Twenty-three minutes to go until I set off for the Alexandra Hospital in Cheadle, and into the care of Adam Hoad-Reddick.
I'm not sure how I'd have felt when, with twenty-three minutes to go, Peter Withe scored for Villa against Bayern Munich in the 1982 European Cup Final. It's likely to have been a mix of nerves and excitement. Exactly like now. I probably wouldn't have been hungry then, though, which I very much am now. At least I can eat after the operation, if we're looking for bright spots!
The bag's packed, the scene is set and I'm pretty much ready to roll now. I didn't know how I'd feel, and still don't now really. A mix of jetlag from last week's two day California trip and nerves meant I was eating Alpen at 2.30am this morning. Wonder what culinary delights await me post-op?
One thing's for sure, though. I'm going into hospital as someone who can never play football again and I'll be coming out as someone in rehab, in the hope of playing my next game as soon as I can. That's got to be a great result in anybody's eyes.
Anyway, the clock's ticking. I'll be back soon with my post-match report...
Showing posts with label Aston Villa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aston Villa. Show all posts
Monday, 5 September 2011
Thursday, 4 August 2011
They think it's all over...
That was a blatant kick in the arse and the referee hasn't even blown! Unbelievable! In the meantime I'm rolling on the floor in agony.
It's early on in the match, probably no more than about fifteen minutes on the clock, and I've got a sight on goal about 25 yards out. I'm running diagonally to my right, from left of centre, with the last central defender my only obstacle. Apart from the goalkeeper, but I don't usually worry about them. They're just a minor distraction. Just outside the box and with the goal now slightly to my left I pull back my right foot and strike across myself powerfully, with a solid connection on the ball. The central defender had closed me down well, though, and blocked the shot just as I connected. It would've been like kicking one of those atlas balls that the fat lads carry every Christmas on "World's Strongest Man". The pain is excruciating.
But the source of my agony wasn't in my foot or ankle, it was directly under my right butt cheek at the top of my hamstring. It felt like a midfielder had chased me down from behind and belted me in the arse just as hard as I'd been looking to hammer that shot at goal. There was no whistle. There was no midfielder. Just me, on the floor for seemingly no reason, rolling around like Cristiano Ronaldo under artillery fire.
Today, August 4th 2011, I received my letter from the Alexandra Hospital in Cheadle confirming my admission for surgery in a month's time. It's got some forms for me to fill in so I can tell them I don't have a pacemaker and I'm not HIV positive or allergic to plasters, and it also has three booklets - "Preparing for your stay", "Reducing the risk of blood clots" and "Your guide to pain control". I could've done with the last one 18 years ago to be honest, but better late than never. Either way, I certainly never envisaged this would be the outcome, and so long after what, in my head, had been a kick up the arse.
I got back to the changing rooms, which were so far away from the pitch itself I could barely see what was going on through the barred window, and felt guilty. I couldn't understand why I was in so much pain. I felt that I was letting my team mates down, and also wondered if people thought I was really injured. It had been so innocuous. After the match finished I climbed into my Dad's car and slid the passenger seat back as far as it would go. I couldn't put any weight on my right side and needed to keep my leg straight. And just as the changing rooms were miles from the pitch so the pitch itself was miles from home. About a 40 minute drive if memory serves me correctly. Which it possibly doesn't as it was so long ago...
At home I took a hot bath to ease the pain but to no avail. Mom (no spelling error, that's what us Brummies call our mothers) had her usual amazing Sunday lunch ready for us but I still couldn't sit so ate it standing up at the window ledge. Something really wasn't right so Dad took me to the casualty department at Good Hope Hospital in Sutton Coldfield. It's usually a very good hospital but in hindsight there was very little in the way of hope on this occasion. A long wait followed by a brief examination and I was told that I had pulled my hamstring and would be playing football again in about 6 weeks, after some rest. That's alright then. That's a proper footballer's injury anyway. I don't feel so bad about limping off after 15 mins now.
Despite a few days off school, barely able to walk (something I'll be repeating after the operation, no doubt) I was still in a lot of pain. A few weeks later and still unable to do any sport without severe discomfort I went to see my GP who referred me back to Good Hope for physio. Over the course of 3 months I had assorted treatment including ultrasound, repeated stretching and (this is the most unpleasant one) deep massage. It was the most unpleasant because since the start I'd described my discomfort as "like sitting on a golf ball". The massage was to "straighten out the pulled muscle", it being contracted and grouped up seemingly the cause of my pain.
