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Jim Stokes

About Jim Stokes (0)

I was always a man of letters ... I worked as postman for two years before changing tack.

My first job as a sports journalist more than 30 years ago, was as a sailing correspondent at the Belfast Telegraph, that is, until I became becalmed one weekend on and ended up writing about the wildlife.

That trend continued when I became rugby correspondent.

For 16 years, I was a dedicated traveller covering the game from the days of the amateur ethos to the present professionalism of playing by numbers and taking in four World Cups. And I finally succumbed to a change of life when I joined "Auntie" six years ago.

It was inevitable that I would end up as a sports journalist. Sport was my life from my early school days with rugby, football, basketball and cricket my tour de force.

I played rugby for my local Belfast team Malone, and captained the club back in the 1972/3 season and collected an Ulster Senior League medal and Ulster Senior Cup gong.

I was a bit of a rare breed who started life as a fly-half one season, and ended up playing number 8 the next. I don’t think the rugby world was ready for a side-stepping, dummying, two-footed kicker in the back-row who had a penchant for dropping goals from the base of the scrum.

During a short break from rugby, I played for the Northern Ireland Youth international team in the 1962 European Championships as a goalkeeper.

But some fella by the name of Pat Jennings strangely got to play in the final against England at Wembley.

They won 4-0. Soon after that, won two caps in the Ö÷²¥´óÐã International series that year, drawing 1-1 with England at Boundary Park where George Best wore the Northern Ireland jersey for the first time.

Now, my engine just keeps on running, literally. I’m a regular jogger and cyclist, having done a couple of marathons and a stream of 10Ks. I can still give my 24-year-old twins a run for their money, much to their chagrin.

Jim Stokes is a sports journalist with Ö÷²¥´óÐã Northern Ireland in Belfast.


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