Grimsby Telegraph

England goalie and This Is England stars to open new sports zone

JORDAN PICKFORD AND THOMAS TURGOOSE WILL

- By PETER CRAIG peter.craig@reachplc.com @GTpetercra­ig

ENGLAND goalkeeper Jordan Pickford has been invited to Grimsby to be guest of honour for the opening of a new sports area.

Work on the new PlayZone in Grant Thorold Park, on Grimsby’s East Marsh is about to start. It will be run by The Shalom youth centre, said its founder, Canon John Ellis.

He told how the England star was chosen because he is “the double” of Grimsby’s own screen star Thomas Turgoose, who was a member of The Shalom youth club during his days growing up on the East Marsh. Jordan and Thomas are well known to one another through a bizarre invitation to a birthday party where Thomas pretended to be Jordan because of the uncanny likeness. The two look-alikes, one famous for his England goalkeeper shirt and the other who began his acting career with hit series This Is England, struck up a unique bond.

Canon John Ellis said he is looking forward to the PlayZone sports area being renovated over the summer. It will be managed by Shalom youth centre and include facilities for football and basketball.

He told Grimsby Live: “Thomas knows Jordan Pickford. He agreed to be a look-a-like for him if he made a donation to The Shalom, which we gratefully received. We are looking forward to having them both here when it opens later in the summer.” He added: “Thomas has been a great ambassador for us. I introduced him to Shane Meadows, the director of This is England when he came to us looking for young people to be in his film.

“We were a bit apprehensi­ve when the director came to us. The first thing Thomas said was no - because he was going fishing! But he hung around. Thomas went up to the director and said: “Are you running this thing? How much will you pay if I stick around to listen? A fiver?’”

John added: “So the director gave him £5 and asked him to be in an audition. Thomas told him he wasn’t planning on sticking around because he was off fishing. But he went anyway.”

The Grimsby actor has spoken about the support he received from Shalom and other agencies as he grew up. At a guest appearance at Grimsby NSPCC he said: “The reason I wanted to help the NSPCC is because me, my mum and my brothers all had visits from social workers and similar charities when we were growing up on the East Marsh.

“As a kid, I took that for granted, but now I feel like I owe it to them to help out now I’m an adult and a dad. “Seeing the hard work these people put into their day to day lives makes me appreciate all that help I had a little bit more.”

He added: “I was a little s*** at that age and people like the NSPCC were so helpful to us and I want to do anything I can to help.” Thomas, dad to Teddy, two, said: “I found it really special when I took Teddy to one of their events on the East Marsh. To see kids playing and enjoying themselves is great. It also helps kids to take pride in their area, which is something I wish I would’ve done when I was their age.” Canon Ellis said he is looking forward to the investment on Grant Thorold Park in the summer, which has been funded by The Premier League, The FA and the Football Foundation.

The PlayZone aim is to focus on funding community-led spaces, with an emphasis on refurbishe­d safe and accessible mini pitches that will allow priority groups to be more active. The Grant Thorold PlayZone multi-use games area (MUGA) will deliver the full refurbishm­ent of the existing tarmacked sports area in the park, and will ill include basasketba­ll hoops, ops, benches, goals, fencing and LED floodlight­ing. The focus is on areas where people may face barriers in being physically active, opportunit­ies for women and girls, and people with long-term health conditions and disabiliti­es.

A series of engagement exercises has helped the design process, such as surface type, line markings and equipment, and how the smaller details fit with the wider requiremen­ts of the project and community.

Dean Evison, PlayZone programme officer, said: “PlayZone will have line marking for football and basketball games, and we have also seen requests for other activities, like outdoor exercise classes.

“The PlayZone pitch is approximat­ely 30 by 20 metres, so not for f affiliated competitio competitio­ns. “The devel developmen­t is around supporting recreation­al football and a range of other sports.

“The idea is to get people into activities, and to engage the community. The emphasis is on ‘free to use’ community access, with a booking system to ensure fairness and safety. PlayZone will also offer the opportunit­y for more formal sessions to be held, where groups can book for a small fee.”

The project will be funded with 75 per cent of the total cost from the Football Foundation, with the remaining 25 per cent from NELC funding sources. This includes grant funding from the Safer Streets project.

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Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford
ALBERTO LINGRIA/ POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES d g. Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford
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