Except it wasn't a pulled muscle at all. It wasn't even muscle that the physio was pummeling back into shape on a weekly basis, much to my chagrin. It was bone. Broken bone. An "avulsion fracture of the ischial tuberosity" as Dr Plewes told me when it was finally diagnosed some 13 (thirteen) months after the initial incident.
Many complaints to my GP hadn't worked. It took ages to break him down and have him refer me after the physiotherapy failed. Similarly my school offered little (mostly no) sympathy. I was pretty good at rugby but hated it. Hockey too. I'd been in trouble before after being selected to play for the school on a Saturday morning but opting to play parks league football and then go to Villa Park instead. At a grammar school you're not allowed to "opt" when it comes to rugby. So by being out injured for over a year with a "pulled hamstring" a few teachers thought I was "opting out". My school report even described me as "a willing non-participant". Cheers for that.
I don't suppose my old games teacher (I'll spare your name but you'll know who you are) is reading this now, but just on the off chance - you've got no idea how much that hurt me. I wanted nothing more than to be able to do sport again. The pain of not being able to play was more than the pain of the injury itself. And you said I was a "willing non-participant". You wrote it on my school report and signed your name next to it. You, and others at the school, didn't believe me. I've still got the report now, and although I've move onwards and upwards I can still remember how it felt to read that. I was heartbroken.
Mr Plewes believed me though. He sent me upstairs for an x-ray. I can recall the radiographer saying they were going to get an image of my pelvis and my reply that they should check as it was a pulled hamstring. Except it wasn't, was it. It was an avulsion fracture of the right ischial tuberosity. Imagine your skeleton, and the area at the base of your spine. The little round bones either side of that, the bones you sit on, they're your left and right ischial tuberosity. They are what your hamstring attaches to, and as my hamstrings were stronger than my bones (too much sport too young perhaps?), what would have likely been a pulled hamstring in an adult actually saw the muscle tear a lump of bone away from it's normal home. That would be the golf ball I was sitting on in my description to the medical professionals whom I was trying to convince that my hamstring wasn't pulled. The golf ball I still sit on to this day.
It was Mr Plewes, too, who delivered the news that I would likely never play competitive football again. At fourteen years of age (nearly fifteen - it's important when you're growing up) I would likely never play competitive football again. The bone fragment should have reattached itself by now, really. The only course of treatment at this stage was a steroid injection into my hamstring. This would inflate the muscle and push the bone back into place in the hope it would knit back together whilst it was there. It was as painful as it sounds and it didn't work. With an attractive student nurse in the cubicle too (just to add to my dismay) I lay with my boxers round my knees and had the agonizing, fruitless treatment that would ultimately signal the end of all of my childhood footballing dreams.
Villa were to play (and beat) Manchester United at Wembley in the Coca Cola Cup Final in a few weeks time and kit suppliers Asics had released a special edition shirt to mark the occasion/make a few extra quid. So on the way home from the hospital Dad took me to Villa Park to get one - a scant consolation for my devastating news, but something I could wear with pride as I limped down Wembley Way.
Looking back it was kind of ironic that my placebo was a football shirt. On the day that my dreams of wearing one for a living ended it's possible that the seed of designing them for a living was planted instead...
So now we know what the injury is, my next couple of blogs will talk about how I felt over the years of being an unwilling non-participant, my attempt to seek justice for so many misdiagnoses in the days before "no win, no fee", and how I wound up designing a football shirt that would be worn by Fabio Cannavaro as he fulfilled my childhood dream.
It's not all comic book stuff, but there might just be a Roy of the Rovers ending yet.
It's early on in the match, probably no more than about fifteen minutes on the clock, and I've got a sight on goal about 25 yards out. I'm running diagonally to my right, from left of centre, with the last central defender my only obstacle. Apart from the goalkeeper, but I don't usually worry about them. They're just a minor distraction. Just outside the box and with the goal now slightly to my left I pull back my right foot and strike across myself powerfully, with a solid connection on the ball. The central defender had closed me down well, though, and blocked the shot just as I connected. It would've been like kicking one of those atlas balls that the fat lads carry every Christmas on "World's Strongest Man". The pain is excruciating.
But the source of my agony wasn't in my foot or ankle, it was directly under my right butt cheek at the top of my hamstring. It felt like a midfielder had chased me down from behind and belted me in the arse just as hard as I'd been looking to hammer that shot at goal. There was no whistle. There was no midfielder. Just me, on the floor for seemingly no reason, rolling around like Cristiano Ronaldo under artillery fire.
