logo
'Urge to play outweighed fear of paralysis'

'Urge to play outweighed fear of paralysis'

BBC News20 hours ago
New Fleetwood Town striker Ched Evans said he should have asked for help much earlier after suffering a neck injury in 2023 which could have left him paralysed.The 36-year-old returned to the Cod Army last week for a third spell after turning down a coaching role at Preston North End.Ahead of his side's opening fixture away to League Two new boys Barnet on Saturday, Evans revealed the severity of an injury which he regrets not reporting to medical staff earlier."I think the scary thing is I didn't tell anybody. That mindset of wanting to play football and prove something probably overtook my decision there," Evans told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"The symptoms of the injury had been going on for two years so the ability to look up or open the milk in the morning, I couldn't do."What I should have done is ask for help and I didn't. That urge to play football outweighed the fear of being paralysed. I knew it was bad, but just how bad, I didn't understand."Evans eventually had surgery in April 2023 and return to action in October of that year.
He will be hoping to rediscover the form that helped him score 37 goals in 81 appearances in two and a half seasons for Fleetwood before a move to Preston, where he has spent the past four years. Last season, Evans signed a one-year deal at Deepdale as a player-coach but he made only eight substitute appearances in the Championship as the Lilywhites narrowly avoided relegation to League One on the final day of the season.Now the former Wales international has said he is unprepared to hang up his boots yet as he embarks on his 15th season as a professional player."For me personally, I was coming back to somewhere you know, and once I'd spoken to the manager [Pete Wild] and he talked about his plan and what he wanted to achieve, I was sold on that straight away," Evans added."It took a good few months but in the end my preference is [playing] football."I got offered to work with the [Preston] under-18s and under-21s and it did really excite me, but I would have had to retire and I wasn't ready to make that decision."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Hundred set for change as new season approaches
The Hundred set for change as new season approaches

The Independent

time27 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The Hundred set for change as new season approaches

Change is coming to the Hundred, with overseas investors set to press ahead with team name changes, a potential switch to the T20 format and future participation in a Champions League competition. After several months of detailed negotiations the England and Wales Cricket Board have finally confirmed the sale of stakes in six of the eight franchises. The two remaining deals, for Trent Rockets and Oval Invincibles, are also inching closer to the line, with ECB chiefs confident they will soon be signed off. A total of £520million is being ploughed in to the sport and on Thursday the governing body began the process of sharing the spoils, with each of the 18 first-class counties receiving a £400,000 down payment with the promise of plenty more to come. Hosts can expect a minimum of £18m, a figure Yorkshire, Lancashire and Glamorgan have already topped up to varying degrees by selling portions of their own stake, with non-hosts set to receive around £25m. And with the new money comes a new chapter for the competition. The fifth edition, which starts next week, will be the last before a radical overhaul. The ECB expect at least three of the teams to be rebranded, with Manchester Originals set to align with Lucknow Super Giants, Northern Superchargers tied up with Sunrisers Hyderabad and the Oval Invincibles likely to become the latest team in the 'MI' stable affiliated to Mumbai Indians. In addition, there is an acceptance that the 100-ball format is up for debate. While the reduction in playing time has appealed to domestic broadcasters, it has not caught on in other territories and there is an appetite to explore reverting to a standard T20 structure. Other matters, including increased salary caps and a move from a draft system to an auction, will also be looked at with a newly-formed Hundred board sending any recommendations to the ECB board for approval. Vikram Banerjee, managing director of the Hundred, said: 'It would be slightly odd to bring all these great people in and leave it as it is. 'There are things the tournament has done brilliantly that we want to hold on to, and the core DNA of the tournament will carry on, but we'll look to supercharge it. 'You want to see innovation and growth in new things. Other people will have great ideas and I'm looking forward to seeing what they are. '(Moving to T20) is one of the things that will be discussed. At the moment it's the Hundred format and that will remain for now but let's see where we get to in the long term.' ECB chief executive Richard Gould also made it clear that if a global Champions League gets off the ground, the governing body would be keen to send the winner of the Hundred rather than a county from the Vitality Blast. 'There might be some pushback, but that's a debate to be had,' he said. 'If there's a Champions League format it would be a Hundred team going forward. Of course we'd want to be involved at the earliest opportunity.'

