The Rugby Paper

It was a real honour to lead Cov to promotion

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there were a lot of very good people at Clifton Lane.

Bedford were looking to bolster their pack and as Rotherham were renowned as a good scrummagin­g unit, myself and Sam Walsh, the loose-head, moved down there the following season. I stayed for eight seasons, which tells you how much I enjoyed it. For all that time, Martin Hynes was the forwards coach. A real salt of the earth bloke, he never took life too seriously but we had a lot of success – and laughs.

One season we went to Otley and won, and spirits were high. We’d hired a double decker bus for the trip and had just set off for home and he was stood up doing his usual thing of marching up and down the bus telling stories with beer in hand. All of a sudden, there was a sharp corner and his huge frame hit the door and it flung open. We must’ve been doing 50-60mph at the time and I don’t know how he saved himself, but he did. Fair play, he didn’t spill a single drop of his beer and he lived to tell another tale … literally. I think he started wearing his seat belt after that!

Most seasons we were at the top end of the Championsh­ip, playing good rugby in front of big crowds. Getting to the Championsh­ip playoff final in 2013 was bitter-sweet in some ways, though. We knew we couldn’t go up because of the ground criteria so our main motivation was to ruin it for the RFU and PRL by trying to beat Newcastle. We came off second-best but we ran them fairly close and I think it showed just how strong the Championsh­ip is as a league. Unfortunat­ely with the season going on as long as it did, we weren’t able to recruit as early as normal and that affected us the following season. Quite a few boys left and others got picked up in the Prem, and rightly so, and it was a bit of a rebuilding job after that.

I stuck around for a few more years but then it was off to Coventry, where the sole aim was to get the club back in the Championsh­ip. To captain the club to promotion in my second season (2017/18) was a real honour. As we were winning most weeks, the social side of things was good too, and people like Max Trimble and Stokesy (James Stokes) came into their own on that front.

PICTURES: Alamy

The squad was a good mix of players stepping up from Nat One, establishe­d Championsh­ip players and a few who’d experience­d the Premiershi­p such as Sammy Tuitupou. Being an All Black, he automatica­lly had everyone’s respect. I loved how he could switch from being the joker to the ultimate competitor in the blink of an eye. You always know that if you were out with Sammy you’d have a smile on your face and a good time but he’d also have your back if things ever got out of control.

As a captain, I preferred to lead by deeds rather than words but every now and again I’d slip the odd David Brent-ism in there. Quite a few of us were fans of The Office, and it made the ones in the know smile whenever I paraphrase­d him. I think one of my strengths as captain was testing the temperatur­e of the room. Sometimes you don’t need to say anything; sometimes you need to gee people up; sometimes you need to relax them and say something a bit left-field.

My pre-match speech just before we ran out to play DMP definitely fell into the latter category. Despite going on to win 24 games in a row and scoring over 1,200 points, there wasn’t much between us in terms of league points when we went up there to play them in February in a rearranged fixture. Our preparatio­n that week hadn’t been very good and the captain’s run wasn’t any good either. Five minutes before kick-off, when the ref knocked on the door, I could sense there was uneasiness and apprehensi­on in the room. So, and I don’t know where it came from, I stood up and likened what we were going through to preparing for a Tinder date. It must’ve struck a chord with the lads because we won 42-0. It’s fair to say we didn’t do the walk of shame that night!

Winning Nat 1 was a proud personal moment for me. Having been to two Cup finals with Bedford and lost both, it was nice to get over the line, even if we had to wait six weeks before getting our hands on the trophy. Promotion was clinched at Caldy but we didn’t get presented with the trophy until the final game against Hull, who ironically handed over the City of Culture status to Coventry on the same weekend.

We’d recruited well for our first season back in the Championsh­ip after seven long years and finished eighth, which was then the highest position ever achieved by a promoted club. The winning habit had given us a real sense of self-belief and I think we also took a few people by surprise.

Before you knew it, I had played 300 games in the Championsh­ip at three fantastic clubs. And, last May, after 15 years in the pro game, I decided to hang up my boots. I think I realised it was time to retire when I found myself playing with the sons of players I’d played with earlier in my career – Morgan Bunting, Simon’s son, and Connor Tupai, Paul’s son! Covid also played a part, being furloughed was a stressful experience and highlighte­d the fragility of profession­al sport. Also in January 2022, I sustained my first serious injury – a fractured wrist, which took three operations to sort out.

It was during this period of rehab that it dawned on me the soft skills that you get from being in a profession­al rugby environmen­t can easily be applied to other careers as well. Amongst those is a good work ethic, I feel I have always had that. Even during my time at Tigers, I used to earn extra money by cutting the grass at the club’s Oval Park training base. That continued with community out-reach work at Rotherham, working in schools whilst I was at Bedford and a bit of teaching and then coaching during my time at Coventry. Lots of hours’ worth of dedication led to me getting my RFU Level 3 badge and, last season, I coached Kenilworth to promotion to level five.

Next year, though, I am going to take a sabbatical from rugby, to concentrat­e on my new career with Frederick Cooper, a leading paint and coatings applicatio­n company in Birmingham.

“Before you knew it, I had played 300 Champ games at three great clubs”

– as told to Jon Newcombe

 ?? ?? Pack leader: Phil Boulton playing for Coventry against Doncaster
Pack leader: Phil Boulton playing for Coventry against Doncaster

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