming back, to try to play for England again, to play at the highest level or there's no point coming back," Thompson told reporters on Wednesday.

"But the way it's happened in the last couple of weeks, it's sort of taken me by surprise. It's a different feeling, it's like winning your first cap again really. I am nervous but I know what to expect from the whole day."

It is a very different attitude to when he was first told it was all over, the bad medical news coming after a slide in form that had seen him toppled from being one of the best hookers in the world to the periphery of the England squad.

"As soon as I was told I couldn't play again it think it was a bit of a relief," he said. "I thought I'd never say that but that was just what it had come to."  Continued...

Photo
Photo
Life with the lions

Kenya’s Maasai warriors are known for being fearless lion killers but times have changed and the country’s lion’s population is in danger of being wiped out. Now the Maasai in southern Kenya are taking part in an initiative to preserve the big cats.  Blog 

 
Photo
Is an independent south Sudan now inevitable?

So, is it now inevitable that Sudan’s oil-producing south will decide to split away from the north as an independent country in a looming secession referendum in 2011?  Blog 

 
Photo
Do Ethiopia’s politicians mean it on democracy?

On the evening of the 20th of March 1878, Ethiopia’s two great rivals, Emperors Yohannes IV and Menelik II, came face-to-face to thrash out their differences.  Blog 

 
Photo
The African brain drain

Africa is suffering from a massive brain drain and it’s questionable whether enough of those highly motivated students studying in America will return home in large enough numbers to really make a difference...  Blog 

 
Photo
Is Sudan’s Darfur crisis getting too much attention?

Activists often say that the world is not paying enough attention to Sudan’s Darfur crisis. But could the opposite be true?   Blog 

 
Photo
Vatican synod urges corrupt African leaders to quit

Roman Catholic bishops called on corrupt Catholic leaders in Africa on Friday to repent or resign for giving the continent and the Church a bad name.  Blog