Grimsby Telegraph

Maddison: My dad cried when I got my World Cup call-up

MIDFIELDER FIRED UP BY MISSING OUT ON PREVIOUS SQUADS

- By SIMON PEACH

JAMES Maddison says he used his repeated England rejections as fuel to force his way into Gareth Southgate’s World Cup squad.

Despite the clamour for the in-form midfielder to be included in the squad, many expected the 25-year-old to be watching on from afar

Maddison himself was braced to miss out having been overlooked during previous purple patches at Leicester, meaning he has yet to add to his debut cap as a substitute against Montenegro in November 2019.

However, the England boss admitted Maddison’s form was too good to ignore upon surprising­ly ending his three-year internatio­nal absence when naming his 26-man squad for Qatar last Thursday.

“We have seen with Gareth especially in the past that he has brought players back in if they’re in good form, and thankfully that was me for this tournament,” Maddison said.

“I managed to squeeze my way back into the squad, which I was very happy about. I don’t think at any point I thought it was a closed door and the opportunit­y had gone.

“It was just about staying hungry and almost using the rejection of not getting called up in previous camps as motivation to try force my way back in.”

Asked if he had expected to be named in England’s squad last week, Maddison said: “I was kind of braced for both a little bit – I think the saying is almost like hoping for the best but preparing for the worst.

“I hadn’t been in a squad for three years and I’m not naive. I understand how it works.

“But I also had that hope, that I was playing, I was in good form, I was in goalscorin­g form. I’ve been a threat for a little while now on the pitch and was hoping for the good call instead of the bad call.

“There was obviously some players that missed out, but thankfully I was on the receiving end of a good phone call from Gareth and one that I’ll never forget.”

Maddison admits that conversati­on with Southgate was a bit of a blur, having gone to the dressing room after a meeting with Leicester manager Brendan Rodgers to see a missed call from the England boss.

“I had his number saved still,” he said with a smile, nodding to his extended absence from the squad.

Maddison said the call-up was ‘a bit of a head on the wall moment’ that he followed with a deep breath and an emotional call with his parents.

“My dad actually cried – and he is not a crier! I don’t think I have seen him cry for years,” he said.

“They were happy tears, of course.”

 ?? ?? Gareth Southgate oversees England’s first training session in Qatar yesterday
Gareth Southgate oversees England’s first training session in Qatar yesterday

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