My grassroots story: Morgan Gibbs-White
England international Morgan Gibbs-White discusses his journey from Stafford Juniors to the Three Lions
PROFILE: MORGAN GIBBS-WHITE
My dad tells me I started playing as soon as I could walk.
Everywhere I went, I always had a football with me. Whether it was going to school with a football, going to the park with a football, or even at home in the living room, which my mum hated. I always had a football in my hand.
But I first started playing for a team when I was six or seven, a team called Stafford Juniors. After training a few times with the U7s, I got pushed up a year and started playing for the U8s.
After one season, I got pushed up again, so two years above. Around eight or nine, Wolves came in for me and I started playing there a year above, without realising that I should have been playing a year below. I was at Wolves for 13 to 14 years in the end and it was a good journey.
When you go into an academy, it becomes a little bit more serious which can be quite scary for a young kid. All you want to do is play, do your hobby, enjoy it and have fun.
I had a weird transition period when I was 13 or 14. I was very small and then had a massive growth spurt and struggled to deal with it. I was used to being small and tricky and then I had a massive growth spurt.
There was an U21 coach at Wolves at the time called Scott Sellars. He helped me out massively. He once told me: 'I'm never going to praise you when you're doing well, but when you're not doing good, I'm going to be onto you.'
It is a slightly weird way of approaching it but he helped me through that transition period.
Growing up at Wolves, my mantra was that my hard work would beat other people's talent. I always wanted to work hard, I wanted to run the most.
It's crucial to believe in your ability and yourself, that you can achieve what you want to achieve.
This drive and motivation have never changed; football is my life. I don't know what I'd do without it.
It's a case of definitely believing in yourself, having confidence and sometimes confidence is a hard thing to find in football. But I feel like when you have that in any young player, they can strive to be whatever they want to be.