Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Fuller’s wife earns praise

- Bylukecawd­ell

There’s more than one hero in the Barry Fuller household. The Gillingham defender has twice captained winning teams at Wembley but his Nhs-working wife Laura is quite rightly getting the praise for her work too. She works in the maternity department at the William Harvey Hospital in Ashford. Fuller said: “It is hard for her, like it is for any NHS staff, key workers and care workers, they are going to work to save lives and help people. There is a risk they may come home and give something to their families and when people talk about heroes, that is what they are. “They are putting their own health at risk to help others, it is amazing and great that they are getting all the praise and the limelight.

“It is nice to see all of those workers getting the credit that they deserve, especially with the situation we are in at the minute, but we have taken our NHS for granted a bit. I think people appreciate how hard they work.” Despite the football shut down, there is no lack of action in the Fuller household, especially with a football crazy middle child. “I have played more football since I have been off than

I do normally,” said the 35-year-old father-of-three. “I might get to sit down and have a cup of tea and watch a programme but she will come in and say ‘come on Dad, the sun’s out, let’s get back out there!’

“They all watch these Youtube videos and stuff and go out and want to copy these skills. She has learned four or five new tricks that she can do quite comfortabl­y during this lockdown. She has been showing me how to do some of them!

“We have been doing some bits in the garden. You aren’t going to see any double step overs or anything from me when we come back but it is nice to have a feel of a football. It is nice to be able to do that in the garden, just to take your mind off what is going on and for them to take the mind off it too.” With children aged nine, 11 and 14, there is plenty of home schooling going on but Fuller readily admits it’s not his strong point.

“It isn’t really me to be honest,” he said. “Laura is really intelligen­t, she has been getting A stars since primary school. Academy wasn’t my strong point. “The odd days when I am doing it I swear I had never learned some of it. It has changed so much, it is crazy, but they can all help each other out too.”

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