Today, August 4th 2011, I received my letter from the Alexandra Hospital in Cheadle confirming my admission for surgery in a month's time. It's got some forms for me to fill in so I can tell them I don't have a pacemaker and I'm not HIV positive or allergic to plasters, and it also has three booklets - "Preparing for your stay", "Reducing the risk of blood clots" and "Your guide to pain control". I could've done with the last one 18 years ago to be honest, but better late than never. Either way, I certainly never envisaged this would be the outcome, and so long after what, in my head, had been a kick up the arse.
I got back to the changing rooms, which were so far away from the pitch itself I could barely see what was going on through the barred window, and felt guilty. I couldn't understand why I was in so much pain. I felt that I was letting my team mates down, and also wondered if people thought I was really injured. It had been so innocuous. After the match finished I climbed into my Dad's car and slid the passenger seat back as far as it would go. I couldn't put any weight on my right side and needed to keep my leg straight. And just as the changing rooms were miles from the pitch so the pitch itself was miles from home. About a 40 minute drive if memory serves me correctly. Which it possibly doesn't as it was so long ago...
At home I took a hot bath to ease the pain but to no avail. Mom (no spelling error, that's what us Brummies call our mothers) had her usual amazing Sunday lunch ready for us but I still couldn't sit so ate it standing up at the window ledge. Something really wasn't right so Dad took me to the casualty department at Good Hope Hospital in Sutton Coldfield. It's usually a very good hospital but in hindsight there was very little in the way of hope on this occasion. A long wait followed by a brief examination and I was told that I had pulled my hamstring and would be playing football again in about 6 weeks, after some rest. That's alright then. That's a proper footballer's injury anyway. I don't feel so bad about limping off after 15 mins now.
Despite a few days off school, barely able to walk (something I'll be repeating after the operation, no doubt) I was still in a lot of pain. A few weeks later and still unable to do any sport without severe discomfort I went to see my GP who referred me back to Good Hope for physio. Over the course of 3 months I had assorted treatment including ultrasound, repeated stretching and (this is the most unpleasant one) deep massage. It was the most unpleasant because since the start I'd described my discomfort as "like sitting on a golf ball". The massage was to "straighten out the pulled muscle", it being contracted and grouped up seemingly the cause of my pain.
Except it wasn't a pulled muscle at all. It wasn't even muscle that the physio was pummeling back into shape on a weekly basis, much to my chagrin. It was bone. Broken bone. An "avulsion fracture of the ischial tuberosity" as Dr Plewes told me when it was finally diagnosed some 13 (thirteen) months after the initial incident.
Many complaints to my GP hadn't worked. It took ages to break him down and have him refer me after the physiotherapy failed. Similarly my school offered little (mostly no) sympathy. I was pretty good at rugby but hated it. Hockey too. I'd been in trouble before after being selected to play for the school on a Saturday morning but opting to play parks league football and then go to Villa Park instead. At a grammar school you're not allowed to "opt" when it comes to rugby. So by being out injured for over a year with a "pulled hamstring" a few teachers thought I was "opting out". My school report even described me as "a willing non-participant". Cheers for that.
I don't suppose my old games teacher (I'll spare your name but you'll know who you are) is reading this now, but just on the off chance - you've got no idea how much that hurt me. I wanted nothing more than to be able to do sport again. The pain of not being able to play was more than the pain of the injury itself. And you said I was a "willing non-participant". You wrote it on my school report and signed your name next to it. You, and others at the school, didn't believe me. I've still got the report now, and although I've move onwards and upwards I can still remember how it felt to read that. I was heartbroken.
Mr Plewes believed me though. He sent me upstairs for an x-ray. I can recall the radiographer saying they were going to get an image of my pelvis and my reply that they should check as it was a pulled hamstring. Except it wasn't, was it. It was an avulsion fracture of the right ischial tuberosity. Imagine your skeleton, and the area at the base of your spine. The little round bones either side of that, the bones you sit on, they're your left and right ischial tuberosity. They are what your hamstring attaches to, and as my hamstrings were stronger than my bones (too much sport too young perhaps?), what would have likely been a pulled hamstring in an adult actually saw the muscle tear a lump of bone away from it's normal home. That would be the golf ball I was sitting on in my description to the medical professionals whom I was trying to convince that my hamstring wasn't pulled. The golf ball I still sit on to this day.
