The Sunday Telegraph - Sport

Roebuck’s sights set on Olympics

Manchester City’s young goalkeeper is practised in seizing her opportunit­ies, she tells Katie Whyatt

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Less than four years have passed since the Manchester City goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck, 20, sat her biology GCSE exam in the British Embassy in Minsk while competing at the Under-17 Euros. For a mark of her rise and rise in the interim, Roebuck is currently the best goalkeeper in the Women’s Super League, finishing the first half of the season with a save percentage of 90.9 per cent. She has conceded just three times in the league and at City has capitalise­d on the hamstring injury to Karen Bardsley, capped 81 times for England, to become club No 1. And next? To do so for England.

Roebuck seldom believed those conversati­ons would happen so soon at that 2016 tournament, when she and Manchester United’s Ella Toone would “graft, graft and mess about, like we were back in school for a few hours of the day. We came third, so it wasn’t like we were just there for a few weeks.

“We had an education officer. Three or four hours every afternoon, we’d just have to revise. It was a bit crazy, but we both passed. I probably did better because

I wasn’t stressing so much. I was more stressed that we had to play Germany in the semi-final.”

Moving to Manchester City from Sheffield United’s centre of excellence at 15, she repeated this balancing act often. Like all prodigious­ly talented teenagers, her on-field achievemen­ts were always punctuated by the arrival of the next pile of homework and a mother reminding her to “always get your grades. But my dad always wanted me to be a footballer, so he was quite lenient”.

Roebuck got by – “I was all right at school, could get decent grades” – but for several years her schedule was manic. Her school provided 15-year-old Roebuck with “day release” every Wednesday to train with City’s first team and on Monday the club’s goalkeeper coach would stay into the evening to give her a one-onone session after school.

After leaving school, she transferre­d to Connell Sixth Form College, a 15-minute walk from City’s sprawling Etihad Campus, attending “between training” to complete a sports qualificat­ion.

“I remember eating my breakfast at half eight, running around to college for a nine o’clock start and then running back for 10 o’clock to be on the pitch for training,” Roebuck says. “Then getting a shower and running back across to school, then running back across to do my gym. That was probably the toughest thing, because you just want to be with the girls and I’m running across the Astro turf trying to get to school. But now I’ve got that for ever. When your career ends, you’ve got to have something [as] backup.”

Her first claim to fame was making the school newsletter in 2016 when selected for the Under-17 World Cup.

When Roebuck retires, in roughly 15 years, the landscape of women’s football will be decidedly different from her first memory of it: the 2013 FA Cup final at Doncaster’s Keepmoat, in front of 4,988 spectators. There, she watched her future City team-mate Steph Houghton for the first time. More significan­t was the 2015 World Cup in Canada, Roebuck defying the five-hour time difference and going to school the following morning tired but inspired. “Lucy [Bronze] was pretty much the star of that show, so what sticks in my mind is her goals. If I couldn’t make it through the second half, I used to have a nap at half-time and wake up.”

She recalls her first day at City: “To come in and see all of the girls that I’d been watching the previous month was pretty surreal, but surreal in that they’re just normal people. I was really shy – I’m not at all now – and tried to keep myself to myself. Steph, Jill [Scott] made sure I was OK, gave me confidence. I found it quite difficult at the start – ‘Wow. I think I’m a million miles away’.”

Bardsley pushed her daily, and Roebuck “learnt pretty quickly that I had to develop off the field in the gym and get stronger. Chris, my goalkeeper coach, was unbelievab­le. He had that time and patience to push me and give me that boost when I needed it”.

That Roebuck has had a dedicated coach since she was seven is significan­t, given that one of her England predecesso­rs, Siobhan Chamberlai­n, was 12 years into her senior internatio­nal career before she had a full-time goalkeeper coach. Roebuck has just bought her first house, having previously rented with Izzy Christians­en, now at Everton, and Georgia Stanway. She cooks for herself, but “I still take my washing home to my mum”.

She moved out at 15, first to a host family in Manchester. “I actually found it pretty hard. It was tough because I didn’t have a car. It was pretty out in the sticks. I’d go from seeing my mates after school every day, probably being out on the street all the time, [to] then coming over here, where you kind of have to think of other things: when you need to rest, where you need to do this. “That was a big change, and I’ve always been a massive, massive family person. If I didn’t have to leave home, I’d probably still be living there now. But it set me up nicely.” The Olympics and the 2021 Euros are always at the back of the goalkeeper’s mind. “My aim, from being younger, was always to be England’s No1 and sustain that,” she says. “There’s a lot of keepers within the mix. I wouldn’t necessaril­y say anyone has got that spot. My goal is to try and secure that place, whether it’s now, for the Olympics – or, definitely, I want to be pushing for the Euros.”

‘A lot of keepers are in the mix. I would not necessaril­y say anyone has got that England No1 spot’

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 ??  ?? Packing a punch: Ellie Roebuck in action for Manchester City against Chelsea at Kingsmeado­w last month
Packing a punch: Ellie Roebuck in action for Manchester City against Chelsea at Kingsmeado­w last month
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