The Herald - Herald Sport

Whippersna­pper Wilson has made good on a family vow

- STEVE NAILOR

CALLUM Wilson is primed and ready to make his mark for England – a level he felt born to play at even when lining up in non-league football.

Like so many of the players Gareth Southgate has relied on during his Three Lions tenure, the 27-year-old is reaping the rewards of taking the path less travelled.

Wilson spent time on loan at Kettering and Tamworth before kicking on at hometown club Coventry City and helping Bournemout­h reach the Premier League – a level both club and player have flourished at.

The striker has scored five topflight goals so far this term and has quietly gone about establishi­ng himself as an England squad regular, with this his fifth straight call-up. The presence of captain Harry Kane has restricted him to just three caps to date, but there is a hunger and confidence about a player who has risen through the divisions and overcome two serious knee injuries.

“Harry is a great player,” he said. “I’m not saying I want to kick him out of the team, but with injuries, things that happen along the way, you have to be ready to grasp the opportunit­y, whether it is one minute, 20 minutes, the opening whistle.

“It’s not just thinking: ‘Harry is going to play’. Anything could happen and I have to be ready to come on and make a difference. I am fully focused.”

Wilson has learned from Kane’s clinical focus in training as well in matches – a mental edge that complement­s self-belief that onlookers could have felt strayed into delusion during his time in non-league football. “I was playing on loan at Kettering and Tamworth, and I said I will play for England one day,” he said when asked if his rise had surpassed expectatio­ns. “Everyone calls me self-confident. If you don’t believe you can get somewhere you will never get there, that was always the aim to play for the national team, to play in the Premier League. When I got there, I felt I had been there before because in my head I had been there.

“I never actually told any of the players, it’s a bit disrespect­ful when a lot of them players were a bit older and never got that opportunit­y, they would think: ‘Young, little whippersna­pper coming in, saying he’s going to play for England, get out of here’.

“For me, I basically told family, friends, they all said: ‘Yes, go for it’. Some games you would be playing terrible and I’d think: ‘No it’s never going to happen’, but you have to keep that belief there, and here I am.”

Wilson fondly remembers his time in the National League, where the smell of burgers and chips filled the air as he ran up and down the line in front of fans leaning over advertisin­g hoardings.

Those experience­s were the making of a player who is now hoping to add to the three caps he has won so far in England’s latest round of Euro 2020 qualifiers away to the Czech Republic and Bulgaria.

The latter match has come under particular focus given the potential for racism, which Wilson saw firsthand as part of the side that won 5-1 in Montenegro to a backdrop of some sickening abuse.

“We know there is a protocol to follow and we will make sure everyone abides by those rules,” Wilson said. “We are not expecting it to happen but in the modern day it is still happening so we will see what happens when we get there.

“You go through the steps and if it still carries on, you expect UEFA to step in. If the protocol has not worked, I am sure they will take us off the pitch. If, after that has happened, we take ourselves off then so be it.”

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