Home / Royal Mail / Rangers legend Graeme Souness says charity work ‘the real me’ after being awarded royal honour

Rangers legend Graeme Souness says charity work ‘the real me’ after being awarded royal honour

Graeme Souness has told how fundraising for charity has allowed people to see “the real me” as he was made a CBE at Windsor Castle.

Souness, both a player and manager at Rangers and Liverpool, was honoured for his services to football and charity by the Prince of Wales on Tuesday, November 12.

The Scot represented his country at three World Cups and won five league titles and three European Cups with the Reds before later working as a pundit.

READ MORE: Vicious Rutherglen dog dragged pizza delivery driver to the ground and bit off his ear

READ MORE: ‘I tried £4 three-course meal at UK’s cheapest pub in Glasgow – I only had one complaint’

The 71-year-old is also the vice-president of Debra UK, which raises awareness of epidermolysis bullosa (EB), a group of genetic conditions that cause the skin to blister and tear at the slightest touch.

He started working with the charity six years ago, and helped to raise £1.5million for further research when he joined a swimming challenge across the English Channel last year.

Graeme Souness was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire by the Prince of Wales at Windsor Castle.

Souness told the PA news agency: “I think when you go to work, whatever job you do, you become quite a different person to what you really are, certainly in the demands of football management and being a football player.

“I am an emotional man, and when I get involved in this charity and when I’m around these poor children, I am emotional.

“Now that I’ve been involved for six years, I get it now – I understand the plight of these children, and it’s just pushing me to do more and more for them if I can.

“You’ve seen a real me. I’m not someone who’s pumped up with adrenaline wants to go to war with everyone on a football pitch – that was my workplace. Now I’m trying to be a decent human being.”

Souness said being made a CBE was “always a team effort” shared with his fellow Debra fundraisers and ranked among his greatest achievements, putting it “up there with European Cups”.

Asked if the door was firmly shut on a possible return to football management or punditry, Souness said his focus was on his next Debra fundraising event, another swim across the Channel before a bike ride from Dover to Westminster, in May.

“The aim is to get more awareness and hopefully raise a similar amount of money,” he said. “We’ve got to get it out there that these children have no light at the end of the tunnel.

“Every day is a groundhog day for them, they suffer unimaginable pain and of course there’s a mental aspect to it as well.

“That’s where my focus is right now – it’s not coming back to football. I’ve been there, ticked that box. This is about raising awareness and raising money for Debra.”

Souness said he discussed Premier League football with Aston Villa fan William during his investiture ceremony.

He said: “He’s still hurting a wee bit from my team (Liverpool) beating his team last weekend, but I reassured him that Villa are certainly on the right path.”

Join Glasgow Live’s WhatsApp community here and get the latest news sent straight to your messages.

Sign up to our daily Glasgow Live newsletter here to receive news and features direct to your inbox




Source link

About admin

Check Also

Royal Mail to scrap Saturday second-class post for nearly a million households next year amid huge shake-up of the business

By JESSICA CLARK, BUSINESS REPORTER Published: 17:02 EST, 22 December 2024 | Updated: 18:06 EST, …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *