Wales On Sunday

BATEMAN BREWS AFTER REVEALING UP FUTURE

- SIMON THOMAS Rugby correspond­ent simon.thomas@walesonlin­e.co.uk

GREG Bateman could be forgiven for thinking what might have been when he reflects on a rugby career which has just come to an end. After all, this was a man who was on the verge of playing for Wales before events dictated otherwise.

But, when he considers all he has been through, the 32-year-old is happy to be in the place he is right now and able to look back on his rugby days with real fondness.

Having been released by the Dragons after two injury-plagued seasons with the Gwent region, he has decided to hang up his boots to focus on his People’s Captain brewing business.

When we catch up for a chat, he proceeds to reveal for the first time just how close he came to playing for Wales under Warren Gatland. He was approached twice, but on the first occasion he was denied by an illegibili­ty issue. When that was resolved, Wales came knocking again, but Bateman felt he had to turn down the opportunit­y because of the mental health issues he was going through.

Some four years on, it’s a story he recounts with unflinchin­g honesty.

“I met up with Robin McBryde and he was very compliment­ary. I was obviously having some good form at that time. Looking back, I was probably playing some of the best rugby of my career. So I was asked to go to them for the autumn series of 2017. It was all looking positive and it just felt like the right thing,” he recalls.

But that was when red tape intervened, as he explains. “My whole understand­ing is I was Welsh-qualified. My grandmothe­r was born in Hawarden in Flintshire. I have been there once. I can’t remember what I was there for, but I remember driving through it and thinking ‘Oh here we are’.

“The background is my grandmothe­r adopted my mother as a baby. So I said to Wales at the time ‘Look, is that going to be a problem?’ and I was told it would all be fine. Then I got there and they couldn’t take me because of the eligibilit­y rules.

“They felt that was incredibly unfair, as did I, because that was my grandmothe­r. It wasn’t as if I got adopted by somebody in my 20s so I could play for Wales.”

As harsh as it was, that looked to be that, but then World Rugby changed the rules, enabling a player’s adoptive grandparen­ts to determine eligibilit­y rather than bloodline. Bateman was now definitely available to Wales, so the following year they made another approach.

“They came back to see if I would be interested in a Six Nations and a summer tour. Really unfortunat­ely, it was just when I was going through turmoil in my personal life and it just didn’t feel like the right thing to do to go and put myself in that environmen­t in that period of time,” he says.

“When they came back, I was obviously really happy and excited, but at the same time it was really, really tough on a personal level to have to turn them down.

“It’s all well and good doing ifs, buts and maybes and all the rest of it. It’s one of those things that I am sure will be debated within my family for years to come whether I should have gone or not.

“But you can only make the decisions that are right for you. On a personal level, going with Wales wasn’t the right thing to do because I just wasn’t in the right place emotionall­y to go.”

The eloquent and amenable Bateman is very open and frank when explaining the mental health issues he was experienci­ng.

“The thing I struggled with most was sleep and constant anxiety, worry. It was difficult to deal with it. There was that feeling of a loss of hope for a positive future. You are kind of wondering what the point is.

“Looking back, I probably have some traits of the type of person that would struggle with this sort of stuff. Then when you go through any kind of therapy or whatever, they unlock some bits that you don’t know about. For me, it was really helpful to talk about it. I went through various forms of help.”

Bateman continued with his rugby, covering both sides of the scrum, but there wasn’t to be another approach from Wales.

“Of course, once you’ve said no, you’ve said no, haven’t you? It’s incredibly difficult to go back. Obviously a lot of it is built on form and I don’t think I hit another vein of form like I had when I was at the Tigers during that period.”

After a five-year spell with Leicester, the former London Welsh and Exeter prop moved to the Dragons in 2020 with a view to once again advancing his internatio­nal claims, but it wasn’t to be.

“Unfortunat­ely, I’ve just really struggled with soft tissue injuries. You are never really playing to your potential because you are not ever really fully cooked, which is really tough. It’s been incredibly disappoint­ing to not be able to get to any kind of form. It’s not the easiest place to be in emotionall­y at times. It’s been a weird old two years at the Dragons.

“I’m done now. I was ready to finish. I’m hanging up my boots to focus my energies on People’s Captain and help support the growth we have been having. It’s really exciting and we are making a real positive social impact. Then you have a tough weekend again with the rugby and you know which one you would rather put your energies into, particular­ly when you are struggling to string games together.”

Bateman’s move into the brewing world stemmed from his time at Leicester when he became involved in the creation of a beer by a company that sponsored the club.

“I went and brewed it with a local brewery and I just fell in love with the process. It was around the time things weren’t going particular­ly well for me. Having something to do every 20 minutes for eight hours is a really good way of staying present, which was something I found really tough during that time. Pulling together all these ingredient­s to make a product I found really cathartic. Also I like a beer!”

Bateman decided this was the business for him, so in November 2020 he launched the People’s Captain range of craft beers, working with a contract brewer.

With a nod to what he has been through, a portion of the money from sales goes to support mental health charities.

“It’s a brand that stands for social interactio­n. I have this firm belief that the great British pub offers a really natural safe space for people to have conversati­ons and look out for one another.

“I’m not saying go and get leathered at a pub, that’s absolutely not what I am saying. But we are a brand to be there to remind you that you can open up because people are there to help and support you. It’s about raising awareness, but more than that, it’s about providing action.”

Bateman feels fortunate to have a living in place outside of rugby and is acutely aware that it can be very difficult for players when their pro careers come to an end.

“I have worked hard while I have been playing to be in a position where I am OK, if and when I felt the time was right to finish. The majority of players simply don’t have the head space to be able to put something together. A lot of that is because they don’t know what they want to do.

“It’s a really dangerous time for people who do finish sport because that transition period is like you are starting a new life and that can be an incredibly scary thing to do. I am very fortunate and grateful to be in a position to be able to move into something else fairly seamlessly. It’s difficult for those lads who don’t have things lined up.

“It’s an incredibly challengin­g time and mental health in sport is becoming more and more of an issue. It’s really tough. Athletes are not immune to the struggles people go through. If anything, they push themselves to the limit and need as much help as they can possibly get. What is difficult is knowing what the best support is. We will do whatever we can to help as a business.”

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