Back To My Roots: Josh Griffin

Back To My Roots: Josh Griffin

Hullfc.com caught up with Josh Griffin to look back at the roots of his Rugby League career…

Club News

Hullfc.com caught up with Josh Griffin to look back at the roots of his Rugby League career…

Of the three brothers in your family, which one started playing Rugby League first?

None of us had really heard of Rugby League before, but Darrell wanted to carry on playing during the off-season in union. He got signed up by London Broncos, and after a year he then got picked up by Wakefield Trinity. My mum and dad sold the pub we owned in Oxford and we moved up to Wakefield after Darrell recommended it.

So when did you start playing Rugby League?

I was still playing union at the time when I moved up from Oxford, but my new school friends in Wakefield suggested that I switched over to league because I was quite quick and they thought I would suit league better. Me and my mates all ended up playing for Stanley Rangers.

I was at college in 2007/2008 when John Kear, who was the Wakefield coach at the time, gave me a call to go down training after the team had picked up a lot of injuries. I had to skive college on the Thursday and Friday! I did team-run in the Saturday morning and ended up making my debut for Wakefield on the Sunday!

Can you remember much from your debut?

I think it was a Challenge Cup game on TV, actually. I came off the bench and played for ten minutes. Then the next morning I was back at college and I was walking round thinking I was the top dog! The best part of it was my teacher the next morning – he was a Wakefield fan and let me get away with skiving!

Talk us through your pathway from your debut onwards.

I was at a lot of different clubs over the next few years after that. I was at Huddersfield, Batley on loan, back at Wakefield, and then at Castleford. I had a pretty turbulent time in the first-half of my career because I never really found anywhere to settle down for a period of time. Any club I was at wasn’t for much longer than a year, really. I was in and out of Rugby League between 2012 and 2014 because I was playing Rugby Union with Yorkshire Carnegie.

But at one point I just wanted to get a league ball back in my hands, so I gave John Kear a call. He was at Batley Bulldogs, so I went down there and played a few games before Salford offered me a trial for a month in 2014

What was it like playing at Salford alongside your brothers?

It was a weird one because we’d never played at the same club before. That was a good point in my career because I was playing alongside them both and it gave me a good feeling. Our dad died in 2015 and it was horrible to lose him. But all three of us brothers united whilst we were at Salford and we all pulled through it together.

 

How did the transition from Salford to Hull come about?

The opportunity came up in 2016 to join Hull FC, and it wasn’t something I could turn down after the club had just won the Challenge Cup. I’ve really enjoyed my time here at Hull. All of the players get along, have great banter and work hard at the same time. There’s a really good culture at the club and hopefully I can keep improving here.

_This article was originally published in the May 2019 edition of The 18th Man_