The Daily Telegraph - Sport

‘It was never a case of hanging on until I’m 40. I see no reason to stop’

Worcester veteran Peter Stringer explains the secret to his longevity as he marks a milestone

- Daniel Schofield

Among Peter Stringer’s earliest memories is a passing drill his father made him perform in their garden. His father would stand still while a five-year-old Stringer would run alternate directions around him throwing passes off either hand.

“I remember clearly becoming really frustrated that he was standing still while I had to run,” Stringer said. “I couldn’t figure out why I was getting tired and he was enjoying it.”

As he turns 40 today, Stringer has not stopped running. In a couple of weeks, his contract at Worcester Warriors expires, but the scrum-half who won the first of his 98 Ireland caps in 2000 against Scotland has no thought of hanging up his boots. Physically, he says he is in better shape than 15-20 years ago, while his enthusiasm has only intensifie­d as he has got older.

“If the right opportunit­y comes up, then I will go for it,” Stringer said. “Whatever environmen­t I am in, I want it to be competitiv­e and ambitious. That’s my main aim: to be a part of something special. And I want to be a part of it. I don’t want to be a hanger-on. I want to add value to a place, not just continuing for the sake of it.”

Stringer’s assessment of his own fitness levels is confirmed by his scores on the bleep test. Long held up as an example of a model profession­al, Stringer is teetotal, the result of childhood memories of seeing fans passed out after games at Lansdowne Road. “I remember thinking I never want to be like that,” he says. Practicall­y every week, he has to refuse offers of pints from Munster supporters for his 15 trophy-laden years with the province.

Despite such service, he slipped out of the first-team picture in 2010. For the first time, he found himself outside a Munster matchday 23 and on loan to Saracens and Newcastle. It was then he admits he became a “bit obsessive” about his fitness levels, changing his nutrition and sleeping habits. “I would have massive regrets in my life if I had the opportunit­y to be back out there playing week in, week out and I was not in the best possible shape that I could be,” Stringer said. “I find that it comes down to the 21-22 hours a day when you are not training that

contribute­s to the longevity. It is about what you do when you get home when you are away from the coaches and nutritioni­sts.”

The next opportunit­y came in 2013 when he received a call from Gary Gold asking if he could provide injury cover for Bath. That was on the Monday. On the Saturday, he came off the bench to score two tries against Exeter for the “first time in my career”.

Stringer stayed at Bath for three seasons and then became Sale Sharks’ player of the season in 2016. His longevity is all the more remarkable considerin­g the premium the sport has placed at fostering giants over the past two decades. At 5ft 7in and 11st 7lb, Stringer is half the weight of some internatio­nal forwards.

He has refused to ever see his size as a disadvanta­ge. There’s a video on Youtube of him tackling Jonah Lomu, even if the commentato­r rather unkindly suggests the All Black wing lost his footing. “It was studs and the boot lace of one boot,” Stringer said. “That’s what I have learnt over the years. You don’t look at the full person when they are running at you, just focus on their boots and ankles.”

When he was 10, his parents suggested that he take a course of growth hormones. “My mum had a cousin whose son was a similar size to me when he was young and he did that,” Stringer said. “A few weeks later, he had grown a few inches but had also turned into a completely different person. I remember getting upset by the whole thing and thinking this is going to change me. I was small for my age, but I had always been happy with the way I was.”

That resolute determinat­ion to be true to himself has been a guiding principle throughout his career. He has never attempted to reinvent himself as a scrum-half but focused on his core strength of providing his fly-half with fast, accurate service.

Another drill he used to perform with his father was passing with his back against a pebble-dashed wall. Every time he attempted a backswing he would rip skin off his knuckles.

“My pass is quite unique in the way it travels and that probably comes from the one-handed stuff,” Stringer said. “My pass comes from shoulders and lats [latissimus dorsi muscle] with wrists at the end, whereas you see a lot of guys who rely on a wristy pass. For me, a pass is a whole body action rather than just an arm action.”

Stringer is not a sentimenta­l type; his wife is under strict orders not to make a fuss today. There is no end goal, such as overtaking Brad Thorn (40 years 109 days) to become the Premiershi­p’s oldest player. Rather than life beginning at 40, Stringer wants to prove that it does not have to finish there for profession­al players.

“It is not a thought of me thinking I am hanging on until I am 40,” Stringer said. “That’s not the case. You come across a lot of people whose workload is reduced as they get older, but if I can keep my workload the same and keep training at the same intensity, then there’s no reason why I can’t continue into my 40s because my game is about playing at threequart­ers pace.

“Forty is a great number to get to but it is similar to being on 98 Ireland caps. One hundred would have been nice but then I would have wanted to get to 110, 120. This is the same. If I play once I am 40, then I will want to get to 42-43.”

‘It comes down to the time when you are not training – what you do away from the coaches’

 ??  ?? The old Warrior: Worcester’s scrum-half Peter Stringer at the club’s ground
The old Warrior: Worcester’s scrum-half Peter Stringer at the club’s ground
 ??  ?? Champion of Europe: Peter Stringer lifts the Heineken Cup after victory with Munster over Biarritz in 2006
Champion of Europe: Peter Stringer lifts the Heineken Cup after victory with Munster over Biarritz in 2006
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