Daily Express

My mum used to beat me – now it is my duty to give back and help kids build self-belief

- By Gareth Walker

WHEN Kevin Larroyer stands before young rugby league players to talk about mental health, he has a jaw-dropping level of experience to call on.

The French internatio­nal and Halifax forward was beaten by his mother and grew up under the care of social services before sport gave him an outlet that led to a profession­al career.

But once there, he had a Super League contract cancelled just days after buying a house and with a newborn baby to look after. After earning a chance with Castleford Tigers, he was then handed the shattering news that his sister had taken her own life.

Now 32, Larroyer is one of a group of players providing advice to youngsters as part of Movember’s Ahead of the Game programme, delivered by player welfare charity Rugby League Cares.

Their work is featured on a documentar­y on Sky Sports tomorrow, in which Larroyer lays out his remarkable life story in detail.

“As far as I can remember I always had mental health symptoms,” he explained. “I couldn’t really find a place, a home. I didn’t feel I was loved.

“My mum never really gave me any affection and that’s something I suffer with. I was always a liability for her.

“She used to beat me up quite often and I used to go to school with bruises. I used to say I’d fallen over.

“But one day I had one or two teeth missing. I came back from school one night and my dad was there, my mum, and two people that I didn’t know. They were telling me that tonight I wasn’t going to sleep at home.

“I was six, my little sister was three, and I had loads of question marks about why I was being taken away but my sister could stay with my mum and dad. I had to sleep in a bedroom with 12 others in bunk beds.

“In those kind of places there is no place for showing emotion or feelings. You have to learn to grow a thick skin. Rugby has always been my exit door, a place I’ve felt valued.”

Even that brought its own shattering moments, though, including being told his contract at Hull KR was no longer valid following their relegation in 2016.

After training on his own, he earned a trial and subsequent deal at Castleford. Larroyer said: “In my first week at Cas, I received a call from home telling me that my sister had taken her own life. That was tough because a year before that, she tried, and my mistake was coming back and thinking she was fine.

“A year after, that happened, and I felt like a bad big brother because I hadn’t checked up on her. My sister has been a big factor in becoming involved with Ahead of the Game, but also it was the fact that when I’ve been in a hole, people have been reaching out to me.

“Being a dad, I don’t want my son to experience even one percent of what I experience­d as a child. I don’t want any other child to feel unloved and useless – and I want to help those kids build up their self-belief.”

To learn more about Movember’s work in mental health or sign up to this year’s fundraisin­g campaign visit www.movember.com

I would go to school with bruises

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 ?? ?? HEAD OF THE CLASS: Larroyer talking to kids, playing for Hull KR, right, and France, below
HEAD OF THE CLASS: Larroyer talking to kids, playing for Hull KR, right, and France, below

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