Sunday People

I wanted to enjoy a new culture... but doing a Leicester’ in Poland has been incredible

CREATING THEIR OWN FAMILY HISTORY

- By Neil Moxley

ONE small corner of south-east Poland may be an unlikely setting for a footballin­g fairytale – but it’s one that suits Tom Hateley just fine.

You’ll recognise t he surname. Of course, you will.

But midfielder Tom has carved out his own place in the history of the game with a central role in that country’s top division, rivalling everything

Leicester City did with their 5,000- 1 Premier

League title triumph three years ago.

Never mind the fact that dad Mark played for AC

Milan, Rangers, Monaco and England. Nor the fact that granddad Tony trod the original path for the family with

Liverpool and Aston

Villa.

Tom, 30, now stands tall in his own right after creating a legacy with unfashiona­ble Piast Gliwice

– a small town 15 miles west of

Katowice – by shocking the big boys and winning t he

Ekstraklas­a last term.

The Champions

League this term proved one hurdle too far.

But, despite losing three of their stars to major European clubs during the s ummer, Gliwice are bloodying the noses of the big boys again, sitting one point behind leaders Legia Warsaw – and Hateley is smack-bang at the heart of it all.

He said: “It’s a story for the football romantics – and it’s one that I feel privileged to have been part of.

“The way it has been described over here by the Press is very much like Leicester City winning the Premier League.

“And, if you judge it on criteria such as the size of the budgets, the clubs and their tradition, then it does bear comparison.

“Even more so when you think that, like Leicester, Gliwice were fighting relegation the year before they won the title – they had to win on the last day to survive – and did so, beating LKS Nieciecza 4-0.

“Twelve months later, the club was celebratin­g winning the title. It’s the highlight of my career so far, no doubt about it.”

Mindset

It has been far from an easy ride for Hateley Jnr, trying to strike out and find a platform in the game for himself, rather than living in the shadows of his illustriou­s forefather­s.

But he has embraced life in Poland and is thriving, despite being just the third Englishman to play for any significan­t time in the country, although he is out of contract this summer.

He added: “A few years ago I was offered the chance to play for Slask Wroclaw and took up the opportunit­y because I always wanted to experience new cultures and a different way of playing. I like being out of my comfort-zone.

“There was just myself and my girlfriend at the time, we didn’t have any kids, so we just thought, ‘Why not?’

“I had travelled around, growing up, because of my dad and it wasn’t that much of an issue for me, so we took the plunge.

“I had a couple of lessons per week, learning Polish – it’s a really difficult language to master – but I had the mindset that it was something I wanted to try and so I went into it with an open mind.

“I’m not yet able to give interviews in Polish, but I can do the basics and I speak the language when I’m in the dressing-room.

Tempo

“And the football itself is different, a different style. More possession­based – less direct – and it’s played at a higher tempo back home.

“For example, if I was having 30 touches per match playing in Scotland, I’d be having 90 in Poland.

“I feel like improved as a player coming over here, I’ve learned so much abroad and feel like I could offer plenty if I was to go back home because I’m much more aware now of the technical side of the game than I was.”

And is there a chance of lightning striking twice?

“We lost three of our players in the summer – one went to Lazio, another to Brentford and a third to Mallorca in La Liga,” he added.

“And we lost two goals in the last eight minutes, so we went out to BATE Borisov in the Champions League.

“But we are up there again and went up to second during the internatio­nal break. We were eighth at Christmas last season – so who knows?”

 ??  ?? LEAGUE CHAMPION: Mark Hateley with son Tom after Rangers won the Scottish Premiershi­p in 1996
POLISHED PERFORMANC­E: Tom Hateley celebrates winning the Polish League with his daughter Eloise
LEAGUE CHAMPION: Mark Hateley with son Tom after Rangers won the Scottish Premiershi­p in 1996 POLISHED PERFORMANC­E: Tom Hateley celebrates winning the Polish League with his daughter Eloise

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