The Chronicle

Hogg hoping to end his career with a real high

ALLY TO HANG UP HIS BOOTS, BUT WANTS FALCONS STINT TO FINISH WITH FLOURISH

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ALLY Hogg has announced he will retire from profession­al rugby at the end of the current season after a career which has included 48 Scotland caps and 175 appearance­s for Newcastle Falcons.

The 35-year-old scored the dramatic last-minute winner less than a week ago as the Falcons ended their 20-year wait for an away win at Leicester Tigers, and the back-row forward hopes to bow out on a high after propelling the club into their first ever Aviva Premiershi­p semi-final.

A sold-out Kingston Park Stadium crowd will get to show their appreciati­on one last time on Saturday when the Falcons host Wasps in the final round of the Aviva Premiershi­p regular season, Hogg saying: “It’s always a sad time when you have to end one career and look on to the next one, but I’ve had a good run.

“I’m 35 now which is a decent age for a back-rower, and there have been many highs and lows along the way. Getting to do your hobby for a job is something you can’t put a price on, and I’ve had a fantastic time. I’m pleased with how things have gone but I feel it’s time now to try something different.” Beginning his profession­al career in his native Scotland, Hogg told the Newcastle Falcons’ official website: “I’ve stuck with just the two clubs, going eight years with Edinburgh and eight years with Newcastle, and I’m glad I did it that way. “I had a great time up in Edinburgh but I always wanted to try the English Premiershi­p, and it has been everything I thought it would be. “Things didn’t go so well at the start with Newcastle but it’s culminatin­g with a place in the Premiershi­p semi-finals, and the progressio­n we’ve seen across all the competitio­ns this season makes it the obvious time to bow out on a high. Now it’s on to the next chapter.”

Recalling his early years at Kingston Park Stadium, the dextrous forward said: “It was a bit of a dogfight when I first came down to Newcastle, to put it politely, and we had some tough years down near the bottom of the table.

“That chapter ended with relegation to the Championsh­ip in 2012, but with Dean Richards and Semore Kurdi coming into the club we had a real stabilisin­g influence and a chance to build the club and the team that everyone sees now.

“It didn’t happen overnight, it has taken a lot of hard work and the profession­alism of the whole group has been the driving force.

“There have been quite a few of us who have been here right the way through that transition, which is nice, and a number of those boys will be staying on to help take us up to the next level.”

Relishing the prospect of one last home outing this Saturday, he added: “The way the Premiershi­p semi-finals have worked out means I know that Saturday’s game against Wasps will definitely be the last home match I’m at as a Falcons player, and if I’m hopefully selected to play it would be the ideal way for me to thank the supporters who have always been amazing with me.

“My family will be coming down for the day and it will be great having them here for what I know will be an emotional occasion. My wife Linsey has been an incredible support throughout my whole career, as have my mum Fiona and dad Alex.

“Without them I wouldn’t be here playing profession­al rugby, they’ve been with me every inch of the way.

“Hopefully I’ll get to run out with my kids for the game if I’m selected, and that really would be a special way to round things off in terms of playing at Kingston Park.”

Keen to credit Hogg’s role in Newcastle Falcons’ resurgence as a club, director of rugby Dean Richards said: “Ally has been an absolutely fabulous player for us and a great person to work with. He will certainly be missed when he does eventually hang up his boots.”

It’s always a sad time when you have to end one career and look on to the next one, but I’ve had a good run Ally Hogg

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