Press Release

HATCHETT HOPES REMARKABLE STORY WILL INSPIRE OTHERS

By 14 November, 2016 2 Comments

HATCHETT HOPES REMARKABLE STORY WILL INSPIRE OTHERS Former Sussex seamer Lewis Hatchett is forging a new career as a motivational speaker, inspiring others with the remarkable story of how he overcame a disability to become a professional cricketer. Hatchett was born with Poland Syndrome, a rare condition which appears in only one in 100,000 births and which affects one side of the body in different ways. In Hatchett’s case he is missing his right pectoral muscle and the two ribs that would have been behind it, which means his chest is visibly sunken on that part of his body, also leaving complications that he has to deal with on a day to day basis. His right shoulder muscles overcompensated for the missing pectoral, causing these muscles to be over-used and they become fatigued quickly, resulting in aches, burning sensations and headaches daily along with his right chest offering little protection to his right lung. Although he was advised as a youngster not to play contact sports, Hatchett’s determination helped him to overcome his condition, which meant making many sacrifices to spend more time on improving his left arm pace and left-handed batting in the nets or fitness training in the gym. Hatchett, 26, enjoyed six years as a professional with Sussex, in which he took 102 wickets in 53 first team matches in all competitions, before he was advised to retire at the end of last season because of a lower back complaint. Hatchett is still adjusting to life outside the Sussex dressing room but he has kept busy by helping his brother Bradley in his business networking business based at professional sports clubs, work as a personal trainer – a course he took with the help of PCA funding while he was playing – and discussing his career as a popular motivational speaker. ” I am pushing the speaking because the message is something that I am very passionate about. The more I have spoken about my condition and my path into the game, the more I have realised how rare this story is,” Hatchett said. ” I am doing some corporate speaking, I have done work in schools and I have got some charity stuff lined up. ” It’s not just relevant to people with disabilities. A lot of the people who have heard me speak don’t have a disability, but tell me that, having heard my story, they realise that they don’t have a reason to complain about things that they think are wrong in their own lives. ” I believe that there are so many messages in my story that are transferable to all aspects of life and I am really enjoying telling it. Each time I speak I get better and the feedback is brilliant.” Hatchett was not always so comfortable in discussing his condition and for a long time he hid it so that it could not be used as an excuse to not select him. ” I protected it because I didn’t want to give anyone the chance to use it against me, to not pick me or to drop me. I could accept not being selected for my cricket, but not my body, that wasn’t an option in my eyes,” he said. ” I worked incredibly hard to make myself the fittest player in the team so no one could use my body against me. I knew if I didn’t put all that hard work in then, I would never have stood a chance of realising my dream. Unfortunately, I ended up having to retire because of an injury to my body, but I have no regrets as I know I did everything possible to play professional cricket and probably went further than I ever should have. ” My family never made it a big deal. I have a younger brother who is fully able-bodied. We competed against each other for years and I didn’t see myself as any different for him. ” I wasn’t put in cotton wool. I wasn’t protected from anything. As a youngster I knew I wasn’t the best player around, but I knew I could work harder than everyone else I came up against and I’d give myself a chance, which is what I did!” Hatchett’s condition meant that he had to work hard to develop his leading right arm for bowling and catching. The vulnerability of his right chest meant that, if struck, the consequences could have been fatal and so he had a specially-designed vest made out of Kevlar to protect the right side of his chest while batting. ” The chest guard was something I had built in my second year of being a pro because I realised that chest guards that you get off-the-shelf weren’t going to cut the mustard with bowlers bowling up to 90mph,” Hatchett said. ” The Kevlar chest guard is literally bulletproof, so when I was batting I could say to bowlers, I’m bulletproof!” Hatchett might have been bulletproof when he batted but there was no protection against the injury that ended his playing career, although developing work in three different areas has meant there has been little time for him to think about cricket. ” I’m very busy which is good because it’s meant I haven’t had too much time to dwell on the cricket. There are times when I am on my own and I do miss it but there is nothing I can do to claw it back. I know my body was really struggling and the surgeon’s advice was: carry on if you want but you are just going to end up in this position or even worse,” he said {{ak_sharing}}