Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

King: Every player should have a back-up

Ebbsfleet

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Ebbsfleet United’s departed captain Jack King starts a new chapter in his life this week as he returns to the building site. With uncertaint­y over when non-league football will resume again, now was the right time for King to start a new career, one he has been working towards for some time. Having that plan B in his life is something he feels all footballer­s should have. King, 34, announced his retirement earlier this month and said: “With the league so uncertain and with a lot of clubs tightening their purse strings it is going to be tough for a lot of footballer­s out there.

“In the lower leagues you are not earning the sort of money so you can have time off, the majority of footballer­s at this level live month to month and it is not easy. I have experience­d that in football. “People see the Premier League and the Championsh­ip players earning thousands a week but it’s not like that in League 1 and 2 and the National League. It is going to be tough for a lot of players and I do feel for them but I have always said to everyone I have spoken to, just make sure you have got a back up, because you never know what it going to happen. If you have nothing it is going to be tough. “You never know what could happen, you are only always one game or one training session from your career ending. Touch wood I have been lucky with injuries. I only had one major one that affected me, but it can end any time.

“I was lucky that my dad had his business running and he has done well with it. I have always had that fall back which I am grateful for.” The family business, run by his dad and uncle, is one King has often turned to. During his part-time playing days he would help out and he would be back learning the trade in the groundwork business during the off-season too. Keeping a hand in for all of those years means he’s now confident to start a new job full-time.

He said: “It is the start of a fairly new beginning but it is something I have always had an eye on, it hasn’t come out of the blue, it was just about when the time was right and I felt that the end of this season was the right time.

“My dad and uncle own it together, they are both getting further down the line, they both want to put their feet up abitmoreno­wandsoitis­just the right time really for me to move on and start working and for them to take a bit more of a back seat.

“My dad has been doing it since he left school at about the age of 18, he’s earned his rest.”

The project he’s now working on is to develop high-end housing near to his home in Oxford.

“There is quite a bit for me to learn,” he said. “Things change and I haven’t done it for the last eight or nine years now and I will be getting my hands dirty to start with.”

Fleet boss Kevin Watson tried to get his skipper to change his mind on retirement but the decision was made and he wasn’t budging.

He said: “It is uncertain times for everyone but it has probably pushed me more the other way because it is probably more uncertain times for football clubs than it is for the building game. It is probably an ideal time in that sense.

“We might not be seeing nonleague football until 2021 and especially for out of contract players it is tough, nobody is going to be signing players when they don’t know what is going to be happening with the seasons.

“The gaffer said he would really like me at the club and if something pops up to let him know, which was obviously nice to hear. I had a good relationsh­ip with the gaffer, we spoke pretty openly which was good, but I thought the timing was right and once you make a decision like that, it is best to stick with it.” King admits it’s been a rollercoas­ter two years with Fleet, skippering a side who have been making headlines for what’s been happening off the field as much as on it. Just over a year ago was the infamous game against Wrexham where the team refused to warm up in protest over unpaid wages. They played the game though, were 3-0 up at the break, and won 4-2. It was a tense day and King recalled it.

“There was never a danger of us not playing,” he said. “That would have been in breach of our contracts.

“We were fully aware of our rights and what we could and couldn’t do but we felt at the time that we needed to make a stand and that’s what we went with. It worked out well! “I have never experience­d anything like it. I was captain on the day and I remember the gaffer saying, ‘get yourselves out and warm up’, I said ‘gaffer, we’re not going out.’ It wasn’t the kind of conversati­on I would like again in a work place but he understood. He was in the same situation as us and it was difficult times for everyone. “It got cleared up and sorted and we moved on. These things happen.

“When I came into the club I was pretty blind. I spoke to Matty Godden (former Fleet player now at Coventry) and he sang the praises of the club. I had a good relationsh­ip with Daryl Mcmahon (the former Fleet boss who signed him) and I got good reports. “We had a few problems off the pitch last season which were well documented so it has been tough in that sense.”

 ?? Picture: Matthew Walker ?? Jack King in action for Ebbsfleet United at Stonebridg­e Road
Picture: Matthew Walker Jack King in action for Ebbsfleet United at Stonebridg­e Road

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