JACK OF DIAMONDS Jack Grealish grew up playing Gaelic football as a kid to become English football’s first £100million transfer superstar

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ENGLAND star Jack Grealish has become English football’s first £100million player.

The Aston Villa midfielder moved to Manchester City for a British record £100million transfer fee.

The move caps a remarkable rise for Grealish, who has been at Villa for almost 19 years.

After joining his boyhood club aged six, the playmaker toughened up by playing Gaelic football on the side – something his father says has helped him in anticipating tackles.

Grealish, 25, has also followed in the footsteps of his great-great grandfather by representing the England national team – after controversially switching his allegiance from Ireland six years ago.

HANDY WITH HIS HANDS TOO

Grealish was born in 1995 and raised in Solihull by parents Kevin and Karen, who have Irish roots.

A die-hard fan, it was always his dream to represent the club he loved as a kid. But in the summers, when the football season had wound down, he just loved playing Gaelic football.

There aren’t many footballers who have scored a point at Croke Park playing Gaelic football and won the Toulon Tournament.

He lined out for the John Mitchels Hurling and Camogie club in the Midlands, where he excelled.

In 2009, Grealish scored a point representing Warwickshire GAA at Croke Park during half-time of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship quarter-final between Dublin and Kerry.

In the past, dad Kevin spoke about how Gaelic football prepared him for the rough treatment he gets week in/week out in the Premier League.

“He’d run the show playing Gaelic. It really helped him because he was knocked from pillar to post. It’s brutal compared to soccer,” he told BirminghamLive.

“Jack, as you know, is good with his feet but you can pick the ball up as well and he’d flick it around everyone!

“I told Gordan Cowans (Aston Villa coach) that once. He asked why Jack was so good at expecting tackles and stuff and it was the GAA.

“It really built up his upper body, players would bounce off him. It’s probably why he’s so strong today.”

Jack, himself, has spoken fondly about his Gaelic football past.

“I wasn’t really into other sports growing up but I loved Gaelic,” he revealed.

“You can play football in it; you don’t just have to have the ball in your hands, you can just run with the ball.

“But when I was 13, Villa told me I need to stop because it’s rough. I still played now and then until I was 15.”

LUCK OF THE IRISH

It’s easy to forget Grealish was a late bloomer in international football – and didn’t make his full England debut until two days before he turned 25.

And he could quite easily have been sat at home watching the Euros in his plush Barnt Green, Worcestershire home had he not snubbed Republic of Ireland at the eleventh hour in 2015.

Capped by Ireland at U17, U18 and U21 level, he seemed destined to play under Martin O’Neill.

However, O’Neill revealed that Grealish turned down an invitation for a call-up , which alerted then-England U21 coach Gareth Southgate to the possibility he would switch allegiances.

In September 2015, he confirmed that he would represent England, and at the Toulon Tournament he made his debut.

Grealish would be instrumental in helping his country win the competition.

FOOTBALL RUNS IN THE FAMILY

Every time Grealish puts on an England shirt, he’s bound to think about his great-great-grandfather from his mother Karen’s side of the family, Billy Garraty.

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Olivia Wilson
By Olivia Wilson

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