It was Mr Plewes, too, who delivered the news that I would likely never play competitive football again. At fourteen years of age (nearly fifteen - it's important when you're growing up) I would likely never play competitive football again. The bone fragment should have reattached itself by now, really. The only course of treatment at this stage was a steroid injection into my hamstring. This would inflate the muscle and push the bone back into place in the hope it would knit back together whilst it was there. It was as painful as it sounds and it didn't work. With an attractive student nurse in the cubicle too (just to add to my dismay) I lay with my boxers round my knees and had the agonizing, fruitless treatment that would ultimately signal the end of all of my childhood footballing dreams.
Villa were to play (and beat) Manchester United at Wembley in the Coca Cola Cup Final in a few weeks time and kit suppliers Asics had released a special edition shirt to mark the occasion/make a few extra quid. So on the way home from the hospital Dad took me to Villa Park to get one - a scant consolation for my devastating news, but something I could wear with pride as I limped down Wembley Way.
Looking back it was kind of ironic that my placebo was a football shirt. On the day that my dreams of wearing one for a living ended it's possible that the seed of designing them for a living was planted instead...
So now we know what the injury is, my next couple of blogs will talk about how I felt over the years of being an unwilling non-participant, my attempt to seek justice for so many misdiagnoses in the days before "no win, no fee", and how I wound up designing a football shirt that would be worn by Fabio Cannavaro as he fulfilled my childhood dream.
It's not all comic book stuff, but there might just be a Roy of the Rovers ending yet.
Sunday, 31 July 2011
He's gone down, but it doesn't look too bad...
I can't remember the exact date. It was too long ago, and I was too young. It was an innocuous injury anyway, right? Nothing worth remembering. Just a knock, a blip on the season. I'd gone down heavily but there'd been no contact. At first glance it didn't look too bad.
It was 1993, I was 14 and it was cold. At a guess I'd put it at February. We'd had a few matches cancelled in January and from memory the pitch, away from home and somewhere in Staffordshire, was still frosted when we kicked off. I was in pretty good form at the time, having scored something like 8 goals in 11 games prior to that day. That would qualify as better than "pretty good" in the analysis of most striker's statistics but I'd ended the previous season with 34 from 13 matches so the move up in age groups had impeded the goal ratio a touch.
I loved scoring goals, and I'd always been drawn to goalscorers when watching football on television. I enjoyed flair players - Baggio, Gascoigne, Hagi, Diego Armando Maradona - but the ones who really captured my imagination were the ones who scored goals. Steve Bull, limited but lethal; Alan McInally, powerful and instinctive; Toto Scillaci, the proverbial fox in the box; and Emilio Butragueño, the vulture. There were others - Lineker, Klinsmann, Völler, the list could go on. I'd certainly never dare to think I might have reached the standard of some of these guys but in my head, aged 14 and wearing my first pair of adidas football boots, that's what I aspired to be.
During the long and painful limp back to the changing rooms, and it felt like miles, I couldn't possibly have imagined that my road to recovery would have no end in sight until 2011. I'd have thought you were mad to have even suggested it.
But thirteen months after the initial injury, at the beginning of March 1994 and just a few weeks before my beloved Aston Villa were due to play the mighty Manchester United at Wembley, I was told I'd never play competitively again. Never. At 14 years of age. That was it.
I'd never really thought I was going to be picked up by Villa, work my way through the ranks and break into the first team before scoring in front of the Holte End on my début. Furthermore I hadn't entertained the idea of eventually being picked for England, rifling home an injury time equaliser from a drilled John Barnes cross and successfully converting my penalty in the subsequent shootout, enabling me to stand next to Tony Adams as he hoisted the trophy aloft.
Who am I kidding? Of course I had! Apart from maybe the part about England winning a trophy on penalties against the Germans. Somebody would've missed theirs before I even got the chance to take mine, and that's assuming an England team containing the likes of Geoff Thomas and Carlton Palmer would even have qualified for a finals, let alone go all the way.
But in March 1994 I had to let go of those dreams, give up the dressing room camaraderie and the smell of spirit liniment and resign myself to a life not just devoid of football but sport as a whole. In February of 2011, though, an orthopaedic surgeon by the name of Adam Hoad-Reddick gave me new hope. A super-specialist in lower limb injuries with an office full of shirts signed by elite athletes whose career he has extended or saved, Mr Hoad-Reddick believes he can fix what has been wrong for so many years and get me back onto a football pitch. It won't be John Barnes crossing the ball, and it won't be the final of an international tournament, but rifling a football into the back of a net is the dream I can reignite and will be the sharp focus in my mind as I rehabilitate from my planned surgery on September 5th.
