by rick olivares
There’s a common comparison in
professions: “football players are like rock stars.” That’s most certainly
true. David Beckham, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Didier Drogba to name a few can
attest to that. But in the case of Chad Edward Gould, it is the opposite… ‘rock
stars are like football players.”
Chad had visions of his band being the
next Blur, Ash, Coldplay, Oasis, and you can insert any Brit Rock band’s name
here, in the early years of the new millennium. His band, RedGrave, just signed
a contract with indie label and recorded an album. “This was the life,” he
recalled of those halcyon days when he left life as a banker at Deutsche Bank
to live his rock star fantasies.
Some time after that in 2004, Chad was
on a three-week holiday with his family in Manila when on a whim they decided
to check out if there was a Philippine national football team. One lead pointed
the Goulds to the Philippine Football Federation where they met then national
coach Aris Caslib who asked the Fil-Briton to try out for the team.
“I must have looked funny to the PFF
officials,” recounted Gould with a laugh. “I went there carry a guitar so they
probably were not sure if I was inquiring about a slot in the national team or
a gig.”
Chad was first turned on to music by
his parents with the Beatles. “That’s how I eventually became a Liverpool
Football Club fan,” he explained of his intertwining music and football roots.
“For five nights a week, music was my proper job.”
Since his gigging was at night, Chad
traded his guitar for his boots to play football by day. “It was the best of
both worlds for me,” said Gould of those days.
There was a huge pool of talent for
Caslib to choose from. Suddenly Chad found himself still in the running for a
slot as the pool was whittled down from 120 to 64 to 32 and ultimately to 23.
“I couldn’t believe my luck,” said Gould of those tryouts. “The three-week
holiday turned into three months.”
Chad found himself in the Philippine
team that competed in the 2004 Tiger Cup. In the Philippine team’s very first
match, the nationals were in the midst of a 4-nil beating by Malaysia when
Caslib sent in Gould in the 90th minute of play. There were four
minutes of added time and Gould remembers his heart pounding as he raced on to
the pitch. “There were a lot people inside the stadium in Kuala Lumpur and if
that doesn’t inspire or intimidate you I don’t know what will.”
In the 93rd minute, the
Philippines got one last corner kick. Aly Borromeo headed in a shot that the
Malaysian goalkeeper blocked and the ball careened out to a gaggle of players.
Gould got to the ball ahead of everyone else and he headed in the ball for a
goal. The Philippines, in this pre-Azkals mania that pervades today, salvaged a
measure of pride as they pulled back one goal. With family and friends watching
back home in the Philippines and England, Gould celebrated as he and his team
won the Tiger Cup.
It was a memorable debut and Chad
would continue to play for the Philippines until the Long Teng Cup of 2010. “At
that time, I was waiting for a call up for the Suzuki Cup,” recalled Gould of
that time. “The team was getting better in terms of quality. After the Long
Teng Cup, I played with an English beach soccer team that was doing a tour. I
was waiting for the call up that never came. And we all know what happened
afterwards.”
The Philippines drew with Singapore,
1-1, then followed that with an incredible 2-nil win over defending champion
and regional powerhouse Vietnam. The run to the Suzuki Cup semifinals was
stupefying and it sparked a football renaissance in the Philippines that has
not abated one iota since. And the long time national veteran who had scored
six international goals suddenly found himself outside looking in.
“Of course, I was proud of what my
teammates had accomplished. But it did hurt a bit that I was not a part of it.
On the other hand, my time off also was good for me as I met my current
girlfriend, Charlotte (Harris, the niece of the late English actor, Richard Harris).”
Some time early this year, while in
correspondence with James and Phil Younghusband who he had been friends with
even in England, Gould was prompted to play in the fledging United Football
League in Manila. “The time after the Suzuki Cup in 2010 was massive for
Philippine football. The sport grew by so much. The UFL also greatly improved.
I wanted to be a part of it.”
Gould recently made the fulltime move
to Manila with his girlfriend. He has for now, shelved temporarily his rock star
dreams to play for the Loyola Meralco Sparks and hope for another call up to
the national team. With the Sparks, he has recast himself as a central defender
instead of his usual forward position.
“Now I have fully committed to
football and in the last eight weeks since I joined Loyola, I have seen myself
grow as a footballer. That’s the focus now and I hope that I can contribute to
the success of Loyola and the UFL.”
That’s okay, Chad. The way it is for
Filipino footballers nowadays, they live like rock stars anyway.
Another time. Another life. Chad with RedGrave back in England.
nice. loved this article
ReplyDeletewhere can i get their music?
Thanks for this article, Ive always been a fan of CG! I wish him more success with the UFL, and hopefully the Azkals again.
ReplyDeleteAny sample of ched's music? I would love to listen please!!!
ReplyDelete