Having helped Tottenham win the Europa League the 34-year-old is stepping out on his own after building a library of coaching experience
For Ryan Mason, this opportunity has been a few years in the making. Since retiring from playing aged 26 after fracturing his skull ? a horror injury that required 14 metal plates to be inserted into his skull, held together by 28 screws ? he has built a library of coaching experience, working under Jos? Mourinho, Antonio Conte and Ange Postecoglou. This season, after accepting his first full-time managerial role at West Brom, he has an opportunity to show his workings. ?My last game was as a 25-year-old and I have had a seven-, eight-year apprenticeship, which in normal circumstances is quite a long time,? he says.
Nothing was normal about the end of Mason?s playing career. For a while there were 45 staples and he had a six-inch scar across his head. For about 10 days he had to be spoon-fed and being able to pick up a glass of orange juice was a major milestone. At the time he felt his career was in its infancy but stepping into coaching, initially in the Spurs academy, he discovered a new passion. ?I definitely have a fire inside of me to be successful and fulfil the sort of dreams and ambitions that I had as a player,? he says.
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