This blog will tell my story around how the injury occurred, the aftermath of misdiagnosis, incorrect treatment and the effect it had on myself and those around me, and the impact it's had on my broader life both negatively (loss of confidence and general health in equal measures) and positively (my desire to kit out athletes in the best product possible and the life/career that has brought me).
As my operation gets closer (it's just five weeks away now) I'll go through how I feel and what my hopes and expectations are; and post-operation I'll document my rehabilitation through every stage from emerging out of the anaesthetic chrysalis to spreading my wings onto a pitch for the first time in nearly twenty years and eventually, hopefully, surely scoring that goal that I've been so desperate to score for so, so many years.
I hope you'll join me on the journey. It'll make the Road to Wembley seem like a stroll in the park.
It was 1993, I was 14 and it was cold. At a guess I'd put it at February. We'd had a few matches cancelled in January and from memory the pitch, away from home and somewhere in Staffordshire, was still frosted when we kicked off. I was in pretty good form at the time, having scored something like 8 goals in 11 games prior to that day. That would qualify as better than "pretty good" in the analysis of most striker's statistics but I'd ended the previous season with 34 from 13 matches so the move up in age groups had impeded the goal ratio a touch.
I loved scoring goals, and I'd always been drawn to goalscorers when watching football on television. I enjoyed flair players - Baggio, Gascoigne, Hagi, Diego Armando Maradona - but the ones who really captured my imagination were the ones who scored goals. Steve Bull, limited but lethal; Alan McInally, powerful and instinctive; Toto Scillaci, the proverbial fox in the box; and Emilio Butragueño, the vulture. There were others - Lineker, Klinsmann, Völler, the list could go on. I'd certainly never dare to think I might have reached the standard of some of these guys but in my head, aged 14 and wearing my first pair of adidas football boots, that's what I aspired to be.
During the long and painful limp back to the changing rooms, and it felt like miles, I couldn't possibly have imagined that my road to recovery would have no end in sight until 2011. I'd have thought you were mad to have even suggested it.
But thirteen months after the initial injury, at the beginning of March 1994 and just a few weeks before my beloved Aston Villa were due to play the mighty Manchester United at Wembley, I was told I'd never play competitively again. Never. At 14 years of age. That was it.
I'd never really thought I was going to be picked up by Villa, work my way through the ranks and break into the first team before scoring in front of the Holte End on my début. Furthermore I hadn't entertained the idea of eventually being picked for England, rifling home an injury time equaliser from a drilled John Barnes cross and successfully converting my penalty in the subsequent shootout, enabling me to stand next to Tony Adams as he hoisted the trophy aloft.
Who am I kidding? Of course I had! Apart from maybe the part about England winning a trophy on penalties against the Germans. Somebody would've missed theirs before I even got the chance to take mine, and that's assuming an England team containing the likes of Geoff Thomas and Carlton Palmer would even have qualified for a finals, let alone go all the way.
But in March 1994 I had to let go of those dreams, give up the dressing room camaraderie and the smell of spirit liniment and resign myself to a life not just devoid of football but sport as a whole. In February of 2011, though, an orthopaedic surgeon by the name of Adam Hoad-Reddick gave me new hope. A super-specialist in lower limb injuries with an office full of shirts signed by elite athletes whose career he has extended or saved, Mr Hoad-Reddick believes he can fix what has been wrong for so many years and get me back onto a football pitch. It won't be John Barnes crossing the ball, and it won't be the final of an international tournament, but rifling a football into the back of a net is the dream I can reignite and will be the sharp focus in my mind as I rehabilitate from my planned surgery on September 5th.
This blog will tell my story around how the injury occurred, the aftermath of misdiagnosis, incorrect treatment and the effect it had on myself and those around me, and the impact it's had on my broader life both negatively (loss of confidence and general health in equal measures) and positively (my desire to kit out athletes in the best product possible and the life/career that has brought me).
As my operation gets closer (it's just five weeks away now) I'll go through how I feel and what my hopes and expectations are; and post-operation I'll document my rehabilitation through every stage from emerging out of the anaesthetic chrysalis to spreading my wings onto a pitch for the first time in nearly twenty years and eventually, hopefully, surely scoring that goal that I've been so desperate to score for so, so many years.
I hope you'll join me on the journey. It'll make the Road to Wembley seem like a stroll in the park.
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