Liverpool would never hesitate to sign someone if given the chance
Liverpool would never hesitate to sign someone if given the chance

The Independent

time27 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Liverpool would never hesitate to sign someone if given the chance

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot insisted the club would never hesitate to sign a player if the chance presented itself. Despite having spent close to £300million already this summer, the Reds continue to be linked with Newcastle striker Alexander Isak in what would be a British transfer record deal. While the club have held an interest in the Sweden international for some time, there has been no approach but Isak's decision to absent himself from Newcastle's pre-season trip to South Korea has only increased speculation about a potential switch to Anfield. There has been a considerable turnover this summer with senior players Trent Alexander-Arnold and Luis Diaz departing, in addition to second-choice goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, Jarell Quansah, Nat Phillips and Darwin Nunez – and Federico Chiesa expected to leave before the end of the window. The response has been to spend a club-record fee on Florian Wirtz, while also bringing in his Bayer Leverkusen team-mate Jeremie Frimpong, Eintracht Frankfurt's Hugo Ekitike, Bournemouth defender Milos Kerkez and goalkeeper Giorgi Mamardashvili. But Slot said the spending may not stop there. 'I always say, another thing about Liverpool is that if we see a chance in the market, we never hesitate to bring someone in,' he told reporters before departing Japan at the end of their trip to the Far East. 'In the end it's about quality and we have already made some very good signings. In terms of quality, we are already in the right place.' Top of that quality list is Wirtz, one of Europe's hottest prospects at just 22. Liverpool beat Manchester City, Bayern Munich and Real Madrid to his signature and were prepared to agree to a record £116m deal because of what he offers currently and the potential for growth. 'We don't just think, 'Let's bring a midfielder in'. This is a long-term project for the club,' Slot added. 'It's the way this club has worked over several years: targeting a specific player who we think can strengthen the squad and can bring us quality. Then we try to bring him in. 'I think this club has always worked like this. We do spend, but if we spend, then we always need to recoup some money. 'It's what we already started last summer when we only brought in Federico Chiesa, but we sold three or four players, which meant a big profit. 'So if you balance things out, we've spent, for sure, but we've also recouped money.' For all the money spent so far, the player who made the biggest impression in matches in Hong Kong and Tokyo was Rio Ngumoha, a 16-year-old who only joined the club last summer from Chelsea but has already made a rapid rise through the youth ranks. He scored a fine solo goal in the 3-1 win over Yokohama F Marinos but also impressed against AC Milan before that and is already being talked about a viable first-team option to play on the left following the departure of Diaz. 'I'm not trying to rush because I'm still only young,' he told the club's website. 'But at the same time, I just want to show the manager what I can do and not get too complacent. I just want to do bigger and better things for me and the club.'

Arsenal v Tottenham: Team news
Arsenal v Tottenham: Team news

BBC News

time28 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Arsenal v Tottenham: Team news

Mikel Arteta has named a strong starting XI for the first north London derby outside the UK at Kai Tak Stadium in Hong Kong. New addition Viktor Gyokeres misses out on making his full debut, but could still make an appearance after being named on a stacked XI: Raya, White, Saliba, Kiwior, Lewis-Skelly, Rice, Norgaard, Odegaard, Martinelli, Saka, Tottenham, Son Heung-min is on the bench alongside James Maddison, who could make his first pre-season XI: Vicario, Porro, Van de Ven, Romero, Spence, Bergvall, Sarr, Bentancur, Odobert, Johnson, live coverage here when the game gets under way

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store